Alibaba has logged more than 215 billion yuan ($30.7 billion)

Alibaba Group Holding Ltd. has logged more than 215 billion yuan ($30.7 billion) of purchases during its Singles’ Day bonanza, exceeding last year’s record haul about two-thirds of the way through its 24-hour shopping marathon.

An estimated half-billion shoppers from China to Russia and Argentina swarmed the e-commerce giant’s sites to scoop up everything from Apple Inc. and Xiaomi Corp. gadgets to Ugandan mangoes. The company again hosted a televised entertainment revue in Shanghai to run alongside the bargain-hunting, this time enlisting Taylor Swift and Asian pop icon G.E.M. to pump up sales.


A screen shows Alibaba’s sales volume exceeding 100 billion yuan after one hour during 2019 Singles’ Day.

The world’s largest shopping event has become an annual ritual for Asia’s largest company, part showcase of commercialism and part publicity blitz. Also referred to as “Double 11” because it falls on Nov. 11, it’s closely watched by investors keen to gauge how willing Chinese consumers are to spend as economic growth threatens to slip below 6%.


Tensions between Washington and Beijing continue to fuel uncertainty and roil global commerce. Among China’s largest corporations, Alibaba is expected to better ride out the storm, thanks to booming online consumption in the world’s No. 2 economy. On Sunday, Alvin Liu, a Tmall general manager, said Alibaba doesn’t expect any impact on its cross-border import business from an ongoing trade spat.


“Alibaba will probably be the one that will be able to circumvent and come out from the trade war in better shape” versus Baidu Inc. and Tencent Holdings Ltd., Richard Wong, head of ICT for the Asia Pacific at Frost & Sullivan, told Bloomberg Television. “The current sentiment and confidence in terms of spending is still relatively high.”
Read more: How Singles’ Day Became Biggest Shopping Spree Ever: QuickTake

While Alibaba and its rivals routinely trumpet record sums in the event’s aftermath, it’s unclear how much Nov. 11 sales actually contribute to the bottom line given the enormous discounting involved. A good result however could bolster Alibaba’s effort to raise as much as $15 billion in a landmark Hong Kong share sale this month, according to people familiar with the matter.
Singles’ Day emerged as a uniquely Chinese antidote to the sentimentality surrounding Valentine’s Day. Emerging on college campuses across the country, it takes its name from the way the date is written numerically as 11/11, which resembles “bare branches,” a local expression for the unattached.

It’s now become an excuse for people to splurge. Last year, sales at Alibaba climbed 27% to 213.5 billion yuan, equivalent to $30.7 billion at the time. More merchandise is sold online over the 24-hour period than during the five-day U.S. holiday buying spree that begins on Thanksgiving and ends on Cyber Monday.
Read more: Alibaba Said to Seek Up to $15 Billion in Hong Kong Listing
Online Shopping
Alibaba's Nov. 11 sales have surpassed the busiest U.S. online spree

Sources: Alibaba, Adobe Analytics
U.S. data covers period from Thanksgiving through Cyber Monday
It’s Time for Alibaba to Slay Jack Ma’s Monster: Tim Culpan
But the company’s facing stiff competition this year from smaller platforms including JD.com Inc. and Pinduoduo Inc. -- the aggressively expanding upstart that’s encroaching on the market leaders’ turf. They’re vying for the wallets of Chinese shoppers particularly in relatively untapped rural areas. All employ heavy discounting and hard-sell tactics in the run-up to and during the 24 hours in a bid to best the previous year’s record.
“Overall, we think this year will likely see a more competitive Double 11 period,” Ella Ji, an analyst at China Renaissance Holdings Ltd., said in a report. “We anticipate each platform will spend more on subsidies.”
Daniel Zhang, who took over as Alibaba chairman from billionaire Jack Ma in September, pioneered the show in its present form in 2015. The Singles’ Day impresario passes the baton this year to Jiang Fan, president of e-commerce marketplaces Taobao and Tmall, and a potential successor to Zhang himself.

Taylor Swift performs during the Singles’ Day gala on Nov. 10.
Source: Visual China Group via Getty Images
“Over the years, we’ve seen consumers become more diverse and younger. Each generation of consumers needs their own peers to serve them,” Zhang said in a post on Alibaba’s blog. “I think this young team is the future.”

The 2019 edition comes with slight twists to the formula. Alibaba, stung by criticism it harmed the environment by shipping an estimated 1 billion packages in a single day -- has enjoined its logistics arm Cainiao to set up recycling centers at 75,000 locations. It says it will also work with courier companies to pick up used boxes and wrapping.

An expansion into Southeast Asia and less-developed areas in China plus newer services -- such as transactions on food delivery site Ele.me, grocery store chain Hema and travel service Fliggy -- is bolstering the total. The company also brought in livestreamers including Kim Kardashian to appeal to younger buyers.
Other aspects remain the same. Singles’ Day has always been an opportunity for Alibaba to test the limits of its cloud computing, delivery and payments systems. Leaving little to chance, Alibaba sent teams across the nation ahead of Nov. 11 to help myriad outlets prepare for the festival. Some 200,000 brands had been expected to participate in 2019‘s edition of the festival.
“Singles’ Day is becoming popular outside of China, especially in the ASEAN region,” said Patrick Winter, Ernst & Young Asia Pacific managing partner. “You’re also seeing how it’s growing in smaller cities in China.”
(Updates with record-breaking haul from the first paragraph)

How Amazon became the Everything Store


Behind this week’s cover


Amazon.com rivals Wal-Mart as a store, Apple as a device maker, and IBM as a data services provider. It will rake in about $75 billion this year. For his book, Bloomberg Businessweek’s Brad Stone spoke to hundreds of current and former friends of founder Jeff Bezos. In the process, he discovered the poignant story of how Amazon became the Everything Store.




Within Amazon.com there’s a certain type of e-mail that elicits waves of panic. It usually originates with an annoyed customer who complains to the company’s founder and chief executive officer. Jeff Bezos has a public e-mail address, jeff@amazon.com. Not only does he read many customer complaints, he forwards them to the relevant Amazon employees, with a one-character addition: a question mark.



When Amazon employees get a Bezos question mark e-mail, they react as though they’ve discovered a ticking bomb. They’ve typically got a few hours to solve whatever issue the CEO has flagged and prepare a thorough explanation for how it occurred, a response that will be reviewed by a succession of managers before the answer is presented to Bezos himself. Such escalations, as these e-mails are known, are Bezos’s way of ensuring that the customer’s voice is constantly heard inside the company.


One of the more memorable escalations occurred in late 2010. It had come to Bezos’s attention that customers who had browsed the lubricants section of Amazon’s sexual wellness category were receiving personalized e-mails pitching a variety of gels and other intimacy facilitators. When the e-mail marketing team received the question mark, they knew the topic was delicate and nervously put together an explanation. Amazon’s direct marketing tool was decentralized, and category managers could generate e-mail campaigns to customers who had looked at certain product categories but did not make purchases. The promotions tended to work; they were responsible for hundreds of millions of dollars in Amazon’s annual sales. In the matter of the lubricant e-mail, though, a low-level product manager had overstepped the bounds of propriety. But the marketing team never got the chance to send this explanation. Bezos demanded to meet in person.

At Amazon’s Seattle headquarters, Jeff Wilke, the senior vice president for North American retail, Doug Herrington, the vice president for consumables, and Steven Shure, the vice president for worldwide marketing, waited in a conference room until Bezos glided in briskly. He started the meeting with his customary, “Hello, everybody,” and followed with “So, Steve Shure is sending out e-mails about lubricants.”
Bezos likes to say that when he’s angry, “just wait five minutes,” and the mood will pass like a tropical squall. Not this time. He remained standing. He locked eyes with Shure, whose division oversaw e-mail marketing. “I want you to shut down the channel,” he said. “We can build a $100 billion company without sending out a single f------ e-mail.”


