Great article in today's San Jose Mercury News. I wonder how long it will be until the US Arm is as sophisticated as the Japanese arm. This is great stuff--I think 7-Eleven might be my first put-away-for-a-long-long time stock. . .
  Steve
  7-Eleven logs Japanese onto the Net
                        BY MICHAEL ZIELENZIGER                       Mercury News Tokyo Bureau                                                                      TOKYO
                        A war is raging to dominate the business of Internet shopping in                      Japan, and the combat is focusing onto a most unlikely battleground:                      the neighborhood convenience store.
                        Yes, that quintessentially Japanese institution known here as the                      konbini, with such cuddly foreign names as 7-Eleven and Family                      Mart.
                        In Japan, convenience stores aren't famous for peddling Slurpees and                      jumbo-sized soft drinks, but for dishing out seaweed-covered  riceballs, sweet breakfast Danish and spaghetti lunches, while                      boasting giant magazine racks crowded with adult comic books that                      welcome lunchtime browsers.
                        Among a younger crowd of consumers like Yukari Yanagawa, who                      admits she hardly ever cooks, convenience stores in Japan have                      become trendy substitutes for larger supermarkets. ``I go to them all                     the time,' she explained, leaving a 7-Eleven store with a prepared              lunch, typically a fried croquette or pasta dish that she zaps in a                      microwave. 
                        Besides, unlike big supermarkets that are forced to shut by 8 p.m.       because of strict government rules, most konbini stay open all night.
                        But in a nation where consumers are hesitant to use credit cards,   where surfing the Internet on home computers is still catching on, and                      where most shoppers aren't home during the day to receive parcels,                      convenience stores may soon be the yoke that ties Japanese                      consumers to the e-commerce revolution.
                        ``It's part of the Japanese culture that people want to buy products,                      face-to-face,' said Minoru Matsumoto, a spokesman for 7-Eleven                 Japan. ``There's a psychological aspect to it.' Even today in Japan,                    about 90 percent of all mail-order sales are paid for with                      cash-on-delivery or by bank transfer. No one writes checks.
                        In many of Japan's small towns -- and even in Tokyo itself -- the                      konbini has become something of a village square. Not just a hangout                     for 20-somethings, but a place where senior citizens can go in the                      middle of the night to pay their phone and gas bills, buy stamps, or  pick up a quart of milk. That help explains why, rather suddenly, the                      convenience stores have become the hot new play in Japanese                      e-commerce.
                        7-Eleven, the largest and most innovative konbini chain, has been the                      most aggressive. Last November, in partnership with Softbank Corp.,                the Internet investment giant, it dipped into the e-commerce market                by launching an on-line bookseller to deliver books and videos to the                      convenience store counter. Last month, it turned up the heat,                      announcing the formation of 7dream.com, a full-service e-commerce                      venture with a host of powerful partners including computer giant  NEC, Sony, the giant Mitsui & Co. trading house and Japan Travel                      Bureau, the nation's largest travel agent.
                        By June the company plans to open an e-commerce Web site, where                      shoppers will be able to order mobile phones, airplane tickets,                      flowers, concert tickets and digital music from their own computers and pick them up at the store of their choice. By fall, 7dream.com will                      begin installing multimedia terminals in its 8,153 stores that will not                      only give shoppers without PCs access to Web shopping, but also                    print out tickets, download music and accept cash payments.
                        ``It's important the customer feel at home,' Matsumoto said, noting                      that many Japanese customers are nervous about using credit cards or                      putting sensitive information on line. 
                        Toshifumi Suzuki, chairman and CEO of 7-Eleven Japan, notes that                      93 percent of the customers for its online equivalent of Amazon.com    picked up their books at the counter. ``We are different from the                      Americans in terms of the maturity of our telecommunications,' he                      explained recently to a Japanese newspaper. ``The Japanese                      customer wants to make sure he gets the products at the store -- and                      wants to pay there.'
                        His Internet-in-a-store strategy has quickly triggered imitation. In                      recent weeks Family Mart, Circle K and three smaller convenience                     store operators announced that they too would form an alliance to                      conduct e-commerce in their shops. And even the Japan Railway                      network, which owns thousands of kiosks in the bustling railway  stations around the country, has suggested that it too would begin                      offering trackside delivery of products ordered over the Net.
                        But analysts believe 7-Eleven could be the best-positioned to                      capitalize on the potential of e-commerce, which the Ministry of                   International Trade and Industry estimates could account for 3.16      trillion yen worth of business by fiscal 2003. That's because the                      company has already pioneered the sophisticated use of computers                      and information technology within its store.
                        The company prides itself on how extensively it mines its                      point-of-sales data collection to anticipate consumer needs. The same                      satellite broadcasting system that 7-Eleven now uses to collect order                      data directly from its individual stores will also serve as the backbone                      for the e-commerce system.
                        Rolling out convenience store e-commerce will also bolster another                      move by 7-Eleven's owner, the Ito-Yokado chain of discount superstores, to open its own online bank. The Ito-Yokado bank             would conduct almost all of its business through ATM machines                      located in its stores, including 7-Eleven.
                        Shinichi Kimura, a 30-year-old bicycle messenger, says he'd                      welcome more e-commerce at the konbini. ``At the moment, we've                      been told that anyone can easily hack our credit cards,' said Kimura,                      who often buys lunch and snacks at 7-Eleven. ``But if they have a              cash dispenser and more information services, it will definitely be                      more convenient.'
                        Emi Doi of the Knight Ridder Tokyo Bureau contributed to this                      report. |