By Jennifer LeClaire E-Commerce Times
08/12/02 1:56 PM PT
There are three key challenges for e-tailers: gaining the trust of consumers, finding
the right merchandise mix, and enhancing services across the board.
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Amazon.com (Nasdaq: AMZN) has finally turned the corner on
the road to profitability, eBay (Nasdaq: EBAY) set
earnings records in the second quarter, and brick-and-mortar chains are buying into the
e-commerce channel in droves.
Does this mean the e-tail shakeout is finally over? That depends on whom you ask.
Analysts have differing positions about whether or not we have seen the last of the
dot-com dropouts.
But industry watchers do agree on one thing: Multichannel retailing is the future of
e-commerce.
Debate the Dot-Coms
Pets.com and Webvan are two of the most-recognized fallen dot-coms. But for all the
highly publicized, pure-play failures, hundreds more quietly shut their doors.
"Most of the dot-com shakeout has occurred already,
Nielsen//NetRatings (Nasdaq: NTRT) analyst Dawn
Brozek told the E-Commerce Times. "But some small players are still going under."
Conversely, Gartner (NYSE: IT) analyst Geri Spieler
said the e-tail model will likely continue to evolve too much to declare an official end
to the shakeout.
"Is the e-tail shakeout over?" Spieler asked sarcastically. "The answer is a big, fat,
bold 'no.' There is still a long way to go -- and for reasons from A to Z."
Reasons A to Z
Analysts said that aside from financial issues there are three key challenges for
e-tailers: gaining the trust of consumers, finding the right merchandise mix and
enhancing services across the board.
True, new users are jumping on the e-commerce bandwagon every day. But it takes time to
convert e-mailers and online game players into confident Internet shoppers.
For the most part, say analysts, it was the product mix that sabotaged many early
e-tailers. Selling furniture online, for example, is as impractical as shipping heavy
bags of pet food.
"The types of products that tend to sell well online are either inexpensive --
meaning they are low-risk -- or they are cheap to distribute," said Brozek, noting that
books, music, airline tickets and flowers are still leading the way.
Service Issues
But perhaps the biggest challenge -- and the greatest untapped opportunity for corporate
cost savings -- lies with service issues.
Beauty shops and automobile service providers, for example, could let customers schedule
appointments online. Then customers could synch their personal digital assistants with
their e-mail clients and receive a reminder several days before the appointment.
These self-serve capabilities will be vital in the coming years as
technology becomes even more pervasive.
"Service online has yet to be fully explored," said Spieler. "The next wave of e-tail is
combining e-commerce with a service component."
Multichannel Experience
Brick-and-mortar players are better positioned, with deeper pockets, to provide the type
of services Spieler described. Familiar offline brands also have something else that
pure-play e-tailers do not yet have: established consumer trust.
"When we look at the major e-commerce categories, most are dominated by the trusted
offline brand names," said Brozek.
According to analysts, this shift toward multichannel retailing -- and the beginning of
the end of the e-tail shakeout -- started in late 2000.
"The dot-com shakeout might continue, but it's primarily among the very small players,"
said Brozek. "I can't see eBay or Amazon folding at this point."