Amazon Flywheel an orange smile on a black background

Building Moats: How the Amazon Flywheel Reinforces Itself

“The most important thing [is] trying to find a business with a wide and long-lasting moat around it… protecting a terrific economic castle with an honest lord in charge of the castle.” – Warren Buffett

Warren Buffett’s castle-and-moat metaphor captures one of business’s most enduring ideas: build systems that protect themselves. Jeff Bezos did exactly that with the Amazon Flywheel—a system that compounds strength with every turn.

Amazon Flywheel

Like Sam Walton at Walmart, Jeff Bezos built Amazon around one principle: an obsession with the customer. In Amazon Unbound, Brad Stone describes the “Amazon flywheel”—the self-reinforcing engine that powers that obsession.

Here’s how the Amazon flywheel turns: Add more sellers -> increase product variety -> attract more customers -> generate more fees -> use those fees to lower prices -> attract even more customers.

Let’s break it down: Sellers: The outside vendors—individuals and companies—who list products on Amazon. The more sellers, the greater the variety customers find.

Customers: The heart of the flywheel. More variety attracts more shoppers, creating steady momentum on the demand side.

Fees: Every sale earns Amazon a small cut. More sellers and buyers mean more revenue—the fuel that keeps the flywheel spinning.

Then comes the crucial step: Amazon reinvests those earnings to lower prices. Lower prices attract more customers, which, in turn, draws more sellers eager to reach them.

That’s the Amazon flywheel in motion—a loop where each turn strengthens the next. Sellers bring customers, customers bring sales, sales bring efficiency, and efficiency lowers prices.

The flywheel is just one example of Amazon’s genius for building systems that strengthen with use. Behind it lies a culture willing to experiment endlessly to find what works.

A Culture of Experimentation

Amazon’s competitive moats—like the flywheel—are built on one foundation: a culture of experimentation.

Bezos hard-wired experimentation into Amazon’s DNA—a mindset now carried forward by Andy Jassy. Amazon Unbound is filled with examples of this creative wandering and bold “swing-for-the-fences” mentality.

That culture shows up everywhere at Amazon—especially in how it reframes failure. Employees are encouraged not just to take risks, but to expect that many will fail.

Employees knew they wouldn’t face punishment for failed experiments. They could test bold ideas, make mistakes, and keep moving forward.

Failure is woven into Amazon’s success story. Its culture of experimentation fuels the novel ideas behind its biggest swings—and the flywheel is proof of that process in action.

Takeaway: The Amazon flywheel compounds innovation through reinforcing loops—more sellers, more customers, lower prices, faster growth. It’s a moat powered by experimentation and protected by culture.

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Michael McHugh
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