An animated argument followed. Amazon’s culture is notoriously confrontational, and it begins with Bezos, who believes that truth shakes out when ideas and perspectives are banged against each other. Wilke and his colleagues argued that lubricants were available in supermarkets and drugstores and were not that embarrassing. They also pointed out that Amazon generated a significant volume of sales with such e-mails. Bezos didn’t care; no amount of revenue was worth jeopardizing customer trust. “Who in this room needs to get up and shut down the channel?” he snapped.
Eventually, they compromised. E-mail marketing would be terminated for certain categories such as health and personal care. The company also decided to build a central filtering tool to ensure that category managers could no longer promote sensitive products, so matters of etiquette were not subject to personal taste. For books and electronics and everything else Amazon sold, e-mail marketing lived to fight another day.
Amazon employees live daily with these kinds of fire drills. “Why are entire teams required to drop everything on a dime to respond to a question mark escalation?” an employee once asked at the company’s biannual meeting held at Seattle’s KeyArena, a basketball coliseum with more than 17,000 seats. “Every anecdote from a customer matters,” Wilke replied. “We research each of them because they tell us something about our processes. It’s an audit that is done for us by our customers. We treat them as precious sources of information.”
It’s one of the contradictions of life inside Amazon: The company relies on metrics to make almost every important decision, such as what features to introduce or kill, or whether a new process will root out an inefficiency in its fulfillment centers. Yet random customer anecdotes, the opposite of cold, hard data, can also alter Amazon’s course.
The original Amazon website in 1995

It’s easy to forget that until recently, people thought of Amazon primarily as an online bookseller. Today, as it nears its 20th anniversary, it’s the Everything Store, a company with around $75 billion in annual revenue, a $140 billion market value, and few if any discernible limits to its growth. In the past few months alone, it launched a marketplace in India, opened a website to sell high-end art, introduced another Kindle reading device and three tablet computers, made plans to announce a set-top box for televisions, and funded the pilot episodes of more than a dozen TV shows. Amazon’s marketplace hosts the storefronts of countless smaller retailers; Amazon Web Services handles the computer infrastructure of thousands of technology companies, universities, and government agencies.
Bezos, 49, has a boundless faith in the transformative power of technology. He constantly reinvests Amazon’s profits to improve his existing businesses and explore new ones, often to the consternation of shareholders. He surprised the world in August when he personally bought the Washington Post newspaper, saying his blend of optimism, innovation, and long-term orientation could revive it. One day a week, he moonlights as the head of Blue Origin, his private rocket ship company, which is trying to lower the cost of space travel.
Amazon has a few well-known peculiarities—the desks are repurposed doors; meetings begin with everyone in the room sitting in silence as they read a six-page document called a narrative. It’s a famously demanding place to work. And yet just how the company works—and what Bezos is like as a person—is difficult to know.


Amazon.com was incubated in Bezo’s Bellevue (Wash.) home
Courtesy GeekWire
Bezos rarely speaks at conferences and gives interviews only to publicize new products, such as the latest Kindle Fire. He declined to comment on this account, saying that it’s “too early” for a reflective look at Amazon’s history, though he approved many interviews with friends, family, and senior Amazon executives. John Doerr, the venture capitalist who backed Amazon early and was on its board of directors for a decade, calls Amazon’s Berlin Wall approach to public relations “the Bezos Theory of Communicating.” It’s really just a disciplined form of editing. Bezos takes a red pen to press releases, product descriptions, speeches, and shareholder letters, crossing out anything that doesn’t convey a simple message: You won’t find a cheaper, friendlier place to get everything you need than Amazon.
The one unguarded thing about Bezos is his laugh—a pulsing, mirthful bray that he leans into while craning his neck back. He unleashes it often, even when nothing is obviously funny to anyone else. And it startles people. “You can’t misunderstand it,” says Rick Dalzell, Amazon’s former chief information officer, who says Bezos often wields his laugh when others fail to meet his lofty standards. “It’s disarming and punishing. He’s punishing you.”
Intensity is hardly rare among technology CEOs. Steve Jobs was as famous for his volatility with Apple subordinates as he was for the clarity of his insights about customers. He fired employees in the elevator and screamed at underperforming executives. Bill Gates used to throw epic tantrums at Microsoft; Steve Ballmer, his successor, had a propensity for throwing chairs. Andy Grove, the former CEO of Intel, was so harsh and intimidating that a subordinate once fainted during a performance review.
Bezos fits comfortably into this mold. His drive and boldness trumps other leadership ideals, such as consensus building and promoting civility. While he can be charming and capable of great humor in public, in private he explodes into what some of his underlings call nutters. A colleague failing to meet Bezos’s exacting standards will set off a nutter. If an employee does not have the right answers or tries to bluff, or takes credit for someone else’s work, or exhibits a whiff of internal politics, uncertainty, or frailty in the heat of battle—a blood vessel in Bezos’s forehead bulges and his filter falls away. He’s capable of hyperbole and harshness in these moments and over the years has delivered some devastating rebukes. Among his greatest hits, collected and relayed by Amazon veterans:

“Are you lazy or just incompetent?”
“I’m sorry, did I take my stupid pills today?”
“Do I need to go down and get the certificate that says I’m CEO of the company to get you to stop challenging me on this?”

“Are you trying to take credit for something you had nothing to do with?”
“If I hear that idea again, I’m gonna have to kill myself.”
“We need to apply some human intelligence to this problem.”
[After reviewing the annual plan from the supply chain team] “I guess supply chain isn’t doing anything interesting next year.”
[After reading a start-of-meeting memo] “This document was clearly written by the B team. Can someone get me the A team document? I don’t want to waste my time with the B team document.”

[After an engineer’s presentation] “Why are you wasting my life?”

Bezos and Bill Gates (with Clippy, a former Microsoft app) have neighboring mansions on Lake Washington
Photograph by Reuters
Some Amazon employees advance the theory that Bezos, like Jobs, Gates, and Oracle co-founder Larry Ellison, lacks empathy. As a result, he treats workers as expendable resources without taking into account their contributions. That in turn allows him to coldly allocate capital and manpower and make hyperrational business decisions, where another executive might let emotion and personal relationships figure into the equation. They also acknowledge that Bezos is primarily consumed with improving the company’s performance and customer service and that personnel issues are secondary. “This is not somebody who takes pleasure at tearing someone a new a--hole,” says Kim Rachmeler, an executive who worked at Amazon for more than a decade. “He is not that kind of person. Jeff doesn’t tolerate stupidity, even accidental stupidity.”

To the amazement and irritation of employees, Bezos’s criticisms are almost always on target. Bruce Jones, a former Amazon supply chain vice president, describes leading a five-engineer team figuring out ways to make the movement of workers in fulfillment centers more efficient. The group spent nine months on the task, then presented their work to Bezos. “We had beautiful documents, and everyone was really prepared,” Jones says. Bezos read the paper, said, “You’re all wrong,” stood up, and started writing on the whiteboard.

“He had no background in control theory, no background in operating systems,” Jones says. “He only had minimum experience in the distribution centers and never spent weeks and months out on the line.” But Bezos laid out his argument on the whiteboard, and “every stinking thing he put down was correct and true,” Jones says. “It would be easier to stomach if we could prove he was wrong, but we couldn’t. That was a typical interaction with Jeff. He had this unbelievable ability to be incredibly intelligent about things he had nothing to do with, and he was totally ruthless about communicating it.”
Jones cites another example. In 2002, Amazon changed the way it accounted for inventory, from the last-in first-out, or LIFO, system to first-in first-out, or FIFO. The change allowed Amazon to better distinguish between its own inventory and the inventory that was owned and stored in fulfillment centers by partners such as Toys “R” Us and Target. Jones’s supply chain team was in charge of this complicated effort, and its software, riddled with bugs, created a few difficult days during which Amazon’s systems were unable to recognize any revenue. On the third day, Jones was giving an update on the transition when Bezos had a nutter. “He called me a ‘complete f------ idiot’ and said he had no idea why he hired idiots like me at the company, and said, ‘I need you to clean up your organization,’ ” Jones recalls. “It was brutal. I almost quit. I was a resource of his that failed. An hour later he would have been the same guy as always, and it would have been different. He can compartmentalize like no one I’ve ever seen.”

Amazon has a clandestine group with a name worthy of a James Bond film: Competitive Intelligence. The team, which operated for years within the finance department under longtime executives Tim Stone and Jason Warnick, focuses in part on buying large volumes of merchandise from other online retailers and measuring the quality and speed of their services—how easy it is to buy, how fast the shipping is, and so forth. The mandate is to investigate whether any rival is doing a better job than Amazon and then present the data to a committee of Bezos and other senior executives, who ensure that the company addresses any emerging threat and catches up quickly.

In the late 2000s, Competitive Intelligence began tracking a rival with an odd name and a strong rapport with female shoppers. Quidsi (Latin for “what if”) was a Jersey City company better known for its website Diapers.com. Grammar school friends Marc Lore and Vinit Bharara founded the startup in 2005 to allow sleep-deprived caregivers to painlessly schedule recurring shipments of vital supplies. By 2008 the company had expanded into selling baby wipes, infant formula, clothes, strollers, and other survival gear for new parents. In an October 2010 Bloomberg Businessweek cover story, the Quidsi founders admitted to studying Amazon closely and idolizing Bezos. In private conversations, they referred to Bezos as “sensei.”

