BUS 475 University of Michigan Zappos Business Case Analysis Paper - Business Finance
This is a business case writing. Company choose: Zappos. The detailed writing instruction and grading rubric is post in the attached file. Make sure use the Stanford case (in attached file)Word count at least 600Need to check the grading rubric and make sure meet all requirement~!~!!Here are some helpful resources:https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=WiIeImBFRK4Zappos Company Culturehttps://www.youtube.com/watch?v=-DYigfNJQlgHowZappos will run without Job Titleshttps://www.youtube.com/watch?v=VRf64t3i16AInside Zapppos holocracyhttps://www.youtube.com/watch?v=kfLOz5WzOlwWhy I sold Zappos to Amazon (3 yrs ago)https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=D9h03mk6SDIWhy I sodd Zappos to Amazon (2010)https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=WV28Jb5caq4 Zappos bets on downtown Las Vegashttp://www.youtube.com/watch?v=cLzjx_E-SXEZappos tour customer servicehttp://www.youtube.com/watch?v=oYNssS_DCPo Zappos on CBShttps://www.youtube.com/watch?v=dAyCO-2caDI Zappos culture or why you should work at Zapposhttps://www.youtube.com/watch?v=1peSz6zR9F4 Why company culture matters at Zapposhttps://www.youtube.com/watch?v=K-Bk_hjVrcI Why Did Amazon Buy Zappos for $940 Million? History line.
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CASE: M-333
DATE: 09/20/2010
ZAPPOS: HAPPINESS IN A BOX
Ive learned that people will forget what you said, people will forget what you did, but people will
never forget how you made them feel.
―Maya Angelou, American author
Zappos is about delivering happiness to the world.
―Tony Hsieh, Chief Executive Officer, Zappos i
THE BEGINNING ii
Nick Swinmurn, a Bay Area entrepreneur, founded Zappos in 1999 after unsuccessfully trying to
find a specific pair of shoes in several stores. He believed the internet could address the
selection problems traditional shoe sellers faced by removing the physical constraints of shoes
stores. He launched Zappos (whose name was an adaptation of the Spanish word for shoes,
“zapatos”), despite having no experience in retail or the shoe industry, to provide access to a
wide variety of shoe styles, colors and sizes.
Meanwhile, just three years after graduating from Harvard, Tony Hsieh (pronounced “Shay”)
and Alfred Lin sold their internet ad-banner business, LinkExchange, to Microsoft for $265
million. In 1999, Hsieh and Lin founded a venture capital fund called Venture Frogs. Hsieh
originally served as an investor and advisor to Zappos and then joined the company in 2000,
serving as the co-CEO with Swinmurn. (Lin later joined as COO/CFO.) Swinmurn was intent
on building the next internet retailing powerhouse and satisfying customers’ needs faster and
more simply than ever before. Hsieh, on the other hand, was not focused solely on profits. He
wanted to create a new universe, a company that was different from any other company he had
known. His focus was on culture and employee happiness. Recalling his outlook on the new
position, Hsieh explained, “It was about: What kind of company can we create where we all want
to be there, including me? How can we create such a great environment, where employees get so
much out of it that they would do it for free?” iii What Hsieh did not know at the time was that he
Sara Gaviser Leslie and Professor Jennifer Aaker prepared this case as the basis for class discussion rather than to
illustrate either effective or ineffective handling of an administrative situation.
Copyright © 2010 by the Board of Trustees of the Leland Stanford Junior University. All rights reserved. To order
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Zappos: Delivering Happiness M-333
p. 2
would move beyond a focus on creating enjoyment and fulfillment for employees towards
delivering happiness to both customers and the greater public.
FINDING THE VISION
Zappos survived the burst of the internet bubble and its own struggles to create a reliable supply
chain and distribution system, but, in 2000, was on the edge of running out of cash. Hsieh knew
the company was doing something right and went to enormous lengths—propping up the
company with personal funds and even selling real estate—to ensure its survival. The dire
circumstances forced the team to focus even more on customer service to enable the company to
continue. iv
Even as a retailing newcomer, Zappos was already collecting customer accolades. In 2003 Hsieh
commented to Fred Mossler, then director of product development, about a customer who had
been shocked by the level of service Zappos provided. The customer had ordered a pair of shoes
and Zappos surprised him by upgrading his shipping from one week to two days: “He loved the
customer service and would tell his friends and family about us. He even said we should one day
start a Zappos Airlines.” Recently, Hsieh had finished reading Jim Collins’ Good to Great and
latched on to Collins’ idea that great companies focus on more than just making money or
becoming market leaders. With these two events top of mind, Hsieh and Mossler realized they
needed to focus on both short-term goals—making money—and becoming a great company.
