Tuesday, February 12, 2008

Time For Change

Time for Change

Meet our e-commerce makeover winners, whose online sales are set to soar
Never underestimate the power of a good makeover. That was the message behind the e-Business Boost Challenge, sponsored by Entrepreneur magazine and ProStores, an eBay company and full-service e-commerce solution for SMBs.

However, this makeover wasn’t about fashion and grooming. Instead, the winners, who were announced on June 13 at the annual eBay Live! convention, held this year at the Mandalay Bay Hotel and Convention Center in Las Vegas, received a complete overhaul of their online sales efforts. More than 500 entrepreneurs operating online or through brick-and-mortar stores submitted entries describing their businesses and products as well as why they needed an enhanced online presence.

“We wanted to [encourage] business owners to take advantage of a powerful small-business web solution designed to establish and build an online presence,” says Julian Green, director of ProStores. “We are eager to educate entrepreneurs who want to further develop their businesses but don’t know how to actualize their growth potential through online sales channels.”
Over a five-month period, the six winning businesses were evaluated, and professionals from Entrepreneur, About.com, PayPal, ProStores and eBay provided consulting services to each business, teaching them how to ramp up their online and offline marketing efforts and business operations. In addition, each winning business received a website overhaul from ProStores, complete with integrated e-commerce functions and a one-year subscription to ProStores’ Business tier service. Here’s a closer look at the six winners, their online challenges and the striking makeovers.

Maggie Vasilyadis, 27Essenceology.com, New York cityProjected 2006 Sales: $25,000The Business: Maggie Vasilyadis knows all about makeovers. Working in the cosmetics industry for nine years, she noticed a distinct trend toward more natural beauty products. “I saw this big change coming, with a lot of demand for natural products, and wanted to start right away,” she explains. So she downloaded a website builder from Yahoo! and created her website in less than a month, launching in January 2006 and sourcing products by turning to trade magazines and attending trade shows.

The Challenge: Essenceology.com is run on a very small budget, and Vasilyadis works on it part time while holding her day job. She wasn’t thrilled with the design limitations of the site builder she chose and felt her site could be cleaner and easier to navigate.
According to ProStores business advisor Richard Lawrence, the online beauty products space is very crowded, and Essenceology.com needs some basics to survive. “Essenceology must have a sophisticated web design that will allow it to compete with the major beauty product sites,” he says. “The company is focusing on a fast-growing niche in the beauty products industry: natural and organic products. Unlike her competitors, [Vasilyadis’] products are very reasonably priced. [She] has a good eye for the types of beauty products that are in demand, as she shops the world looking for the best values.”

The Solution: The key word in the redesign seems to be clarity. The new site, says Vasilyadis, keeps the clean look of her previous endeavor but adds many new features for consumers’ convenience, including clear descriptions of each product and its use, along with better organization of products by category. The site also captures more customer and sales information for future marketing efforts. Checkout is seamless, using ProStores’ interface with PayPal, and Vasilyadis can easily add products as she finds more that fit her mix.
“I learned that I don’t have to do everything myself,” Vasilyadis says. “My expertise is in the beauty industry, not in building and designing a site. With help from ProStores, I was able to have control over the design and administrative options to build a site exactly as I pictured it. With more professional design, more consumers will trust the site, and there will be [fewer] abandoned carts.”

Adding E-Commerce Capabilities

Patrick Coughlin, 45American Diamond Importers, St. Clair, MichiganProjected 2006 Sales: $1.8 millionThe Business: In 1988, Patrick Coughlin carved out a nice niche selling diamonds at wholesale prices to insurance companies that needed to replace lost or stolen gems. When a local retail jeweler came on the market four years later, Coughlin saw a chance to expand and purchased the shop, entering the retail jewelry marketplace. Still, it took a while for customers to catch on that the store offered more than just diamonds, and the name, American Diamond Importers, didn’t help. In 2005, Coughlin decided it was time to create a website to help spread the word about his business.

The Challenge: Initially, the site was just an informational website about the company with no e-commerce functionality. Changing that, says ProStores business advisor Jen Mouritsen, was the big challenge. “The first hurdle was turning his site into a full e-commerce solution and getting his customers to be able to find him and buy online without having to make a phone call,” she explains. “As we move into the integration with eBay and getting ProStores up and running, we need to be sure that he has feedback and support to keep running the business effectively online.”

