DollarDays Expands Headquarters in Response to Growth

DollarDays, a premier Internet-based product wholesaler to small businesses and local distributors, moved into a new Scottsdale headquarters in response to the company’s growth. The new “DollarDays Central” is located in Thunderbird Airpark Center at 7575 East Redfield Road.

DollarDays Central now encompasses more than 10,000 square feet and features two conference rooms, redundant wireless communications and room for up to 70 employees. The company was founded in 2001 with two employees in a home office. Today, DollarDays has 50 employees in both Scottsdale and Boston, with plans to further grow to accommodate the increase in DollarDays’ business.

“This is an exciting growth time for DollarDays,” said Marc Joseph, President and CEO. “Our business mission efficiently supplying small businesses with the best-priced products they need to successfully compete in a competitive marketplace is being embraced by new customers every day. The new DollarDays Central will even further enhance our customer relations and continued success.”

DollarDays is a Web-based virtual warehouse where small-business owners can find great deals on small-business-sized orders for more than 25,000 consumer products, from toys and household décor to apparel, electronics and seasonal merchandise. Due to its innovative business model, DollarDays’ prices are not only often far below those which most small business are accustomed to, but the offerings include many name-brand products, as well as rock-bottom pricing on overstocked and closeout items.

DollarDays’ prices are among the lowest available to small businesses. Membership is free, and any small business is eligible to shop at www.dollardays.com.

Original article here:
https://www.digitalcommerce360.com/2005/04/25/dollardays-expands-headquarters-in-response-to-growth/

Author Says Retail Businesses Can Beat Walmart, Other Big-box Retailers

Access to smaller quantities and unique products, more personalized customer service, and a controllable overhead are a few of the advantages that can help small retail businesses succeed in a big-box retail climate.

A new book titled “The Secrets of Retailing…or How to Beat Walmart” by Marc Joseph, President and COO of DollarDays, a premier Internet-based product wholesaler to small businesses and local distributors, details how small businesses can compete and even win against Walmart and other giant retailers that come to their towns.

“The Secrets of Retailing…or How to Beat Walmart” hits store shelves in spring 2005 but is now available for pre-publication orders at www.dollardays.com.

“Let’s admit upfront that there may be some truth in the low price complaints for run-of-the-mill goods, because it is true that the giant discounters do buy them at lower prices than any independent can obtain,” said Joseph. “However, when it comes to more specialized and not necessarily more expensive merchandise, Walmart and the other giant discounters are actually at a disadvantage to the small retail store.”

According to Joseph, while Walmart can buy in large closeout quantities, they can’t buy in small quantities, which give independents the huge advantage of selling opportunistic products showing great value. In addition, because of a limited supply of unique and different items, the chains can’t buy them in sufficient quantity, giving the independent a chance to really be different.

Joseph also adds that small retailers can control their overhead and be significantly lower because they do not need to support a whole management superstructure, and it’s easier for them to offer customers personalized service and attention that always beats the impersonal feeling in a chain store.

“None of this is to say that the discounters do not offer serious competition. Of course they do. But then I don’t know of any business, retail or otherwise, that is without competitive pushback,” said Joseph. “The point is that, contrary to the complaints you hear from retailers driven out by Walmart, even the largest, most aggressive discounter is nowhere near strong enough to stop a small retailer if they know what they are doing.”

Joseph says the retailers who have been driven out by Walmart were capitalizing on their local monopoly by selling ordinary merchandise at exalted prices. When Walmart came in, these small retailers were undersold.

Joseph was inspired to write [his book] as a result of counseling hundreds of DollarDays customers, small retailers who worried about facing increased competition when big-box retailers opened in their towns. Although many small retailers complain that big-box retailers like Walmart lure customers with “loss leader” pricing on some merchandise, Joseph says small retailers can triumph in the long run.

“Every chapter in my book talks about the fundamentals of entrepreneurial retailing, whether it is hiring the right people, selecting the right location, working with the right vendors or running the right promotions,” Joseph said. “This book is based on my experiences in competing against Walmart and also being a supplier to Walmart. When you finish this book, you will have that edge to not only survive and thrive in the shadow of Walmart, but to go up against any chain store.”

Joseph often speaks to retail associations about how small-business owners can ensure their own success by applying the principals of entrepreneurial retailing.

