
Febuary 8, 2003
Your [SERVICE] E-ComTips
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WHAT'S NEW?
This month our newsletter begins a series of articles about making money
with an Internet store. As regular readers know, we stress that niche market
products offer the best opportunity for on-line store success. To that end,
the first article will define a niche market and review a model that will
probably not succeed.
Give us your feedback. Let us know if you are finding this newsletter
useful and let us know what subjects you would like to see covered. Please
use the Mail Form
at ImagineNation to correspond. Mail to that box is monitored constantly.
If all of this seems a little heavy at times, take a light hearted break at
ShoppingCartAbuse.com
Team....ImagineNation |
E-ComTips
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Using the E-Commerce Internet ...making money |
MARKETS
Internet stores have a distinct advantage over brick and mortar stores: The
cost of doing business is less. Leasing space in a viable location and
staffing that space are major expenses for the brick and mortar merchant.
On the other hand, the Internet store is frequently comprised of one person
with a desk top computer.
To make money though, one needs to offer products
that are suited to Internet sales. This doesn't exclude much. For instance,
you might not think selling pizzas over the Internet is a viable option. But,
one could offer special discount coupons and, if the pizzeria is not a national
chain, link the store from a community web site. So there isn't much that
can't be promoted and/or sold on the Internet. The trick for the small
business is determining which products will succeed.
There are two market factors that will affect your Internet selling success:
Competition and Availability
The degree to which competition will affect your chances of success is related
to the amount of
money you can budget toward sales and marketing. Since this newsletter is
directed toward serving the small to mid-sized business and the entrepreneurial
merchant, the chances are that you don't have a marketing budget. Your
operation or the one you're thinking about starting will probably be started
like ours was: Try it and see what happens and do what's needed and what you
can afford as you go along.
Why is Amazon so successful? According to a recent Nielson report, in the
fourth quarter of 2002 Amazon racked up 12.2 billion ad impressions.... that's
billion. With just their ad budget for one week, you would probably retire to a
south sea island.
Naturally, if you have a unique product, there are no alternatives and
consequently no competition for the item.
This doesn't mean you're home free. While there may be no competition for the
item, there is plenty of competition for the consumer's money. So, while
product competition won't be an issue, having a product that people want bad
enough to spend their money with you instead of on something else, will be.
Availability is the second issue that will effect your on-line success. Just
because your product isn't unique, doesn't mean that it will be widely available.
This is where the Internet store is the consumer's best friend and the
merchant's best opportunity.
There is often a good reason a product isn't widely available. It usually
belongs to a category considered a niche market. Niche markets are
characterized by products that have a limited general public appeal, are not
widely distributed and not readily available to the consumer, and are not
especially price sensitive.
It is often easier to determine what products do not fall into the niche
market category. Go to your local shopping mall. The chances are that
any product you find there does not fit the niche market category. Neither
do most items found in the major chain stores like a Sears or Kmart.
For the small merchant to go up against the big retailers, even on-line, is
to court disaster. Today, nearly all of the big retailers have an on-line
presence, a marketing budget, and brand recognition. You won't stand a
chance of competing across the board with these guys.
This doesn't mean that you can't sell any items that the big chains stock.
They sometimes stock one or two of something just to satisfy
the occasional customer. However, the chains will not stock niche
market items in any depth. For instance, you may be able to go to Sears and
buy a mountain bike but, your selection will be limited and you probably
won't find just the brakes you want nor the riding outfit you'll need. The
niche marketer can take advantage of this deficiency by offering a broad
range of their speciality products.
Because niche markets are defined, in a sense, by a lack of customers, the
Internet store is the ideal way to address that market. By a lack of customers,
we mean a lack of sufficient customers within local geographic area to support
the overhead of a brick and mortar store. This is why the Internet offers the small, niche
market merchant a great opportunity. The overhead is low and the market is
global.
In our next issue of E-ComTips well talk more about niche market opportunities
and provide some currently successful examples from our own client list.
The Staff
Team ....ImagineNation
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FURTHER READING:
Don't overlook our LINKS page for information sources.
Did you know you can take credit cards at your
Internet store without a merchant account. Learn more about our
IAMS service.
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There are lots of advantages to subscribing to
an IAMS account and a couple of compelling reasons:
Everything you'll need is in one easy to use location and includes free use
of our very robust PeddleGold storefront.
Take a look at the advantages of subscribed services.
View a demonstration IAMS order management console.
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Tips 'n Tricks
HTML tags shown here use the caret (^) instead of
braces <> for proper rendering within this newsletter.
Brackets are represented by the curly bracket symbols ({}). |
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Sometimes a customer wants to
return to a specific page within your store using a bookmark. With most
standard storefronts that isn't possible because the information used to
get to the page isn't known. With PeddleGold storefronts,
you can do the next best thing. Make sure the customer is in a functioning
store so they can navigate to the desired page.
This is done by including a small piece of JavaScript code into the head
section of any document you create.
^script language="JavaScript1.1" type="text/javascript"^
if(window.name != "store")top.location.href = "http://my_domain.com/PeddleGold/peddlegold.htm";
^/script^
Keep the second and third lines in a single row and replace "my_domain.com/PeddleGold/"
with the full URL to your peddlegold.htm file. This code will now load the
functional PeddleGold store with the storefront.htm page showing when
a customer arrives at your site using a bookmark link to any page containing
the code.
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