Quidsi founders Bharara (left) and Lore
Photograph by Danielle Levitt/August
In 2009, Jeff Blackburn, Amazon’s senior vice president for business development, ominously informed the Quidsi co-founders over an introductory lunch that the e-commerce giant was getting ready to invest in the category and that the startup should think seriously about selling to Amazon. According to conversations with insiders at both companies, Lore and Bharara replied that they wanted to remain private and build an independent company. Blackburn told the Quidsi founders that they should call him if they ever reconsidered.

Soon after, Quidsi noticed Amazon dropping prices up to 30 percent on diapers and other baby products. As an experiment, Quidsi executives manipulated their prices and then watched as Amazon’s website changed its prices accordingly. Amazon’s pricing bots—software that carefully monitors other companies’ prices and adjusts Amazon’s to match—were tracking Diapers.com.
At first, Quidsi fared well despite Amazon’s assault. Rather than attempting to match Amazon’s low prices, it capitalized on the strength of its brand and continued to reap the benefits of strong word of mouth. After a while, the heated competition took a toll on the company. Quidsi had grown from nothing to $300 million in annual sales in just a few years, but with Amazon focusing on the category, revenue growth started to slow. Venture capitalists were reluctant to furnish Quidsi with additional capital, and the company was not yet mature enough for an initial public offering. For the first time, Lore and Bharara had to think about selling.
Meanwhile, Wal-Mart Stores was looking for ways to make up ground it had lost to Amazon and was shaking up its online division. Wal-Mart’s then-vice chairman, Eduardo Castro-Wright, took over Walmart.com, and one of his first calls was to Lore to initiate acquisition talks. Lore said Quidsi wanted to get close to “Zappos money”—more than $500 million, plus additional bonuses spread out over many years tied to performance goals. Wal-Mart agreed in principle and started due diligence. Mike Duke, Wal-Mart’s CEO, visited a Diapers.com fulfillment center in New Jersey. The formal offer from Bentonville was around $450 million—nowhere near Zappos money.

Bezos and wife, MacKenzie (center), at a company costume party
Courtesy Amazon
So Lore picked up the phone and called Amazon. In September 2010, he and Bharara traveled to Seattle to discuss the possibility of Amazon acquiring Quidsi. While they were in that early morning meeting with Bezos, Amazon sent out a press release introducing a service called Amazon Mom. It was a sweet deal for new parents: They could get up to a year’s worth of free two-day Prime shipping (a program that usually cost $79 a year). Customers also could get an additional 30 percent off the already-discounted diapers if they signed up for regular monthly deliveries as part of a service called Subscribe and Save. Back in New Jersey, Quidsi employees desperately tried to call their founders to discuss a public response to Amazon Mom. The pair couldn’t be reached: They were still in the meeting at Amazon’s headquarters.

Quidsi could now taste its own blood. At one point, Quidsi executives took what they knew about shipping rates, factored in Procter & Gamble’s wholesale prices, and calculated that Amazon was on track to lose $100 million over three months in the diaper category alone.
Inside Amazon, Bezos rationalized these moves as being in the company’s long-term interest of delighting its customers and building its consumables business. He told Peter Krawiec, the business development vice president, not to spend more than a certain amount to buy Quidsi but to make sure that Amazon did not, under any circumstance, lose the deal to Wal-Mart.
As a result of Bezos’s meeting with Lore and Bharara, Amazon had an exclusive three-week period to study Quidsi’s financial results and come up with an offer. At the end of that period, Krawiec offered Quidsi $540 million and called the number a “stretch price.” Knowing that Wal-Mart hovered on the sidelines, he gave Quidsi a window of 48 hours to respond and made it clear that if the founders didn’t take the offer, the Amazon Mom onslaught would continue.

Wal-Mart should have had a natural advantage. Jim Breyer, the managing partner at one of Quidsi’s venture capital backers, Accel, was also on the Wal-Mart board. But Wal-Mart was caught flat-footed. By the time it increased its offer to $600 million, Quidsi had tentatively accepted the Amazon term sheet. Duke left phone messages for several Quidsi board members, imploring them not to sell to Amazon. Those messages were then transcribed and sent to Seattle, because Amazon had stipulated in the preliminary term sheet that Quidsi turn over information about any subsequent offer.
When Bezos’s lieutenants learned of Wal-Mart’s counterbid, they ratcheted up the pressure, telling the Quidsi founders that “sensei” was such a furious competitor that he would drive diaper prices to zero if they sold to Bentonville. The Quidsi board convened to discuss the possibility of letting the Amazon deal expire and then resuming negotiations with Wal-Mart. But by then, Bezos’s Khrushchev-like willingness to use the thermonuclear option had had its intended effect. The Quidsi executives stuck with Amazon, largely out of fear. The deal was announced on Nov. 8, 2010.
Blackburn, Amazon’s mergers-and-acquisitions chief, said in a 2012 interview that everything the company did in the diapers market was planned beforehand and was unrelated to competing with Quidsi. He said that Quidsi was similar to shoe retailer Zappos, which Amazon acquired in 2009: a “stubbornly independent company building an extremely flexible franchise.”
The Federal Trade Commission scrutinized the acquisition for four and a half months, going beyond the standard review to the second-request phase, where companies must provide more information about a transaction. The deal raised a host of red flags, such as the elimination of a major player in a competitive category, according to an FTC official familiar with the review. The merger was eventually approved, in part because it did not result in a monopoly. Costco Wholesale, Target, and plenty of other companies sold diapers online and off.
Bezos won, neutralizing an incipient competitor and filling another set of shelves in his Everything Store. Quidsi soon expanded into pet supplies with Wag.com and toys with Yoyo.com. Wal-Mart missed the chance to acquire a talented team of entrepreneurs who’d gone toe to toe with Amazon in a new product category. And insiders were once again left marveling at how Bezos had engineered another acquisition by driving his target off a cliff.

The people who do well at Amazon are often those who thrive in an adversarial atmosphere with almost constant friction. Bezos abhors what he calls “social cohesion,” the natural impulse to seek consensus. He’d rather his minions battle it out backed by numbers and passion, and he has codified this approach in one of Amazon’s 14 leadership principles—the company’s highly prized values that are often discussed and inculcated into new hires:
Have Backbone; Disagree and Commit
Leaders are obligated to respectfully challenge decisions when they disagree, even when doing so is uncomfortable or exhausting. Leaders have conviction and are tenacious. They do not compromise for the sake of social cohesion. Once a decision is determined, they commit wholly.
Some employees love this confrontational culture and find they can’t work effectively anywhere else. “Everybody knows how hard it is and chooses to be there,” says Faisal Masud, who spent five years in the retail business. “You are learning constantly, and the pace of innovation is thrilling. I filed patents; I innovated. There is a fierce competitiveness in everything you do.” The professional networking site LinkedIn is full of “boomerangs”—Amazon-speak for executives who left the company and then returned.

Bezos in his office in 1999
Photograph by David Burnett/Contact Press Images

But other alumni call Amazon’s internal environment a “gladiator culture” and wouldn’t think of returning. Many last less than two years. “It’s a weird mix of a startup that is trying to be supercorporate and a corporation that is trying hard to still be a startup,” says Jenny Dibble, who was a marketing manager there for five months in 2011. She found her bosses were unreceptive to her ideas about using social media and that the long hours were incompatible with raising a family. “It was not a friendly environment,” she says. Even leaving Amazon can be a combative process—the company is not above sending letters threatening legal action if an employee takes a similar job at a competitor. Masud, who left Amazon for EBay in 2010, received such a threat. (EBay resolved the matter privately.)
Employee churn doesn’t seem to damage Amazon, though. The company, aided by the appeal of its steadily increasing stock price, is an accomplished recruiter of talent. In its second-quarter earnings report in July, Amazon said its ranks had swelled to 97,000 full-time and part-time employees, up 40 percent from the year before. New hires are given an industry-average base salary, a signing bonus spread over two years, and a grant of restricted stock units spread over four years. Unlike Google and Microsoft, whose stock grants vest evenly year by year, Amazon backloads the vesting toward the end of the four-year period. Employees typically get 5 percent of their shares at the end of their first year, 15 percent their second year, and then 20 percent every six months over the final two years. Ensuing grants vest over two years and are also backloaded to ensure that employees keep working hard and are never inclined to coast.

Bezos with Amazon then-President Joe Galli (seated) in 1999
Photograph by David Burnett/Contact Press Images
Managers in departments of 50 people or more are often required to “top-grade” their subordinates on a curve and must dismiss the least effective performers. As a result, many Amazon employees live in perpetual fear; those who manage to get a positive review are often genuinely surprised.