The Solution: ADI’s new website is fully optimized, and Coughlin has had a crash course in how to make his site rank higher in customers’ online searches for fine jewelry. Now customers can immediately see the wide variety of offerings his company has and easily make purchases. Because the new site allows him to reach out to customers in other states--and even other countries--Coughlin says he’ll be able to keep their business, even if they relocate.
“Optimization, spiders, sponsorships--it’s like I’ve learned a whole new language,” Coughlin says. But he expects that language to pay off in a big way. “When you turn on the news here, it’s hard not to get depressed. Michigan’s economy is in the dumpster because of all the news coming out of the car [industry],” he explains. “We were expecting to do $1 million in online sales next year, but now we expect to double that. We’ve already hired six new full-time people to handle the increase, and if all goes according to plan, we’ll probably hire another six more. That’s great news for our area.”

Warren Tracy, 49The Busted Knuckle Garage, Prescott, ArizonaProjected 2006 Sales: More than $300,000The Business: When Warren Tracy stumbled out of bed in the middle of the night in August 1996 and scrawled a foggy idea on a piece of paper, he didn’t realize he had just started his next business venture. A year later, Tracy refined and trademarked that late-night doodle to launch The Busted Knuckle Garage, a gift company that now offers 150 distinctive, branded items for car and motorcycle enthusiasts.
Tracy started getting the word out by promoting skin-care products for mechanics and other hands-on types, such as the river guides he worked with at the Grand Canyon. He began publicizing his products through back-of-the-book advertising in an automotive magazine, and sales increased. When the business picked up some momentum, he quit his job, sold his small collection of cars and motorcycles, and refinanced his house to get the capital he needed to grow the business.

The Challenge: Revenue growth has been steady since the company’s founding in 1997--Tracy has licensed his trademarked name to other manufacturers and closed a 3,400-store distribution deal for a major automobile parts retailer--but Tracy knew sales through his website could be stronger.
“We created retail demand for [our] product and focused on wholesaling to stores and catalog companies,” Tracy explains. “We didn’t really customize the website to any great extent but watched it grow every year. Someone needed to come in with tools and bring it up [a] level. I raised my hand and said, ‘I’m not the one.’”

The Solution: Spearheaded by ProStores director Julian Green, the team created a slick new look and a more functional shopping cart for the site, as well as back-end functions that capture more customer information and sales data, allowing the site to handle a greater volume of sales seamlessly. “Through ProStores, Tracy will be able to list items on eBay as well as other comparison shopping sites [such as Froogle and Shopping.com],” says Green. “Managing and updating those listings will help drive traffic to [his] products.”
Tracy expects the site and other marketing will result in an uptick in referral business: “I believe we’ve built something so friendly and so inviting that new and existing customers will be extremely motivated to tell their friends and family what they’ve discovered.”

Breaking into a Niche Market

Elena Neitlich, 39; Andrew Neitlich, 40; & Cari Whiddon, 38Moms on Edge LLC, Osprey, FloridaProjected 2006 Sales: $55,000The Business: Best friends Elena Neitlich and Cari Whiddon were discussing the challenges of teaching their children how to behave. How can parents be consistent with consequences? After all, it’s not easy to make a little one take five in the middle of a shopping mall. Soon, an idea began to take shape: The Original Naughty Spot--a portable mat with a timer for timeouts.
Whiddon and Neitlich carved out time to develop that idea and others by parking next to each other at the local Wendy’s with sleeping children in the back seat or taking their cordless phones into their closets for a few minutes of uninterrupted discussion. Soon, Andrew Neitlich, Elena’s husband, came onboard as a partner and director of operations. The business officially launched in 2005.
“Our site was up in September, and we got our first order in October,” says Elena. “When people placed orders, Cari sent out an e-mail that said we didn’t have our products in yet, but people e-mailed back and said, ‘We’ll wait.’ That’s when I knew we had something special--when people wanted to purchase [our products] without us having them in our hands.”

The Challenge: Because the company specializes in niche products--“products for peace, quiet and good behavior,” says the tag line--educating customers and getting them to the site were key challenges. ProStores business advisor Angela Troy says, “Children’s items are so competitive. There are numerous hits for ‘place mats,’ so we needed to be sure that the right keywords were being used.”

The Solution: The redesign includes enhanced graphics and a cleaner look. The ProStores team added featured products to the home page, which helps educate customers on the types of products the company specializes in. Other additions include a shopping cart that’s easier to use, an online retail order form and price list, more shipping options and free shipping promotions, and a much easier back-end interface. Links to eBay make managing auctions simpler, and a blog keeps customers entertained and informed and gives them another place to provide feedback.
“Revamping an e-commerce site is not just about web design,” says Whiddon. “It is about a comprehensive strategy to attract prospects, convert them to customers, and manage the back-end order and fulfillment process. We have become much more aware of the importance of various online marketing options, as well as the potential [for] PR.”

