Adventures in Internet Retailing

The first big surge in the ecommerce explosion came from business-to-consumer
(B2C) or retail sales. Companies such as America Online, Amazon.com, eBay and
Priceline.com became the first household names in ecommerce. Their leaders
became the names that replaced the old economy names during 1998 and 1999. We
ended the last century with Amazon.com's leader Jeff Bezos as Time magazine's
Person of the Year. In the first couple of weeks of the new century, Steve
Chase led America Online in its purchase of Time Warner. Talk about heady
days and sky-high stock valuations.

The speed of the ascent was dizzying. In the early hours of the AOL Time
Warner announcement, news stories discussed a merger between Time Warner and
AOL. Half of a day went by before I realized that Time Warner wasn't the
company doing the buying. At that moment, it was still inconceivable that a
dot com could buy the leading offline company in its sector, no matter how
big the dot com. Of course, given what happened over the succeeding year, it
again seems inconceivable that a dot com could buy the leading offline
company in its sector. The dot com fall came fast and hard.

The fall actually came less than three months after the AOL Time Warner
announcement, in March 2000. But like the coyote who runs off the cliff
chasing the roadrunner and doesn't realize at first that he is no longer on
solid ground, the dot com world kept running along on thin air, not sensing
it would soon come to a very painful crash. Yet for all its smugness, the dot
com world got hit harder than it deserved when it crunched into solid ground.
AOL was one of the very few companies that had the wherewithal to grab
ownership of a traditional company at the high swell of the dot com bubble.

So where does that leave opportunities for niche sites in the scorched-ground
market of dot com retailers? As with most niche selling, you're left in
fairly healthy territory. You have a credibility gap to overcome with
potential customers. They will need more reassurance that you can deliver on
all of your service and security promises, but the customers are still
shopping online and their numbers are continuing to grow both nationally and
internationally month-by-month.

This would be a lousy time to start a mass-market toy store such as eToys,
but this may be a very good time to launch a site that offers children's
educational software and books that support specific home-schooling
curricula. Consumers understand now that there is wealth of specialized goods
and services available on the Internet, and growing numbers of these
consumers are willing to buy from niche sites.

Trust remains a factor, just as service is still critical to Internet
retailing, but some of these hurdles can be traversed by presenting a site
that communicates expertise and then backs up that expertise by delivering on
all service and security promises. A lot of trust can be gained by
communicating expertise. A musician friend of mine buys dozens of harmonicas
each year. Buying online from niche sites is the only way to go when you want
both a wide selection and a good price. So he goes to the niche sites
specializing in harmonicas. Within a few minutes, he can tell whether the
site owners really know the products in the niche. Once he ascertains a high
level of knowledge, he is willing to trust the retailer.

Not surprisingly, the best harmonica sites are run from a family home. The
service is high touch, and the proprietors are quick to offer product
information and any other help related to professional harmonicas.
Inevitably, a relationship develops. This is the territory best suited to
Internet retailing. You can't get this relationship from a catalog, and you
can't find the expertise in a store. In the world of finely-carved niche
retailing, the Internet remains a land of golden opportunities. It does
requires considerable expertise, superb service and high security, but if you
can deliver these three requisite qualities, you can avoid that nasty dot com
flu.

About the Author

Rob Spiegel is the author of Net Strategy (Dearborn) and The Shoestring
Entrepreneur's Guide to the Best Home-Based Businesses (St. Martin's Press).
You can reach Rob at spiegelrob@aol.com.