Hsieh recalled, “We realized that the biggest vision would be to build the Zappos brand to be
about the very best customer service.” v
CREATING THE CULTURE
The start-up culture, where everyone pitched in and felt integral to the success of the company,
invigorated Hsieh and his colleagues:
Even though we were going through some tough times, we were going through
everything together, and we were all fiercely passionate about what we were
doing. We had made sacrifices in our own way because we all believed in the
potential and future of the company.” vi
The need for employees to work as a unit only strengthened when the company moved from the
San Francisco Bay Area to Las Vegas in 2004. Most employees were new to the area—their
lives at work and outside of work merged. Hsieh and his colleagues enjoyed feeling “part of a
tribe,” and Zappos encouraged this activity. The culture and Zappos’ performance were so
intimately related that Hsieh believed, “If we got the culture right, then building our brand to be
about the very best in customer service would happen naturally on its own.” vii
Knowing it would be hard to maintain the start-up feel and culture, in August 2004, Zappos
asked all of its employees to provide their thoughts on what the Zappos culture meant to them. It
compiled this feedback into a culture book that it shared both internally and externally. (From
that point on, the book was published annually with new employee comments.) Zappos wanted
employees to understand that they were building the culture and ensure that employees had a
shared experience in working at the company. Serious about creating an environment where
Zappos: Delivering Happiness M-333
p. 3
personal well-being and happiness were emphasized, Zappos hired an in-house life coach, Dr.
Vik, in July 2005.
Later that year, the company again approached its employees to help it define its core values.
They pared down this list and released it to the world in February 2006:
1. Deliver WOW Through Service
2. Embrace and Drive Change
3. Create Fun and a Little Weirdness
4. Be Adventurous, Creative and Open-minded
5. Pursue Growth and Learning
6. Build Open and Honest Relationships with Communication
7. Build a Positive Team and Family Spirit
8. Do More with Less
9. Be Passionate and Determined
10. Be Humble
Many companies developed core values and some even publicized them. No company, however,
had values like those of Zappos. From cubicles decorated by theme, such as the “Monkey Row”
(housing the company’s executive team); to open public tours of the company’s headquarters,
complete with hoots and bells from every department the group passed; to fully-paid health and
dental insurance, Zappos was unique. It almost looked as though employees were having too
much fun to be productive. Visitors to the company’s headquarters were not only invited to help
themselves to anything at the company’s free lunch room but also allowed to walk around
unescorted—thus demonstrating that “build open and honest relationships with communication”
was a value that extended to the company’s interactions with the public. They thought about
how they could make their core values into the platform on which they would build a company,
and the culture became the platform. Making employees happy and making customers happy
and making our partners happy became their mantra
Hiring for Cultural Fit
To maintain its unique culture, Zappos hired for specific qualities—weirdness, humor, humility,
and even luck. The job interview included a technical assessment and personality/fit questions
as well as funny quizzes or even crossword puzzles that focused on Zappos’ business. Lin added
that happiness was another quality that they screened for interviews:
I attended a conference where someone in the audience asked Starbucks’
chairman/CEO Howard Schultz why everyone at Starbucks smiled and he said,
‘We only hire people that smile.’ We try to do the same thing at Zappos. We
only hire happy people and we try to keep them happy. Our philosophy is that
you can’t have happy customers without having happy employees and you can’t
have happy employees without having a company where people are inspired by
the culture. viii
Zappos was interested in how potential employees saw themselves. One of the interview
questions was, “On a scale of one to ten, how lucky are you?” According to a study Hsieh had
Zappos: Delivering Happiness M-333
p. 4
read, people who reported themselves as being lucky were more likely to pick up on clues to help
solve a task they were given, even outperforming a group of people who perceived themselves as
unlucky. Zappos’ goal was to “hire the lucky people that bring more good luck to Zappos.” ix
Cultural fit was so important, Hsieh explained, that it superseded talent: “We have passed on a
lot of smart and talented people that we know can make an immediate impact on our top or
bottom line, but if they are not a culture fit we wont hire them.” x
Training to Spur Personal Emotional Connections
Every employee started with Customer Loyalty Team (CLT) training, regardless of the
employee’s future role. New hires learned about the kinds of things CLT members did to
“WOW” or surprise customers with fantastic service. The new hires even spent two weeks
taking phone calls from customers.