Marc Desrosiers, 50RaceWax.com LLC, Waynesboro, PennsylvaniaProjected 2006 Sales: $100,000The Business: Marc Desrosiers liked watching his son’s ski team race but didn’t like dipping into his pockets regularly for $50 bars of race wax and $100-per-bottle speed additives. As a chemist, Desrosiers recognized that the ingredients in those pricey products were actually relatively inexpensive.
When his son decided to test ski waxes for his science fair project, Desrosiers did some experimenting of his own. He purchased some of the ingredients and began creating his own ski wax, which he distributed to his son’s racing team.
“They were thrilled that I was able to give them some of the stuff that they pay a lot of money for,” Desrosiers explains. “Then they said, ‘Hey, you should sell this stuff.’ I had the idea that I would put up a website and send [prospects] a small sample [for free], and if they wanted more, they [could] buy some from me.” Since that nondescript launch in 1999, Racewax, which specializes in affordable ski and snowboard wax products, has been featured in a ski trade magazine and has fielded orders from around the world.

The Challenge: Desrosiers felt that his lack of business training was holding him back. After reading about using eBay as a marketing tool, he gave it a try, and his sales volume steadily increased. However, there was no strategy or comprehensive approach to his marketing or branding, especially on his website, www.racewax.com.
ProStores business advisor Lin Shearer says this is another case where looks matter. “In the product line he’s in, a cool logo is going to go a long way on patches [and] decals,” says Shearer. “He needs to create a true corporate identity.”

The Solution: Sporting a hot new logo created as part of the makeover, Desrosiers’ new site is now far more functional, even allowing customers to accurately compute shipping from many countries. He’s learned a great deal about search engine optimization from the consulting sessions and webinars in which he participated. Plus, the ability of the site to capture more customer data from both his eBay auctions and his direct sales will boost his ability to market his business. Says Des-rosiers, “One of my goals, along with the management of customer information and inventory, was just to be able to use information technology to do a lot more and make my busy life a little easier.”

Making Your Website Cozy

Pamela Huber-Hauck, 46Spirit Work Knitting and Designs, Rochester, New YorkProjected 2006 Sales: $375,000The Business: When Pamela Huber-Hauck left her management position at a telecommunications company to follow her passion and open a yarn shop, her well-honed business acumen served her well. Huber-Hauck’s knowledge of what her clients wanted, as well as the fact that knitting and crochet were on the upswing, created an environment for explosive growth. The startup she launched in 2003 moved from a tiny, 400-square-foot storefront into a 2,400-square-foot facility by the end of her second year in business.
As Huber-Hauck explains, the store became the priority. “Our whole strategy around the brick-and-mortar store was finding what we could do that’s different and innovative,” she says. “We brought in couches and seating and coffee and spa music. We shifted our focus away from [the] website.”

The Challenge: When business had fallen 40 percent by early 2006, Huber-Hauck knew she needed to find new revenue streams. However, the online yarn market was already dominated by a few sellers who were doing it well, and Huber-Hauck wasn’t sure how to transform her website (www.spiritworkknit.com) from a place to learn about upcoming in-store events to a full-service online retailer of yarn and related accessories.
Even though Huber-Hauck was spending as many as 10 hours a week updating her site with new images and information, that time wasn’t paying off in increased sales. ProStores business advisor Mike Miller says the problem was two-fold. “First, it was hard to tell when navigating if you could actually purchase products,” he explains. “Second, we had to [take] the warm, fuzzy feeling of the retail [store] and put it in the online setting.”

The Solution: The new site places the retail experience first. “My site was primarily a marketing tool for local customers,” Huber-Hauck says. “The redesign placed the emphasis first on shopping, then on communication and community building.” But that doesn’t mean she’s abandoning her commitment to the local market, adding, “The new site will allow us to leverage technology, e-mail marketing, etc. that will help us stay connected with local customers, communicate in a timely manner and drive sales.”

Comment on the above success stories! View in respect to the overall e-marketing plan, consumer behaviour &/or product that was being marketed. In your opinion, which story has the most potential for e-growth and which is the most successful? (Comments due by Feb. 19th - 2008)

12 comments:

Surien said...

These success stories are good because they show how brick-and-mortar businesses can make a difference to their sales revenue just by adding online services with their business. To me, all of these companies have potential to grow in respect to e-commerce but the one with the most potential is the Moms On Edge Company because they have a niche market and could do with an updated, fully functional website as to boost sales because they do not have a physical location and they have a unique product that the customers will wait for thereby setting them apart from their competitors. In respect to the e-marketing plan Moms On Edge needs to work on educating the consumers and making them aware that this particular product is available and discuss the means of how to find it. In respect to consumer behaviour Moms On Edge needs to understand their consumers and the way that they think as to affectively promote this unique product. In respect to the product Moms On Edge needs to promote this unique product in various ways as to make the consumers aware of their product and its features. The key challenges for Moms On Edge is getting a base of customers and making their target population aware of their existence.

