Posts Tagged ‘Yahoo! Stores’

Beating Giants like Cabela’s and Bass Pro Shops: The eCommerceOutdoors Story Pt. 2

Monday, August 23rd, 2010

eCommerceOutdoors
Back again with eCommerceOutdoors’ co-founder and marketing head “Do it All” Patrick Gill. In this second half of our interview, we’re focusing on technology–the past, present and a future that looks increasingly to be an open source one. (Read Part 1 here).

Moving to technology and the nut and bolts of operating a site. Yahoo! Stores is well known as an excellent place to get started in online retailing and you’ve been on it for years now. Now that you’ve become a successful retailer, what are the pros and cons for remaining with Yahoo!?
Yahoo! offers retailers a very affordable platform that saves you lots of headaches. I think it would be difficult to find a PCI compliant, fully hosted ecommerce platform for the same budget. Particularly if you went the do-it-yourself route, say, by getting a server from Rackspace. While I think the price provides excellent value, your flexibility is limited. The back-end prevents you from doing some things simply. You’re forced to customize and create workarounds. There are extreme differences between an established platform like Yahoo! and Magento, which was designed from scratch for web 2.0/3.0 (or whatever they’re calling it these days).

As a company, we’re pretty loyal to Yahoo! and the Yahoo! platform. Still, if a company knows that it will grow beyond $5-15M in annual sales, I think they are going to ultimately regret choosing Yahoo! When we launched our newest store, I wanted to see what I was missing, which is why I researched alternatives and ultimately chose Magento. Revamping that site has been a good learning experience and an opportunity to really see the pros and cons of Yahoo!

Is Yahoo! a flexible platform for integrating the latest operational, web design, merchandizing and payment technologies and services?
Yahoo! isn’t a platform that offers the latest and greatest. It is always a couple of steps behind and there are number of integration and technology challenges that are really frustrating. One of the most obvious examples is integrating an alternative payment option like Google Checkout. While the Google Checkout icon can help your PPC clickthrough rates, if you actually want to integrate it, you’ll violate the terms of your Yahoo! agreement.

Talk about the Yahoo! Stores retailer and developer communities…what are their value?
These communities are really important. When we started out, we didn’t outsource anything because we couldn’t afford it. We learned Yahoo’s proprietary programming language, RTML, and grew the site to a level where we could afford to outsource. Once we had a development budget, we tapped the developer community. The sites wouldn’t be where they are today without the contributions of the professional store developer community.

Talking specifically about the Yahoo! platform, what are three things that you did that you would have done differently had you known better?
A. I’d like our site to be faster. We need to make some optimization changes but I’m going to have to do some research because I’m not sure right now if it is the underlying code or a graphics issue.

B. We need a lot more sophistication in our supplier chain. I would have really loved to have spent a lot more time developing real-time integration of our inventory data. We’ve since created workarounds but they are not as ideal as doing the most effective way right from the beginning.

C. The third change would have been to spend a lot more time and care building our product database. It is really valuable to have complete product information or attributes (notably dimensions and weights). This is especially true for retailers who drop ship. Complete product data helps minimize shipping costs. It helps you provide real-time shipping calculation to customers when they are in your shopping cart. It helps you calculate by dimensional weight. I can’t overemphasize the importance of having an accurate and up-to-date database.

How does Nextopia’s site search technology and modules that you use fit into the Yahoo! Stores world?
Nextopia integrates very easily into the Yahoo! Stores platform and we’ve been a happy customer for over three years. In a perfect world, your product database includes all of the relevant product attributes, which enables you to filter search results. In general, site search benefits a retailer in proportion to the completeness of the underlying product database. By working with Nextopia, we’ve been able to implement some solutions but as I said just now, I really wish we had built our database with complete product attributes from the beginning.

Enough about Yahoo!, let’s talk about Magento and your newly revamped site, IslandBeachGear.com.
Even though Magento’s basic version is open source and the vendor doesn’t charge for it, it isn’t your least cost option by any means. Magento is neither simple, nor is it free. It took many, many hours to develop our IslandBeachGear.com site to the point where it is now. It required a lot of tweaking to get it right and you’ll probably require some knowledgeable developers. We used a combination of in-house resources and some third-party development. Additionally, the hosting level you need to have a fast website is expensive.