Once new hire training ended, Zappos employees had the opportunity to continue to learn. The
company offered courses on communication, finance, and time management as well as unique
offerings, including “The Z Library: Tribal” (based on the book Tribal Leadership), “The
Science of Happiness” and “Delivering Happiness: The Book.” In 2007, Hsieh became interested
in the science of happiness and started reading books and articles about happiness, including The
Happiness Hypothesis by Jonathan Haidt and Happier by Tal Ben-Shahar, and offering courses
on the topic. The Science of Happiness was one of the most popular classes in the elective
training program. xi
HAPPY EMPLOYEES GIVE GREAT SERVICE
Zappos’ customer service included some straightforward but unusual standard practices—a 365day return policy, free shipping both ways, 24-hour customer service, a toll-free phone number
for service inquiries prominently displayed at the top of every page, and assistance in reaching
competitors if Zappos could not satisfy a customer request. Most call centers were sterile and
could experience turnover as high as 300 percent annually—their main goal was to keep service
costs down. Zappos, however, did not see its call center as an expense; rather, as Hsieh
explained, “We believe that it’s [telephone customer service] a huge untapped opportunity for
most companies, not only because it can result in word-of-mouth marketing, but because of its
potential to increase the lifetime value of the customer.” xii
The team member’s job was to WOW customers. They answered the phone cheerfully but
without a script, a standard tool for most phone reps. They were not compensated on how many
calls they handled during their shifts but were told to spend as much time with customers as it
took to resolve their issues. Zappos even kept a record of the longest customer call—the last was
on July 10, 2010 when a CLT member spoke for 7 hours and 28 minutes. These conversations
helped build the brand, as Hsieh explained: “We want our reps to let their true personalities shine
during each phone call so that they can develop a personal emotional connection (internally
referred to as PEC) with the customer.” xiii
Zappos: Delivering Happiness M-333
p. 5
Implementing the Happiness Framework at Zappos
As the company grew, and the happiness culture become even more prominent, Hsieh realized
that Zappos was going to be about more than just shoes or clothes—its goal was about happiness
and spreading happiness far and wide. “We’ve always had customers tell us that they think of
the experience of opening up a Zappos shipment as ‘Happiness in a Box.’ Whether it’s the
happiness that customers feel when they receive the perfect pair of shoes or the perfect outfit, or
the happiness that they feel from our surprise upgrades to overnight shipping or when they talk to
someone on our Customer Loyalty Team, or the happiness that employees feel from being part of
a culture whose values match their own personal values—the thing that ties these all together is
happiness.” Accordingly, in 2009, the company’s brand promise evolved once again, this time
from “personal emotional connection” to “delivering happiness.” xiv
Hsieh, in the process of learning about happiness, discovered several “happiness frameworks”
that could help individuals and organizations understand how best to reach happiness. The
framework he found most useful for Zappos was the following:
Source: Compiled by author based on information from Delivering Happiness.
Perceived control was the first part of Zappos’ happiness framework. In place of annual raises in
its call center, which reps appreciated but did not control, Zappos implemented a “skill sets”
system for CLTs. The company had 20 different skill sets that employees could acquire, and
mastering each one came with a small pay increase. As Hsieh explained, “If someone chooses
not to get any, then he or she simply stays at the same pay level. If someone is ambitious and
wants to gain all 20 skills, then we let the rep decide on the right pace to achieve that…. Our call
center reps are much happier being in control of their pay and which skill sets to attain.” xv
The importance of perceived progress in driving happiness caused Zappos to change its
merchandising promotion process from every 18 months to smaller promotions every six
months. Though the end results did not change—employees reached the training, certification
Zappos: Delivering Happiness M-333
p. 6
and compensation milestones on the same schedule—employees were, Hsieh said, “much
happier because there is an ongoing sense of perceived progress.” xvi
To create a feeling of connectedness, Hsieh encouraged employees to socialize outside of work.
