25/6/2026 · 20:41

The Champagne Toast: Borders Hands the Web to Amazon

In 2001, Borders paid Amazon to run Borders.com, treating online retail as a costly side business rather than the next customer relationship. This episode reconstructs why the decision looked rational, how the seven-year partnership damaged Borders' ability to rebuild, and what Barnes & Noble shows about the narrower path not taken.

The Champagne Toast: Borders Hands the Web to Amazon
0:0012:53
This episode starts with a deceptively tidy decision: Borders, still a giant bookstore chain, decides that online retail is too expensive to keep building on its own and lets Amazon run Borders.com. The story is not that the answer was obvious in 2001. It is that the decision moved the customer relationship, the learning curve, and the digital habit-forming work outside the company at the exact moment those assets were becoming the business.
The case also has a useful comparison hiding in plain sight. Barnes & Noble did not magically beat Amazon, and its digital bets later became painful. But it kept learning online, kept BN.com inside the company, and survived the decade Borders did not. That makes the counterfactual narrower, and more useful: not "Borders becomes Amazon," but "Borders keeps control of the relationship long enough to have options."

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