The Jeff Bezos' Strategy: Betting On What Will Never Change

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Pat Miller

Founder of the Small Business Owners Community

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Everyone’s Chasing What’s Changing

The most successful small business owners aren’t the ones who adopt every new tool first. They’re the ones who get the fundamentals so right that the tools almost don’t matter.

It’s the same insight behind Jeff Bezos’ strategy at Amazon: obsess over what won’t change, not what will.

New AI tool. New platform. New algorithm. New social network. Every week there’s something shiny demanding your attention, your time, and your money.

Small business owners feel this acutely. You’re already wearing every hat. Now you’re supposed to keep up with the pace of change in technology, marketing, and operations — simultaneously.

It’s exhausting. And mostly pointless.

There’s a better framework.

The Jeff Bezos Strategy

In a now-famous interview, Bezos explained the question that guided Amazon’s strategy:

“What’s NOT going to change in the next 10 years?”

For Amazon, the answers were obvious: customers will always want low prices, fast delivery, and massive selection. Those aren’t going to change. So Amazon poured billions into making those things better — fulfillment centers, logistics networks, Prime membership.

They didn’t chase trends. They invested in constants.

The Constants for Small Business Owners

When you apply the strategy of Jeff Bezos question to small business, the answers are just as clear:

  1. People will always want someone they trust.

No amount of AI changes the fundamental human need for trust. When someone hires a financial advisor, a contractor, a coach — they’re buying trust first, expertise second.

  1. People will always want real results.

Not promises. Not potential. Results. The businesses that deliver measurable outcomes will always win, regardless of what technology exists.

  1. People will always want human connection.

As AI gets better, human connection becomes more valuable, not less. The handshake, the phone call, the personal follow-up — these things will matter more in a world flooded with automated everything.

How to Apply This to Your Business

Instead of asking “What new tool should I learn?” or “What platform should I be on?”, ask:

  • How am I building trust with potential clients before they buy?
  • How am I delivering results faster and more visibly?
  • How am I creating genuine human connection in my process?

These investments compound. Tools change, platforms die, algorithms shift — but the business owner who is deeply trusted, consistently delivers results, and makes people feel seen? That person wins in every era.

Stop Chasing. Start Building.

The most successful small business owners aren’t the ones who adopt every new tool first. They’re the ones who get the fundamentals so right that the tools almost don’t matter.

Use AI. Adopt new tools. Stay current. But invest your real energy into what’s not going to change.

Trust. Results. Connection.

Those are forever.

From Businessing with Pat Miller — a daily live show for small business owners. Mon–Thu at 11am CT. Join the conversation at smallbusinesscommunity.com.

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Pat Miller

Contributed by

Pat Miller

Founder of the Small Business Owners Community

Pat spent two decades in broadcasting management and hosting. After leaving the radio industry, he spent time consulting small businesses and realized the support system for entrepreneurs was broken. Where could you find help for improving small businesses and building real connections with other like-minded people. In June of 2020, the Idea Collective Small Business Community was born.