Nextopia Site Search integrated on a Magento site-IslandBeachGear.com

Nextopia Site Search integrated on a Magento site-IslandBeachGear.com

In contrast, you can get a Yahoo! Store up and running in no time. In about twenty minutes, I could create a functioning one or two SKU Yahoo! Store that could actually take orders and process payments. It wouldn’t look pretty but it would work. In contrast, Magento isn’t nearly as easy to use. The tradeoff is much greater flexibility. I’ve been very impressed by the design and usability and the out-of-box functionality. I love the flexibility. There is no limit to what I can do. I haven’t run into one adjustment or request that we couldn’t implement. With Yahoo, I run into roadblocks all the time. Magento is designed using the latest software technologies and online retailing, marketing and merchandising processes. The SEO capabilities, integrated reviews and real-time inventory access are great. That said, I would love it if Magento provided an on-demand platform like Yahoo!

Thanks very much to Patrick. Great information and guidance from someone who’s been in the ecommerce trenches for a decade. As you can see, the road to success requires a lot of hard work and iterative trial. If you fish or know someone who fishes and might appreciate an angling-themed Christmas gift, you know where to start your shopping.

Beating Giants like Cabela’s and Bass Pro Shops: The eCommerceOutdoors Story Pt. 1

Thursday, August 12th, 2010

eCommerceOutdoors

Years after launching its first store, TackleDirect.com, eCommerceOutdoors has become a highly successful multi-store retailer located on the South Jersey seashore. While co-founder and marketing head Patrick Gill continues to use the Yahoo! Stores platform for TackleDirect.com and PennFishingStore.com, he recently embraced the open source world by re-launching IslandBeachGear.com on the Magento platform.
In this two-part interview, Patrick talks about why his employees fish on company time, how the economic situation has affected customer behavior, the pros and cons of Yahoo! Stores and Magento, and why the biggest misconception about free open source ecommerce platforms is that they’re actually free.

 

Can you give us a quick summary of your company, operations and markets.
We’re an ecommerce retailing company, currently operating four sites in the fishing and outdoor leisure markets. Our corporate headquarters are in Somers Point, NJ and we run our Island Beach Gear retail store in Ocean City, NJ. In total, we have 25 full-time employees. We’ll add seasonal staff during the peak fishing and beach-related retailing months (spring and summer). Our fishing sales are split 80% in the United States, with the balance from overseas markets. The big overseas markets are South America and the United Kingdom with some sales in parts of Asia. Our beach gear sales are almost exclusively North American sales.

Who are your competitors?
We’re a specialty fishing retailer. We don’t generally–or even try to–compete against mass merchandizers like Wal-mart or the national chains like Cabela’s or Bass Pro Shops. We win customers on service and know-how, not private branding or discounting. There are probably 6,000 independent fishing retailing stores in the United States, the vast majority of which are small Mom and Pop stores. To give you an idea of the market fragmentation, a really successful independent fishing retailer will do one million dollars annually in sales. But while they’re small, these local stores are really important because they know their regions. They know specifically what works in the local rivers and lakes and costal waterways. In contrast, our specialized knowledge is product-centric. Our company and our sales reps have lots of product knowledge, but the local fishing market knowledge is found in local stores. A final word on this retailing category is the fact that people who like to fish have been much slower to adopt to Internet product sourcing than in other categories.

Let’s talk about mixing fishing and business, or in your case, making fishing your business. How often do you actually get out and test the products you sell?
While I do get out on the water, I’m the head guy so I’m not out as much as our customer service and sales staff. Our product buyers and customer service team all fish a lot because they have to test lots of gear to figure out what we should buy. I tend to test the beach gear products more often than the fishing catalog.

Let’s start by talking big picture. Your retailing properties target outdoor pursuits that are restricted by climate seasonality across much of the North American continent? How does the seasonality of your customer base affect your operations?
We sell a good amount of gear twelve months per year. We sell all types of fishing gear, primarily saltwater, although we also sell freshwater and fly fishing. But saltwater is definitely our focus. While fishing sales increase considerably in the summer, the winter months are not exactly dead. The seasonality issue is certainly real but we balance that against a very wide product selection.
TackleDirect logoHow has your customer base been affected by the economic downturn since 2007?
Although our number of orders for the 2009 fiscal year were up over 2008, average order value was down. We’ve done much better than the industry average, I think, in 2010.

