Amazon is opening up one of its most closely guarded advantages, its logistics network, to businesses beyond its own marketplace. The newly announced Amazon Supply Chain Services (ASCS) marks a shift from using that infrastructure purely as a competitive moat to positioning it as a standalone business line.
The ambition is clearly to replicate, at least in part, what Amazon Web Services did for computing — turn internal capability into an external revenue engine.
Amazon's supply chain has been shaped by years of solving its own operational challenges — moving goods globally, storing them efficiently, and delivering at speed. That system, spanning freight, warehousing and last-mile delivery, was gradually extended to third-party sellers through Fulfillment by Amazon.
But logistics beyond the warehouse — cross-border shipping, customs, inventory allocation — has remained fragmented for most businesses. ASCS attempts to stitch those layers together, offering a single network that handles movement from factory floor to customer doorstep.
The pitch lands at a time when companies are rethinking supply chains after years of disruption. A unified system with visibility and predictable delivery could appeal, especially to firms juggling multiple logistics partners. Yet, the move also raises familiar questions. Amazon is both a service provider and, in many sectors, a competitor. For large retailers and brands, handing over logistics to a company that also sells directly to consumers may not be an easy call.
There's also the challenge of replicating AWS's success in a far more asset-heavy business. Unlike cloud computing, logistics requires constant capital, local execution and tight coordination across geographies.
ASCS is less a sudden pivot and more the formalisation of a trend already underway — Amazon quietly expanding logistics services beyond its own ecosystem over the past few years. Whether it becomes the next AWS-scale business remains uncertain. But by opening up its supply chain, Amazon is signalling that growth may increasingly come not just from selling products—but from moving them.
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