Why Amazon is collaborating with US universities
The online retailer is partnering with three big colleges to provide more affordable textbooks and course materials to students. Who benefits?
The Amazon.com logo adorns an Amazon.com fulfillment center in Goodyear, Ariz., one of several centers in the Phoenix metro area to open in recent years. This year, the online retail giant is launching a new initiative with big US universities in an effort to take a bite out of the multibillion-dollar college bookstore industry.
Ross D. Franklin/AP Photo/File
Amazon.com is coming to your college.
In a bid to further expand its customer base, the online retail giant has launched an initiative, called , to sell course materials and other products at a discounted rate to students at select universities.
The company has so far struck deals with the University of Massachusetts-Amherst, Purdue University, and the University of California-Davis to operate with the three schools and to open distribution centers where students can pick up packages from code-activated lockers.
At UMass and Purdue, Amazon is also offering free next-day campus delivery for all products to Student Prime members and will pay the schools 0.5 percent to 2.5 percent for purchases made through the colleges鈥 sites 鈥 a total of about $1.5 million and $1.7 million in revenue over four years for each university respectively, .
Course materials and textbooks will be eligible for next-day delivery, regardless of students鈥 Amazon membership status.
Amazon has tapped into the college market before: Prime membership has long been available to students at a discounted rate of $49 a year 鈥 about half the regular $99 fee. Last month, the company launched the Kindle Textbook Creator, which lets authors prepare ebooks for students for publication across a slew of operating systems and devices.
The new partnerships, however, could be Amazon鈥檚 way of establishing itself in the college bookstore industry, which is currently led by booksellers Barnes & Noble Inc. and Follett Corp. Prime members spend about twice as much as non-Prime members yearly, , an investment research group. Student Prime accounts gained through Amazon Campus could provide a valuable sales uptick.
鈥淐ollege campuses are an opportunity for us,鈥 Ripley MacDonald, director of Amazon student programs, told the Journal. 鈥淲e hope students like it and continue being Amazon customers.鈥
With the Amazon system integrated into the colleges鈥 course-selection software, students could save on time: Books and materials they鈥檒l need to buy for their registered classes will be instantly visible.
The initiative could also save students up to $380 annually on course materials and textbooks, according to Amazon representatives. In 2012, average textbook prices ranged from about $68 for new copies and $53 for used ones, the National Association of College Stores reported.
鈥淲e really recognize that textbooks and course materials are a major expense for students, and those have continued to go up over time,鈥 Ed Blaguszewski, UMass spokesman, told . 鈥淭his is about convenience and saving money for students.鈥