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To: Impristine who wrote (49257)4/7/1999 8:59:00 AM
From: Glenn D. Rudolph  Respond to of 164684
 
Retailers disgrunted with big Internet sites
By Michael Connor
MIAMI, April 6 (Reuters) - Online retailers are growing
disgruntled with tie-ups with popular Internet sites such as
Yahoo! <YHOO.O> now seen as the main way of pulling in
cybershoppers, according to a study released on Tuesday.
The Jupiter Communications research group said fewer than
one in 20 online retailers plan to renew unchanged existing
deals with the big sites, saying the so-called portals deliver
too many one-off customers.
"Although 92 percent of commerce players surveyed believe
that portal tenancy deals help them to drive sales or
transactions, over two-thirds attribute 30 percent or less of
their online sales directly to portal deals," Jupiter said.
Yahoo!, Excite <XCIT.O>, Microsoft <MSFT.O> and other
portal sites offering Internet-search, chat, news and other
services accounted for about $1.4 billion of U.S. consumer
online sales of $7.9 billion last year, according to Jupiter
analyst Marc Johnson.
And while portal-driven sales of recordings, books,
clothing, tools, vitamins and other products will continue to
rise, other means of attracting and keeping online customers
for repeat business will grow ever more important, according to
Jupiter.
"Commerce players simply have not demanded enough from
their portal partners," Johnson said. "While they offer an
effective means to drive traffic, primary portals do not help
commerce players retain customers."
Johnson said online retailers were not going to abandon
portal alliances in great waves, but he expects new deals to be
based on commissions on transactions and other criteria likely
to yield repeat business. Most current deals typically turn on
the number of visitors a portal directs to an online retailer,
he said.
Ken Seiff, chief executive of Bluefly.com, said portals
were important marketing tools for his online clothing retailer
site but changes in terms were likely.
"You see differences among customers from different sites,"
Seiff said at an Internet conference in Miami sponsored by
Jupiter. "You may see that you'll see different prices from
different portals."
Jupiter forecasted that overall consumer Internet sales
will rise to nearly $43 billion in 2002, up from a forecast $13
billion this year. But portal-delivered business will rise only
to $8.7 billion or less, from $2.4 billion this year, Jupiter
said.
The research firm predicted that portals' share of
electronic commerce would rise modestly through 2002, going
from an estimated 18 percent last year to 20 percent in three
years.
Online retailers need to add other means of recruiting
customers, such as traditional advertising on radio and in
newspapers, and promotions, Johnson said.
Online retailers should also use specialty sites, such as
those dedicated to sports, to build customer traffic, according
to Jupiter.
Several online-retail executives at the conference said
building customer traffic was vital in start-ups and saw portal
deals as important but that frequent-buyer premiums, good
service and reliability aimed at building repeat business were
keys to profitability.
Johnson said tests done as part of the study found that
only 43 percent of 125 retail sites queried by e-mail last
month responded within two days, down from 63 percent in
December.
The Jupiter study was based on consumer-transaction data,
company projections and a survey of 36 online retailers,
Johnson said.