eBay for Manufacturers
Calloway Golf. Dell Computers. HP. JBL, Harmon Kardon, and
Infinity.
What these manufacturers have in common is that they all sell
merchandise on eBay, direct to consumers. And they're just a few of many;
hundreds and thousands of smaller specialty manufacturers have developed eBay
businesses that function as supplemental sales channels to their main
businesses.
If you choose to sell your products on eBay, you have some
distribution questions to answer. The chief question, of course, is what kind of
products you want to sell on eBaythat is, do you want to sell your entire
product line, selected products, or do you want to use eBay as a outlet for your
overstock and distressed merchandise? The latter option is one that many of the
big boys take; they find eBay a great way to move product that had no outlet
previously. In addition, using eBay for closeout product helps to minimize
channel conflict, as you're selling products online that aren't available (or
even wanted by) your traditional retail channels.
For example, Dell Financial Services (stores.ebay.com/Dell-Financial-Services) operates an eBay
Store that sells refurbished computers that have come off-lease from their
corporate clients. As you can see in Figure
12.1, this is a great way for Dell to move these recycled products that it
might otherwise have no way to offer to the public.
Back to the issue of channel conflict: This is definitely
something that most businesses need to address. It's nice to establish a new
stream of sales, but not if it ticks off your established retail partners. The
last thing a bricks-and-mortar retailer wants to see is the same product he's
buying from you offered for sale directly from you to the general public;
retailers don't really like competing with their suppliers for business. It's
best if you can find some way to distinguish your eBay sales from the sales you
make otherwise.
In addition, if you're going to sell on eBay, you better be set
up to ship directly to consumers. Some companies are, some aren't; don't assume
that the distribution operation you have fine-tuned to service bulk orders to
distributors and retailers can also handle one-off orders direct to individuals.
Servicing individual consumers isn't nearly as easy as you might think; not only
could you screw up the individual's orders, shoehorning direct-to-consumer
shipments into your warehouse could cause stress to your existing operation. I'm
not kidding here; think carefully before you add B2C sales to what was
exclusively a B2B operation.
That said, selling on eBay has helped many manufacturers, both
small and large, move overstock and clearance merchandise and add a nice
supplemental revenue stream to their existing businesses. And, of course, if
you're just starting out, there's no reason not to consider eBay as your primary
sales channel.
If you do decide to sell on eBay, it's a good idea to open an
eBay Store. Yes, you can use the traditional auction process (perhaps
supplemented with Buy It Now listings) to move a lot of merchandise, but you
probably have a lot more items in the warehouse than you can list for auction at
any given time. Make sure you route a fresh supply of merchandise into your
weekly auctions, but then supplement those listings with stock merchandise in
your eBay Store. This combination works well for manufacturers in all product
categories.