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To: H James Morris who wrote (29347)12/8/1998 9:05:00 PM
From: Glenn D. Rudolph  Respond to of 164684
 
Glen,<The technology can not easily be purchased. Hmmm..????>
That's not correct.


I meant it can easily be purchased. I was rushed sorry.

Don't think of that as a shorting opportunity, because his increasing losses
won't matter. It's revenue gains the institutions want. The losses they'll deal with later.
Trust me on that.


Believe me, I trust you.

Glenn



To: H James Morris who wrote (29347)12/9/1998 8:39:00 AM
From: Glenn D. Rudolph  Respond to of 164684
 

WEB RETAILERS TRAMPLED BY
SHOPPING ONSLAUGHT

By Georgie Raik-Allen
Red Herring Online
December 8, 1998

Web retail sites are collapsing under the weight of an online
shopping stampede, and may bring customer-acquisition
opportunities down with them.

In the past few days, major online sellers such as Buy.com,
Toys R Us (TOY), and eBay (EBAY) have had to close
their virtual doors temporarily as heavy shopping traffic
downed their sites. Victoria's Secret also delayed the
pre-holiday launch of its e-commerce site, due to fears that
servers would not be able to cope with heavy traffic.

Opportunity knocks once
While the crashes will lead to a decrease in anticipated
holiday revenues for affected Web retailers, analysts say a
more serious concern is lost opportunities to acquire new
customers and build shopper's loyalty.

According to Jupiter analyst Ken Cassar, about 17 million
people will come onto the Internet for the first time this
holiday season. "This is a very important customer
acquisition period," he says. "If potential customers are
having problems accessing Web sites, there is a tremendous
risk of alienating them."

Forrester analyst Maria La Tour Kadison says that major
online brands are using email reminders and promotional
activities to keep consumers coming back to the Web for
post-holiday purchases. And the recent slew of television
ads promoting e-commerce sites demonstrates that Web
retailers hope to use the spending season to attract new
customers to their virtual stores.

While Mr. Cassar does not expect the Web crashes to affect
online shopping overall, he says if mainstream customers
visit sites that are not working, they will be driven to the
competition with the click of a mouse.

Too much, too soon
New consumer electronics site 800.com, which launched
just prior to the spending season, has been experiencing
server problems since last Friday. The Web site is now up
and running, but did momentarily slam its virtual doors on
hundreds of potential new customers.

Founder and CEO Greg Drew blames a too-successful
promotion for 800.com music and video sales for the excess
traffic. The company has added a higher-capacity Internet
pipeline and several new computer servers.

He says the unexpected traffic was a mixed blessing,
demonstrating demand for the site's products, but causing
headaches for its technology teams. "You know how it
goes," he says. "You have to be careful what you wish for."

Mr. Cassar says the lesson for online merchants is to make
prediction about holiday shopping traffic and prepare for
four times that number of customers.

"I wouldn't say this will ruin things for 800.com, but it
could have a very serious effect on customer acquisition,"
Mr. Cassar says.

EBay's stock fell 10 points on Monday after an attempted
upgrade of the software used to manage the data storage
system brought the online auctioneer's site down for early
morning shoppers. Online auctions were postponed up to 18
hours as engineers worked on the problem.

Bricks and mortar hold up
The Toys R Us commerce site also collapsed last week,
although its stock price was unaffected.

Mr. Cassar says big bricks-and-mortar stores would not be
as affected by site crashes as new e-commerce plays,
because they already have a solid reputation in the public's
mind. "People may be willing to give Toys R Us a second
chance," he says, "whereas people trying eBay for the first
time will just go to another site, and forget eBay."

While missed sales due to Web site crashes are not as
serious as the missed opportunity to acquire new customers,
the lost revenue cannot be discounted.

Jupiter has estimated online holiday spending will jump to
$2.3 billion, up from $1 billion last year, and Forrester
Research expects it to reach $3.5 billion.

Mr. Cassar says that in traditional as well as online retail,
the year's profit is made in the fourth quarter. "Generally
you have 35 to 40 days in the year to make your profit, and
in the Internet that time is even more important.

"Every day you lose is absolutely crucial."