Despite the dot-com downturn, there is still room for small offline retailers on the Web
and good reasons for them to be there, according to industry analysts.
"I think people have to separate what is happening to dot-coms from the value of the
Internet to retailers," Gartner research director David Schehr told the E-Commerce Times.
Schehr believes the real value of the Web to small retailers is its ability to provide
an additional shopping channel for their customers. Other sources cite the Web's use as
an information tool by customers who later make purchases in brick-and-mortar stores.
Small businesses appear to be using the Internet as an "information channel," William J.
Dennis, Jr., a senior research fellow at the National
Federation of Independent Business (NFIB), told the E-Commerce Times.
According to Dennis, Web surfers are using the Net "as an electronic yellow pages."
Research Avenue
A report issued by the NFIB in August, "The National Small Business Poll," said that 58
percent of small business owners found that their sites acted as a stimulant to sales
made in the site owner's real-world place of business.
Other studies have also found a connection between online research and offline sales . For
example, a recent Jupiter study concluded that
45 percent of consumers have used a
retailer's Web site to research a product before purchasing it in the same company's
store.
Jupiter also found that nearly two-thirds of the total Web benefit for retailers
comes from offline transactions influenced by Web-based research.
Revenue Roads
Although the primary value of an online presence is as an informational channel for
customers, small e-tailers are also making sales online. The NFIB found that 24 percent
of small businesses were recognizing revenue from e-commerce sales.
Another source of income from Web sites is advertising revenue, according to 21 percent
of the small businesses polled by the NFIB. Additionally, Web sites garner revenue through
subscriptions and commissions from directing visitors or sales orders to other sites,
the NFIB said.
On average, small businesses with Web sites surveyed by the NFIB estimated that 13 percent
of their total revenue is generated directly or indirectly from their Web
presence.
Slow Stream
Companies that decide to take their business online should not look at the company Web
site as an immediate profit center, business consultants say. However, having a company
Web site does offer the possibility for long-term revenue growth.
The NFIB found that 27 percent of small businesses with a Web site reported
an operating profit over the last three to six months, 38 said they broke even, and 38
percent reported an operating loss.
One reason many small brick-and-click retailers are not yet making a profit on their Web
sites, according to Dennis, is that "a significant share of people with Web sites have
not integrated their sites into their business."
Separate Paths
Dennis said that in many instances, the site was a "dangling appendage" created because
companies had a "nagging feeling that they ought to have one."
Dennis advised small retailers to "pull their Web sites in to become part
of the whole, rather than leaving them flopping around."
Integrating a Web site into a company's total business can be as simple as including the
URL on shopping bags and receipts, and making sure that items purchased online can be
returned offline, Dennis said.
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