"E-commerce, A No Nonsense Perspective For New Business"
Success is about making fewer mistakes
Why you should read this Guide
Whilst failure is one of the best ways we can learn, learning from others
experience is far less painful - and thats essentially the point of this
guide! Learning from others makes achieving your own goal quicker and easier,
plus lets face it, making unnecessary mistakes is just plain dumb!
Spend just 2 hours digesting the information in this guide and you could save
years of trial and error. Which route do you think will put your e-commerce
venture into profit fastest?
Whether you are thinking of starting a new Internet business, or you already
run your own business and are interested in developing a website or perhaps
an e-commerce operation; if you are considering developing a presence on the
Internet then this guide is for you.
If it seems too good to be true, it just might not be.
Why e-business?
Since the early 90s the Internet has shaped the way we do business. At
first it was peripheral nowadays it is central to business life. Technologies
have advanced and access is more widespread, meaning businesses can do more
things for more people. But the Internet is really just another communication
channel, though unlike other communication channels it differs in that it can
offer a uniquely interactive experience, serve multiple data formats, and provide
information on-demand.
This said the Internet is still a communication channel and successful web
applications usually leverage one or more of the following benefits.
Immediacy. With todays data transmission rates communication can be almost
instantaneous.
Frequency. The convenience of the Internet and particularly email, means that
communication is likely to happen more often.
Cost efficiency. Migrating traditional communication to utilise internet technologies
can greatly reduce costs.
So how can your Business leverage the Internet and in particular the communication
benefits? Below are just a few areas your Business should consider.
Commerce - e-commerce has become synonamous with the Internet; from presenting
product information, to marketing, to communication with Customers - costs are
often very low.
Business Awareness - Industry sector, latest news, product range or simple
directions. The Internet is an ideal vehicle for delivering information about
your Business to a wide audience at low cost.
Image - Brand and Image are important assets to Business. The Internet can
be used to promote an image and reinforce a brand - perception is all!
Community - A web site can provide a superb focal point for people with similar
interests, especially where visitors are encouraged to interact with your Business
and each other.
Support - Providing post sale support, or just dealing with frequently asked
questions, a website can be used to provide a structured mechanism for providing
help or information.
Competition - In an age where businesses without a website are increasingly
the exception, a professionally designed website may differentiate your Business
from your competitors'.
Think of any web site you use, and youll see that the benefits users
and the Business itself derive will mostly relate to communication and fall
into one of the three categories previously mentioned; immediacy; frequency
and cost efficiency.
Ten Golden Rules of e-business
1.Start re-skilling now. If you dont have huge financial backing your
idea will not get off the ground UNLESS you can do much of the work yourself.
2. You have more chance of making money if you can take just one step up the
supply chain.
3. The real profit makers on the Internet match supply with demand, but do
not sell anything!
4. You cant just build a site and expect to start generating income any
more.
5. There are few truly new ideas - most things have already been done. Exploit
a niche, leverage breaking technology, or do the same thing but just better.
6. If you come across an idea that hasnt been done, congratulations you
could be on your way - but think long and hard about why no one else is already
doing it.
7. Expect any competitive advantage you may establish to be short-lived. Where
will your profit come from tomorrow?
8. Be amazed at how little your e-business is worth.
9. Dont buy an e-business off the shelf. At least one person
does not want it why not?
10.Establish a budget to build your site then add at least 30% more to build
an adequate administration interface.
1. Start re-skilling now
Heres an unwritten law of the Jungle; many businesses thrive off other
start-up businesses. This is true whether your business is offline or online.
Just getting your Business off the ground can seriously stress your cash-flow.
e-business can be even more expensive as additionally youll need technical
services like web hosting, graphics design, site design and database development,
search engine optimisation, secure servers, bandwidth, data backup, credit card
processing, disaster recovery and insurance to name a few; these are on top
of your other overheads!
Technical services are always expensive, and true experts in technical areas
are worth their weight in gold - but sometimes what is actually being done is
not that complicated; understanding what is involved can help inform your decision
about when to bring in an expert, but more importantly allow you to perform
some of this work yourself.
Start re-skilling and outsource less, or your ground breaking e-business idea
may never see the light of day!
2. You have more chance of making money if you can take just one step up the
supply chain.
Mention e-commerce and you immediately think of retailing; businesses selling
to consumers. But what are they selling and where are they sourcing it from?
The answer, in the majority of cases, is from other businesses further up the
supply chain.
Retailing really is the front line in e-commerce, hard fought and often a war
of attrition. For many reasons if you can take just one step up the supply chain
and into wholesale supply, the odds of succeeding move in your favour plus,
you could always retail as well! This is why.
Your Customers are people just like you - would be entrepreneurs, people who
want to do their own thing, run their own business and make a success of it.
Unfortunately unlike you, they havent read this guide, so whilst they
have enthusiasm, work hard, and have money to spend, they start at the bottom
of the supply chain and opt to retail someone elses (your) products. Ask
yourself this; will you sell more with all these enthusiastic entrepreneurs
promoting your products, or less? Though many may fail, if they succeed you
succeed also, so make supporting these people the focus of your own e-business
efforts. Excellent product, price, and customer service.
Retail customers expect the best product and service at lowest cost. In retail
e-business supply often exceeds demand; if youre retailing someone elses
products, chances are there are another 20 or maybe 100 retailers with the same
dream and same products, all doing the same thing! Too many suppliers chasing
too few sales, and Customers are free to choose! Quality product? Great service?