Managers were required to spend 10-20 percent of their time hanging out with their team
members. Hsieh conceded, “It’s just kind of a random number we made up. But part of the way
you build company culture is hanging out outside of the office.” xvii
While Hsieh was leading the happiness movement at Zappos, he did not see himself as the center
of that movement. Instead, he explained, “For any company or movement or religion or
whatever, if there’s one person that personifies it, then that puts that company or vision at risk….
That’s why it needs to be about a movement, not about a person or even a specific company.” xviii
Zappos would drive the happiness movement and each employee would play an important role in
advancing it.
Zappos’ unique approach to running a business and engaging employees and customers attracted
the attention of some of the world’s leading retailers. Amazon, like Zappos, was adamant that it
must “obsess over customers” and reinvent itself continuously. xix In July 2009, Amazon
announced it was acquiring Zappos in a deal that closed at $1.2 billion. xx True to the Zappos
values of embracing change and building honest and open relationships, Hsieh sent a detailed email to all employees (and made it available to the press) the day the deal was announced. (See
Exhibit 1 for a copy of Hsieh’s letter to employees announcing the deal. See Exhibit 2 for
Hsieh’s 2010 letter reflecting on the deal.)
Repeat Customers Drive Zappos’ Success
Connecting with customers and driving customer happiness were part of Zappos’ recipe from the
very beginning, as Lin explained:
We started out with the idea that while we want to sell shoes, and thats how we
make money, if we can make one customer happy, they will tell 10 of their
friends. That’s how we basically built Zappos, not by spending a ton of money on
marketing, but WOWing our customers and WOWing employees, so that they tell
their friends to come shop at Zappos or work at Zappos or do business with
Zappos.
“WOWing” customers was the way to ensure customers would buy from Zappos again and
again. Seventy-five percent of Zappos sales on any given day are from repeat customers. If you
wanted to model out the true power of repeat customer visits and the power that translates into
business performance, this is an under-told story. Further, repeat customers ordered 2.5 times
the amount that new customers ordered in the 12 months following a purchase, and had higher
average orders. For instance, first-time customers spent $123.86 in Q407 and returning
customers spent $156.27 during that same period. xxi
Zappos: Delivering Happiness M-333
p. 7
Power of repeat customers and word of mouth...
$1,000
Gross Sales $Ms
$800
$600
$400
$200
$0
Gross Sales
2000
2001
2002
2003
2004
2005
2006
2007
2008
1.6
8.6
32
70
184
370
597
841
1014
Slide 7
Source: Zappos
Sharing Stories of Great Service and Happiness
Sharing the feedback from customers as well as stories that CLT members collected helped
reinforce the core values for newer team members—Zappos was serious about going to great
lengths to serve customers. That kind of sharing also acknowledged, as Lin explained, that the
company made mistakes: “Well screw up more often than we would like to admit, and well
apologize, and well fix it. Customers that have said, ‘I’m going to be a customer for life’ are the
ones [for whom] something wasnt exactly right, whether it was the shoe didnt fit, or it broke, or
we sent them the wrong one three times, and we made it up to them.” As one team member
wrote:
One of our international customers was in the U.S. for a business trip and placed
an order to be delivered while he was in the States. Unfortunately, his order was
not delivered on the expected date. He was, understandably, upset and he really
wanted his shoes. He decided to stay an extra day and wait for his package to
arrive. He ended up missing his flight out and had to pay a fee to reschedule with
the airline. Because his order wasnt delivered as promised, we paid for the
difference in his airfare, the shoes that he ordered, and issued a very generous
coupon towards a future purchase! xxii
Zappos had numerous stories to share about the astounding things employees would do to make
customers happy. (See Appendix for customer stories.)
USING TECHNOLOGY TO SHARE THE CULTURE AND AMPLIFY THE CUSTOMER EXPERIENCE
Zappos fielded 5,000 to 6,000 calls a day. Hsieh explained, “Our best branding tool, as unsexy
and low-tech as it may sound, is actually the telephone. And if we get that interaction right, it’s
something they remember, maybe for the rest of their life, and tell their friends and family
Zappos: Delivering Happiness M-333
p. 8
about.” xxiii Nevertheless, Zappos also explored additional ways to connect with customers and
non-customers.
Leveraging Twitter to Strengthen Company Culture
Hsieh originally joined Twitter to keep track of his friends at an offsite meeting. He also used
Twitter as his personal search engine with tweets such as, “I’m in NYC. What’s a good bar to
hang out ...
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