One
thing that’s constantly misunderstood by people trying to run a
home business on the Internet is the word “Wholesale”.
Some people
think that working with a real Wholesale Supplier means that they
will magically be able to sell products for less than anybody else
on the planet, for ever and ever.
They’ll be the only one who ever
gets such good prices, and they’ll earn millions because no
competition can touch them. They’re retire happily in a couple of
months, and buy a big house in Beverly Hills, complete with a
butler, a private chef, and a little satin doggie bed in every room
for the casual use of the family Basset Hound, Duke.
Then
they find that they may actually have to compete with companies who
have more buying power and get better price breaks, and suddenly the
honeymoon is over.
They run around screaming that the supplier is
not a real Wholesale Supplier, and is cheating them. The sky is
falling, and it’s time to get Duke to the storm cellar because all
their dreams are being blown away by bad, BAD people who claimed to
be Wholesale Supplier, and really are NOT!
The
truth is that they’ve simply been confronted with a perfectly
normal aspect of retail sales that they had not anticipated, and
need to be educated about.
Even
when using genuine Wholesale Supplier,
you're going to find some stores selling products at a
"retail" price that is lower than your Suppliers’
"wholesale" price.
There are VERY good reasons why you'll
see this happen, and it's extremely important to understand why
it happens and what to do about it in order to sell
successfully on the Internet or anywhere else.
As
I said, it happens for a variety of reasons; the most common of
which is that the retailer with the "lower than wholesale"
price is a large retail operation that bought THOUSANDS of the
product at a dirt-cheap quantity price break, and also qualified for
huge manufacturer's wholesaler rebates. You can't compete against
that with a home business; no one can.
The
term "wholesale" is relative, no matter who your
distributor is or how you find them. What you're getting as a small
business is a Wholesale Supplier's
genuine "first level" wholesale price.
For
example, one factory-direct Wholesale Supplier
we work with has an initial wholesale price for 1 to 36 dart boards.
Then the second price level is reached, and there's a lower price
for 36 to 72 boards, for example, then a lower price for the next
higher quantity level, etc.
When dealing with single item orders in
your home business, you are obviously going to be getting the
"first level" wholesale price.
Again, wholesale is a relative term. Yes, genuine Wholesale
Supplier DO sell at
significant discounts below Manufacturer's Suggested Retail Price.
However, you have to watch what you sell. Electronics, for example,
are a very tough market, because EVERYBODY is trying to sell
electronics on the 'Net right now. All these people are so busy
trying to undercut each other that they have driven the "market
price" of these items down so low as to make it very difficult
to make a profit, even at wholesale.
For
example, if the Manufacturer's Suggested Retail Price (MSRP) for a
VCR is $149, and it is available at "wholesale" for
$69.00, that's a 54% discount off MSRP. That's a pretty good profit,
right? However, with everybody getting roughly the same price break,
there are a lot of people out there who are ruining the market for
everyone else by selling that product for, say, $79, thinking they
will undercut everyone else and make money by selling volume.
Pretty
soon, everyone else sees this, and tries the same thing. Eventually,
the Internet "market price" for this VCR BECOMES $79, and
everyone is flooding the market with it at that price. That's only a
13% percent profit margin, and that product is no longer worth the
effort for anybody.
So,
even though the product IS available initially at a great wholesale
price, its market value is ruined by those who (wrongly) assume that
the only way to sell is to have the absolute lowest price anywhere.
Sales
is much more of an art than that. If selling something were simply a
matter of the absolute lowest prices, Wal-Mart would be the only
store on the face of the Earth.
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Without
going into too much detail, sales is a mixture of choosing the right
product, or combination of products, for your web site.
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It's
presenting a clean, attractive, focused site.
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It's giving the
customer some little value-added bonus at your site. It's providing
the absolute best customer service that you can. All these things
help a customer to trust you, and when they trust you they are
willing to spend a little more to buy from you.
One
of our retail sites is www.ElectronicDartShop.com. We sell Arachnid
Electronic Dart Boards there. We sell ONLY those products on that
site; just 14 of them. Our site is clean and attractive.
