(art)Business Week - a MUST read 
    Dot-Coms: Can They Climb Back? 
    They'll have to run leaner, adapt to change, and--above all--focus on making money sooner 
    A year ago, Ameritrade Holding Corp. (AMTD) was a conqueror. The online brokerage had zeroed in on America's    pre-millennial obsessions--the Internet and the stock market--then promoted the bejesus out of itself.  Result: The Omaha-based company placed No. 30 on Business  Week's last Info Tech 100 list. That was mostly because of  its  staggering 1,200% return to shareholders, a category  where it finished on the top of the heap. This year,  Ameritrade is  among the conquered. It didn't make the  top 200. Shareholder return has plummeted to -59%, and  the company's profits have evaporated due to costly  price and marketing wars against other online brokers. 
  That's the way it goes for Internet warriors. Because of  the collapse in stock valuations, the number of Net  companies on the IT 100 list was cut nearly in half,  shrinking from 27 a year ago to just 14 this time around. 
  Who's left standing? 
  The Net's steady, unglamorous carpenters: software builders such as No. 34 BroadVision Inc. (BVSN) and  network-reliability firms such as No. 95 Micromuse (MUSE). In fact, only three of the 14 could be counted as classic  dot-com companies--those megabrands Yahoo! (YHOO), Yahoo!  Japan, and America Online (AOL). ''The technology enablers  are fundamentally better businesses than the dot-coms,''  says David M. Alschuler, vice-president  of e-business  and enterprise applications at Boston's Aberdeen Group Inc.  
  SKEPTICISM. Investors heartily agree. In fact, their whole  flight from Net stocks was what knocked some of the    highfliers off the list. Examples: online auctioneer  eBay (EBAY), which came in at No. 23 last year; Web portal  Excite@Home (ATHM), which was No. 68; and health site  Healtheon/WebMD (HLTH), which came in at No. 81. In addition, mergers claimed seven of last year's Internet  elite. 
  Have the fundamentals of these companies changed? Not  really. What has changed is investors' psychology, which  has hardened from a speculative ardor into a prickly skepticism. Now, if Net companies hope to climb back into the ranks of the elite, they're going to have to start  playing by a new set of rules. Out goes the grow-at-any-cost  mantra, with its break-the-bank advertising campaigns  and vast hiring sprees. The new guidelines seem to have  been crafted by  accountants, not spend-happy visionaries.
   Here they are: 
    -- New Rule No. 1: Get profitable sooner. Forget  B2B or B2C: The new catchphrase among dot-coms is P2P,  for path to profitability. Venture-capital investors once  tolerated profits forecasts three or four years in the  future. Now they're looking for business plans that target  profitability less than one year after an initial public offering, says Peter Y. Chung, general partner at Summit  Partners, a venture-capital firm in Palo Alto, Calif. Signs  of this shift abound: Since  April, at least 25 IPOs have  been left in the holding pen. The median age of an IPO  company is increasing for the first  time since 1998, up to  4.6 years from 4.1 through 2000. 
    To get into the black, companies have begun targeting  staffing and marketing expenses. In May, e-tailer  Living.com in Austin, Tex., laid off 50 of its 385 employees. And at government-transaction Web site  govWorks.com Inc. in New  York, executives canceled most  of an anticipated $45 million marketing campaign. 
  ''There's not the patience in the  market to build a brand 
over a couple of years,'' says CEO Kaleil D. Isaza Tuzman. 
 
  -- New Rule No. 2: Cozy up to private investors. As public  markets succumb to uncertainty, companies of all sizes    will have to retreat to private sources. This winter,  when Amazon.com (AMZN) needed some fresh cash, it didn't print new shares. Instead it issued $671 million in  convertible bonds to private investors in Europe. 
  For smaller players in the Net world, financing becomes  more dicey. To tide themselves over until they can go  public, a number of pre-IPO dot-coms are returning to  venture capitalists for late-stage financing. At Boston  venture firm  Capital Resource Partners, for instance,  partner Jeffrey W. Potter has seen the number of  prospective deals double in  just one month. ''We're seeing  later-stage companies who thought they would have gone  public, but they will no longer  be able to,'' says Potter. 