As a support system for entrepreneurs, DollarDays offers a program called DollarDays Independent Distributors (DDID) that helps people open their own product wholesaler businesses on the Internet. After paying an annual fee of $199, DollarDays’ professionals set up the independent distributor’s website, where the distributor’s business contacts can order DollarDays’ famous small case-load quantities of supplies. Every time a customer orders, the independent distributor receives a commission of 5%. Based on yearly sales volume, commission earned can increase to as much as 15%.

About DollarDays
Founded in 2001, DollarDays is the leading supplier of wholesale goods for nonprofits, businesses and betterment organizations. By sourcing affordable products, backed by exceptional service and meaningful community engagement, we strive to inspire and empower our customers to accomplish their missions to improve the lives of people around the world. Recognized as the City of Phoenix Mayor’s Office “2018 Product Exporter of the Year” and Internet Retailer Magazine’s “B2B E-commerce Marketer of the Year” for 2016 and 2017, DollarDays is headquartered in Phoenix, Arizona. For more information, visit www.dollardays.com.

DollarDays Relaunches with New Search, Merchandising Features

DollarDays.com, a website that wholesales general merchandise to 425,000 small, independent retailers, relaunched today with redesigned navigation and site search features. DollarDays has doubled its number of registered users in the past year, [the company’s] president, Marc Joseph, tells InternetRetailer.com.

DollarDays sells about 30,000 general-merchandise products, including toys, household décor, apparel, electronics and seasonal merchandise. The redesigned site uses site search technology from Endeca Technologies Inc. integrated with an in-house content management system to improve the way users can search and navigate for products, Joseph says.

Each merchandise page of the site presents several images of products with multiple ways to drill down into categories and subcategories, including price, free-shipping offers, new products, closeouts and brands. Each page displays a navigation bar that lets shoppers click into these and other categories, automatically changing all the product images on the page to reflect the chosen category.

Joseph says DollarDays’ sales are divided into thirds by closeout products, seasonal products and basic items.

Original article here: 
https://www.digitalcommerce360.com/2005/03/08/dollardays-com-relaunches-with-new-search-and-merchandising-feat/

Online Wholesaler DollarDays Reports 1,000 New Customers a Day

Designed to help small merchants compete with large retailers, online wholesaler DollarDays has gained an average of 1,000 new customers a day, many of them one- or two-person operations, over the past year, the company says.

DollarDays, based in Phoenix, also says its 2004 sales reached a record growth rate of 200% over 2003. The privately held company does not release sales figures in dollar terms.

“This has been an exciting year, and we look forward to beating our own records in 2005,” says Marc Joseph, founder and COO.

In addition to traffic from mom-and-pop merchants, DollarDays is also building its business with entrepreneurs who are establishing new dollar-store locations and with larger retailers who are establishing dollar-store departments within existing stores, the company says.

Original article here: 
https://www.digitalcommerce360.com/2005/01/04/online-wholesaler-dollardays-reports-1-000-new-customers-a-day/

DollarDays Celebrates Third Birthday

DollarDays, a premier Internet-based product wholesaler to small businesses and local distributors, today marks its third birthday. [The company], which sells small caseloads of 25,000-plus consumer products to small businesses through its website at www.dollardays.com, opened its virtual doors for business in October 2001. DollarDays is a key player in helping small businesses compete with big-box retailers such as Walmart and helping traditional brick-and-mortar stores and would-be entrepreneurs open online retail outlets.

“From our first day of business, DollarDays’ mission has been to the small-business leader’s best friend,” said Marc Joseph, COO of the Scottsdale, Arizona-based company. “Reaching this birthday is proof that small businesses rely on us to make the most of their purchasing power and for the practical how-to advice that small-business people need for success.”

DollarDays celebrates this birthday after achieving significant business milestones. The company’s August 2004 revenues increased 196% over August 2003 revenues, beating the company’s previous record, and DollarDays announced a record one-month registration, with nearly 21,000 new customers registering on the site.

Additionally, DollarDays also reports a record 226 percent increase in orders during July 2004 over July 2003, and a record one-day registration with nearly 800 new customers registering on the site. In August, the DollarDays Website received more than 65 million hits.

“DollarDays is growing, not only with new customers, but with repeat business as well,” says Marc Joseph, DollarDays’ COO. “We will continue to break our own records as we expand into other business sectors, such as nonprofit organizations, where items purchased on DollarDays make their budgets stretch the farthest. […] Small-business owners are the core of our business, and small-business owners need to find the best value for their money. DollarDays’ record-breaking growth shows that small business owners are shopping with us to save money.”