Has their behavioral change affected your growth plans?
When economic times are tight, focus on the things that are working. At times, your focus could be to gain market share, not lose it. We’re trying to do a better job at everything we do. We’ve reduced our PPC spend as well as adjusted some of our other marketing activities. Inventory projection is always a gamble but we have reduced large inventory purchases to extend our cash resources.

Has it changed your plans for upgrades in technology, marketing activities or third party services that you use?
I’m constantly evaluating third party add-ons like Nextopia site search, and I probably get several phone calls per week from vendors pitching me on some third party tool or conversion booster. I like to listen to learn if we’re not doing something that we should. You really have to distinguish between what can help you and what will waste your time. If something comes out that is better than what we’re using, we’ll make the change.

Nextopia site search helps fishing enthusiasts find exactly what they need among the thousands of product SKUs on TackleDirect.com

Nextopia site search helps fishing enthusiasts find exactly what they need among the thousands of product SKUs on TackleDirect.com

Two things I noticed that you are not using are reviews or videos on TackleDirect. Why not? Reviews are available on some of your sites but not all of them. Are you planning on integrating them any time? What are you thoughts about user generated content (UGC) and online retailing?
It is time to get serious about both reviews and video across all of our sites. Incorporating reviews into Yahoo! Stores isn’t easy. We evaluated review technology for our Yahoo! sites a while back and it was premature. We’ve also found limitations with PowerReviews on the Yahoo! platform. To really do the job well, we’ll probably have to redesign our product layout because our current site design doesn’t work easily. It will take some effort. In contrast, the Magento site (IslandBeachGear.com) included review software from the beginning. Integrating reviews into that site was far easier.

Any comments on UGC?
One thing I’d really like to create is some kind of customer showcase. We receive hundreds of pictures every year. We’ve received everything from pictures of landing a 1,000 lb. blue marlin, to a variety of world record catches to little kids who caught something really special. My favorite, though, has to be a picture several years ago from three guys who went to Thailand. One of them landed a huge tuna using a very special and very expensive fishing reel that cost over $1,300. What I loved about the picture was that the boat they were sitting in, a very beaten up 14′ aluminum, was probably worth $50.

Come back in a couple of days for the second part of our interview with Patrick.

How BrickHouse Security Unlocks Secrets of Online Success-Pt. 2

Wednesday, June 30th, 2010

BrickHouselogo-smallWe’re back with BrickHouse Security’s Director of Acquisition Ryan Urban. After introducing us in the part one of our interview to a tiny computer surveillance device that surreptitiously records everything on a computer, we’re back to focus on how he maximizes online revenue and whether the future of site search is visual.

Let’s move to technology and the nut and bolts of operating BrickhouseSecurity.com?
We host with Yahoo! Stores. We moved to that platform in late 2005 and the reliability has helped us become an Internet Retailer Top 500 site.

What are some of the vendors you use?
Yahoo! for hosting. Google, Omniture, and Yahoo! for analytics. We use Nextopia for site search.

How important is site search to your company?
Fifteen percent of our revenue comes from the search box on our site. A lot of our site visitors do not land on our home page. Site search really helps our visitors who arrive looking for specific things. They want to navigate directly to the product rather then click on links. A lot of people want to click on the product images that we display as part of our Nextopia AutoComplete module.

How do you integrate site search into your website?
We’ve been using Nextopia’s EcommISearch module for the past year. It integrates very well into the Yahoo! Stores environment. Nextopia has also spent a lot of time ensuring that it integrates well with Google Analytics.

I can see every search term typed in, which search terms converted and exactly where they converted. I see the traffic sources that are directing people to our site, and our revenue per customer. I can easily see whether we need to do a better job of optimizing our landing pages.

I’m sure you spend hours looking at logs, Do any particularly weird search terms jump out at you?
Strangely enough, the most common search term is nothing. Lots of people don’t enter a search term, yet still click submit. We just direct those searchers to the new products page.