Jonny said...

This contest was definitely a plus for brick and mortar stores as it gave them an opportunity to access a market they might not normally be able to take advantage of. Being a small brick and mortar would make it difficult to afford an online source, but having this guidance would allow for a normally local store to begin creating a national presence.

holly7 said...

This contest was great because it gave a chance to these small business that weren't getting the coverage they needed to really succeed. With the help of these "online makeovers" these niche markets that are very localized can now be seen by everyone. They can now expand and become bigger in every direction.

Dan said...
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Dan said...

As someone who knows a number of entrepreneurs, including individuals who have succeeded online, as well as those who haven't, it is interesting to read about those who have succeeded, and what measures were taken to get to where they are today.
It's one thing for an entrepreneur to be successful in their brick in mortar location - however, without expanding your physical presence through expansion, you're really limitting yourself to your immediate trading area - and depending on your proximity, that added on-line business could mean make or break for your business.
I think that the web is an awesome way to reach new markets, and to build not only business name, but in some ways I can see it acting as a motivator for the entrepreneur to work harder - motivating them to want to go the distance.
I checked out all of the websites, and there were two that really stuck out. Moms on Edge, and RaceWax Inc. both fit into unique niche markets. Moms on Edge offered a really interesting mix of merchandise, and 'mompreneurs' are a hot trend in the business community as of late...by offering a unique product line, and by adding a 'mom perspective' I do think that they'll succeed. Though more specific to the merchandise offered, RaceWax had a decent looking site that was easy to view, merchandise was presented in a professional manner and the company has gone the extra step by offering their online catalogue in English, Swedish and Norwegian - a smart move on their part.
Okay, so it looks like I'm starting to ramble a bit...anyways, I think that for the most part, the re-designs were successful, and will hopefully act as an incentive for others that are currently struggling with their online operations.

Anonymous said...
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Ashley said...

I believe that the brick and mortar website makeover contest was a great idea for all the entrepreneurs operating online. I believe that the easlier the website is to work the better. So it's great that all of these entrepreneurs got the website makeovers. I really believe that it will help all of businesses grow. and it will get them all out there more.

Tegan said...

This was a really good idea to have a contest among small retailers. I'm sure it really opened their eyes to how successful their companies could be if they put a little work into it and had the help of some experts. Each of the companies was very different to one another and each will have the ability to be successful in their chosen fields. They each need to have their main competitors in line and make sure the word is getting out about their products and services. By looking over the websites the one that I really liked the best was for RaceWax. This company didn't like the products that were currently on the market and instead made the product themselves. I like that this gentleman had the background training in dealing with the chemicals necessary to make his products and it was that simple for him. He is also very passionate about what his product does and how it helps other people. It also probably doesn't help that I think it would be a sweet company to have because then you would be near the ski hills all the time! This company does have an interesting website that allows customers to purchase right online. Having paired up with major sponsors is also a major plus to this business. Overall though, any company can make their business successful if they have the right idea and the passion.

Lindsay Delmage said...

This shows that online services help businesses because it will increase thwe revenue. The contest was a positive aspect for Brick and mortar and it gave them a chance to gain more awareness and business.

Christine said...

All of these companies have worked hard to be where they are today and with that have developed very effective marketing tools. The sucess stories allow other entreprenuers to look into the newly-sucessful businesses and find some sort of relation.
I think that Essenseology.com is very well set up and will be one of the more successful businesses. They found a demand among their consumers and developed that into their e-marketing plan. Being able to fulfill consumer demand and offer an easily acessible, easy-to-use site offers their customer their trust, getting business in return.
RaceWax.com was also very professionaly set-up and it offers an abundance of merchandise.
All in all, I believe that these two sites will be the most succesful because they were able to find out what their customer want and present their solutions in a professional manner.
The contest was a good idea because it got these entreprenuers thinking about how they could better their business, and in the end they got a more successful business.

tara said...

I think that this was a great idea, to get businesses names out there. It was also a way for them to learn about e-marketing and what it can do for smaller businesses.I think that this will be a great opportunity for these businesses to advance and keep a competitive edge.

Tara Bender said...

The contest was a really good idea and really smart of the brick and morter stores to do this. It really gave these smaller companies a chance to make a good site or just simply make it better, and actually have the chance to get their company out there. I think the company with the most potential would have to be Moms On Edge, because they have such unique stuff and have such a unique niche market, and to me their site stood out more than the others.