British
companies must shoulder much of the blame for the slow
development of e-commerce in the UK. But companies can
catch up quickly if they ask themselves the right questions.
More
rapid adoption of Internet technologies is not the only
reason why American businesses have led their European
counterparts in e-commerce. They held a number of other
advantages too. Consumer purchasing patterns are different
in the US, with a much larger percentage of sales carried
out by mail order. Customers are much more inclined to
purchase remotely.
Also,
the ethos of risk taking - of being first - is not so
prevalent within the UK. To compound matters, some early
adopters were sold a software package, told "that's
e-commerce" and expected to get on with it. The lack
of clarity around what e-commerce involves has not done
the UK any favours.
UK
companies must share some of the blame. Responsibility
for e-commerce has often been turned over to the IT department.
Apart from having their hands full with the millennium
bug and the Euro, technologists cannot be expected to
readily understand marketing and other business realities.
E-commerce
impacts on every aspect of a business, with the IT department
having a relatively minor role in creating effective e-commerce
applications. Forget about the technology. It works.
Concentrate
on identifying your business objectives and don't get
side-tracked by wizzy applications. Be pragmatic and focus
on the basics - why should my business enter into e-commerce.
Don't
just look for cost reductions. Say you already have 5
people taking order entries, but expect to take 20% of
orders electronically. Reducing the pay-roll may offset
set-up costs, but it might be better to focus that employee
on adding-value to your most important customers.
Businesses
should also take account of benefits such as increased
margins, improved service levels, new market opportunities,
reduced debtor days and improved cashflow. Businesses
should seek to identify the market opportunity by determining
whether e-commerce is an opportunity to enter new markets,
build stronger relationships, or start a completely new
business.
80%
of customers typically generate only 20% of profit for
SMEs. Having taken account of the £35 cost of raising
invoices and purchase orders, the business must decide
whether to concentrate on obtaining new customers, making
that 80% more profitable or adding value to the select
20%.
It
is then necessary to establish what proposition will attract
and retain users and encourage them to return. Some added
value tools are cost effective on the web and nowhere
else. Identifying, at an early stage, what internal measures
need to be taken to translate interest into action, close
the sale and add value to orders is essential.
Organisations
must remember that e-commerce permits easy cross-selling
of products and services, so self-imposed boundaries based
around vertical lines of business can be removed.
It
is necessary to establish if the brand carries enough
weight to stand alone or would be better served in a community
of interest such as a portal or "shopping mall"
like Barclays Sq.
Calculate
how trusted your brand is and also work out where the
market you wish to reach is. Would going offshore, using
the Channel Islands, say, to host transactions and handle
distribution create a competitive advantage?
The
on-line marketplace is relatively undeveloped, but its
potential is huge. Approximately 10 million UK residents
already have access to the Internet. Delay is not an option.
It is vital to launch your e-commerce activity as quickly
as possible. The market is changing so fast that delay
would necessitate a complete re-examination of the issues.