Long tail searches on our site can reveal some really “interesting” interests that people have. Queries relating to monitoring or recording cell phones are pretty common. Unfortunately, that’s illegal so we can’t help them. Lots of people are interested in detecting bugs or are suspicious about the possibly of hidden cameras lurking in their homes of offices. They think their smoke detectors might contain hidden cameras, and many times they are right (see Erin Andrews).

Two other interesting product categories are covert surveillance and GPS Tracking. We have taken products normally sold to the government, and made them consumer friendly in terms of use and price.

Let’s talk specifically about Nextopia’s AutoComplete with Images technology.
AutoComplete with Images has really helped us. Let me explain – we first started off using Nextopia’s AutoComplete module which just displayed keyword suggestions to our customers. We later upgraded to their affordably priced AutoComplete with Images module which extends keyword suggestions to includes top converting keyword and product names and thumbnails that link directly to product detail pages. Think of it as a guided search box experience.

How does it work?
As soon as a customer begins typing into our search box, they are automatically presented with both keywords and products relevant to their search. The display instantly changes as a searcher inputs more characters. It starts predicting as each character is entered and dynamically changes the display of suggestions. Visitors end up seeing related queries and products right away, bringing them close to the point of conversion. So, customers can either click on a suggested keyword and proceed to do a search on our site OR they can click directly on a thumbnail of relevant products and be directed right to a product detail page.

Nextopia's AutoComplete site search technology on BrickHouseSecurity.com

Nextopia's AutoComplete site search technology on BrickHouseSecurity.com

Ex. A customer searching for the term ‘usb’ is “autosuggested” 5 top keyword suggestions for search and 6 top converting products with ‘usb’ in the product name. With each keystroke, suggestions dynamically change to display the most relevant set of suggestions.

What issues were you trying to address by integrating it?
First of all, we wanted to direct people to what they want and need. We found people often don’t use the best search terms so a system that suggestively prompts them is much better. A lot of people search for uses of products; not necessarily the products themselves. We wanted to enhance this process. We’ve found that product images are the best way to direct people. We now put them immediately in contact with the product.

We wanted to present historically strong sellers and direct people to those pages. The Nextopia technology pulls data from our sales history and changes as sales rise and fall over time and incorporates this data into their algorithm. We also spend a lot of time optimizing these pages. We ensure that our product pages include cross-selling information, recommending other products and coordinating products.

Another issue for to think about is this…if your product pages aren’t very good, then you might be better off putting them in contact with a product list than giving them a choice of which ones to select.

What was the AutoComplete implementation process?
It is real easy since we were already an existing eComm|Search customer and were already submitting tracking codes for each product SKU. That was it. Nextopia’s developers did the rest.

What kind of metrics are you seeing with the AutoComplete with Images module?
Upgrading to Autocomplete with Images was a great move as it converts twice as well as the base AutoComplete module. We started showing four images and then expanded to six images per query. Half of our searchers click on the product images in the search now. Overall, revenue is 8% higher. We’ve seen close to a 2% rise in overall site conversion, which I think will jump to 3-3.5%. That is very big for a site like ours.

Any other comments?
Nextopia’s AutoComplete with Images module is worth thousands and thousands of dollars to a larger website. In addition to the revenue it creates for us, it makes it really easy for our staff to find products. In fact, pretty much everyone in sales and support uses it to quickly find products in our catalog, even if it wasn’t designed for them.

I’m also experimenting with the number of pictures to display. I have six images showing now. If I want, I could have 8-10 pictures. I’m going to keep testing. I know that if I put it 10 images at a time, I think I could lift sales another 15%. It’s pretty tempting to fill up the screen and quickly give direct people to the highest selling products.

Finally, we’ve found that more people who use site search arrive organically than through PPC ads.

That’s great info Ryan. Thanks for your time.

How BrickHouse Security Unlocks Secrets of Online Success-Pt. 1

Wednesday, June 23rd, 2010

BrickHouselogo-smallWe recently spoke with Ryan Urban, Customer Acquisition & Analytics Manager, BrickHouse Security. He’s been instrumental in making BrickHouse one of the fast growing Yahoo! Stores by selling lots of security and surveillance products to consumers, businesses, and government agencies such as the NYPD, LA County Sheriffs Department, and the FBI.

