Welcome to The Backroom, a window into what goes on behind the scenes as the Retail Dive team covers the stories and trends reshaping retail. You can check out all our podcast episodes (past and present)hereand listen on Apple Podcasts,Stitcher,iHeartRadioand Spotify.
The early years of the internet era were trumpeted as a renaissance of entrepreneurism and innovation, a time when garage-based startups could upend oversized, tired old legacy models of doing business.
Today the internet is still big and busy, but much of the activity is funneled through a few companies. Google and Facebook control a majority of the digital advertising market, which retailers depend on to reach customers.Product search is controlled mainly by Google and Amazon. Roughly a third of all e-commerce in the country happens through Amazon's website.
In recent years, the tech giants have come under scrutiny from the federal agencies tasked with reining in harmful monopolies and ensuring competitive markets. The tough stance isn't likely to change with a Democrat-controlled government, given the House of Representatives issued a scathing report into the tech giants last year. President Biden named Lena Kahn, who led the House investigation and authored an influential paper critical of how Amazon wields its market power, to the Federal Trade Commission.
To make sense of how the world of antitrust and market structures affect retailers across the industry, we talked with Sally Hubbard, a former assistant attorney general with New York's antitrust unit and current director of enforcement strategy at the Open Markets Institute.
Resource links:
More:
The Backroom: Just how competitive are retail markets? - Retail Dive