Title: Business to Consumer
1Business to Consumer
e-Commerce
Presented by Carol Reavey, Kevin Keely and Martha
Harting
2Who, What, How, When..
- Who is on the web?
- Who is the target customer?
- What vehicles can be used to reach the customer?
- How to Attract the right customer
- How to stand out amongst the pack?
3Demographics
4Weve got a new way to talk1
Total World Online Population 619 million
5Everybodys Doing It!
- The Internet is in 20 nations
- E-commerce has 619 million potential customers
- This number is estimated to reach 948 million by
2004
6Who is doing it in the USA(2)
- The total population of internet users in the US
is 112 million - 94.2 million are White (4 growth vs 01)
- 7.8 million are black (3 growth vs 01)
- 7.6 million are Hispanic (13 growth vs 01)
- 2.4 million are Asian (6 growth vs 01)
7Frequency vs. Purchase
- Only 2.8 of all surfers use the net primarily
for purchasing product. This is an increase over
2.6 in 4th Qtr 2001. - The average purchase increased from 298 to 364
in the 250 - 501 range. - It also increase from 1,298 to 1,668 in the
1,000 range.
8E-Commerce Sales(10)
- E-commerce sales rose in the 2nd Qtr 3.7 over
first quarter and 24.2 year over year - The US Department of Commerce expects record
e-commerce sales for the holiday season.
9Doing it with what..(3)
- Household income is significant in the e-commerce
game. - 72 of the surfers in the gt75k bracket do
product/service research
10When Are We Surfing(4)
- 112 million Americans use the Internet
- 46 million use it primarily at work 17 higher
than last year - 20.4 million of the workers are women up by 23
- Men (of course) make up the remaining 25.3
million surfers 12 increase over 2001
11Its a mans world
- Men dominate internet usage in the USA
- Men view an average of 1900 pages versus 1700
pages for women - 36 of the male usage is for adult entertainment.
This is 8 for women.
12Mom is Surfing More(5)
- American Moms are on-line an average of 16 hours
and 52 minutes every week. - Teens log about 12 hours and 17 minutes per week.
- Moms and Hispanics are the fastest growing
groups of surfers. - This may change the way companies market and
target customers.
13Top 5 Activities(6)
- The primary reason for logging on is E-mail.
- Products/Services activities have increased 7
over last year. - Women are sending the greeting cards and entering
the sweepstakes (61).
E-mail 93
Search Engine 79
Research products/services 63
Local Information 60
Sweepstakes 59
14Buzz Words(7)
- To increase strikes the week of October 5th 2002
web content could have included these - Halloween
- Dragonball
- KaZaA
- Costumes
- NFL
- Tatoos
- Hurricane Lilli
- Britney Spears
- Yu-Gi-Oh!
- The Bible
15What the E-Shopper Wants(8)
Courteous and respectful employees 73
Consistently good merchandise quality 70
A clean and well-maintained store 69
Unconditional return of merchandise 69
Visible prices 68
16Service versus Price
- Honest Price is more important than lowest
price to 64 of the American consumers - Consistently good merchandise quality was seen
as essential to 70 of the consumers
17Balancing Ethical Issues
18Mis-Trust(7)
- Many Consumers wont by on-line because they
dont trust the process - 68 of the consumers trust small business
- 58 trust the newspapers and television
- 55 trust financial institutions (banks,
insurance companies) - 54 trust charities and non-profit organizations
- 47 trust the government
- 29 trust the e-commerce community!
19SPAM(8)
- SPAM is an ever-increasing issue
- Hotmail estimates that 10 (1.3million) of the
daily messages sent through Hotmail are SPAM - 10 of the working day is spent deleting SPAM
20The Choice isnt much of a Choice
21Selling your e-mail info(9)
- Failed dot.coms have sold private information
- They follow the letter of the Opt Out law by
selling their web site and all the names with it.
- Its a common business practice to rent your
customer database Cheryl Regan spokesperson for
Network Solutions Inc.
22E-Commerce Phase Two
- What can we expect to see in the sector as the
second era of e-commerce gathers steam?
