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Cannibalizing Bricks and Mortar
By Michael Alan Hamlin
December 20, 1999

The big Internet buzz these days is about B2B commerce, which globally is supposed to grow to US$1.3 trillion by 2003 by some estimates, and even earlier than that by others. B2B growth in Asia appears set to grow rapidly, too. China alone has about two-thirds the total number of e-commerce servers all of Europe has, and throughout Asia, large retailers and manufacturers are linking their firms electronically by the Internet, digitizing supply chain management.
But economist James Surowiecki writing in Slate magazine last week suggested that all the B2B hype is overblown, at least in terms of the shadow the hype has cast over B2C commerce. He paraphrases a B2B proponent who recently urged listeners to, "Think of all the parts that GM has to buy every day just to keep its business going, and multiply that by all the giant companies out there that have to buy parts."

"But," Mr. Surowiecki says, "let’s remember this: GM spends less on parts in a year than consumers spend on GM cars. That’s by definition. Otherwise, GM would go out of business. In fact, if you add up all the money GM and its suppliers spend on parts and databases and infrastructure, it’s less than consumers spend on GM cars, again by definition."

Critics of the potential of B2C commerce discount arguments like Mr. Surowiecki’s with a lot of cultural malarkey, that generally goes like this: "Consumers enjoy shopping. It’s as much a social activity as an economic one." To which I say, "Anyone who has to go to a grocery store to meet a girl (or a boy) is dysfunctional and is probably a menace to society." Granted, it’s more comfortable window shopping with your wife or girlfriend at the mall than it is to cybershop huddled together at a computer (Hmm, sounds rather nice, actually.), but not necessarily if you are serious about buying something, and getting the best price, and are surfing on your living room TV while sitting on your couch instead of trying to find a parking space at Megamall after dodging the MMDA’s rogue traffic enforcers.

Here in the Philippines there are also other reasons to give B2C short thrift. Last week at an end-of-the-year party of techno-types, for instance, I was told about the number of hits a new site developed by a local consulting company was receiving. The consulting firm built and is maintaining the site for a high-profile media company, and hopes to make its money from advertisers. Given the hits it is receiving, I suggested that some sort of B2C initiative be considered.

Why? Because as consultants Philip Evans and Thomas S. Wurster write in a recent article, "Getting Real About Virtual Commerce," which appears in the November-December 1999 issue of Harvard Business Review, "navigation is the battlefield on which competitive advantage will be won or lost" in the retail sector. For instance, "Many people continue to view Amazon.com as an on-line bookseller, but its true business is navigating," they argue.

"Navigating has three dimensions. Reach is about access and connection," and includes not just eyeballs or hits, but upstream products and suppliers; or rather, how many products and suppliers can be connected to a great many customers. The second dimension is affiliation, which really means customer relationships so close that the site becomes a consumer advocate, delivering on its customers’ desires and wishes.

Third comes richness, or the depth and detail of information that can be provided on the Internet, as opposed to the general level of product knowledge available through sales people in a typical bricks and mortar mall.

The site my friend was describing sounded to me like a natural navigation site, already attracting significant numbers of users with a common interest. Why not provide additional services, especially retail of products that appeal to the type of user already spending time regularly at the site? The objections were two. First of course was that electronic commerce is hard to transact because legislation and banking practices are not yet in place.

However, legislation and banking hasn’t stopped some B2C pioneers, who are both experimenting — with the cooperation of their banks — with secure online credit card transactions and other forms of payment, such as COD. Early next year, based on the anecdotal evidence available to me from retailers and their consultants, the number of Philippine sites offering B2C opportunities will grow dramatically.

The second objection was that the Philippines doesn’t have that many users yet, and with the economy uncertain, growth in users may even slow. There are three reasons why I think this won’t be the case. First is that user growth in Japan throughout its recession has grown 50 percent annually. While traditional sectors have slowed, new engines of growth have emerged (Japan’s problem is that it is trying to keep the traditional sectors alive, and is creating a huge debt bubble doing that, and it’s not helping. More companies went bankrupt last quarter than ever before.). That's pretty much the case for the rest of Asia, too.

Second, there are significant efforts to extend usage into the provinces. One is directed at individual users, and will involve putting up Internet kiosks (instead of cafés) in pawn shops (consumer finance companies!). This is the initiative DFFN.com recently announced. Another effort evolves from corporations operating nationally. Better infrastructure and new technologies allow them to use the Internet to connect their operations. This can result in the sudden creation of hundreds of new users almost overnight.

The third reason I think it would be strategically imprudent to delay B2C initiatives is that individual Filipinos love and quickly absorb new technology: the Philippines is not the texting capital of the world for nothing.

There is one more reason that B2C Internet-commerce hasn’t gone as quickly here as it might, and that is that traditional retailers are reluctant to cannibalize their existing retail business. That’s too bad, according to Messrs. Evans and Wurster, who say of retailers’ efforts to protect traditional models, "They must expect the new business to cannibalize the old."

Because if they don’t go after the business, someone else will.

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