Title: ETrade: Case Analysis
1ETrade Case Analysis
2Executive Summary
- ETrade was a first-mover in the online
brokerage market. Because of this, they achieved
early brand name recognition and an adequate
customer base. However, by the late 90s,
competition was heating up and the offline
brokerages were waking up. ETrade needed to
change its strategy to face these challenges.
They needed to expand their customer base to
other investors beyond the online world. But to
do so, they faced barriers to entry with their
lack of complementary assets in the offline
world. ETrade overcame the traditional barriers
to entry by spending significant amounts of money
on their technological infrastructure and
aggressive advertising. ETrade Group wants
consumers to use its financial services for
Everything and marketing the ETrade name has
been a key component of their success. ETrades
strategy focused primarily on customer
acquisition and building a strong brand. Over the
last two years, ETrade spent 640 million on
brand recognition and marketing. Schwab, which is
eleven times the size of ETrade, spent only 520
million in the same time frame.1 The ETrade
Monkey riding through a deserted dot.com ghost
town advertisement, which aired during Super
Bowl XXXIV in 2000 and reached an audience of 130
million, was named the 4 greatest Super Bowl
advertisement of all time by consumers. - 1 Chen, Huang, Wong, and Wong, ibid.
3Executive Summary
- The company continues to expand its services to
make up for shortfalls in trading income
resulting from Internet fallout. The Internet
fallout caused their stock to fall and also
online traders to decrease their use of ETrade
service. This continued slump could make ETrade
a takeover target for a larger financial services
firm looking to broaden its online services.
(Hoover)
4SWOT Analysis and Sustainability
5- ETrade has focused on customer acquisition and
building a strong brand since the beginning. This
is critical because in the financial industry,
especially on the Internet, trust and
brand-awareness are crucial for success due to
the perception of low security. It has
established a firm position as the first online
broker in the online trading market. While many
brokers have entered and exited this market,
ETrade has experienced phenomenal growth and is
among the top players in the industry.
6- Recently, the online brokerage industry has
undergone changes and companies have changed
their strategies as a result. During the first
stage, online brokerages could attract customers
simply by having lower commission fees than
traditional full-service brokers. However, by the
late 1990's, all kinds of brokers have begun
online trading services, and following the
pure-play online brokers, have provided lower and
lower prices. So, the discount strategy is no
longer sustainable. Large, traditional brokers
like Merrill Lynch, and discount brokers like
Charles Schwab, can provide new services by
combining their old off-line services with new
technology. They have strong capabilities, huge
assets, strong analysis and research skills, and
large staffs. Moreover, new customers to the
online market are not as active as early Internet
traders. They trade less often and are less price
sensitive. In addition, in e-business, including
online trading, switching costs are very small so
customers can have multiple accounts with
multiple brokers, quit transactions midstream, or
shift to other brokers easily. In these difficult
circumstances, pure-play online brokers have
pursued other strategies to keep attracting new
customers.
7- ETrade began preparing early for a shift in
strategy. It has tried to diversify its business
and sources of revenue beyond transaction fees.
They not only offer a variety of products -
including mutual funds, proprietary mutual funds,
bond trading, and access to initial public
offerings - but have also begun to offer services
other than trading. ETrade started Internet
banking services in 1999, and it is the third
largest operator of ATMs in the U.S. The company
has also become interested in the
bricks-and-mortar model. ETrade decided to
establish a branded bricks-and-mortar presence
with its ETrade Zones, which will serve as a
branch office to compete directly with both
discount and full-service brokers. It also
decided to partner with Target to put both
ETrade Zones and ATM machines in over 20 Target
locations.
8- These new strategies have brought changes in
ETrades revenue structure. While the most
important source of revenue is interest on
customers' assets and investments, mortgages, and
fees from banking and ATM services are
increasing. Every e-business company faces
cutthroat competition. Most of the entrants are
kicked out of the market and very few companies
can survive. Moreover, it is more difficult to
make a profit. Even seemingly very successful
dot com companies, such as Amazon.com, face
difficulties getting out of the red. In such an
environment, ETrades lack of dependence on
transaction fees gives it financial strength, and
greater ability to expand its business.
9- Now ETrade seeks to enlarge its market share
both in the U.S. and globally. It also continues
to expand its services, loans, and personal
banking. Sustained revenue growth and good cost
management will position the company for
sustained growth.
10VIDE Analysis
- ETrade began life as a deep-discount online
broker. As one of the first online brokerages,
ETrade catered to active, independent,
knowledgeable investors who wanted to execute
trades as cheaply as possible and who did not
need expensive advice. For these investors, even
discount brokers were too expensive. They were
early-adopters of new technologies, including
those who were online in the late 1980s and early
1990s, and were comfortable with the new online
environment. ETrades value proposition was
meaningful to a specific market segment and, as
an early mover, allowed ETrade to grow.
11- Since its earliest days, ETrade faced
competition from other deep-discount online
brokerages. Though its market was growing,
no-frills trading was a limited market, so the
company sought to broaden its services to reach
other segments rather than compete strictly on
price. This was a significant strategic decision.
Since that time, ETrade has expanded its
services into many other area. The company offers
mortgages, mutual funds, and referrals. It has
built the 3rd largest ATM network in the U.S. and
expanded internationally. It sells ads for all of
its websites.
12- ETrade offers banking services, such as
deposits, CDs, and loans along with all of the
bundling and cross selling opportunities that
come with varied banking and brokerage services.