23New Technologies
- Automating processes
- Reducing costs in customer service
- Streamlining replenishment
- Streamlining aftermarket selling opportunities
24Spending Mix
- Initial Phase
- Computers
- Brokerages
- Travel
- Books and Music
- Auctions
- Generated 75 of Sales(1)
25Spending Mix
- Current Phase
- Only 50 of online sales
- Clothing, pharmaceuticals, groceries,
communication services and general merchandise
make up the other 50. -
- Groceries went through a valley last year but may
rebound this year.
26Multichannel Selling
- Systems allow customers to reserve product online
for in-store pickup. - Manufacturers sell direct
- Retailers fear of channel conflicts has faded.
27Real-Time rules
-
- Investing in real-time capabilities to manage
orders. - Real-time order processing can increase order
fulfillment accuracy and productivity by 50.(2)
- Real-time supply chain and inventory lets
companies know what they have and when its
coming. - Reduce or eliminate stock-outs and overstocks.
28Improved Profitability
-
- Improved profitability spurred by innovations.
- Analyst predict a 20 year-over-year growth.(3)
29The Seven Habits of Highly Effective Web Sites(6)
- Personable
- Remembrance(4)
- Flexible Interaction
- User Profiling
- Abstract Interaction(5)
- Context Creation and Use
- Dialogue Structuring and Management
30Five E-Commerce Trends to Watch
31Trends
- Multichannel Retailing(7)
- Increased Customer Satisfaction(8)
- Consumers do their own thing(9)
- Death of the Mid-Size E-tailer
- More Profit 70 of the top 40 sites are
profitable versus 30 last year.
32Business Models on the Web(10)
- Business models are perhaps the most discussed
and least understood aspect of the web. - The web changed traditional business models.
- Little clear-cut evidence of exactly what this
means. - Auctions An old way of doing business
popularized and broadened.(11)
33Models Continues
- Varied Implementation
- Blended Models
- Intellectual Patents
34Categories of Business Models
Brokerage Advertising
Infomediary Merchant
Manufacturer Affiliate
Community Subscription
Utility Utility
35Brokerage Model
- Marketplace Exchange Orbitz
- Buy/Sell Fulfillment CarsDirect
- Demand Collection System - Priceline.com
- Auction Broker - eBay
- Transaction Broker PayPal
- Bounty Broker BountyQuest
- Distributor Quest
- Search agent - Deal time
- Virtual Mall - ChoiceMall
36Advertising Model
- Portal Yahoo
- Personalized Portal - MyYahoo
- Niche Portal - iVillage
- Classifieds - Monster.com
- Registered Users - Anytime's Digital
- Query-based Paid Placement Google
- Contextual - Gator
37Infomediary Model
- Advertising Networks DoubleClick
- Audience Measurement Services Nielson
- Incentive Marketing - MyPoints
- Metamediary - Edmunds
38Merchant Model
- Virtual Merchant - Amazon.com
- Catalog Merchant - Lands End
- Click and Mortar - Barnes Noble
- Bit Vendor - Eyewire
39Community Model
- Content Service - Netflix
- Person-to-person Networking Services Classmates
- Trust Services - Truste
40Subscription Model
- Voluntary Contributor Model - WCPE.org
- Knowledge Networks AllExperts
- Internet Service Provider - AOL
41Other Models
- Affiliate Model - Amazon.com
- Manufacturer Model Dell
- Utility Model - Slashdot
42Three Different Business Models
43(No Transcript)
44e-Bay is 1
- e-Bay is the 1 in sales.(12)
- 1.1 billion in revenues in 2002
- Earnings .73 - .75 per share.
- Brokerage model / Auction Broker / Transaction
Broker.
45Holiday Strategy
- Printed Catalogs in 2001
- Amazon.com is copying the idea.
- Bidders wait to find out if they won, e-Bay
instituted a buy it now feature. - Also advertised on AOL Time Warner cable and
network outlets to promote their site for holiday
gifts. (13)
46(No Transcript)
47Amazon.com is 2
-
- Amazon.com is 2 with Online sales to U.S.
consumers estimated between 1.7 1.9 billion.
(14) - Amazon made a profit for the first time, in the
last quarter. It has not made a profit for a
fiscal year. - Merchant Model / Virtual Merchant
48Product Offering
- Free electronic greeting cards
- On-line auctions
- Millions of books, CDs, videos, DVDs,
- Toys and games
- Electronics
- Kitchenware
- Computers and more(15)
49Holiday Strategy
50(No Transcript)
51Quixtar.com is 7
- 400-450 million in sales in the U.S. (16)
- Privately Held
- Believed to be profitable.