  Companies that already have gone public will find it  difficult to tap traditional private capital, but some,  such as e-tailer Garden.com (GDEN) and grocery-delivery  service Streamline.com (SNLE), are searching for other  sources of private funding--like corporations or investment  banks. ''I don't think there's practically any e-tailing  company who can continue'' without new cash infusions,  says Tim A. DeMello, CEO of online grocer Streamline.com  Inc. in Westwood, Mass., whose stock has dropped 70% this  year. ''Every single one of them needs to raise additional  capital, ourselves included.'' Streamline still has $21  million in the bank, which should last until at least  October, but DeMello is looking for new investors to  keep the company's motor running until it can survive  on its own revenues--or return to the public marketplace. 
    -- New Rule No. 3: Tear up the dot-com business plan. If operating a Web site doesn't work, try selling  technology or services to other Web sites. That  arms-dealer strategy has helped put No. 100 InfoSpace  (INSF) on the Info Tech list for the second year in a  row. The profitable provider of information behind  online Yellow Pages, maps, and phone  directories  grew revenues by 265% last year, fourth best overall. 
  Now others are taking the same path. GovWorks.com recently  moved away from its function as an information portal  for citizens interacting with local and federal government.  Now it focuses on installing technology for government  customers through alliances with Arthur Andersen consulting.  Onvia.com, a small-business portal whose stock soared  as high as $78 per share last year and has crashed to  around $5, has shifted its focus from selling commodity office products to acting as an auction site for  small businesses. 
  -- New Rule No. 4: Good technology trumps glitzy  marketing. It once was an article of faith: building  a brand on the Net was paramount--even if it meant years  of losses.  Now, dot-coms are finding that useful technology  can be an important differentiator. That helps explain  why CNET Networks Inc. (CNET), which operates a handful  of Web sites dedicated to technology products and news,  paid $700 million in stock last January for mySimon,  a popular site that sorts and compares products and  prices on the Web. Leading online travel site Travelocity  recently installed a feature that lets users view seat  configurations on dozens of planes and pick where they  want to sit. "If a company has a unique technology,  investors will still pay for it," says Theresia G.  Ranzetta, partner at venture-capital fund Accel  Partners in Palo Alto. 
    -- New Rule No. 5: Cultivate your best customers. Many execs are thinking less about raw traffic numbers and more    about what people do when they're on the site. ''Six  months ago, sites were buying traffic no matter what the  cost,'' says John Keister, president of portal Go2Net Inc  (GNET). ''Now it's about profitability per user.''   Struggling e-tailer eToys Inc. (ETYS) in Santa Monica,  Calif., recently scrapped the 5% to 12% sales commissions  it was paying the network of sites that referred new  customers. Instead, it's giving 10% discounts to people  who sign up for a gift registry--encouraging repeat  visits. ''Companies are looking hard at  customer-acquisition costs,'' says Forrester    Research analyst Dan O'Brien. ''If you can't convert  them into a buyer or sticky visitor, than maybe it  doesn't make  sense to spend a lot for them.'' 
    The stock market has begun rewarding companies that help Web sites wring more value from each visit.  That helped propel a small, New York-based e-mail marketing  company, NetCreations Inc. (NTCR), to No. 78 on the IT 100  list. The company showed 615% revenue growth, top overall.  Another top company, Art Technology Group Inc.  (ARTG) of Cambridge, Mass., which came in at No. 90,  makes software that helps Web sites personalize their  interactions with online customers. 
  Over the long haul, analysts expect Wall Street investors  to sweeten on dot-coms again but say they'll only bid up  companies that are leaders in their fields with clear  paths to profitability. '' The next few quarters are  going to be turbulent times,'' says Accel's Ranzetta. 
    And what of Ameritrade? Its $54 million TV ad campaign  goes forward unabated. Unless the stock market has a total    change of heart about that kind of strategy, don't expect  this upstart's stock to soar anytime soon. 
    By Dennis K. Berman in New York 
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