Amazon testing drones for delivery: Jeff Bezos
Bezos said the gadgets, known as octocopters, can carry as much as five pounds within a 10-mile02 dec 2013 mon
Amazon may start
using the drones, which can deliver packages within 30 minutes, in four
to five years pending Federal Aviation Administration approval, CEO Jeff
Bezos said. Photo: AFP
San Francisco:
Amazon.com Inc. chief executive officer (CEO) Jeff Bezos
said the world’s largest e-commerce company is testing drones to
deliver goods, as it works to improve efficiency and speed in getting
products to consumers.
Bezos unveiled the plan on CBS’s 60 Minutes news programme, showing interviewer Charlie Rose
the flying machines that can be used as delivery vehicles. The CEO said
the gadgets, known as octocopters, can carry as much as five pounds
within a 10-mile radius of an Amazon
fulfilment centre. Amazon may start using the drones, which can deliver
packages within 30 minutes, in four to five years pending Federal
Aviation Administration approval, Bezos said.
“It will work, and it will happen, and it’s gonna be a lot of fun,” he said in the 60 Minutes interview.
Amazon, based in Seattle, has been ramping up ways to get
products to consumers more quickly, as it seeks to keep shoppers coming
back to buy from its Web store instead of going to brick-and-mortar
retailers. Some of Amazon’s most lucrative customers are members of its
$79-a-year Prime programme, which promises fast delivery.
To cater to these customers, Amazon last month said it
was teaming up with the US Postal Service to begin Sunday delivery. The
company invests heavily in distribution and delivery, which made up the
largest portion of the Amazon’s expenses in the third quarter. Investors
have endorsed the spending on capacity—the costs increased 35% to $2.03
billion—pushing up the company’s shares 57% so far this year even as it
posts losses.
96 warehouses
The company had 89 warehouses in 2012 and is planning 7
more this year. Amazon also unveiled plans in July to increase staff by
5,000 in 17 centres this year, and is hiring 70,000 seasonal workers in
the US to meet holiday order demand.
Bezos showed the drones as growth of e-commerce sales is
outstripping total retail sales. On Black Friday, e-commerce spending
increased 15% to a record $1.20 billion as more consumers opted to shop
from their couches rather than battle long lines at stores, according to
ComScore Inc. Amazon ranked as the most visited online retail store, said ComScore.
Online shopping is also anticipated to be heavy tomorrow,
the Monday after Thanksgiving that is dubbed Cyber Monday for the
number of Web deals that retailers offer. ComScore has projected that
Cyber Monday sales will increase more than 20% to about $2 billion.
Separately, Amazon said in a statement that it will offer two limited-time deals on its Kindle Fire
tablets as part of its Cyber Monday promotions. The company said it
will offer $50 off its 16-gigabyte Kindle Fire HD and its 7-inch Kindle
Fire HDX. BLOOMBERG
ABHISHEK KUMAR
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