GK...here is what you are looking for.... More background on VerticalNet from SmartMoney:
The Web's Next Big Thing? By Gerri Willis
IF YOU THOUGHT the Internet was only about sex and shopping -- and why wouldn't you after Wednesday's VictoriasSecret.com network-stopping online fashion show -- we have some news for you. The real money may be in such sleep-inducing URLs as plantautomation.com, testandmeasurement.com and solidwaste.com.
That's the hope anyway of VerticalNet, a tiny company that builds and aggregates these hard-core business sites and which plans to launch its initial public offering next week. VerticalNet is looking to make its mark in the expanding market for business-to-business e-commerce. Think consumer Web buying is big? It pales in comparison with corporate America's spending. Businesses will spend $300 billion over the Internet next year, compared to just $30 billion by consumers. "It's a 10-to-one proposition,'' says Paul Cook, manager of Munder NetNet (MNNAX), an Internet fund that returned 98% last year. "But investors haven't yet completely embraced it."
The segment won't be overlooked for long. Formed three-and-a-half years ago, VerticalNet took dead aim at this market by developing online communities for 31 industries from water engineering (wateronline.com) to medical design (medicaldesignonline.com). Visitors get detailed information such as product reviews, job listings, information on industry developments and chat boards where they can talk to experts. Because of its focus, VerticalNet advertising reps can brag that 15% to 20% of its visitors are employed as buyers. Competitors are mostly fledgling operations, none of which are public.
For the nine months ended Sept. 30, 1998, VerticalNet's strategy yielded just $2.3 million in revenue on losses of $9.8 million. With its public offering under the symbol VERT, the company hopes to raise $40.25 million to pay back its initial investors and fund the development and acquisition of more Web sites. But the big payoff for investors will come as the company expands its role as an intermediary to take fees on e-commerce business. Of course, there's no guarantee that the company will be able to make its strategy pay off. Just reading the company's S-1 filing with the Securities and Exchange Commission is enough to make any investor blanche. "To date, we have not generated any material revenues from e-commerce," it states. "We do not anticipate generating significant revenues from e-commerce until, at the earliest, 2000, if ever."
And certainly, others have tried and failed in this category. Not even former Lotus chairman Jim Manzi could resurrect the ambitious Industry.net, a sort of Nasdaq-like trading system for industrial vendors and buyers. After six years of struggle, that company filed for bankruptcy-court protection 18 months ago.
But Cook and others believe that VerticalNet may have cracked problems that hamstrung Industry. First off, the company's founders, Michael J. Hagan and Michael P. McNulty, two former college chums, aren't trying to provide the world's biggest catalog of industrial goods. Instead, they've narrowed their focus to industries that could benefit from a centralized location for trading information and tips. For the individual sites to work, says Steven Bell, an analyst at Forrester Research, VerticalNet must focus on industries where competitive barriers are low, information sharing is high and players tend to relate to each other as professionals rather than employees of specific companies. "They're very sophisticated about picking a market to go after," says Bell.
Second, the company has some pretty impressive backers. Internet Capital Group, a Wayne, Pa., firm that invests in start-up companies in the Internet business-to-business arena, owns 49% of VerticalNet (and some 39% after the IPO). In turn, ICG's investors include Compaq Computer (CPQ), GE Capital (a unit of General Electric (GE)), Comcast (CSCK) and Safeguard Scientifics (SFE), a public venture fund that backed companies like Novell (NOVL) and Cambridge Technology Partners (CATP). Internet Capital has helped the company land some marquee partners and executives. VerticalNet has a three-year agreement with both Excite (XCIT) and AltaVista, a division of Compaq, to develop an industrial channel for the search engines, and its CEO of 18 months, Mark Walsh, is the former America Online (AOL) senior vice president who founded that company's business-to-business channel called AOL Enterprise.
Cook cites another advantage to VerticalNet's business model: It has the potential to become profitable far faster than its rivals, which target consumers. Remember AOL? It is generating earnings now, but AOL was in the red on and off from its founding in 1985 until 1997 because it was spending roughly a third of its revenue carpet-bombing the country with diskettes. It's the same kind of marketing spending that keeps companies like Amazon.com (AMZN) from being profitable. But Cook says that companies targeting businesses will have to spend far less to get the attention of users. "Businesses are less interested in brand names," he says. "You provide them with a value proposition and they will come."
VerticalNet isn't achieving those advantages yet. Sales and marketing costs of nearly $5 million accounted for the biggest piece of the company's expenses. And how long it will take to become profitable is anybody's guess. The good news is that revenue is growing at an average of 48% a quarter from advertising. And the potential in the business-to-business segment is pretty awesome. |