- No marketing expenses
- Company world-wide sales for fiscal 2002 where
4.5 billion. (17) - Unique Merchant Model could be Virtual Merchant
/ Catalog Merchant
52- Amway - Person-to-person multilevel marketing.
- In business since 1959
- Manufacture items for nutrition, wellness, beauty
and home products. Vitamins, food supplements and
cosmetics are among the company's leading global
brands. - Manufacturers pay to have products sold.
- Order a car direct from the manufacturer
delivered to the nearest dealership. - Bass Pro, Chevrolet, Ford, IBM, are just a few
companies that allow direct selling from Quixtar.
53Pay to Use and Earn
-
- Pay to use this site.
- IBO to purchase from this site.
- Earn bonuses or cash based on product sales.
- Currently 3.3 million distributors that teach
their people how to shop the site. - Infrequent catalog distribution.
54-
- Could other models be used to describe this
e-tailer? Which models?
55e-Commerce Steps to Success
- Gain Trust
- Personalization
- Multi-channeling
56Gaining Trust Online1
- Why dont consumers trust cyberspace?
- No close physical presence
- Incomplete, ambiguous physical location
- No people to talk to
- Reputation, size, and background unknown
- History of security and privacy problems
- Privacy invasion and abuse of customer
information - Potential for misrepresentation and fraud
- On the Internet nobody knows that you are a dog
57- How to gain trust online
- Similar backgrounds
- Translate into customers language
- References regarding adherence to local
regulations and business practices - Promotional campaigns to stimulate repeat
business - Personalization
- Photos and video clips of store owners
- Order confirmation
- Stronger product warranties
- Customer support
- Reputation
- Trust can be transferred link site to other
reputable sites - Easier to obtain when part of a large chain
58Level of Trust Online2
Financing/banking has successfully gained trust
online, while other uses have declined in overall
trust.3
59The Personal Touch4
- Benefits
- Forms a relationship with the customer
- Increases trust
- Increases sales and repeat business
- Difficulties
- Gathering data
- Analyzing data
- Utilizing data
- Expense
60Personalization on the Web5
- Virtual 3D models Lands End
- Live chat feature Lands End
- E-mail reminders Drugstore.com
- Suggestions for visitors American Greetings and
1-800-Flowers.com - One-click shopping Amazon.com
- Records of previous purchases Office Depot
- Smart recommendation engines Amazon.com6
61Multi-channeling
- The Future of E-Commerce?
62The Channels
- Web Site Click and Mortar Store
- Brick and Mortar Store
- Catalog
- The more channels a customer uses, the more
valuable they are to a business.7 - (e.g., JC Penney found their 3-channel customers
are worth 1000/year 2-channel customers
700/year 1-channel customers only 300/year.)
63The New Customer8
- Customers want old-fashioned service with all the
new tools and convenience - According to Brylane e-commerce, web sites have
to Sail the Seven Cs -
- You must Combine Customized Content, Community
and Commerce to provide Control and Convenience.
64Benefits of Multi-Channel Integration9
- Capture sales regardless of channel
- Build and strengthen customer loyalty
- Improve direct marketing efforts
- Seamless service experience
- Improved demand planning and product distribution
- Increased revenue and gross margin
65Disadvantages of Multi-Channeling9
- Costs (specialty or medium-sized department
store) - Brick and mortar costs range from an average of
8 to 28 million for startup and can expect to
break even in about two years - E-commerce sites cost 73 million to 1.2 billion
break-even volume - May not generate positive returns quickly
- May distract from core business
- Active shoppers may prove to be a liability10
- More deal driven
- Look for costly site features such as live help
66Tier 1 - Multi-Channel Functionality Low Risk9
- Accept returns in physical store without
exception - Offer store pickups
- Accept retail store credit card online
- Provide basic customer service
- Frequently asked questions, how-to guides,
warranty information, etc. - Retail store locator information
- Coordinate logo, information, graphics, etc.