There are few perks or unexpected performance bonuses at Amazon, though the company is more generous than it was the 1990s, when Bezos refused to give employees city bus passes because he didn’t want to give them any reason to rush out of the office to catch the last bus of the day. Employees now get cards that entitle them to free rides on Seattle’s regional transit system. Parking at the company’s offices in South Lake Union costs $220 a month, and Amazon reimburses employees—for $180. Conference room tables are a collection of blond-wood door-desks shoved together side by side. The vending machines take credit cards, and food in the company cafeterias is not subsidized. New hires get a backpack with a power adapter, a laptop dock, and orientation materials. When they resign, they’re asked to hand in all that equipment—including the backpack. These practices are also embedded in the sacrosanct leadership principles:
Frugality
We try not to spend money on things that don’t matter to customers. Frugality breeds resourcefulness, self-sufficiency, and invention. There are no extra points for head count, budget size, or fixed expense.
Bezos molded Amazon’s business principles through two decades of surviving in the thin atmosphere of low profit margins and fierce skepticism from the outside world. In a way, the entire company is built around his brain—an amplification machine meant to disseminate his ingenuity and drive across the greatest possible radius. “It’s scaffolding to magnify the thinking embodied by Jeff,” says Wilke, the senior vice president for North American retail. “Jeff was learning as he went along. He learned things from each of us who had expertise and incorporated the best pieces into his mental model. Now everyone is expected to think as much as they can like Jeff.”
Bezos runs the final meetings in the biannual operating reviews, dubbed OP1 (held over the summer) and OP2 (after the holidays). Teams work intensely for months preparing for their sessions with the CEO, drawing up six-page narratives that spell out their plans for the year ahead. A few years ago, the company refined this process further to make the narratives more easily digestible for Bezos and other members of his senior leadership group, called the S Team, who cycle through many topics during these reviews. Now every narrative includes at the top of the page a list of a few rules, called tenets, that guide the group’s hard decisions and allow it to move fast, without constant supervision.

Once a week, usually on Tuesdays, various departments meet with their managers to review spreadsheets of data important to their business. Customer anecdotes have no place at these meetings; numbers alone must demonstrate what’s working and what’s broken, how customers are behaving, and ultimately how well the company overall is performing. “This is what, for employees, is so absolutely scary and impressive about the executive team. They force you to look at the numbers and answer every single question about why specific things happened,” says Dave Cotter, who spent four years at Amazon as a general manager in various divisions. “Because Amazon has so much volume, it’s a way to make very quick decisions and not get into subjective debates. The data doesn’t lie.”

The metrics meetings culminate every Wednesday with the Weekly Business Review, one of the company’s most important rituals, which is run by Wilke. Sixty managers in the retail business gather in one room to discuss their departments, share data about defects and inventory turns, and talk about forecasts and the complex interactions between different parts of the company.
Bezos does not attend these meetings. He spends more time on Amazon’s newer businesses, such as Amazon Web Services, the streaming video and music initiatives, and, in particular, the Kindle and Kindle Fire efforts. (Executives joke darkly that employees can’t even pass gas in the Kindle buildings without the CEO’s permission.) But Bezos can always make his presence felt anywhere in the company.
After the lubricant fracas of 2010, for example, e-mail marketing fell squarely under his purview. He carefully monitored efforts to filter the kinds of messages that could be sent to customers, and he tried to think about the challenge of e-mail outreach in fresh ways. Then, in late 2011, he had what he considered to be a significant new idea.

Bezos is a fan of e-mail newsletters such as veryshortlist.com, a daily assortment of cultural tidbits from the Web, and Cool Tools, a compendium of technology tips and product reviews written by Kevin Kelly, a co-founder of Wired. Both are short, well-written, and informative. Perhaps, Bezos reasoned, Amazon should be sending a single well-crafted e-mail every week—a short digital magazine—instead of a succession of bland, algorithm-generated marketing pitches. He asked Shure, the marketing vice president, to explore the idea.

Door-desks are a part of Amazon’s frugal culture
Courtesy Glassdoor
From late 2011 through early 2012, Shure’s group presented a variety of concepts to Bezos. One version revolved around celebrity Q&As, another highlighted interesting historical facts about products. The project never progressed—it fared poorly in tests with customers—and several participants remember the process as being particularly excruciating. In one meeting, Bezos quietly thumbed through the mock-ups as everyone waited in silence. “Here’s the problem with this,” Bezos said, according to people who were present. “I’m already bored.” He liked the last concept the most, which suggested profiling a selection of products that were suddenly hot, such as Guy Fawkes masks and CDs by the Grammy-winning British singer Adele. “But the headlines need to be punchier,” he told the group, which included the writers of the material. “And some of this is just bad writing. If you were doing this as a blogger, you would starve.”

Finally he turned his attention to Shure, who, like so many other marketing vice presidents throughout Amazon’s history, was an easy target.
“Steve, why haven’t I seen anything on this in three months?”
“Well, I had to find an editor and work through mock-ups.”
“This is developing too slow. Do you care about this?”
“Yes, Jeff, we care.”

“Strip the design down, it’s too complicated. Also, it needs to move faster!”
Jeff Bezos grew up in a tight-knit family, with two deeply involved and caring parents, Jackie and Mike, and two close younger siblings, Christina and Mark. Jackie, who gave birth to Bezos just two weeks after she turned 17, was a towering figure of authority to Bezos and his friends. Mike, also known as Miguel, was a Cuban immigrant who arrived in America at age 18, alone and penniless, knowing only one English word: hamburger. Through grit and determination, he got a college education and climbed through the ranks of Exxon as a petroleum engineer and manager, in a career that took the Bezos family to Houston, Pensacola, Fla., Miami, and, after Bezos left for college, cities in Europe and South America.
Yet for a brief period early in his life, before this ordinary if peripatetic childhood, Bezos lived alone with his mother and grandparents. And before that, he lived with his mother and his biological father, a man named Ted Jorgensen. Bezos has said the only time he thinks about Jorgensen is when he’s filling out a medical form that asks for his family history. He told Wired in 1999 that he’d never met the man. Strictly speaking, that’s not true: Bezos last saw him when he was 3 years old. And while Bezos’s professional life has been closely studied and celebrated over the last two decades, this story has never been told.


A 5-year-old Bezos at his grandfather’s ranch in Cotulla, Tex.
Courtesy Amazon
Jorgensen was a circus performer and one of Albuquerque’s best unicyclists in the 1960s. A newspaper photograph taken in 1961, when he was 16, shows him standing on the pedals of his unicycle facing backward, one hand on the seat, the other splayed theatrically to the side, his expression tense with concentration. The caption says he was awarded “most versatile rider” in the local unicycle club.
That year, Jorgensen and a half-dozen other riders traveled the country playing unicycle polo in a team managed by Lloyd Smith, the owner of a local bike shop. Jorgensen’s team was victorious in places such as Newport Beach, Calif., and Boulder, Colo. The Albuquerque Tribune has an account of the event: Four hundred people showed up at a shopping center parking lot in freezing weather to watch the teams swivel around in four inches of snow wielding three-foot-long plastic mallets in pursuit of a six-inch rubber ball. Jorgensen’s team swept a doubleheader, 3 to 2 and 6 to 5.
In 1963, Jorgensen’s troupe resurfaced as the Unicycle Wranglers, touring county fairs, sporting events, and circuses. They square-danced, did the jitterbug and the twist, skipped rope, and rode on a high wire. The group practiced constantly, rehearsing three times a week at Smith’s shop and taking dance classes twice a week. “It’s like balancing on greased lightning and dancing all at the same time,” one member told the Tribune. When the Ringling Brothers and Barnum & Bailey Circus came to town, the Wranglers performed under the big top, and in the spring of 1965 they performed in eight local shows of the Rude Brothers Circus.
Jorgensen was born in 1944 in Chicago to a family of Baptists. His father moved the family to Albuquerque when Jorgensen and his younger brother, Gordon, were in elementary school. Ted’s father took a job as a purchase agent at Sandia Base (today’s Sandia National Laboratories), then the largest nuclear weapons installation in the country, handling the procurement of supplies at the base.


Bezos as a teenager, after his family moved to Miami, in 1982
Photograph by Seth Poppel/Yearbook Library
In high school, Jorgensen started dating Jacklyn Gise, a girl two years his junior whose father also worked at Sandia Base. Their dads knew each other. Her father, Lawrence Preston Gise, known to friends as Preston and to his family as Pop, ran the local office of the U.S. Atomic Energy Commission, the federal agency that managed the nuclear weapons program after Harry S Truman took it from the military following World War II.
Jorgensen was 18 and finishing his senior year in high school when Gise became pregnant. She was a sophomore. They were in love and decided to get married. Her parents gave them money to fly to Juárez, Mexico, for a ceremony. A few months later, on July 19, 1963, they repeated their vows at the Gises’ house. Because she was underage, both of their mothers signed the application for a marriage license. The baby was born on Jan. 12, 1964. They named him Jeffrey Preston Jorgensen.

