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Study:
Death of e-commerce
is being greatly exaggerated
Health not to
be confused with stock turmoil
By Jeremy Schlosberg
Given the
beating many internet companies have taken both on the stock market and in
the press over the last few weeks, the world seems suddenly ready for the
rapid and indelicate decline of the dot.com in all its various guises,
e-commerce chief among them.
But hold off from humming "The Funeral March" just
yet.
According to a new study
from the Boston Consulting Group, e-commerce is only just beginning, not
coming to an end.
Business-to-consumer
sales online amounted to $33.1 billion in 1999, a figure 120 percent
greater than 1998 online sales revenues, reports the study.
This number is expected to grow by another 85 percent
in 2000 to $61.1 billion.
The study urges
people not to confuse turmoil in the financial markets with weakness in
the basic idea of e-commerce, which it says is strong, growing stronger
and is here to stay.
The study bases this conclusion on major trends.
First, the online population is just now beginning to mirror
the offline population.
According to the report, 1999 was the year when web users
finally became a bit older, less affluent, more female and less highly
educated than they were in previous years.
While it’s true that advertisers usually chase the high-end
demographic groups, the study’s point is that the high end can’t exist
in a vacuum if the underlying enterprise—e-commerce itself—is going to
blossom.
It concludes that the fact that online users look more
and more mainstream is a strong sign of health and future growth.
In fact, says the study, the new demographic
composition of the online population means that the fastest-growing
e-commerce categories of the coming year will be different than the
categories that launched e-commerce in the ‘90s, when the web was
largely the province of younger, highly-educated, high-tech enthusiasts.
Specifically, the Boston Consulting Group
anticipates that health and beauty, home and garden, consumer electronics
and food and beverage will all be categories that begin growing notably in
2000.
The study shows that these categories are pretty much
wide open competitively.
While established online categories such as books or toys or
music or financial services are now dominated by the top three players in
each niche, the top three players in these newer categories by and large
do not have even half of the business.
For instance, in the health and beauty category, the
top three players at this point have just 40 percent of the business; in
home and garden, the top three have just 35 percent of the business.
Compare that to books, where the top three players have
captured 85 percent of the market.
The other main factor
the study identifies as indicating a strong future for e-commerce is how
much of online retail sales at this point are already being captured by
companies with nontraditional retail business models.
These news types of retail enterprises include auctions,
buying groups and manufacturers or distributors that now sell directly to
consumers.
Together this group accounted for more than 35 percent
of online sales in 1999.
The study says that the nontraditional models that have
developed on the web each have clear advantages to both the businesses and
their customers.
This means that e-commerce is clearly providing something
people can’t get anywhere else.
The study also points to the fact that e-commerce entities as
a group have not nearly begun exploiting the potential for what its calls
"supplemental revenues" above and beyond the retail
transaction.
These include advertising, customer referral fees and
market research fees.
So-called internet "pure-plays"—companies
that exist only online—have been much more successful earning this sort
of supplemental revenue than retailers with both an online and offline
presence.
In 1999, supplemental revenue comprised 15
percent of total revenues for pure-plays but only 1 percent of total
revenue for "clicks-and-mortar" enterprises.
While many have looked at these sorts of supplemental
revenues as moves of desperate companies in search of cash, this report
considers such money an important part of any e-tailer’s future growth,
highlighting yet again the idea that e-commerce is just now coming into
existence.
The Boston Consulting Group warns that
traditional retailers have a lot to worry about from their online rivals.
By the end of this year, online sales will
comprise 10 percent or more of a number of retail categories—a reality
the report calls "a very real threat" to offline retailers in
these categories, which include computers, books and music/videos.
- Jeremy Schlosberg is the senior
editor for new media.

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