What’s your background?
I’ve been in and around ecommerce for a long time. I started in 1996 when I was in high school and got serious about selling Beanie Babies in volume. I ended up a Top 100 seller on eBay in 2002-2007. I went from eBay to consulting on other people’s sites, as well as jumping on the Amazon.com platform when it opened up. When I joined BrickHouse in September 2008, it was the first time that I had worked for someone other than myself.

Tell us about BrickHouse.
BrickHouse has been online on since 2005 and is an Internet Retailer Top 500 retailer for 2010. We have fulfillment warehouses in California, Indiana, and Tennessee. We’re headquartered in New York City. We offer 18,000 products, focusing on opportunities in micro security niches, such as GPS tracking, consumer sector surveillance, biometric locks, home security and child safety. We were born on SEO & Analytics, that is what makes us great. Interestingly, we have a lot of international customers who are looking for technology that isn’t readily available in their home countries.

How did you get started in analytics?
Someone has to figure out how to make the money. I’ve been in analytics for years.

Who is the typical BrickHouse customer?
There really isn’t a typical customer. I guess you could say that the typical BrickHouse Security customer wants to find out something or confirm a suspicion. The GPS tracking customer, for example, is looking to confirm the location of their children, their husband, or their vehicles. The customer interested in surveillance usually wants to confirm that things are OK. How is the nanny treating the children? They come to us for general security and surveillance technology.

What do you do to stand out to in the marketplace?
We try everything here. We have an actual phone number on our site. We have a huge tech support team with free lifetime support. Our product videos are stellar. We are everywhere in the online universe, including eBay & SkyMall.

Has the economy in the past couple of years changed the types of product that people buy?
It hasn’t. People still want to do what they want to, and have needs to fill. Finding a cheating spouse, for example, is a need for some people; as is making sure their children are safe. We’ve maintained strong conversion rates. In fact, conversion is higher now than it was in 2007. As far as pricing….we continually reevaluate it. We’re certainly not the lost cost leader because we sell the best products with professional service.

What do you think is the most interesting product you sell?
I think it is the Stealth iBot. It installs in seconds through a USB port, and records everything a person does on a computer. It is undetectable by most anti-spyware software, and stores up to 10,000 screenshots and virtually unlimited text. Think of it as a really sophisticated keylogger that is capable of revealing multiple email and Facebook accounts. It only costs $129. stealthibot-computer-spy
Thanks Ryan. If Sandra Bullock had slipped an iBot into Jesse James’ laptop she would probably have saved herself a lot of heartbreak and been able to take someone more deserving to the 2010 Academy Awards. Look for Part Two of our interview with Ryan in a couple of days.

Ecommerce Site Search Invades the Windy City

Tuesday, June 8th, 2010

Got our bags packed and ready to fly out to Chicago for the annual gathering of the ecommece clans–the Internet Retailer conference. Once again at the McCormick Center, the 2010 show’s 400 plus exhibitors will welcome 6,000-7,000 attendees looking for ways to get ahead online as we come out of the recession of the past 2-3 years. We’ll be there to educate people about how site search is a critical component of this upward journey.

Internet Retailer – June 8-10, McCormick Place West, Chicago, IL (Booth #414)
I’ll be in the booth, along with Chris, Ruby and Christian. Stop by to receive a gift worth receiving. One hint: it is very Canadian. I guarantee that you won’t find it anywhere else on the expo floor. Prepare to be thrilled!

We’re also planning some major improvements to our website during the summer. One of the key changes will be the inclusion of much more video so we’re shooting on-site interviews with customers discussing their operations and Nextopia experience. So if you’re not camera-shy, and have 15 minutes to spare on Wednesday, RSVP to me as soon as you can.

Yahoo! Merchant Summit – June 11 – 8:00am – 5:30pm, McCormick Place West, Chicago, IL
Yahoo! is one of the platforms we frequently work with and this conference is one full day on how to supercharge your Yahoo! Stores business. We look forward to meeting up with many of our Yahoo! Stores-hosted customers, such as .

In addition to exhibiting at this one-day event, I’m also on the “Power of Design” panel, speaking on the importance of usability and design. We’re going to discuss a variety of issues, such as which design techniques are critical for merchants and how simple decisions like the placement of the search box can affect your site performance.

