By Michael Mahoney E-Commerce Times
06/01/01 11:48 PM PT
Although many formerly Web-only merchants now have
brick-and-mortar initiatives or alliances,
there are still some successful pure-play companies doing business on the Net.
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A year ago, pure plays still handily outnumbered
the multichannel retailers doing business both on the Net
and in the malls.
Now, following the dot-com shakeout,
e-businesses that don't have a brick storefront or
catalog presence as well are nearly extinct. Even pure-play
old-timers eBay (Nasdaq: EBAY) and Amazon.com (Nasdaq: AMZN) have brick-and-mortar
alliances these days.
"As the economy gets worse, there's an
increasing desire by consumers for
online retailers to have a brick-and-mortar presence," Forrester analyst Christopher Kelley told the
E-Commerce Times. "It has a lot to do
with their peace of mind."
However, before anyone writes off the pure-play business model,
it is a good idea take a look at the companies
that are showing stubborn resolve -- and even
profitability -- while doing business on the Internet only.
Although their path might not be easy to travel or to follow,
they're proving that with the
right format, it is possible to flourish as a Web-only seller.
Pure Luck?
To succeed as a pure-play merchant,
e-tailers need to offer products
that are not found on many other Web sites --
and be certain that those
products yield high gross margins,
Strategic Research
Advisors managing director Paul Ritter said.
Bellacor.com,
a home furnishing e-tail site that offers
over 500,000 high-end lighting products and home decorating products
from 700 manufacturers, does
just that. Although the pure play has only been online since September,
it reported a profit in April and expects
a profitable second quarter as well.
"I think that pure plays have become a convenient thing to blame, as if it's
the law of nature," Bellacor.com chief executive officer
Jan Anderson told the E-Commerce Times.
"The principle is to find something that's inefficient and use the
Web to make it more efficient, rather than just to find something it can do
regardless of whether it already works pretty well. If you do this,
pure play vs. non-pure play isn't a factor."
'Decent Profits'
Bellacor was completely self-funded,
and its goal has been profitability from the outset.
With average sale amounts ranging around US$400, no warehousing costs other
than shipping, and gross margins in the 40 to 50 percent range, Bellacor
has taken a traditionally inefficient distribution
channel and made it more convenient for consumers --
and lucrative for itself.
"Their visitor traffic is small at the moment, and they will have to pursue
sound customer acquisition strategies in order to scale the business model
to the point where it is generating decent profits," Ritter said. "However,
they have built a sound business model to this point and have a solid chance
at reaching their financial goals."
Online Rebels
Another one of the few pure-play e-tailers to show a profit is FragranceNet.com, which
sells brand name fragrances at a discount. Because the company
is Net-only, it avoids the high overhead of
running real-world stores. The company
also works without significant inventory on hand.
"An effective cost-saving strategy is not paying for products from its
suppliers until after customers have placed an order, so critical operating
funds are not tied up in accounts receivable," Ritter said.
According to Ritter, FragranceNet's
customer acquisition costs are reported to be
in the $7 range, "which is
impressive for a profitable pure-play. That tells me their business model is
scalable."
FragranceNet offers discounts of
up to 50 to 60 percent off retail prices,
and throws in free shipping and a gift
for orders over $25. The
company showed a profit in both
the third and fourth quarters of 2000, Ritter said.
Without A Cause?
Despite the successes of pure plays such
as Bellacor and FragranceNet, some
analysts believe that ultimately, the biggest pure plays will succumb
to the multichannel party or be left off the most successful list.
"At least to some extent, e-tailers will need some
brick-and-mortar backbone,
unless they're a very small niche site," Kelley said.
"But in terms of being
a first-rate retailer, every one will have some
kind of multichannel presence."
Even Ritter, who believes both FragranceNet and Bellacor will still be
around in a year, issued words of caution.
"They still face formidable competition from their multichannel
competitors," he said. "As this phenomenon takes hold by a growing base of
multichannel retailers, it will become increasingly difficult for new
players in the pure-play world to ever get enough traction to get out of the
box."