The new parents rented an apartment in Albuquerque’s Southeast Heights neighborhood. Jackie finished high school, and during the day, her mother, Mattie, took care of the baby. Life was difficult. Jorgensen was perpetually broke, and they had only one car, his cream-colored ’55 Chevy. Belonging to a unicycle troupe didn’t pay much. The Wranglers divided their fees among all members, with Smith taking a generous cut off the top. Eventually, Jorgensen got a $1.25-an-hour job at the Globe Department Store, part of Walgreen’s short-lived foray into the promising discount retail market being pioneered at the time by Kmart and Wal-Mart. Occasionally Jackie brought the baby to the store to visit.
Their marriage was probably doomed from the start. Jorgensen had a habit of drinking too much and staying out too late. He was an inattentive dad and husband. Jackie’s father tried to help him; he paid his son-in-law’s tuition at the University of New Mexico, but Jorgensen dropped out after a few semesters. Preston Gise then tried to get Jorgensen a job with the New Mexico State Police, but Jorgensen wasn’t interested.

Jackie and Mike Bezos, Jeff’s parents, in 2012
Photograph by Clint Spaulding/Patrick McMullan
Eventually, Jackie took the child and moved back in with her parents at Sandia. In June 1965, when the baby was 17 months old, she filed for divorce. The court ordered Ted to pay $40 a month in child support. Court records indicate that his income at the time was $180 a month. Over the next few years, he visited his son occasionally but missed many support payments.
Then Jackie took a job working in the bookkeeping department of the Bank of New Mexico and met Miguel Bezos, who was working the overnight shift while he attended the University of Albuquerque. On several occasions when Ted was visiting his son, Bezos would be there, and they avoided each other. But Ted asked around and heard he was a good man.

In 1968, Jackie called Ted and told him she was marrying Miguel and moving to Houston. She told him he could stop paying child support and asked him not to interfere in their lives. Her father confronted him and made him promise to stay away. Jackie also wanted to give Jeffrey her new husband’s surname and let Miguel adopt him. Ted’s permission was needed for the adoption. After thinking it over and reasoning that the boy would probably have a better life as the son of Jackie and her new husband, Ted obliged. After a few years, he lost track of the family and then forgot their last name.
If you were to search the world for the polar opposite of sprawling, secretive, powerful Amazon, you might arrive at a small bike shop in Glendale, Ariz., just north of Phoenix. It’s called the Roadrunner Bike Center. It sits in a shoebox-shape space in an ordinary shopping center next to the Hot Cutz Salon & Spa and down a ways from a Walmart grocery store. It offers a small selection of premium BMX and dirt bikes from companies such as Giant, Haro, and Redline, brands that carefully select their retail partners and generally do not sell to websites or discount outlets. “The old guy that runs this is always there and you can tell he loves to fix and sell bikes,” writes one customer in a typically favorable online review of the store. “When you buy from him he will take care of you. He also is the cheapest place I have ever taken a bike for a service, I think sometimes he runs a special for $30! That’s insane!”
A red poster board with the hand-scrawled words, “Layaway for the holidays!” leans against the window. Hanging on a wall next to the front counter, there’s a framed newspaper clipping with a photograph of a 16-year-old boy with a flattop haircut, standing up on the pedals of his unicycle, one hand on the seat and the other flared daringly out to the side.


Jorgensen, Bezos’s biological father, in 1961
Courtesy Ted Jorgensen
I found Ted Jorgensen, Jeff Bezos’s biological father, behind the counter of his bike shop in late 2012. I’d considered a number of ways he might react to my unannounced appearance but gave a very low probability to the likelihood of what actually happened: He had no idea what I was talking about. Jorgensen said he didn’t know who Jeff Bezos was and was baffled by my suggestion that he was the father of this famous CEO.
I mentioned Jacklyn Gise and Jeffrey, the son they had during their brief teenage marriage. The old man’s face flushed with recognition. “Is he still alive?” he asked, not yet fully comprehending.
“Your son is one of the most successful men on the planet,” I told him. I showed him some Internet photographs on my smartphone, and for the first time in 45 years, Jorgensen saw his biological son. His eyes filled with sorrow and disbelief.
I took Jorgensen and his wife, Linda, to a steak dinner, and his story tumbled out. When the Bezos family moved from Albuquerque to Houston in 1968 and Jorgensen promised Jackie and her father that he would stay out of their lives, he remained in Albuquerque. He performed with his troupe and took odd jobs. He drove an ambulance and worked as an installer for Western Electric, a local utility.

In his twenties, he moved to Hollywood to help Smith, the Wranglers’ manager, start a new bike shop, and then to Tucson, looking for work. In 1972 he was mugged outside a convenience store after buying cigarettes. The assailants hit him with a two-by-four and broke his jaw in 10 places.

Ted Jorgensen today
Photograph by Benjamin Rasmussen for Bloomberg Businessweek
Then he finally started to take control of his life. In 1974 he moved to Phoenix and quit drinking. Six years later he put together every cent he had and bought the bike shop from its owner. He’s run the store ever since, moving it several times, eventually settling into its current location on the northern edge of the Phoenix metropolitan area, adjacent to the New River Mountains. He met Linda at the bike shop. She stood him up on their first date but showed up the second time he asked her out. They’ve been married for 25 years. Linda says they’ve been talking privately about “Jeffrey” and replaying Ted’s youthful mistakes for years.

Ted has no other children; Linda has four sons from a previous marriage. All are close with their stepfather, especially the youngest, Darin Fala, who spent the most time with him growing up. But Ted never told them that he had another child. He says he was sure he would never see or hear anything about his son again, so what was the point?
Ted is 69 now and has heart problems, emphysema, and an aversion to the idea of retirement. “I don’t want to sit at home and rot in front of the television,” he says. He’s friendly and, his wife says, deeply compassionate. The store is less than 30 miles from four Amazon fulfillment centers, but if he ever saw Bezos on television or read an article about Amazon, he didn’t make the connection. “I didn’t know where he was, if he had a good job or not, or if he was alive or dead,” he says. The face of his child, frozen in infancy, has been stuck in his mind for nearly half a century.
He says he always wanted to reconnect with Jeffrey—whatever his occupation or station—and seems ashamed that he agreed to stay out of his life all those years ago. “I wasn’t a good father or a husband,” he says. “It was really all my fault. I don’t blame Jackie at all.”
When I left Ted and his wife after dinner, they were still in shock and decided that they weren’t going to tell Linda’s sons. The story seemed too far-fetched. But a few months later, in early 2013, I got a phone call from Fala, a senior project manager at Honeywell who also lives in Phoenix. Ted, Fala said, had called a family meeting the previous Saturday afternoon. “I bet he’s going to tell us he has a son or daughter out there,” Fala’s wife had guessed correctly.
The gathering was wrenching. “My wife calls me unemotional because she has never seen me cry,” Fala says. “Ted is the same way. Saturday was the most emotion I’ve ever seen out of him, as far as sadness and regret. It was overwhelming.” Ted decided he wanted to reach out to the Bezos family and reestablish contact and asked Fala to help him craft letters to Bezos and Jackie.

Curious about Bezos, Fala had watched online clips of the Amazon CEO being interviewed, including one from The Daily Show with Jon Stewart. He was startled to hear Bezos’s laugh. He’d heard it before. He grew up listening to it. “He has Ted’s laugh!” Fala said in amazement. “It’s almost exact.”
Excerpted from the book THE EVERYTHING STORE: Jeff Bezos and the Age of Amazon, by Brad Stone. Copyright © 2013 by Brad Stone. Reprinted with permission of Little, Brown and Company; all rights reserved.


Brands follow their new-age audience to TikTok videos


Chinese brands have already seen success on TikTok, but home-grown brands yet to test the app’s advertising value.

Earlier this week, Flipkart garnered over three billion views in three days on popular short-video app TikTok, for a campaign on its upcoming Big Billion Days festive sale.

This is perhaps the first instance of a big ecommerce player using the ByteDance-owned app to push its brand as it looked to target the next 100 million internet users.

Flipkart’s campaign featured Amitabh Bachchan, MS Dhoni and Alia Bhatt and has been running under the hashtag next #BigBillionStar, with the winners bagging Realme 3 phones.

“We have also partnered with TikTok, to reach out to the new-age audience, through a challenge underpinning user-generated content. So far, the challenge has clocked in over 4.1billion views on the platform,” said Flipkart’s group chief executive Kalyan Krishnamurthy.

Experts tracking the space say that after a two-week ban was lifted by the courts in April, TikTok has been strongly chasing brands and advertising agencies to onboard influencers.

