
Online Retailing Just Keeps On Rolling
The rapid growth of online retailing in North
America continues, with revenues expected to top $36 billion by the end of the
year and a projected growth rate of 145% in 1999. These findings were
released today by Shop.org, the trade association for online retailers, in a report
conducted by The Boston Consulting Group.
Based on data from 328 online retailers, 158 of which participated in a detailed
survey, the study provides the first complete picture of actual online retail
revenues for 1998. Total 1998 online revenues across all categories reached
$14.9 billion, representing 0.5 % of all retail sales. Online orders in 1998 were
up 200% and the number of online shoppers was up 300%.
"While it is commonly acknowledged that Internet retailing is coming of age, our
research shows that opportunities exist to further grow the category," says Donna
Iucolano, Chair of Shop.org's Committee on Internet Shopping Research.
"Challenges and opportunities are being dealt with on a daily basis by online-only
'pure-play' retailers, traditional stores, catalogers and manufacturers. The specific
findings and lessons reported in this study illustrate that retailers of all kinds and
sizes are finding new and innovative ways to market and sell products online to
the global consumer."
"Most people think e-commerce is mainly being done by Web-only businesses,
but 62% of the $14.9 billion of online revenues in 1998 were from retailers who
had businesses that predated the Web. These catalog, call centers and
brick-and-mortar retailers are a growing force behind the continued rapid
growth of online retail," said David Pecaut, Senior Vice President of The Boston
Consulting Group and leader of its E-Commerce Practice.
The Shop.org/BCG study compares multichannel retailers - those with
brick-and-mortar, call center or catalog operations who also sell online - with
"pure-play" retailers who sell strictly online. A number of key differences are
cited:
Currently, pure-play retailers are dominant in the collectibles
(person-to-person auctions), books, music/video and automotive
categories. In categories such as financial brokerages, consumer
electronics, apparel and computers, the majority of sales are from
multichannel retailers.
Because multichannel retailers have the advantage of an existing brand and
infrastructure, they are more recognizable than online-only competitors in
some areas. But online-only retailers have begun using aggressive online
and off-line marketing and advertising campaigns to build their own
recognizable brands.
The two channels work the Web differently, with online-only retailers
generating 6% of revenues from affiliate sites, compared to only 1% for
multichannel retailers.
Pure-play retailers earned 12% of revenues from high-margin
supplemental sources versus less than 1% earned by multichannel
retailers.
Customer acquisition costs for online-only retailers are $42 per customer,
almost double that for multichannel retailers at $22 per customer.
While multichannel retailers spend heavily on customer retention (16% of
their marketing and advertising budget), online-only retailers spend only
3% on retention, devoting most of their resources to customer acquisition.
Online-only retailers tend to outsource back office functions such as
managing inventories and filling orders, while multichannel retailers more
often outsource Web site development and maintenance.
The report draws on the recent experience of savvy online merchants to offer
eight lessons for online retail success:
1.Develop relationships of trust and security with customers to overcome
inhibitions about online shopping.
2.'Imprint' new customers by becoming their first point of reference and
creating a sense of comfort that can translate into customer loyalty.
3.Exploit the connectivity of the Web by leveraging affiliate programs and
portal relationships that drive customers to your site.
4.Provide end-to-end customer service throughout the purchasing cycle -
from order taking to delivery to after-purchase services such as
responding to customer questions and complaints, merchandise returns,
exchanges and billing.
5.Use rich information to increase sales and product mix; providing
customers with more information helps them make better purchasing
decisions and often encourages them to buy more high value products.
6.Leverage offline relationships to gain online customers by providing them
with a means of researching, acquiring and servicing their purchases in
person, by phone or by Internet.
7.Develop interactive merchandising. In other words, replicate the in-store
sales interaction by providing consumers with opportunities for two-way,
personal and interactive communications.
8.Create a powerful brand promise around the total retail experience,
including the online process and fulfillment.
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