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To: Jan Crawley who wrote (14021)8/19/1998 11:11:00 AM
From: Tenpole  Read Replies (1) | Respond to of 164684
 
Glad to be of service!



To: Jan Crawley who wrote (14021)8/19/1998 8:40:00 PM
From: Glenn D. Rudolph  Respond to of 164684
 
Net store eyes office supply market
By Paul Festa
Staff Writer, CNET NEWS.COM
August 17, 1998, 4:00 a.m. PT
In an attempt to repeat the Amazon miracle, a new company is bringing a virtual
office supply store to the Web.

OnlineOfficeSupplies.com launched today with the mission of providing office
supply consumers with a service it says brick-and-mortar players can't compete
with online.

"Office Depot is not using the Internet to its full economical advantage," said
OnlineOfficeSupplies chief executive Paula Jageman. Office Depot has an online
store and numerous physical stores.

Companies like Office Depot are faced with two major problems that a purely
virtual store will not face, according to Jageman. One is that in every state
where the store has a physical presence, the company must charge sales tax.

Another problem brick-and-mortar stores face is the risk of cannibalizing the
business of their physical stores by undercutting their prices online.

"Office Depot has regionalized pricing for almost every zip code," said Jageman,
who cited online prices for 100 manila envelopes ranging from $2.99 in Idaho to
$3.99 in Virginia. Consumers that sign on to Office Depot's online store must
enter a zip code in order to shop.

OnlineOfficeSupplies charges $3.21, tax-free outside Virginia and Maryland, for
the same item, Jageman said.

OnlineOfficeSupplies faces additional competition from OfficeMax as well as a
number of smaller online office supply vendors.

Fear of cannibalizing local stores has kept another office supply superstore on
the sidelines--at least so far. Staples, which maintains an informational Web
site, says it will add online shopping this summer.

OnlineOfficeSupplies' first target will be the back-to-school market, but its
ultimate destinations are the small office-home office and large corporate
markets, Jageman said.

Related news stories
* PCs hurt OfficeMax sales July 28, 1998
* The pursuit of industry online March 11, 1998
* Office Depot to open Net store January 15, 1998