Brands follow their new-age audience to TikTok videos
“This year, we are partnering with an array of regional and local influencers and a diverse portfolio of online and offline brands,” said Vikas Gupta, vice-president, marketing at Flipkart. “We plan to reach out to the next 200 million consumers, who we believe will hail from smaller cities and will need easy discovery and they are not just accessible through mainstream media channels anymore,” he added.

Chinese brands like Oppo, Vivo, Club Factory and brands like Pepsico have already seen success on TikTok, but home-grown brands apart from the likes of Myntra and Snapdeal have yet to test the app’s advertising value, says Aditya Gurwara, a marketing expert.

Emerging consumer brands like Dunzo, Bounce, dating app TanTan, social commerce platform Meesho and short-video social network app Vigo have also been advertising on the ByteDance-owned app to reach out to a new set of people.

In India, TikTok claims to have over 120 million monthly active users and throwing trending hashtags as a challenge has emerged as its big money-making tool. TikTok also makes money through what is known as cost per mile, cost per day and cost per click methods. While some hashtags are selected by Tik-Tok, other specific ones are paid for by advertisers.

“These packages are sold for over Rs 50 lakh and trend for three days. The brands get a complimentary, in-app, full-day advertisement along with these packages. TikTok promises 300 million views for the silver package, and 600 million views for gold package,” an expert said. An influencer with 10 million followers charges Rs 80,000-1,20,000 for generating over a million views, while a celebrity charges Rs 2-4 lakh for the same.

Get rich by being penny wise, pound wiser


Their bank accounts may be flush with funds, but the rich don’t just drop cash on a whim. In fact, the ones who are good with money can be quite frugal
businessinsider.in

You don’t have to be a billionaire to be good with money. Making sound financial decisions is about habits, not income.

People who are good with money, even the wealthy ones, are always looking for a way to not spend unnecessarily on a whim.


Here are some of the things they aren’t likely to spend on.

Buying a new car frequently

“The person who actually has several hundred thousand in the bank or may even be a millionaire is going to drive a fiveyear-old car or a 10-year-old car,” says personal finance expert and author Lynette Khalfani-Cox.

A new car loses 10 per cent of its value in the first month, and 20 per cent of its value in the first year. Someone who’s good with money won’t want to take on that kind of loss. They know that the best value comes from keeping the same car for a while, instead of splurging on the newest model every year.

Houses they can’t afford

Those who are good with money aren’t looking to spend more than they can afford on a home. Most of us want to feel like we are getting the most value for our money, without getting ripped off. And though millionaires and billionaires may have hefty bank accounts, some prefer not to purchase extravagant homes.

Splurge on luxury brands

Those who are good with money are “less interested in brand names or tags and labels,” says Khalfani-Cox. And it seems that those with wealth are starting to take this cue as well. Showing off wealth is no longer the way to signify having wealth. In the US particularly, the top one per cent have been spending less on material goods. Instead, many wealthy people are opting to spend on privacy, exclusive wellness and fitness routines, and investing in education instead of buying designer items.

Stuff over experiences

Accordi ng to research, money and material things can generate only this much happiness. Meaningful experiences are what truly define a life well lived. According to Jaime Tardy, author of The Eventual Millionaire, the wealthy choose once-in-a-lifetime experiences over new gadgets and material things.



Deepika Padukone has said, “One of the first things that my parents taught me is to live within your means”


Retired NBA player Robert Horry has said, “I owned two Ferraris when I was playing [he retired in 2008]. I also liked watches but have sold many of them. That’s where my frugal part kicks in”


IKEA’s founder, the late Ingvar Kamprad did not wear anything that was not from a flea market to “set a good example”

Which are the most profitable businesses that I can start in 5 lakhs?

No business is done with capital and skill. If you also want to follow your passion and really feel that you have to do your own work, then first find out about your passion. Somewhere your passion is born after talking to some friends, after reading stories of other successful people, after getting bored of daily work or to become rich from shortcut. If this is true, then let your daily life go on. You will have to work harder in your own work.

Now come to the issue of what work can be done with five lakh rupees.

If you are from village and have cultivable land then you can earn good money by investing some on your own fields.

Dairy Farm, Goat Farming, Beekeeping
Organic farming
Cash crop cultivation from polyhouse
Poultry farming
Cultivation of Mushrooms and Fruits
For doing work related to farming, you can get information in Krishi Vigyan Kendra or Gram Sevak and agricultural fairs. Farming work does not cost much money and a loan from the bank can be arranged at a low interest rate only.

If you have any skill, then you can make it your business. For example, if you have done ITI or diploma, instead of looking for a job, you can open your own repair shop.

Motor and water pump repairing
TV and electronic equipment repairing
Mobile and Computer Repairing
Bike and car service
If you have a good knowledge of computer then you can do many things.

Starting Your Own Online Business
Creating a website or mobile app
Making data entry work
Making revenue by creating YouTube channel or blog
Teach online tuition
If you already have a business, then you can also invest in it. By updating your shop to the present day. Many new shops can be opened by themselves.

There is no shortage of work, just make sure that what you have to do. You have to work hard, there is no shortcut to it.


 कोई भी व्यवसाय पूँजी से नही हुनर और लगन से किए जाते हैं. अगर आप भी अपने पैशन को फोलो करना चाहते हो और वाक़ई लगता हैं कि आपको अपना ख़ुद का काम करना हैं तो पहले अपने पैशन के बारे में पता कीजिए. कही आपका पैशन कुछ दोस्तों से बात करने के बाद, दूसरे सफल लोगों की कहानियाँ पढ़ने के बाद, रोज़मर्रा के काम की ऊब के बाद या शोर्टकट से अमीर बनने के लिए तो नही पैदा हुआ हैं. अगर यह सच हैं तो आप अपनी जो रोज़मर्रा की ज़िंदगी चल रही है, उसे चलने दे. ख़ुद के काम मे आपको ज़्यादा मेहनत करनी पड़ेगी.

अब आते हैं मुद्दे की बात पर कि पाँच लाख रुपए से क्या काम किए जा सकते हैं.

अगर आप गाँव से हैं और खेती करने योग्य ज़मीन हैं तो आप ख़ुद के खेतों पर कुछ निवेश करके अच्छा पैसा कमा सकते हैं.

डेयरी फ़ार्म, बकरी पालन, मधुमक्खी पालन
ओरगनिक खेती
पोलीहाउस से नक़द फ़सल की खेती
मुर्ग़ी पालन
मशरूम और फुलों की खेती
खेतीबाड़ी से सम्बंधित काम करने के लिए आपको कृषि विज्ञान केंद्र या ग्राम सेवक और कृषि मेलों मे जानकारी ली जा सकती हैं. खेतीबाड़ी के काम में ज़्यादा पैसे भी नही लगते हैं और कम ब्याज दर पर ही बैंक से ऋण की व्यवस्था हो सकती हैं.

अगर आप के पास कोई हुनर हैं तो उसे ही आप अपना बिज़नेस बना सकते हैं. जैसे कि आपने आईटीआई या डिप्लोमा किया हुआ हैं तो नौकरी की तलाश के बजाय ख़ुद की रिपेयरिंग की दुकान खोल सकते हैं.

मोटर एवं वाटर पम्प रिपेयरिंग
टीवी और इलेक्ट्रोनिक उपकरण रिपेयरिंग
मोबाइल और कम्प्यूटर रिपेयरिंग
Bike और car service
अगर आप को कम्प्यूटर का अच्छा ख़ासा ज्ञान हैं तो आप कई काम कर सकते हैं.

ओनलाइन ख़ुद का व्यापार शुरू करना
वेबसाइट या मोबाइल एप का निर्माण करना
Data Entry का काम करना
YouTube channel या Blog बना कर आमदनी करना
ओनलाइन ट्यूशन पढ़ाना
अगर आप के पास पहले से व्यवसाय हैं तो आप उसमें भी निवेश कर सकते हैं. अपनी दुकान को आज के ज़माने के मुताबिक़ अपडेट करके. ख़ुद भी कई नए दुकान खोले जा सकते हैं.

काम की कोई कमी नही हैं केवल आपको क्या करना हैं, उसे सुनिश्चित कर लीजिए. मेहनत तो आपको करनी ही पड़ेगी, उसका कोई शोर्टकट नही हैं.


About GST Information in Marathi

About GST Information in Marathi

gst information in marathi
gst information in marathi

Formjacking - How to trap a cyber criminal in his own web of deceit


Formjacking is a new type of threat that’s being compared to ATM skimmers, and the only way to protect your website is by putting the best security measures in place

Chances are that you have never heard of formjacking at all. Or you may have heard that it’s the internet version of an ATM skimmer.

For those who’ve never heard of it, formjacking has just been highlighted in the newest Symantec Internet Security Threat Report. The report lists this cybercrime as one of the most serious and lucrative attacks in the history of cyber-badness. Symantec says that it’s so successful that about 4,800 websites are infected with formjacking software every month.


