The Day E-Commerce As We Knew It Died
Of course, e-commerce didn't die today.
But symbolically, e-commerce changed today, with the ousting of Yahoo! CEO Terry Semel and a New York Times piece about the end of rampant e-commerce sales growth.
Both stories point to the maturation of the online channel.
To me, the New York Times article is particularly delicious, drawing the ire of Shop.org and various e-commerce bloggers (here, here and here), all quick to defend their channel at the first hint of criticism or sales slowdown. To be fair, the criticisms are valid and even enlightening --- but it was fascinating to see how defensive some of the responses have been.
Those articles and comments look an awful lot like the musings of catalog executives between 1999-2003. Catalog folks were defensive, quick to defend the catalog channel when e-commerce pundits predicted doom for anything not associated with the online experience.
In reality, the data used in the study has been readily available from Forrester Research for years, and publicly traded companies have repeatedly talked about this slowdown over the past year, so this news isn't news.
Over the next three years, our profession will see a separation in talent. As e-commerce growth becomes harder and harder to achieve, management is going to need e-commerce folks who are skilled, maybe "gifted" at driving sales.
For the past decade-plus, multichannel e-commerce executives benefited from the efforts of their catalog and retail leaders. The catalog executive mailed catalogs, the customer shopped on the internet. The online executive received hefty bonuses, the catalog executive was fired.
The retail executive spent decades building a brand, the online executive received credit for sales cultivated through years of positive retail experiences. With e-commerce maturing, it will be up to the e-commerce executive to stand alone, to drive incremental sales increases without the benefit of seasoned leaders in other channels pushing free, incremental sales to the online channel.
There are hundreds of really good, really talented online executives at multichannel companies. These folks honed their craft, while learning how to get things done politically, while learning offline marketing skills that transfer to the online world.
These online executives will have a tremendous advantage. These are the folks who will continue to drive true incremental sales increases over the next three years, while other online businesses flatten-out, or flounder.
June 18, 2007. The day e-commerce as we knew it died.
Labels: Catalog Marketing, e-commerce, NY Times, online marketing, retail, Yahoo
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