We have a
page listing all the rules for all the dart games that can be played
on those boards. We pay very careful attention to customer service.
And guess what? We are NOT the lowest priced store for those dart
boards, by any means.
Yet we are one of the highest-volume Internet
dealers of the products around, according to the factory.
Why? Our
customers trust us, and are willing to pay a little more because
they feel they will get more value from us than they will from some
guy who just throws up a cheap-looking site full of all kinds of
unrelated products and only pays attention to price-cutting.
In
fact, a few days ago, I went online and bought a couple of
SmartMedia memory cards for my digital camera. I could have gotten
them for a very cheap price that I found on the 'Net, but I chose to
pay $5 more each for them because the cut-rate site looked cheesy,
and I was not sure I could trust them. I was more than happy to pay
the extra ten bucks total when I found the same products at a higher
priced site. The site was well-built, easy to navigate, and went out
of it's way to explain it's customer service policies to me. I'd
rather spend an extra ten bucks and be confident that the cards
would show up at my door than lose thirty bucks plus shipping to a
site I didn't feel I could trust.
As
a small business owner, you should remember to choose comparison
areas very carefully.
Too many people simply go to the big search
engines and look for the absolute lowest price on earth, and then
give up on selling that item if they can't beat it. That's the wrong
approach, as I've mentioned above. You need to be comparing prices
against sites that will be seen in the same places that your site
will be seen, and even if your prices are higher, you can bring in
sales by building a clean, focused site. Alternatively, you can
simply sell the models that others are NOT selling.
After you begin
to earn some profit, you can then start to buy and stock the better
sellers in quantity, lowering your price, if you really want to.
Even
then, you're going to run into stores that stock a lot of
merchandise, and are getting price breaks on greater quantities.
This allows them to sell at a lower price.
Go
around them. Sell models that they don't, from the same brand names.
You don’t have to purposely go head-to-head with the big
superstores. They don’t carry every product ever made on earth.
Sell something in the same general brand and product lines that they
DON’T have the shelf space for!
Besides
the reasons mentioned above, there are also too many people who buy
entire pallet loads of last year's closeouts, liquidations, and
refurbished goods, and claim that they are NEW.
They get that junk
at "rock bottom" prices, and of course, sell them
dirt-cheap, fooling the customer (and other Internet retailers) into
thinking that they have the corner on the best wholesale prices
around, when they DON'T.
The
important thing is to work effectively within the framework of
available products and prices, and work around those who
have millions of dollars available to stock inventory. That's what
THEY did in order to EARN those millions in the first place. You can
do it too.
I know it's frustrating to be just starting out, and
thinking that you can't succeed because of competition from large
stores. That's just not true. We're succeeding at it, and so are
thousands of others.
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You just have to be willing to be flexible,
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To make serious decisions for the good of your business.
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You may
have to give up selling certain products that you personally like,
in order to make money on other products whether you like them or
not.
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You’re in business to make money, not to satisfy your
personal taste.
One
thing I tell people all the time is that it’s very important to
“jump through the hoops” and form a LEGAL business. It’s the
right thing to do, and it’s the ONLY way to work with GENUINE
wholesale suppliers.
However,
anyone in business will tell you that the hoops never end; not for
home businesses, and not for big businesses either. Even the
big guys spend much of their time "hoop-jumping"
in order to be successful.
Imagine
how the purchasing agents at CompUSA feel when they spend a million
dollars on 19" monitors so they can sell them for $329, and a
week later, they find that Best Buy spent three million
buying up the same monitor at a better price break, and is now
advertising them for $298. Suddenly CompUSA can't compete.
Should
they throw a tantrum, and berate the Wholesale Supplier for simply
performing the normal function of a Wholesale Supplier?
Of
course not. They can simply stop advertising that monitor by itself,
and bundle it with an entire computer system that has it's own
serious price breaks, and move the monitors that way. Adapt
and improvise.
There
are no magic bullets, even though there are plenty of people who
will tell you that there ARE. Don’t believe them! When you’re in
business you will always have to compete. It's all part of sales, on
the Internet or anywhere else.
Chris
Malta
WorldWideBrands,Inc
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