Title: ECommerce: Boom or Bust
1E-Commerce Boom or Bust?
- Marketing Group 2
- Lutao Ning
- Kevin Cassese
- Paul Jepsen
- Drew Ciepcielinski
2Research Question
- E-Commerce has created a vast new medium for
companies to market their product. The
infrastructure issues and uncertainty that
e-commerce brings, however, has many companies
seriously debating whether or not the switch to
E-commerce is worth it. Does E-commerce help a
company become more profitable?
3Approach
- To avoid any discrepancies across industries due
to the dot.com crash, we chose four case studies
within the same industry (books). - 4 Ways to Approach E-Commerce
- Avoid e-commerce completely (The Regulator)
- Use it as a medium of advertisement (Borders)
- Embrace it whole-heartedly and invest heavily
(Barnes and Noble) - Avoid Brick and Mortar all together (Amazon.com)
4Case 1 Amazon.com
- Amazon.com opened its virtual doors in July 1995.
- Jeffrey P. Bezos - President, CEO, Board Chairman
- Has always been strictly an online company
- Started by selling only books via the Internet
- Now they sell CDs, videos, DVDs, toys, games,
electronics, kitchenware, computers, along with
the books. They offer E-Cards, conduct auctions,
and have added a section for apparel and
accessories. - As the internet has become more popular, so has
Amazon
5Customer and Financial Growth
- 1997 Customers 1.5 million Sales 148
million - 1998 Customers 6.2 million Sales 610
million - 1999 Customers 16.9 million Sales 1.64
billion - 2000 Customers 20 million Sales 2.76
billion - 2001 Customers 25 million Sales 3.12
billion
6Marketing Progress
- As the Internet has become more popular, Amazons
marketing strategies have progressed
exponentially. - Marketing strategies are always customer centric
- Some of the strategies include
- Welcome banner uses the customers full name
- Your gold box feature allows the customer to
see a special item offered at a discounted price
solely for that customer (based on purchase
history) - E-mails are sent to customers thanking them for
their order, giving them a confirmation number,
and providing shipping information - They offer secure credit-card payment with
compensation for insecure credit-card
transactions. - Amazon.com Associate allows people to earn money
by selling Amazon products on their websites. - Online Z-Shops allow independent vendors to gain
access to Amazons customers and one-click
shopping system for a 10 per month fee.
7Marketing odds and ends
- Personalized customer and employee
recommendations - Hassle free bid click auction bidding
- Wish List allows you to select items for your
holiday list and send it to friends and family
members - Add any item to your wish list and win up to 350
of products - Wedding registry (same as wish list, but for
weddings) - Free Super Saver Shipping on orders over 25
dollars - 50 discount off bestsellers
- 30 discount off DVD new releases
- International affiliates offer thousands of
additional items - EYES program alerts customers when their
favorite authors release new publications
8Competitive Landscape
9Case 2 BM First, E-commerce Second
- Barnes and Noble Inc. started in 1873 in Chicago
- Grew steadily until 1971 when Leonard Riggio
bought the NYC store for 1.2 million dollars - Offered best seller books for 40 off retail
price - Merged with B. Dalton in 1986 and Scribners in
1989 and began streamlining their superstore
design - Went public in 1991
10BN.com
- In the wake of the internet boom, the 1 book
retailer in the country felt threatened by up and
coming internet bookstore Amazon.com - Started Barnesandnoble.com in 1997.
- Partnerships with AOL and book publisher
Bertlesmann coupled with high growth in tech
stocks caused Barnesandnoble.coms value to sore. - Went public in late 1999. Now no longer part of
Barnes and Noble Inc.
11Financials
- Year Before IPO
- 26 weeks ended
-
---------------------
------------- -
Fiscal Year August 2,
August 1, -
1997 1997
1998 -
----------- ------------------
--------------- -
(unaudited) -
- Statement of Operations Data
- Net sales.........................................
... 100.0 100.0
100.0 - Cost of sales.....................................
... 80.5 82.5
76.6 - Gross margin......................................
... 19.5 17.5
23.4 - Operating expenses
- Marketing and sales..........................