About DollarDays
Founded in 2001, DollarDays is the leading supplier of wholesale goods for nonprofits, businesses and betterment organizations. By sourcing affordable products, backed by exceptional service and meaningful community engagement, we strive to inspire and empower our customers to accomplish their missions to improve the lives of people around the world. Recognized as the City of Phoenix Mayor’s Office “2018 Product Exporter of the Year” and Internet Retailer Magazine’s “B2B E-commerce Marketer of the Year” for 2016 and 2017, DollarDays is headquartered in Phoenix, Arizona. For more information, visit www.dollardays.com.

DollarDays Expands Party Supplies Department in Time for Holiday Season

DollarDays, a premier Internet-based product wholesaler to small businesses and local distributors, today announced that the company has dramatically expanded its party supplies product line in time for the upcoming holiday season.

DollarDays now carries more than 5,000 party products for every holiday, including Halloween, Thanksgiving, Christmas, Hanukah and New Years. New party products now available include invitations, table centerpieces, holiday-themed garlands, noisemakers, serving trays, streamers, balloons, door banners, paper plates and cups, utensils, party hats, gift wrap and gift bags, and leis.

“We expanded our party supplies department to help small-business owners who often respond to tough economic times by cutting back their holiday party budget[s],” said Marc Joseph, President of DollarDays. “Now, because of our expanded product offerings, you don’t have to skimp on festivities to stay within your budget. And neighborhood-based small retailers can better compete against big-box retailers by giving their customers the same high-quality goods and competitive prices.”

Recently, DollarDays […] announced several new initiatives and business milestones. The company’s August 2004 revenues increased 196% over August 2003 revenues, beating the company’s previous record. Additionally, DollarDays announced a record one-month registration, with nearly 21,000 new customers registering on the site.

“Daily, more small businesses turn to DollarDays to obtain products at wholesale prices so they can pass on these savings to their customers while competing head-to-head with major chain retailers like Walmart,” Joseph said. “Our success mirrors theirs, and we’re glad to be the entrepreneurs’ best friend.”

About DollarDays
Founded in 2001, DollarDays is the leading supplier of wholesale goods for nonprofits, businesses and betterment organizations. By sourcing affordable products, backed by exceptional service and meaningful community engagement, we strive to inspire and empower our customers to accomplish their missions to improve the lives of people around the world. Recognized as the City of Phoenix Mayor’s Office “2018 Product Exporter of the Year” and Internet Retailer Magazine’s “B2B E-commerce Marketer of the Year” for 2016 and 2017, DollarDays is headquartered in Phoenix, Arizona. For more information, visit www.dollardays.com.

Nonprofit Organizations the Fastest-growing Sector on Top-rated Wholesale Distributor to Small Retailers

Nonprofit organizations are the fastest-growing sector of customers on [the DollarDays website]. […] Orders from nonprofits—including medical, educational and charitable institutions—are up 147% over the previous year.

“Nonprofit organizations are small businesses, and, just like any small business, nonprofit groups need to make their donations go as far as possible,” said Marc Joseph, COO of DollarDays. “When they buy their necessary supplies by the case on DollarDays, they are putting their donors’ hard-earned money to good use.”

Joseph reports that nonprofits are buying everything from office supplies and health-and-beauty products to fundraising items. Other top-selling supplies include batteries, inexpensive clothing, recognition awards and plaques, holiday greeting cards, and small electronics.

“Recently, an Oklahoma elementary school principal purchased hundreds of tennis balls from DollarDays to use on the bottom of his student’s chairs so they won’t scratch the school’s newly resurfaced wood floors,” said Joseph. “In addition to it being cost-effective, it’s incredibly innovative, and I’m thrilled we were able to help him.”

About DollarDays
Founded in 2001, DollarDays is the leading supplier of wholesale goods for nonprofits, businesses and betterment organizations. By sourcing affordable products, backed by exceptional service and meaningful community engagement, we strive to inspire and empower our customers to accomplish their missions to improve the lives of people around the world. Recognized as the City of Phoenix Mayor’s Office “2018 Product Exporter of the Year” and Internet Retailer Magazine’s “B2B E-commerce Marketer of the Year” for 2016 and 2017, DollarDays is headquartered in Phoenix, Arizona. For more information, visit www.dollardays.com.

