By Michael Mahoney E-Commerce Times
03/08/02 2:42 PM PT
To get a true read on the health of the e-commerce sector, observers should keep close
tabs on several financial indicators, according to analysts.
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The past several months of e-commerce news has been enough to make any e-commerce
prognosticator dizzy. An industry dominated over the last six months by doom-and-gloom
messages is suddenly awash with profitable earnings reports and growth numbers.
And the profitability news does not stop with large e-tailers like
Amazon. Healthy
earnings reports have also been released by smaller niche companies, such as
EBags and jewelry e-tailer
Ice.com, according to Jupiter Media Metrix analyst Ken
Cassar.
So, what is the true state of e-commerce health? Where does the hype end and reality
begin?
"The e-commerce sector is in a good place relative to six months ago, but that's not
saying much -- the sector was as popular as O.J. Simpson six months ago," Cassar told the
E-Commerce Times.
Still Breathing
According to GartnerG2's Van Baker, it is not really correct to say e-commerce is "back"
because in truth it never went anywhere.
"E-commerce never died. We just had a problem for a while where there were a lot of bad
business models securing funding and seeing the light of day, which under closer scrutiny
should never have seen the light of day in the first place," Baker said.
In Baker's view, e-commerce has continued to grow for companies that have a good business
model, infrastructure and value proposition, and he said he expects that trend to
continue.
"E-commerce behavior is predominantly tied to the amount of time someone has been online,
so as we get a population who has more years of Internet maturity, that lends itself very
nicely to continued strong growth," Baker noted.
Cloudy Forecast?
But while more consumers may be getting comfortable online, many e-tailers are scaling
back their online efforts.
"I don't think it's all completely sunny," Cassar warned. "We're seeing a lot of
brick-and-mortars still being very conservative about their Web investments and
dramatically scaling back."
Cassar pointed to recent staff cuts at
Bloomingdales.com as well as to a growing
trend toward outsourcing e-commerce operations to third parties. Marketing expenses for
online ventures also are being cut, Cassar said. But such cutbacks do not necessarily
mean that multichannel retailers have lost faith in their e-business arms.
"A lot of the bricks are getting to the point where their sites are pretty good and they
don't need a lot of the development staff they might have had in 1999 or 2000," he said.
Signs To Watch
To get a true read on the health of the e-commerce sector, observers should keep close
tabs on several financial indicators, according to analysts.
"Retailers' investment in the sector and online sales are probably the best indicators,
but investment is difficult to track," Cassar said. "A company's marketing budget is also
an indicator of its level of confidence in the channel."
Baker pointed to the moves of traditional retailers -- and to a certain extent the
fulfillment and reverse logistics capabilities of online retailers -- as key indicators
for the sector.
"One of the things you definitely watch for is the traditional retailers and their
activity within the [e-commerce] space," Baker said. "There's some evidence from
multichannel companies that if they can get a customer active across all channels, the
amount of money per consumer on an annual basis increases dramatically, like two times
the revenue, and we're seeing a fair amount of evidence of that already."
Baby Steps
According to Cassar, one of the best things that could happen to the e-commerce sector is
stabilization.
"We may have hit a point where investment in staffing has stabilized, and we might see
where the channel becomes boring, which could be the best thing that happens to it in
terms of its stability," Cassar said. "Six months into the future, there's no reason to
believe we'll see anything but a continuation of what we see today: cautious baby steps
forward."
But the size of those steps will depend largely on the health of the overall economy,
Baker noted.
"As goes disposable income, so goes purchasing," he said. "Some [economists] are saying the
recession ended in January or February, but the primary governing factor will be: Is
consumer sentiment improving?"