... 60.3 46.7
134.6 - Product development..........................
... 34.3 38.9
19.8 - General and administrative...................
... 13.8 14.7
22.4 - Depreciation and amortization................
... 18.3 25.5
14.0 -
-------- -------
------- - Total operating expenses.........................
... 126.7 125.8
190.8
12Financials Since IPO
13Competitive Landscape
14Conclusion
- Competing directly with Amazon.com has greatly
damaged BN.com profitability. Amazon had first
mover advantage and has diversified its inventory
while BN.com remains primarily on books. - BN.com as a company has been generally
unsuccessful despite financial backing from its
name-sake, Barnes and Noble Inc. - Barnes and Noble Inc. has lost millions in
investments while BN.com continues to generate a
loss.
15Case 3 Borders Group Inc.Overview
- Company is leading global retailer of books,
music movies and other information and
entertainment items. - Second largest operator of book and music
superstores and the largest operator of mall
based book-cost stores in the world (based on
sales and of stores) - Operates over 385 Borders Books and Music Stores
in the U.S. and 25 international Borders Books
stores - Approximately 800 Waldenbooks locations and 36
U.K. Books etc. stores - Added online shopping at borders.com in 99
(through 01)
16BordersFinancial Summery
02 01
00 99 Total Sales
3,387.9 3,271.2 2,968.4
2,595.0 (Dollars in Millions) Increase
5.1 8.6 14.4 14.5
Breakdown of total sales
17Rise and Fall of Borders Online, Inc.
- 99 Leading global retailer decides to try their
hand at the internet Borders Online, Inc. - Originally functioned as complete online store
similar to amazon.com - As online store Borders.com was losing money
-
- 2001 2000 1999
- Net losses at 18.4 17.2 10.5
- Borders.com
- (In millions)
18Why Was Borders Online losing ???
- Cost of operations outweighed total sales
- Impairment charges
- Borders Annual Report 2000-2001
- The net loss for 2000 increased primarily as a
result of an 11.3 million after-tax asset
impairment charge related to the computer
hardware and software at borders.com. The
increased loss in 99 and 00 was due to a full
year of the sites operating expense, (which was)
required to develop and operate the site and to
fulfill costumer orders. -
19The death of Borders Online, INC.
- 2000 Annual Report
- Our online investment will be channeled to
support out in-store platform. We have targeted
loss reduction as a major goal in this area. The
first step took place in the fourth quarter when
we wrote off certain hardware and software assets
of borders.com. We took this step with the
realization that the direct-to consumer segment
of our online business will not produce profits
in the foreseeable future. Therefore, we plan to
continue to mitigate losses throughout 2001 via
partnerships that take advantage of excess
capacity in our industry. - Bordersstores.com
- Check inventory and find closest stores
- Borders.com teamed with amazon.com
- borders gets a small cut from amazon
20Competitive Landscape
21Case 4 The Regulator Book Store
- Founded in 1977 by Tom Campbell and John
Valentine - Privately held company (thus no public earnings
statements) - Primarily targets local residents/Duke employees
- Students buy textbooks once in a while, but not
much profit off of students because they dont
read for pleasure - Sales increased by 40 since 1998
22Website www.regulatorbookshop.com
- Belongs to the American Booksellers Association
(Trade organization) - Booksense.com uses the large database of the ABA
to market books - Gives the Regulator a presence but the Regulator
has not spent any overhead for the website
23Competing with Online Retailers
- Difficult to compete with Amazon because Amazon
can incur large debt and still function as a
business - Regulator competes well on prices
- Provides much better personal service and faster
delivery
24Staying Away From E - Commerce
- Costs of hardware and compiling a database was
cost prohibitive - Majority of customers still shop via BM rather
than online - Moderate profits regardless of no E-commerce
presence
25Conclusion
- E-commerce allows companies to reach a much
broader customer group - High overhead brings little increase in actual
profit - Companies that have invested heavily in
E-commerce are in large debt and have suffered
huge losses - Companies who invest very little, or not at all
in e-commerce will enjoy modest profits and net
gains