- Consistent messaging across all channels
- Use e-mail campaigns to reinforce marketing
efforts along with direct mail, billing inserts,
and other promotional advertising
67Tier 2 Multi-Channel Functionality Some Risk9
- Install in-store kiosks for online ordering
- Integrate loyalty and registry programs
- Implement ERMS (e-mail response management system)
68Tier 3 Multi-Channel Functionality
Substantial Risk9
- Web-enable point of sale (POS) systems to bring
the Internet into the store (very expensive) - Use hand-held/wireless devices process web/store
orders. - Implement guided merchandising use customer
relationship information and blend with product
descriptions and merchandising rules
69Multi-Channel Leaders9
- Office Supply Retailers
- Office Depot
- OfficeMax
- Staples
- Consumer Electronic Retailers
- Circuit City
- Best Buy
- CompUSA
- Others
- Department Stores-Sears, JC Penney
- Pharmacies-Walgreens
- Discount Stores WalMart, K-Mart, Target
70Multi-Channel Challenges8
- Plan promotions as a single company with multiple
channels, not separately - Integrate online into offline
- Promote web benefits and URLs in all
communications - Promote offline into online
- Mention in-store promotions, store locators
- Provide catalog requests
- Pay attention to time-sensitivity
- Just because e-mails can be sent quickly, this
does not guarantee that your target market will
be accessed immediately or that it will even be
read at all.
71Keys to Multi-Channel Success9
- Integrate in stages
- Evaluate the organizational impact
- Implement the right multi-channel approach for
your business - Get the organization ready
- Collect customer data determine target
customers - Focus on customer incentives
- Pricing
- Return policies
- Support
72Most Popular Web Sites11
- Nielsen Net Ratings for Week Ending 10/13
- Top Sites Overall
73Most Popular Web Sites11
- Sports
- Entertainment
- Music
- Movie
- TV
- News
74Sources for Demographics
- Global Internet Statistics (by Language)
www.global-research.biz/globstats/index.php3
(9/30/02) - Saunders, Christopher, Latinos Outpace Other
Groups On-line growth www.cyberatlas.internet.com
/big_picture/demographics/article/0,,5901_1428231,
00.html 10/20/02. - Greenspan, Robyn, High-Speed Connects
High-Income Homeswww.cyberatlas.internet.com/marke
ts/article/0,,10099_1467471,00.html9/20/02. - Cyberatlas staff, Traffic Patterns for August
2002 www.cyberatlas.internet.com/big picture.com
(9/12/02). - Saunders, Christopher, Moms, Hispanics
Increasing Web Use www.cyberatlas.internet.com/big
_picture/demographics/article/0,,5901_1041581
(05/08/02). - Greenspan, Robyn, American Surfers Keep It Simple
www.cyberatlas.internet.com/big_picture/geographic
s/article/0,,5901_1466661.html 9/19/02
75Demographics Cont.
- 7. Greenspan, Robyn, Consumers Rank Trust
Above Low www.cyberatlas.internet.com/marketing/r
etailing/article/0,60611014831.html4/23/02. - 8. Staff, Spam poses threat to privacy BBC
News World Edition, Technoligies 10/16/02 - 9. Greg Sandavol, Failed dot-coms may be
selling your private information
www.news.com/2100-1017-242649.html 06/29/00 - 10. U.S. Commerce www.uscomerce.gov 10/20/02
76Sources for the Second Phase
- LeClaire, Jennifer, Phase Two for E-Commerce,
E-Commerce Times 8.1 (2002), 26 Oct 2002,
http//www.ecommercetimes.com/perl/story/18840.htm
l - LeClaire, Jennifer, Phase Two for E-Commerce,
E-Commerce Times 8.1 (2002), 26 Oct 2002,
http//www.ecommercetimes.com/perl/story/18840.htm
l - LeClaire, Jennifer, Phase Two for E-Commerce,
E-Commerce Times 8.1 (2002), 26 Oct 2002,
http//www.ecommercetimes.com/perl/story/18840.htm
l - Martin, Mike, The Seven Habits of Highly
Effective Web Sites, CRM Daily.com, 9.3 (2002),
26 Aug. 2002, http//www.crmdaily.com/perl/story/1
9270.html - Martin, Mike, The Seven Habits of Highly
Effective Web Sites, CRM Daily.com, 9.3 (2002),
26 Aug. 2002, http//www.crmdaily.com/perl/story/1
9270.html
77Phase Two Cont.