Stealing credit card info

What happens is that a bad actor places a small piece of code on to an e-commerce website and then waits. In a typical event, the code reads credit card information as the victim enters it, and then sends that information to the bad guy. Meanwhile, the actual e-commerce transaction goes through as if nothing has happened. The victim never knows that the credit card information has been stolen — until it shows up on a malicious site or charges start showing up on card statements.

Malicious code in disguise

“From a consumer standpoint, there’s nothing to see,” says Kevin Haley, director of product management for security response at Symantec. “It’s the equivalent of a skimmer at an ATM unless you can go through the code on a website.” But chances are, you won’t find it even if you look. Malware developers are good at disguising malicious code as harmless or routine.

“It’s up to the website owners to protect against this threat,” Haley says. He noted that some major e-commerce sites have been caught with formjacking software on their websites, “but small and medium businesses are more likely to be affected”. The reason smaller businesses can be a target is because they are less likely to have the sophisticated protection that larger sites have.

How to protect websites

“Some of these attacks are going through third-party applications such as chats and surveys,” Haley explains, saying that it’s important to have a strong relationship with the supplier of such software. “You should test updates before using them,” Haley says. Then, “scan your websites looking for unexpected code”.

It’s important that you find tools that will let you lock down your websites and alert you if there are any changes. This includes following security best practices regarding managing and protecting your websites.



Cybercriminals have now shifted their target from consumers to enterprises

Crooks fake e-commerce site, dupe user of ₹52k




New Delhi:

Be cautious while searching for customer care numbers of e-commerce websites on the internet as fraudsters have flooded search engines with fake sites and numbers to cheat people by making them reveal their account details.


Renu Gupta learned about this the hard way when her daughter ended up on a similar fake website of a popular ecommerce portal. A man posing as a customer care representative not only emptied the woman’s bank account but even sent her messages showing the transactions he was making and mocked her saying, “ Ab paisa gaya” (now your money is gone).

Gupta, who runs a boutique in Rohini Sector-24 in New Delhi, said that they had ordered a handbag from a popular e-commerce website but were not satisfied with the quality of the product and so decided to return it. On March 1, her daughter got the number of the customer service representative of the portal after googling it.

“The man posed as a representative and while talking to my daughter he managed to make her share the account details on the pretext of transferring the refund amount. I soon started receiving messages of withdrawals being made from my account and before I could get the card blocked, the man had already taken Rs 15,000,” Gupta said.

The woman shared the incident with her bank officials and asked them if it was safe to keep the remainder amount in the account as she had to pay the EMI of her house. She was assured that no harm would be done since the ATM card had been blocked.

“The hacker used UPI to hack into my account and to mock me, he even sent me messages on WhatsApp showing the transfers being made. My husband called him up and requested him to give back the money, but he snapped back,” the woman said, adding that in total she lost approximately Rs 52,000 in the fraud. Despite more than a week after the incident, the cops are yet to register a case.

Cops said fraudsters have flooded the search engines with fake customer care numbers that are being used to dupe scores of people. The customers who are seeking a refund are trapped into sharing confidential details by the accused who then quickly empty the accounts.

New useful android app

Pass it On


This website is part of the US-based Foundation for a Better Life, a non-profit that shares inspirational messages to promote good values and higher thinking. It does this by commissioning billboards with positive messages and producing inspirational TV commercials and radio spots in countries all around the world.

On this website, you will find all these TV videos, billboard messages, downloadable audio files, and even thought-provoking quotes that are illustrated with the help of beautiful images. All these digital assets can be shared with friends and family for free via social networks and instant messaging. Pass it On also has a section where readers can share their inspiring anecdotes and messages, as well as stories of their personal heroes. www.passiton.com

Science 101

Here you will find the latest science stories, written in a way that is easy to understand and interesting to read. The features on Science 101 are categorised into sections such as space, biology, culture, health, mind and technology.

For instance, you can read about the five coolest innovations of 2018, how the shape of your skull could reveal your genetic ancestry, 30 practical uses for Coca-Cola, what made the extinct Megalodon one of the most dangerous predators ever, what happens in your brain when you’re sad, five ways to slow down Alzheimer’s, things you didn’t know about planets, strange creatures living on your body right now, and more. The site is updated every day so there’s always something new to read and interesting to learn on this website. www.science101.com

Typatone

This website converts any text you input into music. When you first start to type a message, you will hear the melody at the speed you type, but when you play it back, Typatone adds rhythm to make it sound like a song. To do this, the web app developers researched the occurrence of letters in the English language: The most frequently occurring letters were assigned melodic notes, while the lesser-occurring alphabets are programmed to give the musical phrases more variety and spice. The web app also includes six filters so you can choose your favourite sound; plus, the tempo is set to vary depending on the time; this means your music always sounds different. So, if you need ambient music for when you’re working, or even if you want to share a musical note with friends, try Typatone; words never sounded sweeter.typatone.com

downloads

Aloha Browser

Aloha is a smartphone browser that is built to protect your privacy. It comes with a VPN to mask your location and secure your web browsing when logged on to public Wi-Fi hotspots. Simply tap the VPN badge to enable the mode and the browser chooses a random global server to route your web requests. You also get an ad-blocker to blank out invasive promotional content, and a private mode—which can be configured to open with a fingerprint or passcode only—to disable browsing history and tracking cookies. You also get a native video player, with support for VR content playback, and a download manager that lets you save web content to a password-protected private folder. Aloha includes a newsfeed, which you can customise by country and interest; a QR code reader; a night mode to cut screen glare, and the option to choose from multiple search engines including Bing, Google and DuckDuckGo.

Android, iOS Free

Manoké

Manoké is a music app that gives you access to song sheets of popular Bollywood and regional movie songs.

It is ideal for music teachers, as well as those who are learning to play the guitar, keyboard or piano on their own. When you create an account, you get access to over 100 songs in Hindi, Tamil, Kannada and Bengali. Each composition comes with sheet music for multiple instruments, including tablature for acoustic and bass guitar, notes for the keyboard, pads, drums and more. Students of Indian classical music can also change the notation style to show swaras instead of chords. The app lets you mute individual instruments so you can focus on a specific track only. Manoké even has a lyrics mode for karaoke where words scroll by in sync with the tempo, along with chord changes. It even provides options to change the song’s tempo, key, enables a metronome, and record yourself playing along.

Android, iOS Free

Typoman Mobile

In this mashup between a word puzzle and a side-scroller, you have to guide Typoman, who is made of alphabets, across a dark world crawling with monsters and traps. Instead of fighting the creatures, you have to solve word jumbles to progress. Game controls include a D-pad to move Typoman, a jump button, and grab-and-lift controls to grasp and carry a letter. This action is required when you want to use an alphabet as a step or to push it toward a jumble to form a word. The answers are always related to the action you may have to follow. For instance, forming the word “open” may unlock a door, “turn” will make wheels move, or straightening the letter “L” to form the word “lever” will disarm a trap. You also have to be quick to avoid being captured by the creatures. Typoman Mobile really makes you think and the inky graphics only add to the game's appeal.

Android, iOS Free

IT co customers seek ‘flexi over fixed’




Bengaluru:

Many customers of Indian IT firms are placing demands that go beyond the commercial construct of a fixed price project, a form of services contract where the company takes the responsibility for delivering a solution for a certain price and within a mutually agreed time-frame.


The arrangement is meant to give vendors flexibility in the staffing and execution of the project. But IT firms are battling what is called a “pseudo FP (fixed price)”, an industry parlance for customers controlling staffing requirements, including selecting campus recruits, keeping tabs on the operations and controlling the entire experience.

Though Indian IT companies don’t record a metric like “pseudo FP”, a large part of the FP contracts are said to be pseudo FP. Before FP contracts became popular, the standard contract was what is called a time and materials contract, where customers paid for the time spent by the IT vendor’s employees and the materials used by the vendor. In that model, customers exercised control over the employees they got.

On “pseudo FP” contracts, Capgemini COO Thierry Delaporte said: “There is a lot of different models that exist across the organisation, spanning industries and from one market to another. In America it is probably a little more towards time and material. In Europe probably towards more fixed price. Sometimes the client likes to control things. Sometimes he likes to limit his risk or push his risk to someone else. You cannot have both. You cannot have at the same time full control on everything and push responsibility to someone else.”

Akhilesh Tuteja, global cyber security practice co-leader and heads of the IT advisory practice for KPMG in India, said, “A lot of contracts are outcome based and many clients expect a high degree of visibility into their delivery structure, skills and scale of people. It creates a risk management lever too,” he said.

