By Paul A. Greenberg E-Commerce Times
04/17/01 4:54 PM PT
While brick-and-click operations may be the inevitable direction
for e-commerce, a company still needs added value, whether it's
peddling e-commerce like NBCi or pedaling it like Kozmo.
BuyDomains is the world's leading marketplace for premium domains with over 800,000 domain names for sale. BuyDomains' domain experts have helped thousands of businesses locate the perfect domain - let us help yours!
It was a news item that wasn't fully unexpected, yet it caught
some e-commerce industry observers off guard.
Last week, online delivery service
Kozmo locked up its bikes,
cashed in its dreams and became another footnote in the
work-in-progress version of electronic commerce history.
Kozmo's ticket was punched not long after the
demise of NBCi.com (Nasdaq: NBCi),
the Internet arm of NBC Television. Well, perhaps it wasn't a demise
so much as a necessary absorption by parent company General Electric (NYSE: GE).
GE evidently decided to cut its losses and trip the off switch on NBCi.com
before the venture caused the conglomerate any further embarrassment. And
how do you accomplish that if you're a mega-power like GE? Simple. You just
buy back all the outstanding publicly held stock and re-direct the public's
interest into Must-See TV.
Will Monica and Chandler really get married next month? Will Grace move out
of Will's apartment again?
See? They've already re-directed my attention and it's only been a few days.
Why It Matters
So, with dot-coms closing right and left, why do these two companies'
simultaneous endings matter?
In part, they are particularly noticeable because Kozmo and NBCi had
real-world presence in their favor. Kozmo cyclists had almost become
part of New York City's culture. New Yorkers, notoriously in a hurry
for everything from corporate climbing to Ben & Jerry's Chunky Monkey
ice cream, were able to satisfy at least some of their cravings with
Kozmo's handy one-hour guaranteed delivery.
In nine markets nationwide, Kozmo aimed to please with instant
gratification and actual humans to represent a concept that was
born in cyberspace.
As for NBCi.com, its television network sibling has one of the
strongest product identities in America. Some thought the relationship
would give the online offspring a boost. It didn't.
If real-world presence and branding don't count for something in
the world of e-commerce, what does?
Where's the Beef?
Actually, that may not be the right question to ask.
A human face to connect with the keystrokes and a half-century
of broadcasting probably do count for something. Perhaps
the electronic newcomers simply didn't know how to take full
advantage of their built in-head starts.
For Kozmo, what was the added value that it brought to the
marketplace? For years, I have spent a good deal of time
in New York, and delivery of everything from ethnic food
to laundry detergent has never been a problem. If you
live in one of the city's boroughs, your corner grocery
store probably provides almost the same service Kozmo touted,
albeit a bit slower sometimes. And if you stay in a decent hotel,
one call to the concierge can generally yield the same moo goo gai pan or Tide.
Kozmo's concept, while a decidedly new age interpretation, was
not a new value for consumers.
There was little added worth involved in visiting NBCi.com as well.
How many sweepstakes and contests can we really endure?
Fiscal Focus
Of course, in the end, it came down to simple dollars
and cents. For Kozmo,
what began as the brainchild of one guy in his East
Village apartment in
New York resulted in investors pouring almost US$300
million into the company's promise.
Didn't anyone realize how much Ben & Jerry's you'd have
to deliver in those nine markets to recoup that outlay,
much less turn a profit? And why were heavyweights
such as Softbank so willing to keep plying the service
with cash, as recently as 12 weeks ago?
Further, if big investors were going to continue backing
Kozmo, why didn't they insist the company infiltrate markets
where delivery services would be a true added value in the
marketplace? It's tough to get rented videos and cheese
popcorn delivered in an hour in Omaha, Nebraska. Everyone seems
to have missed the forest for the trees.
World-Weary Peacock
Meanwhile, observers wondered when the plug might be pulled on
NBCi.com once it reported a loss of $662 million last year. Yet
GE kept selling stock to all comers. What was that all about?
It's incredible that GE would risk its decades-earned reputation
in such a irresponsible manner. The portal was clearly not
going to make it. What is not so clear is why GE waited so long to kill it.
Mainstream conglomerates on the level of a GE would do
well to take the NBCi debacle as an object lesson. Strong
initials like NBC and GE backing dot-coms do not
necessarily spell success.
While brick-and-click operations may be the inevitable
direction for e-commerce, a company still needs added value,
whether it's peddling e-commerce like NBCi or pedaling it like Kozmo.
What do you think? Let's talk about it.
Note: The opinions expressed by our columnists are their own and do not necessarily reflect the views of the E-Commerce Times or its management.