Hoping to see you in Chi-town at either of these events, or both.
Sanjay

How the World’s Largest Christmas Store Thrives Year Round-Pt. 2

Thursday, December 17th, 2009

 Bronners.com-Logo

We’re back with Bronner’s Vice President Maria Sutorik. In the second half of our conversation, Maria discusses all the technology powering the World Largest Christmas Store’s online presence.

Let’s move to technology and the nut and bolts of your site. Who are some of your vendors? I noticed McAfee, Nextopia, and both sites are Yahoo! Stores.
Both the McAfee Secure and Nextopia relationships came from the fact that we host with the Yahoo! Stores platform. We actually have three Yahoo Stores; Bronners.comBronnersCommercial.com and BronnersWholesale.com. We do our payment processing offline, and also use a local search agency that we’ve been very happy with.

 Bronners.com-Homepage

Seems a natural environment to allow customers to showcase their Christmas displays (either video or photos). Any plans to incorporate user generated content?
Improving our use of UGC is on my wish list for 2010. We’d like to do a lot more but it is a question of where do we apply our time. Our MyChristmasWonderland.com site has operated for several years and is integrated with GoogleMaps. It is a place where Christmas lovers can post pictures of their outdoor lighting displays. It is really quite amazing to see the results when our customers invest time and effort and creativity into their gardens.

How is social media such as FaceBook and Twitter working? I saw that you have Facebook pages for both the commercial and retail operations.
Our use of social media services is working well. Facebook and Twitter have proven great sharing channels for customers to share their experiences. Right now, we have 6000 Facebook fans and 1,500 Twitter followers. We’re careful to split up the Facebook audiences between our retail and commercial customers because their interests relative to Christmas are very different.

Bronners.com-on-Facebook

Do you handle web development in-house or it is outsourced?
We do both. The creative is done in-house, while we outsource a lot of the store coding to a specialist Yahoo-Store developer. Our Bronner’s commercial site is handled by a former employee who left to launch a web development firm. We produce all photography ourselves.

What about search engine marketing and search engine optimization. Do you handle those in-house?
The search agency handles both optimization and search engine marketing. I manage our comparison shopping program. Although we use a third-party feed software, we manage feeds ourselves. That’s a lot of work because the key to profitability is submitting the right products with the right pricing, product descriptions and titles.

How did you find Nextopia?
We had seen them at a show. We thought the time was right to upgrade our site with a really comprehensive site search and merchandising system. The price certainly was right, too. It made perfect sense. The implementation was painless and the performance has been terrific. We’re using the eComm|Search module to handle site search on Bronners.com.

Bronners.com-Site-Search-with-Nextopia

How does Nextopia’s site search technology and modules fit in with your ecommerce plans?
We use all the core functionality, including search filtering. It really helps customers find their way to the products they’re looking for, particularly when they aren’t sure of the spelling or, perhaps, there is a regional difference in what a specific product is called. Overall, we’ve been very happy customers since 2007.

We’re raising a glass of eggnog as a toast of thanks to Maria for sitting down and talking to us about what it is like to live Christmas 365 days a year. Merry Christmas to everyone at Bronners from the engineering elves at Nextopia Software.

How the World’s Largest Christmas Store Flourishes Year Round

Tuesday, December 15th, 2009

Bronners.com-Logo

With Christmas Day less than two weeks away, we were delighted (and lucky) to be able to get some time with Bronner’s Christmas Wonderland Vice President Maria Sutorik. If you’ve ever been anywhere close to Frankenmuth, MI, you’ve seen the ads, billboards and invitations to visit the World’s Largest Christmas Store. And if you’ve been online, you’ve likely been amazed at the selection of ornaments and decorations. In the first part of our two-part interview, Maria discusses how the company her Dad Wally started in the 1940s has grown into a full-time employer of more than 250.

Part One

Can you give us a quick company history.
My Dad started a sign painting business in the 1940s. He later branched out into creating window displays. In 1951, he met some merchants who were searching for Christmas decorations for their city lampposts. To meet their needs, he designed and produced Christmas panels. Over the next couple of years, he gradually built up a sideline producing and installing decorations and displays for communities, shopping centers and stores. The first retail store opened in 1954. By 1977, retail operations had grown to the point that my Dad purchased 45 acres on the edge of town. Our current store covers an area equal to five and a half football fields.