- 6. Martin, Mike, The Seven Habits of Highly
Effective Web Sites, CRM Daily.com, 9.3 (2002),
26 Aug. 2002, http//www.crmdaily.com/perl/story/1
9270.html - 7. Regan, Keith, Five E-Commerce Trends to
Watch. E-Commerce Times, 3.3 (2002), 26 Aug
2002, http//www.ecommercetimes.com/perl/story/169
67.html - 8. Regan, Keith, Five E-Commerce Trends to
Watch. E-Commerce Times, 3.3 (2002), 26 Aug
2002, http//www.ecommercetimes.com/perl/story/169
67.html - 9. Regan, Keith, Five E-Commerce Trends to
Watch. E-Commerce Times, 3.3 (2002), 26 Aug
2002, http//www.ecommercetimes.com/perl/story/169
67.html 10. Rappa, Michael, Business Models on
the Web Managing the Digital Enterprise, 27 Aug
2002, http//www.digitalenterprise.org/models/mode
ls_text.html - 11. Rappa, Michael, Business Models on the Web
Managing the Digital Enterprise, 27 Aug 2002,
http//.digitalenterprise.org/models/models_text.h
tml
78Phase Two Cont.
- 12. Top 100 Internet Retailers, Russell
Reynolds Associates, 7.6 (2002), 24 Aug 2002,
http//www.stores.org/archives/ootop100int_.html
- 13. Saunders, Christopher, e-Bay Taps Catalogs
for Holiday Push Ecommerce News, 11.27 (2001),
26 Aug 2002, http//ecommerce.internet.com/news/ne
ws/print/0,,10375_929661,0... 14. Top 100
Internet Retailers, Russell Reynolds Associates,
7.6 (2002), 24 Aug 2002, http//www.stores.org/arc
hives/ootop100int_.html - 15. About Amazon.com, Amazon.com, 27 Aug 2002,
http//www.amazon.com/exec/obidos/subst/misc/compa
ny-info.html - 16. Top 100 Internet Retailers, Russell
Reynolds Associates, 7.6 (2002), 24 Aug 2002,
http//www.stores.org/archives/ootop100int_.html - 17. Alticor Inc, 26 Aug 2002,
http//www.alticor.com/news/pop_alticor_fact.html
79Sources Step to Success
- Jarvenpaa, S., and Grazioli, S. Surfing among
sharks how to gain trust in cyberspaceMastering
Informational Management. Prentice Hall, London,
2000. pgs 197-201. - Greenspan, Robyn. More Users, Less Trust.
http//www.cyberatlas.internet.com/markets/retaili
ng/print/0,,6061_1483061,00.html, 10/24/2002. - Taylor, Charlie. Banking on success
http//www.nua.ie/surveys/analysis/weekly_editoria
l/archives/issue1no316.html, 10/30/2002. - Walsh, John. Websites with a personal touch
Mastering Informational Management. Prentice
Hall, London, 2000. pgs 201-204. - Regan, Keith. The Best of E-Commerce E-Commerce
Times http//www.ecommercetimes.com/perl/story/193
23.html, 11/5/2002. - Hirsh, L, and LeClaire, J. Kings of Repeat
E-Business E-Commerce Times http//www.crmdaily.c
om/perl/printer/19137/, 10/30/2002.
80Step for Success Cont.
- Bartram, Michelle. Multi-Channel Secrets to
Success http//www.webpractices.com/slideshows/Mu
ltichannel20Success/multi_2Tech.pdf, 10/30/2002. - Bartram, Michelle. Multi-Channel Secrets to
Success http//www.webpractices.com/slideshows/Mu
ltichannel20Success/multi_2Tech.pdf, 10/31/2002. - Multi-Channel Integration, A Retailers
Perspective Escalate http//www.escalate.com/whit
epaper3.html, 10/31/2002. - Cox, Beth. Are Multi-Channel Shoppers a
Liability? http//www.internetnews.com/ec-news/ar
ticle.php/1442631, 11/5/2002. - Internet Nielsen Net Ratings Nielsen Net
Ratings for Week Ending 10/13. http//alliance.zap
2it.com/zap2it/zp_int_nielsen_net_ratings/1,1648,1
73__,00.html, 10/30/2002.