Hansa Iyengar, analyst in London-based Ovum Research, said: “Customers do have a say in who the vendor hires and this is specifically prominent in roles such as architects, team leads, project managers, agile coaches, etc, as these roles have a direct impact on the delivery quality.”

RIL to buy 83% stake in Grab for ₹146 crore




Bengaluru:

Reliance Industries has said that it will buy a 83% stake in Mumbai-based hyper-local logistics startup Grab a Grub Services for Rs 146 crore through a mix of fresh investment and buying shares from existing investors, according to a filing made to the stock exchanges.


“The investment will augment the group’s digital commerce initiatives and strengthen its logistics services, catering to both B2B and B2C segments,” said the company. The acquisition is being made through RIL’s subsidiary Reliance Industrial Investments and Holdings. TOI was the first to report about the deal in its February 28 edition.

Besides Grab, Reliance said it is also acquiring a 82% stake in Bengaluru-based C-Square Info Solutions, which provides software solutions with focus on the pharma sector, for Rs 82 crore. Some of the clients of the company include Apollo Pharmacy and Adcock Ingram.

Both these acquisitions will help Reliance with new commerce push which is expected to be launched by telecom arm Reliance Jio and Reliance Retail. RIL chief Mukesh Ambani had last year outlined the company’s online-to-offline (O2O) approach.

Alibaba penalises sellers evading taxes in India




New Delhi:

Days after the government’s crackdown on goods being sent to India in the guise of gifts by Chinese e-tailers, e-commerce giant Alibaba said it has taken action against thousands of sellers on its platform who have been caught in the act.


Officials in the Indian customs department last week said large shipments from Chinese e-commerce platforms have been landing on Indian shores, marked as ‘gifts’. Shipping goods as gifts allows an entity to avoid paying duties and taxes, as the government exempts gifts of up to Rs 5,000 under existing laws to allow NRIs to send them back home to relatives.

“AliExpress, as a marketplace, respects local regulations and laws and forbids any illegal activities by sellers on its platform,” an Alibaba spokesperson told TOI. “AliExpress has strict measures in place to take action against items that contain descriptions that encourage tax avoidance. Any infringing sellers found on the platform face penalties including store closure.”

The move comes against the backdrop of the government taking note of the fact that the national exchequer has been missing out on significant revenues in the form of duties and taxes that could have been collected from Chinese businesses selling goods over the internet. Domestic etailers, too, have had to face unfair competition from their counterparts from the neighbouring country.

“Not paying duties and taxes brings down the prices of goods significantly,” said a senior executive at a Bengaluru-based e-tailer. “The goods, including fashionwear, on Chinese platforms are at least 40-50% cheaper than what is available on Indian e-commmerce marketplaces.”

A senior Alibaba executive told TOI that the crackdown by the Chinese e-commerce giant on errant sellers on its platform has been gathering steam since the ‘Singles Day’ sale in November that helped it clock over $30 billion in 24 hours. “We have made our position very clear to our sellers through agreements on our platform,” he said.

Slowdown of online sales in China has prompted a host of Chinese e-tailers, including Shein, Club Factory and Alibaba’s e-tailing arm AliExpress, to look towards a nascent but booming Indian e-commerce market. Several of them have become as popular as Amazon or Flipkart on Google Playstore, according to app ranking platform App Annie. The Mumbai customs department last week said courier companies, too, have been informed about the issue of ‘gifts’ and their registrations will be cancelled if they are found flouting regulations.

You still bear e-pay surcharge on govt & utilities websites


RBI Directive Bars This Fee Being Passed On To Customers

Several government agencies and public utilities are disincentivising epayments by refusing to bear transaction costs charged by banks even as the Modi administration promotes digital India. Banks are passing on the cost of online payment to customers in several e-portals. In some cases, not only are charges being illegally passed on, the amount is also higher than what banks are allowed to charge merchants as fees.


Electricity consumers in Delhi have to pay 1% extra on their bill amount when they make payments through UPI. Consumers of Tata Power end up paying a surcharge when their bills are over Rs 2,000 in Mumbai and Rs 5,000 in Delhi. For train tickets booked on IRCTC, the most widely used e-commerce portal, customers are charged Rs 10 plus GST for UPI transactions over Rs 2,000. These are only illustrative examples and there are many other instances of agencies where the surcharge is passed on to customers.

A study on surcharges in digital payments by Ashish Das, department of mathematics, IIT-Bombay, has shown that despite a well-meaning policy and directives against passing on the surcharge to customers by the RBI, banks continue to facilitate surcharging. “Unauthorised surcharging has also burdened payment system users with huge additional costs. Just for online payments, it has led to extortions by the acquirer banks and their payment facilitators/aggregators to Rs 200 crore in 2018 alone,” said Das in the report.

The surcharge that is passed on to the customer is illegal. The RBI, in a notification on December 27, 2017, had asked banks to ensure that merchants do not pass on MDR (merchant discount rate) charges to customers while accepting payments through debit cards. The government extended this norm to payments under UPI as well.

According to Das, the surcharge is different from a ‘service charge’ or a ‘convenience fee’ that merchants are allowed to charge. Unlike a convenience fee, which is flat across all modes of payment, the surcharge varies depending on the mode of payment with credit cards attracting the highest surcharge. Also, in most of these cases the utility or government agency displays the actual billed amount while the bank deducts the billed amount plus surcharge. The report recommends that the government and the RBI take steps to ensure that consumers do not end up bearing the surcharge in electronic payment transactions. It also recommends that in credit cards, the cost of credit should be borne by the customer and not the bank.

Payment companies like Visa, Mastercard and RuPay impose caps on the card issuing bank on the maximum they will get in certain payments like government departments and MFs.

Intimation U/S 143(1) of Income Tax Act AY:2018-19


Please find attached the Income tax Intimation U/S 143(1) for PAN xxxxxxxx with respect to the return of income filed by you for the Assessment Year 2018-19.

        The attachment is password protected.  To open the attachment, please enter your PAN in lower case and date of birth in case of individual tax payers / date of incorporation for non-individual tax payers in DDMMYYYY format without any space between the PAN and date fields.  For example, if your PAN is ABCDE1234A and date of birth /incorporation is January 1, 1985 then the password will be abcde1234a01011985. The date of birth / incorporation should be same as furnished to the Department and available in the Income Tax Department PAN master (as printed on the PAN card).

             The digital intimation is authenticated by a digital signature obtained from a certifying authority under the Information Technology Act, 2000. To know the process of validation of digital signature, please click here https://incometaxindiaefiling.gov.in/portal/downloads10-11/cpc/DigitalSignatureValidation.pdf.




Deputy Commissioner of  Income Tax, CPC



Note:Income Tax Department does not seek any tax payer information like user name, password, details of ATM, credit cards, etc. Tax payers are advised not to part with such information on the basis of emails.

You paid all your tax dues and filed your return in time; yet you have received a notice under section 143(1) in your mailbox? Don’t worry, let’s help you understand this notice sent under section 143(1) by the income tax department as well as explain what suitable action can be taken to address it.

Review a few things to make sure this document pertains to your return

Check your name & address and PAN number
Check the Assessment Year (AY) for which the notice has been sent. The AY is 2015-16 for return filed for income earned in Financial Year (FY) 2014-15.
Check your e-filing acknowledgement number

Understanding Notice under section 143(1)

Notice or intimation under section 143(1) is a computer generated record. The income tax department validates each tax return with its own record and this notice usually only points out apparent mistakes found out by the system.

This intimation has two columns ‘As provided by taxpayer in the Return of Income’ and ‘As computed under section 143(1)’ where the amounts are compared for these – income under various heads and deductions, TDS and self tax payments. You can run through each of these amounts and find out where the discrepancy is. It could be that a certain TDS has been disallowed or there is a mismatch in self-assessment tax payments, a rounding off error. A final tax due or refundable is comp

When there is no mismatch

Its likely that all of the fields are matching and there is no tax due or refundable – in such a case you can safely assume the intimation to be an acknowledgement of your tax return. No further action is required from your side.

When there is a final tax due and you agree with it

You need to make payment of this tax due to the income tax department. Read how a payment can be made – here. Once you make a payment of the tax due, no further action is required from your end.

Where there is a final tax due and you do not agree with it

One of the situations where this arises is when a certain TDS has been disallowed. Or a self-assessment tax payment has not been considered. If you do not agree with the final calculations done by the department, you need to file a rectification under section 154(1). This can be done by – Log on to e-Filing application https://incometaxindiaefiling.gov.in/ and GO TO –> My Account –> Rectification request. You can also reach out to your assessing officer and submit an application in writing.

This Email is system generated. Please do not reply to this email ID.  For any queries, please call CPC on telephone number 1800-1034455 (Toll Free) or 080-46605200 and quote the Communication Reference Number mentioned in the Intimation.



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