What is Bronner’s today?
Bronner’s is a multi-channel retailer with wholesale, retail, catalog and web distribution to individual and corporate customers. We have customers around the world. Our Christmas lights sell very well in Europe, while the Japanese market seems to like the retro look of lighted plastic. We create displays for cities, business and malls, as well as work with movie studios that are developing Christmas-themed movies such as The Santa Clause. We give them ideas on set design and dressing. As far as company management, I concentrate on event marketing and online operations while my brother is the president.

Is the international market important?
We’ll take whatever comes our way but we really don’t target international markets. It is a lot of work to sell overseas because international shipping requires a lot of custom quoting.

How many product SKUs do you carry?
We have about 50,000 in our retail store and carry roughly about 10% of that number online. The approximately 800 items in our print catalog are all sold online. We allot much of our online store to unique items, or items that have sold well in our retail store. We also review a mix of sales data and other intelligence (including our Nextopia data and reports) before deciding what to sell online.

Are they all carried in inventory or do you drop ship any items?
We only drop ship two product categories; large commercial items that we sell to malls and high volume custom ornaments.

Where do you source products and new items from?
We attend buying shows domestically, and in Asia and Europe. We also source new products from manufacturers who will make our own designs. In fact, half of the ornaments we sell are our own designs. I even have some of my own designs for sale in the store.

What are some of your favorite items that you sell?
I’ve always loved our personalized items because it is a category my Dad created. He used to letter ornaments for the children of employees who would receive them at the annual party. Their relatives and friends started asking for their own personalized ornaments and that is how our customization department started. The other items I really love are the life-size nativity scenes. My Dad worked hard to design scenes that were both lifelike and could withstand the elements.

What are some of the items that are unique to Bronners?
It would have to be all of our own Christmas ornaments designs. As I said, half of our ornament collection comes from our own design studio.

What are your biggest selling products?
In terms of number of units, it is our ornaments. In terms of size, it would be our giant fiberglass Santa. Available through our commercial website, he stands 17′ tall and costs around $8,000.

How has the Website contributed to the company’s growth in the past decade?
We’ve always had a national reach due to the popularity of Frankenmuth with tourists. Every summer, we welcome tens of thousands of visitors and they help spread the word. The website and our print catalog, of course, continue to expand our market. We mail about 3 million catalogs every Fall, usually starting in October.

Is the Website more for selling products or promoting the retail store?
It does both. The site and catalog both help drive store traffic. Bronners.com is also a way to keep in touch with former Michigan residents who have moved away. We frequently receive comments on catalog orders about how people loved the store and are so happy to be able to shop with us again, even if they’ve moved to Arizona.

There are few things more seasonal than Christmas. Are your sales distributed throughout the year or concentrated in Q4?
We are definitely a Q4 business, although summer tourism provides considerable sales from June to August. We hire a lot of seasonal help in the fourth quarter. Business during December has grown so much, in fact, that we actually schedule our staff Christmas party in January.

How has your customer base been affected by the economic downturn since 2007?
Thankfully, our sales have held their own. Catalog and Internet sales have continued to grow and retail sales have been solid. Expanding our sales efforts outside of Michigan has been very important in cushioning the really difficult situation our home state is experiencing.

Can you describe the typical Bronner’s customer?
The Christmas lover. We don’t necessarily go after the high end Nieman Marcus customer; we go after middle America. People with families, people who really celebrate Christmas.

Is this customer profile the same for all of your sales channels, or have you attracted a different kind of customer online?
It is a little different. Online purchases are driven through search behavior. People might be looking for a specific ornament and find us through a specific keyword.

Who are Bronner’s main competitors?
When people start thinking about Christmas, we compete against anyone, from a local hardware store and specialty online sites, to Wal-Mart and other big box retailers. The main difference is that we do Christmas year round. It is obviously not a seasonal merchandising event for us and we don’t sell through our inventory with half off sales, starting on December 26.

Thanks Maria for your time. Tomorrow, we’ll post the second half in which she discusses what it takes to run Bronners.com.

How eHobbies.com Thrives Against National Chain Stores

Monday, December 14th, 2009

 eHobbies-Logo

 In between driving holiday sales and driving his family to nearby Disneyland, eHobbies.com, President Ken Kikkawa talked to us about how he provides hobby enthusiasts with more than 60,000 SKUs in a wide range of hobby and specialty toy categories.