DollarDays Sets New Monthly Sales Record

DollarDays, a premier Internet-based product wholesaler to small businesses and local distributors, today announced the highest one-month sales revenues in the company’s history, shattering the company’s previous record set in April 2004.

DollarDays reports its July 2004 revenues increased 227% over July 2003 revenues. This beats its previous record announced in April 2004, where revenues increased 199% over April 2003 revenues. Additionally, DollarDays also reports a record 226% increase in orders during July 2004 over July 2003 and a record one-day registration, with nearly 800 new customers registering on the site.

“DollarDays is growing, not only with new customers, but with repeat business as well,” says Marc Joseph, DollarDays’ COO. “We will continue to break our own records as we expand into other industries, including philanthropies, where items purchased on DollarDays are sold to raise money. Small-business owners are the core of our business, and small-business owners need to find the best value for their money. DollarDays’ record-breaking growth shows that small-business owners are shopping with us to save money.”

As a support system for entrepreneurs, DollarDays recently unveiled a new program called DollarDays Independent Distributors (DDID) that helps people open their own product-wholesaler businesses on the Internet. After paying an annual fee of $199, DollarDays’ professionals set up the independent distributor’s website, where the distributor’s business contacts can order DollarDays’ famous case-load quantities of supplies. Every time a customer orders, the independent distributor receives a commission of 5%. Based on yearly sales volume, commission earned can increase to as much as 15%.

About DollarDays
Founded in 2001, DollarDays is the leading supplier of wholesale goods for nonprofits, businesses and betterment organizations. By sourcing affordable products, backed by exceptional service and meaningful community engagement, we strive to inspire and empower our customers to accomplish their missions to improve the lives of people around the world. Recognized as the City of Phoenix Mayor’s Office “2018 Product Exporter of the Year” and Internet Retailer Magazine’s “B2B E-commerce Marketer of the Year” for 2016 and 2017, DollarDays is headquartered in Phoenix, Arizona. For more information, visit www.dollardays.com.

Product Wholesaler Gives Special Back-to-School Discount to Educational Organizations

DollarDays, a premier Internet-based product wholesaler to small businesses and local distributors, announced today that the company would give educational organizations a special discount on orders for back-to-school supplies.

Any education-based nonprofit—including schools, daycare facilities and after-school clubs—is eligible for the 10% discount on any order placed during the month of August at www.dollardays.com.

“Every elected official in the country talks about how all of us need to help our schools succeed,” says DollarDays’ COO, Marc Joseph. “At DollarDays, we wanted to take action by enabling schools to stretch their budgets as far as possible. When schools win, everybody in our society wins.”

DollarDays carries thousands of back-to-school necessities, like pens, erasers, backpacks, calendars, calculators, chalk, pencils, highlighters, compasses, locker accessories, thumbtacks, […] notebooks and paperclips. “We carry everything you need for a successful school year,” Joseph says, “and even without our new back-to-school discount, our prices are the best you’ll find.”

About DollarDays
Founded in 2001, DollarDays is the leading supplier of wholesale goods for nonprofits, businesses and betterment organizations. By sourcing affordable products, backed by exceptional service and meaningful community engagement, we strive to inspire and empower our customers to accomplish their missions to improve the lives of people around the world. Recognized as the City of Phoenix Mayor’s Office “2018 Product Exporter of the Year” and Internet Retailer Magazine’s “B2B E-commerce Marketer of the Year” for 2016 and 2017, DollarDays is headquartered in Phoenix, Arizona. For more information, visit www.dollardays.com.

Direct to Retailers

After having spent 20 years in the retail business, Marc Joseph figured in the mid-1990s that the Internet offered broad new opportunities. But even though he had devoted much of his career as a merchandise expert for Federated Department Stores Inc.’s Burdines chain, he wasn’t thinking retail. His sights were on the web and its ripe potential for changing the wholesale consumer products business. Online wholesaling has become the next wave to hit the Internet, he says.

In 1998, Joseph founded DollarDays as a wholesaler of general merchandise to independent retailers. After years of slow growth, it surged in the past year as more merchants have raised their comfort level in sourcing products online and have come to know DollarDays through searching the Internet for merchandise.

A few years ago, retailers were tentative about going online to buy wholesale products, says Joseph, President and COO. They preferred the traditional way of walking around trade shows to see a few hundred vendors, talk to people, look at samples and then decide who to buy from.

