+86 15546883080 (China mainland) +852 6554 1700 (Hong Kong)  [email protected]

Amazon rating system developers ended up being too protective of it

According to the former Amazon executive, the online ratings and reviews model was a good solution at first, but the team ended up being too protective of it.

Dan Lewis spent many years at Amazon before founding his own company. Among the biggest projects he worked on was helping to build an online ratings and reviews model.

It was a big problem from the online retail giant in its early days.

“The original problem we were trying to solve at Amazon was customer confidence. You can’t touch, see, smell — how do you get confidence to buy?” Lewis explained at the recent CNBC Technology Executive Council summit in New York City.

Peer reviews, with a rating of one to five stars, solved the original customer confidence problem. But in that success, Lewis says he learned a key lesson about setting oneself up for failure. In a nutshell: falling in love with solutions rather than never-ending problems.

“Oftentimes you protect the thing you built versus remembering the existential problem you are trying to solve”.

“We didn’t name the group that works on the problem the ‘customer confidence team.’ We named it the ratings and reviews team,” Lewis said.

Amazon employees like Lewis who worked on the original solution became convinced their job was to make ratings and reviews better, instead of thinking of other solutions, and newer technologies, that could solve the problem better.

More Amazon news

Amazon is launching a new marketplace in the Netherlands

Amazon is launching a new marketplace in the Netherlands

Amazon opens Netherlands marketplace to sellers Amazon has opened its Netherlands marketplace for sellers to register, as well as announcing plans to expand it later this year. Sellers are invited to register on the amazon.nl portal for a fee of €39 per...

read more
Why Did Amazon Block Sellers From Using FedEx?

Why Did Amazon Block Sellers From Using FedEx?

Here's Why Amazon Won't Let Third-Party Sellers Ship with FedEx Earlier this week, Amazon announced that sellers on its site will not be permitted to use FedEx for deliveries to Amazon Prime customers. The Wall Street Journal reported a “decline in...

read more
Amazon logistics keeps growing rapidly

Amazon logistics keeps growing rapidly

Amazon is already delivering half of its packages Amazon has been steadily growing its logistics operations, and it now delivers more than half of all packages in the US, according to Morgan Stanley It means Amazon, which now operates its own freighters...

read more