Amazon expands home services in US

Photo: Rick Wilking

Photo: Rick Wilking

Published Jul 22, 2015

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Seattle - Amazon.com is expanding its home-services programme, which lets people find prescreened plumbers, rug cleaners and even yoga teachers, to 15 cities as the online retailer seeks new sources of growth.

Amazon said Wednesday that it’s adding Atlanta, Chicago, Dallas, and eight other markets to the program. In March, the world’s biggest e-tailer introduced Amazon Home Services in New York, Los Angeles, Seattle and San Francisco, challenging user- review sites such as Yelp and Angie’s List.

Customers can find professionals to paint their homes, clean gutters, install home theatres and give guitar lessons. The Seattle-based company estimates US residents spend $640 billion yearly on the more than 900 services offered, Nish Lathia, general manager, said in an interview.

The expansion represents Amazon’s latest attempt to broaden beyond online sales of books, electronics and household items. The company also has a fast-growing cloud computing division that stores data for such companies as Pinterest and Netflix. It offers online video and music streaming, and makes hardware devices such as the Kindle e-reader, which helped create the market for electronic books.

The company is also seeking to expand internationally, and announced last month a major push into Latin America with a new online storefront for Mexico.

Amazon needs new markets to maintain the growth that investors covet. Analysts estimate 2015 revenue will increase 16 percent to $103 billion, according to data compiled by Bloomberg. Sales advanced 20 percent last year.

Marketing deal

Amazon Home Services takes a 10 percent to 20 percent commission of each job booked through its site, Lathia said. Rather than pay for marketing, professionals hired through the program share revenue with the company in exchange for access to its loyal customers.

Yelp sells advertising on its website, which offers free access to consumer reviews about local businesses. Angie’s List charges for access to reviews and also sells advertising.

Google also signaled interest in the home-services market by hiring part of the team at Homejoy, a housecleaning startup that is shutting down at the end of the month.

Bloomberg

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