No more traveling

But a growing number of retailers, after becoming more familiar with using the Internet for personal shopping and conducting research, are becoming more accustomed to shopping online to stock their businesses. And some have begun to lean on the web as their lifeline.

“Without going online to my suppliers, I would be out of business,” says Trina Ortiz, owner of three Ortiz Dollar Store & More outlets in the Pueblo, Colorado, area.

At the same time, adds Joseph, who also spent several years as a traditional wholesaler to grocery and drugstores, manufacturers have cut back on their policies of sending salespeople to stores to display products and process orders.

With online retailing continuing its steady annual growth, subsequent growth in online wholesaling is a natural progression, experts say. When all of the Internet play in 2000 was on retail, wholesale was under the radar, Joseph says. It’s been a basic business matter of converting the mindset of store owners to realize that buying over the Internet is not only convenient and safe, but that it also gives them a chance to find the latest products at competitive prices.

The growth of online wholesaling is expected to continue rising steadily, according to a study released earlier this year, “Facing the Forces of Change,” commissioned by the Distribution Research and Education Foundation of the National Association of Wholesalers. The percent of wholesalers’ revenues gained through websites will rise from to 13% in 2008 from 3% in 2003, says the study, which was conducted by Philadelphia-based Pembroke Consulting.

Over the same period, the study notes, e-mail orders will grow to 5% of orders from 2%; online orders through third-party websites will stay at 1%, and EDI orders will grow to 18% of all orders from 12%. Overall, online ordering will expand to 37% of orders from 18%, the study says.

Not just technology

Reaching that growth in retailer-wholesaler online commerce will require a continued evolution of the web as a channel for sourcing retail inventories among independent merchants. And as large mass-market and specialized big-box retailers deal more directly with manufacturers, cutting into traditional wholesaler-distributor markets, a new breed of online wholesalers is emerging to serve the small, independent merchants that often find themselves competing with the largest retailers.

But making online wholesale activity more common can require coaching by wholesalers, as well as a better understanding of the benefits of online buying by merchants themselves. Online wholesalers are also finding the web doesn’t negate the basic skills of merchandising and customer service.

The benefits to small, independent merchants are not difficult to comprehend. Through the ease of using web browsers rather than having to hit the trade show circuit or meeting with dozens of sales reps, retailers gain wider selection of suppliers, as well as products in a more expedient manner. They can also realize more organized management of orders and shipments while viewing webpages that show near-real-time updates of inventory availability.

Joseph figures that, in the long run, the most sophisticated small retailers will also integrate data from online orders with back-end inventory management and accounting software applications, saving them time on updating their inventory management and accounting software as they purchase supplies. Wholesaling products is the next logical step in the evolution of the Internet, Joseph says.

But for now, retailers involved with online wholesaling say they’re more focused on the near-term benefits that the channel offers them over more traditional wholesaling. Most wholesalers put out a catalog once a year, and that catalog has the merchandise that, at the time of publication, is usually in stock, says Ortiz, the dollar store owner, adding that keeping her stores stocked with fresh products is key to her success. But a couple of months later, the percent[age] of merchandise that is in the catalog and not in stock is very high. The only way to find new items is online, which is usually updated as often as daily.

Tom Williams, a principal and manager of the family-owned Big Gib Store in rural Republic, Washington, says he routinely receives visits from a locally based wholesaler of general merchandise for his store’s section on goods typically found in dollar stores. But that wholesaler, who is also a friend of the family, rarely gets any of Big Gib’s business, Williams says. “His pricing is pretty much the same as online wholesalers’ [pricing], but it takes him three to four weeks to deliver goods. [W]hen we order online, we get deliveries in seven to 10 days or sooner.”

The 4 Quarters Dollar Store in Belle Fourche, South Dakota, has done all of its product ordering online since opening for business last summer, says owner Robin Olson. Although Olson will occasionally view product offers from traveling salesmen, so far their product catalogs have been too scant and their prices too high in comparison to online offerings. “They haven’t been able to give me prices as good as available online, and their catalogs are not that big and don’t offer a lot of variety,” she says.

Taking care of customers

Olson adds that ordering from DollarDays, which she often does late at night, saves her time during the day to tend to customers and other store-keeping chores. It also provides for ease of managing her orders through self-service administrative features that let her print out an order record after making a purchase, then tracking the shipment online and checking its details against the order record—all without having to place calls to wholesalers. “I don’t have to use business hours to do business with suppliers,” she says.