These days these are pre-requisites, so what else will differentiate you from
your competition?
3. The Real Profit takers on the Internet match supply with demand, but do
not sell anything!
Think of the big e-businesses like Google, Ebay, and Overture. These companies
are successful and worth millions, but they dont sell any products! Instead
they are service providers; they offer different services that have one thing
in common they connect people who want to sell with people who want to
buy. Otherwise put they are market makers and if you are serious about your
e-business you will very quickly end up paying companies like these for your
own sales as these companies can give your products the exposure needed to sell
them but at a cost!
Im not going to advocate you set up your own search engine, online auction
site, classified ads site or even dating agency, as I think youll agree
you couldnt seriously expect to take market share off established big
name brands like those above? But remember, in e-business, market makers are
the real profit takers. If you spot an opportunity to be a market maker which
hasnt already been dominated by a big name, that could just be your ticket
to e-business success.
4. You cant just build a site and expect to start generating
income any more.
There was a time, not too long ago, when you could build a simple e-commerce
site using off the shelf software like Actinic Catalog or EROL, submit it to
a few search engines for free, and if your products were reasonable and at attractive
prices, you could expect people to find it and buy from it.
Sadly, those days are long gone, the Internet has matured; there are a thousand
sites just like yours and the search engines are much more selective about the
resources they index.
Whilst, your first challenge is getting indexed in the search engines, and
make no mistake this will cost your business money, your second challenge is
convincing your visitors they should buy from your web site and not another
which is also just one click away. Your final and most often overlooked challenge
is making enough profit to cover your customer acquisition costs.
On more than one occasion I have found the profit from a sale does not cover
the cost of the advertising and marketing necessary to acquire that sale. This
is not that significant if you can reasonably expect your Customer to purchase
from you again as the cumulative profit from repeat sales may well cover the
customer acquisition cost and see you into profit. However, if your products
are niche, high value, or typically one off or impulse purchases, you only get
one opportunity to make a profit from your Customer.
5. There are few truly new ideas for e-business - most things have already
been done. Exploit a niche, leverage breaking technology, or do the same thing
but just better.
As a technology matures, the opportunities to leverage that technology to create
competitive advantage generally decrease. This happens for three reasons. The
cost of the technology falls making it more accessible to the masses; as more
people opt into the technology more ways to utilise the technology are found
and the technology becomes more user friendly which drives further take up,
until eventually the technology becomes commonplace - as does the knowledge
required to utilise it. Indeed rather than it providing competitive advantage,
you could be said to be at a competitive disadvantage if you dont
use the technology.
By way of example, consider the telephone. These days nobody, at least in the
western world, would claim a telephone gives their Business a competitive advantage
though many would recognise that not having a telephone could well be detrimental
to their Business. However think back to the days shortly after Alexander Graham
Bell invented the first telephone - a Business with a telephone would certainly
have had a competitive advantage over its competitors without.
So how do you get ahead in e-business? How do you create competitive advantage;
I believe there are actually only three ways you can.
Exploit a niche. Supplying specialist products or servicing a specialist market
is one way to get ahead. If you have rare skills or knowledge you may well be
able to use this to create an e-business niche, whereby only someone with the
same skills or knowledge could compete with you. The more specialist the knowledge
on which you build your e-business the more difficult it becomes for competition
to enter the market and copy you. Simple economics dictates that in a marketplace
with few suppliers, prices and therefore margins remain higher for longer. Of
course this assumes demand exceeds supply and herein is a potential sting in
the tail; in a specialist market place your Customers are specialists also.
You will invariably have fewer prospects to market to - knowing who these prospects
are is crucial, as many generalist marketing techniques will not work for you
and could prove very expensive.
Leverage breaking technology. Despite what was said earlier in this section
it is still possible to create technological competitive advantage. You need
to be an early adopter, someone who embraces the technology as soon as it launches.
You should expect to offset some of the advantage you create, with the high
cost of using a new technology early on in its life-cycle, and you should
also accept that not everything you try will yield gains for your Business so
much of your investment may be wasted.
Do the same thing but just better. On the face of it a rather obvious statement,
but youll be amazed how many people are running online auction websites,
classified ads websites, or little search engines! When evaluating an e-business
opportunity check out what the existing players are doing and ask yourself,
Can I do it better than these guys? If your answer is no, then you
might want to look elsewhere for your e-business opportunity! Could you buy
an off the shelf auction website and take on the might of ebay? Will your classified
Car Ads website give Autotrader anything to worry about? Might we all be searching
the web via your new search website instead of Google in a few months time?
Improvement opportunities should all focus on customer experience like
the ease with which they can use the website and the service level they get
via the website. Dont waste your time on anything else. For example, you
might have a flair for graphic design, and think you could produce a better
logo than the ebay logo for your own auction website. Perhaps you could, but
this is unlikely to improve customer experience.
Keep the maxim of doing it better in mind at all times and you
may well spot improvement opportunities in market sectors with no dominant players.
Keep an open mind and youll be surprised how often you notice things that
could be better. Perhaps your e-business could address these shortcomings and
gain competitive advantage.
(continued in Part 2 of this series)
About the Author:
Oliver Phillips runs the web development company eantics Ltd and as a qualified
Accountant, has built intranet financial systems for an FTSE quoted UK PLC.
His e-commerce operations have twice reached the finals of the UK e-commerce
Awards; his Companys latest venture, PFS France has just launched. |