"...I'd be much more likely to wind up at bigwords.com."
  Bigwords.com shuts down:
  thestandard.com
  October 27, 2000, 5:56 PM PDT 
                                    End of Story for Bigwords.com 
                                    The college-textbook seller shuts down its 2 offices and lays off nearly 100 workers                                   after failing to secure more VC funding. 
                                    By Ronna Abramson
                                    Despite having racked up some big-name                                   investors, college textbook seller                                   Bigwords.com has shut down its operations                                   in San Francisco and Kentucky and laid off                                   nearly 100 employees after failing to                                   secure more venture capital funding. 
                                    A message on the site posted Friday said                                   that the company "succumbed … to the                                   powers that be" and informed customers                                   that back orders and orders placed on or                                   after Oct. 20 would not be processed. 
                                    On Oct. 20, the company laid off about 70                                   employees in its South Park office in San                                   Francisco, along with six employees and 22                                   temporary employees at its new                                   distribution center in Kentucky, according                                   to several employees. Former Bigwords VP                                   of operations and Publisher Todd                                   Sotkiewicz, the company's 20th employee,                                   said everyone in San Francisco was let go                                   except the CEO, CFO and CTO. Company                                   co-founder and CEO Matt Johnson did not                                   return several calls to comment. 
                                    Sotkiewicz said employees were paid in full                                   for their work up until that date, and other                                   employees confirmed that they received                                   cashier's checks. Sotkiewicz attributed the company's demise to the                                   cooling attitude of investors toward e-commerce companies. 
                                    "We were looking for another round for strategic partners that                                   focused on the college opportunity," Sotkiewicz says. "I just think                                   that the financial community was not ready to support the                                   opportunity." 
                                    He stressed that the company's early investors had provided support.                                   "It was finding investors at that next level that was becoming more                                   and more difficult," he says. 
                                    The company's last round of investors, which included such                                   heavy-hitters as NBC and WPP Group (WPPGY) , owner of major                                   advertising agencies such as Young & Rubicam (YNR) and Ogilvy &                                   Mather Worldwide, handed Bigwords $30 million in June. Other                                   investors included 21st Century Internet Venture Partners, Geocapital                                   Partners, Media Technology Ventures, Attractor Investor                                   Management, Trans Cosmos USA and St. Paul Venture Capital.                                   Officials with NBC and WPP declined to comment on the company's                                   collapse. 
                                    Bigwords, known for guerilla marketing tactics that included dressing                                   student representatives in orange jumpsuits, announced plans last                                   summer to evolve from just a textbook seller to a media site with                                   original content and expanded e-commerce offerings, such as                                   clothing. The idea was to draw visitors – and generate revenue –                                   year-round, rather than just at the beginning of a new semester                                   twice a year, when most college students buy textbooks. Bigwords                                   even hired editors from such magazines as Details and Jane to create                                   an online magazine targeted to its 18- to 24-year-old market. 
                                    The company's closure came just a few months after it moved into a                                   larger, state-of-the-art distribution center in Kentucky – a move that                                   in hindsight some employees suggested might have been premature.                                   In September, the peak of the textbook buying season, Bigwords laid                                   off nearly 100 employees. Workers in the distribution center said the                                   company failed to meet projected sales. 
                                    "I was told we were actually hitting about 10 percent of what our                                   projections were," says Vern Reynolds, IT manager of the distribution                                   center and among the six laid off Oct. 20. 
                                    The farewell posting on the Bigwords Web site said it counted                                   800,000 unique visitors per month and about $14 million in sales. 
                                    The site's demise was greeted with mixed feelings among employees,                                   with some harboring resentment for being left in the dark about the                                   company's troubles and others regretful that they no longer are                                   employed at a place they loved to work. 
                                    "These people are pathological liars," one angry former Kentucky                                   employee laid off in September wrote in an e-mail. But Victoria                                   Wilinski, who relocated from San Francisco to Kentucky in December                                   and became director of operations and purchasing, said most people                                   were upset that the company "that won all our hearts no longer                                   employs them." 
                                    "I never worked at a company where the employees so believed in                                   the vision and were willing to sacrifice so much to see it work,"                                   Wilinski said in an e-mail. 
                                    Indeed, David Keeps, the editorial director in San Francisco who                                   formerly worked as the West Coast editor of Details magazine, said it                                   was disappointing that his team of 14 people could not realize their                                   vision of an online magazine for college-age readers, both male and                                   female. 
                                    "The sense of [having] just tasted the appetizers and not being able                                   to have the full meal was very evident," he says. |