It is now expanding into the bricks-and-mortar
world with its ETrade Zones, which are
essentially branch offices which offer research
and investment advice through more personalized
service. ETrade has entered into an agreement
with Target to open ETrade Zones and ATMs in
Targets stores.
13- Many of these moves were executed by ETrade
through acquisitions. ETrade has made over 15
acquisitions since the early 1990s. This method
is consistent with the companys desire to move
quickly to attack larger competitors, and
pre-empt other similar competitors. - These moves to diversify by ETrade have allowed
it to attract more customers and offer more
services to its growing customer base. The wide
range of services adds value to ETrades
customers because it allows them to consolidate
their banking and brokerage needs in one place.
ETrade becomes an intermediary between a
customer and their money. By consolidating their
financial services with ETrade, a customer
builds loyalty because a switch will mean
incurring switching costs.
14- ETrade has spent a considerable amount of money
building its portfolio of services, particularly
its bricks-and-mortar operations. The effect of
this has been to build somewhat of a defense, and
it has worked. Some other pure-play online
brokerages have indicated that they will not
actively pursue the building of similar
capabilities. In the long run, of course,
ETrades moves are imitable by competitors. But
in the short-run, it would be very difficult for
another online broker to copy ETrades success
as a late mover. ETrades expanded array of
services set it apart from its competitors. - One of the significant benefits of the wider
range of products and services offered by ETrade
is its ability to cross-sell. Many mergers fail
because anticipated synergies fail to
materialize. However, the banking industry has
consistently proved to be an excellent example of
synergy in its ability to effectively cross-sell
products and services.
15- ETrade can continue to add value by offering
additional products and services and it can
cross-sell across these offerings. By doing so,
it differentiates itself by allowing a more
complete financial solution for customers.
However, the greatest threat ETrade faces is its
inability to build effective long-term barriers,
allowing it to exploit the short-term competitive
advantages gained by its innovations. In the
long-term, it is easy for other firms to build
branches and ATM networks. Many other firms
already offer research and investment advice.
ETrade is particularly vulnerable against the
larger players. They witnessed the dramatic
growth of Internet usage and online brokerage
firms during the late 1990s. By the late 1990s,
they began entering the online market.
16- Some predicted the demise of pure-play online
brokerages when the large, established players
began to enter the market. ETrade, however, has
continued to grow. This is despite the fact that
the environment has only deteriorated since the
late 1990s boom in valuations and day-trading
activity. In the current market, customers are
more conservative, executing fewer transactions.
ETrades real competitive advantage, its core
competence, is its ability to read the market and
innovate, adding value to customers before its
competition. It would seem unlikely that an
upstart pure play deep-discount broker would be
able to take on giants such as Merrill Lynch and
Charles Schwab. ETrade has not so much as taken
them on as it has outran them. And it continues
to do so.
17Models of Innovation
- Innovation models can be applied to ETrade to
give us insight into the companys success in the
face of competition from traditional full-service
and discount brokerage houses.
18Teece Model
- Teece argued that two factors were instrumental
in reaping profits from an innovation. The
appropriability regime, which is the extent to
which the technology can be protected from
imitation, and complementary assets, other
non-technological capabilities the firm needs to
exploit the technology.1 - ETrades technology was easy to imitate as
evidenced by the large number of competitors who
have entered the online brokerage market.
Initially, they were able to use their run
strategy to stay ahead of the competition, but
this did not prevent imitation by others.
Complementary assets became one of ETrades
distinguishing features, but this was not the
case at the outset. It took heavy marketing,
advertising campaigns, acquisitions, and
alliances to develop a now enviable set of
tightly held complementary assets. - 1 Afuah, Allan. Innovation Management,
Oxford University Press, 1998.
19Utterback-Abernathy Dynamic Model
- The Utterback and Abernathy model details the
dynamic changes from a fluid phase to a
transitional phase to a specific pattern.
Technological and market uncertainties comprise
the fluid phase and is a key time for entry by
entrepreneurial firms. ETrade entered the market
during this fluid phase when the changing
technology and acceptance of the world wide web
provided them with an opportunity to build a
pure-play Internet trading platform. - Companies enter the transitional phase when they
begin introducing more and varied products. The
market uncertainty is reduced and research and
development investment increases are justified.
This phase also requires major process changes
due to rising volumes. By this time, ETrade had
entrenched itself in the online trading market
and established a strong brand name. ETrade
changed its focus to expanding services and
technologically accommodating a large, changing
customer base. The addition of ETrades wide
range of services including online banking,
financial advice, mortgages, insurance, college
savings plans, etc. signified their entrance into
this phase.
20Utterback-Abernathy Dynamic Model
- The transitional phase eventually leads to a
specific pattern whereby cost reduction becomes
the focus. This phase is also characterized by a
more formal corporate culture with a greater
number of levels of authority. ETrade has not
moved fully into this phase as it continues to
diversify and reinvent itself.1 - 1 Abernathy and Utterback, Patterns of
Industrial Innovation, Technology Review,
June/July 1978.
21Exhibit 1 Stock Price History
Source Yahoo!, www.yahoo.com
22Exhibit 2 Value Chain
23Exhibit 3 Balance Sheet for ETrade
24Exhibit 5 ETrade Market Share
Online Brokerage Market Share by Total Assets
Source Brokerages Need Banking to Keep
Customers, Web Finances, 5 (7) April 5, 2001,
Securities Data Publishing.
Source Disclosure, Inc., www.disclosure.com
25Exhibit 4 Income Statement for ETrade
26Exhibit 6 Broker Comparison Table
27Exhibit 7 Online Brokerage Trading Costs