A Nextopia customer since January 2009, Ken discusses his favorite metrics, how he succeeds against national toy chains, why he likes the Yahoo! Stores platform, and the challenges of seasonal retailing.

You sell hobbies and specialty toys that are purchased by a wide demographic range. In addition to B2C customers, you also sell to institutional organizations such as camps, schools and the Boy Scouts. How do you address their different purchasing needs?

It is a challenge we’re just starting to figure it out. Each organization is different. Firstly, in terms of awareness, most of these organizations find us through online search or word-of-mouth referrals. We haven’t done any real specific marketing other than add a couple of pages to our website.

The second big area is in payment type. Most of these organizations do not pay up front with a credit card, and the preferred method and terms differ widely. For example, schools usually need to pay via purchase order. Because we need to make it easy for them to order from us, we’ve modified our payment and financial policies (including adding different payment options in our shopping cart).

A third area is in our product selection, where we offer a wide range of categories that reflect the different age levels, for example, that you find in scouting. A big category for us is model rockets. For the youngest scouts, say in first grade, we’ll provide pre-assembled kits that are simpler than what older boys in grades 4/5 want. Offering a wide range of products allows us to meet whatever level of product sophistication a scout troop needs.

Are there any challenges in selling toys online that you think affect your company more than other retailing categories? I’m thinking here of the annual media “hot toy” frenzy, with the Tickle Me Elmo craze of 1996 coming to mind.

We try not to play in the hot toy arena. It is very competitive (product availability, pricing, etc.) and you are up against the large/national mass merchants and toy chain stores. They can get behind certain products with huge advertising budgets, leaving a very tough grind for independent retailers. Instead, we play more in the specialty arena, with a product line comprised of more timeless categories like car model kits.

rccarYou said in your September 2009 Practical Ecommerce column that your priorities before the holiday season became too hectic “were optimizing SEO & PPC programs, site enhancements (updates to the item pages including video demos and product delivery estimator) and a quick and easy way for customers to get real-time order updates without logging in to their account.” How easy it is for a Yahoo Store to incorporate the customization that this obviously requires?

Customizing a Yahoo! Store is not easy—and I speak from many years of experience—but the tools are there for developers to work around. (We rely heavily on our developer network to do it). Over the years, Yahoo! has rolled out additional enhancements that are beneficial for merchants. The options to customize the shopping cart have been a very good upgrade and it is now totally customizable. We moved to Yahoo! in 2001, left in 2005, and returned late in 2006. We just found that for a retailer of our size, it provided a really robust platform that we could depend on.

In the same column, you describe yourself as a merchant at heart, having worked as an assistant buyer for May Company department stores in the 1980s. You mention working on the floor during November and December and getting a chance to get customers reactions to merchandise on the spot. How is this different from the online environment?

I used to be a buyer in the pillows and bedding categories. There are very specific fill weights and densities that help people sleep comfortably, depending on their sleeping positions. When you are physically standing on the store floor, it is easy to impart this knowledge to shoppers and either help them find what they’re looking for or what you know will really help them.

You can’t really replicate this interaction online but there are tools that can help you. I really like to help customers on the phone and find out exactly what they need. Email support is another good opportunity. I like to peruse our customer support email boxes. I look at what they are asking for and what we are saying. While it obviously helps close more sales, it also helps me exert some quality control over our sales conversations, ensuring that we’re converting as many prospects as possible into happy customers.

How can online retailers recreate some of the key elements of in-person retailing in a virtual store?

You need to create a conversation channel with the prospect. We use email, telesales, and live chat. We’ve used the latter for two years and I frequently review the logs in the same way that I look through email threads. We have also started to take the best questions from our customers and turn them into a hobby FAQ.

How does site search fit into your merchandising strategies?

About 25% of our visitors go straight to the search box so it is a really important piece of technology. I particularly like Nextopia’s redirection functionality, which enables us to direct shoppers to specific landing pages based on their search terms. For example, here is what a shopper will see when searching for “slot cars” on our site.

Thanks for your time Ken. Give Mickey a big hug from the engineering team at Nextopia.