Olson will occasionally travel to a consumer products trade show to see vendors and products personally, but she says the quality of product images and descriptions available online makes frequent trade show visits unnecessary. “We get a pretty good idea how good a product is by viewing it online,” she says. “There have been a few times I’ve been disappointed because a product wasn’t the quality I expected, but that’s been a small percentage. Most of the stuff, I’m happy with it.”

As happy as Ortiz and other retailers are with their online buying experiences, the biggest challenge to online wholesalers is to broaden their market among the large majority of retailers who continue to source products through more traditional wholesaling, Joseph says. “The downside of the online wholesale business is having to convince the rest of the business world how easy the Internet is to use. Our biggest competition is the more traditional wholesalers, [and] our biggest challenge is how to get more offline buyers online.”

Yet Joseph says he does no offline advertising but focuses mostly on building word of mouth through strong customer service and merchandising. “It comes down to the basics of retailing, having the right product at the right price at the right time,” he says. “Our home page changes every day with new product offers. We have to be sharp with merchandising and make sure we’re priced right.”

Online wholesalers must also rely on human interaction in customer service as well as special support programs to attract and keep customers, he adds. “You can’t be a customer service slouch and wholesale on the Internet,” Joseph says.

Indeed, online wholesalers are resorting to old-fashioned personalized service to stay in the mind of customers. Olson of 4 Quarters Dollar Store says online wholesalers will frequently call just to touch base. “A lot of times they call me to ask how things are going and if I got the last shipment okay and if I’m happy with everything,” she says. “They also call to tell me when they plan to have special promotions or tell me to wait a few days to order to get a better deal. It makes me feel better about doing business with them and makes it more likely I’ll keep going back to them.”

Williams of Big Gib Store says he’s had similar personal contact. He adds that he feels that online wholesalers are more likely to treat small retailers with the same respect as larger retailers, regardless of the size of their orders. In one case, after he had sourced about 300 sweaters from DollarDays, the online wholesaler called to alert him that the sweaters were used merchandise that had been shipped by mistake. “They took the sweaters back and credited us for the entire amount, even including the dozen that we had sold,” Williams says.

Incentive programs

Others competing in the online wholesale consumer products market, including Overstock Inc.’s OverstockB2B.com and eBay’s “Wholesale Lots” section, are offering incentive programs geared to attract more small, independent retailers into sourcing products on the web.

eBay is planning to offer, this year, an inventory financing program for wholesale sellers, and it also plans to provide improved site navigation from eBay’s home page into its “Wholesale Lots” consumer products section. “We want to make it easier for buyers and sellers to find each other,” says Jordan Glazier, General Manager of eBay Business. “‘Wholesale Lots’ accounts for a sizable proportion of eBay’s business-to-business sales, which also include sales of office supplies and industrial equipment, and which totaled $2 billion last year,” he says.

Search marketing here, too

Overstock plans to introduce, this year, special services to small merchants, including a commercial credit card program and health insurance programs in association with Advanta, though Overstock has yet to set a date for launching those services, a spokesman says.

Wholesalers also need to develop effective Internet search marketing strategies, including testing the most effective keyword combinations and linking to frequently visited sites. Joseph notes that DollarDays has grown its number of customers ten times since 2000 and that most find his site through web searches for keywords of products preceded by the term “wholesale,” as well as through listings on aggregator sites like WholesaleCentral.com.

Other wholesalers also say the web has caused a noticeable jump in customers. “[Fifty percent] of the business we attract online are people we never sold to before,” says Jeff Rosen, marketing director of PriceMaster Corp., a wholesaler to thousands of convenience stores and other small, independent retailers. While PriceMaster has provided more than 2,000 products for large convenience store chains, it’s now moving those same products—non-food items like photographic film, aspirin and Chapstick—to new kinds of retailers through PriceMaster.com, which gets much of its traffic through a connection with WholesaleCentral.com. “It was a nice surprise to us that we could attract mom-and-pop non-c-stores,” Rosen says.

Scott Sumner, President and CEO of Sumner Communications, which owns WholesaleCentral.com, says the site nearly doubled its number of wholesale-retail buying sessions in March to 781,388 from 404,500 a year ago. The site hosts more than 1,400 wholesalers, who pay $199 every six months to conduct trading sessions. That fee includes 100 keywords for use with WholesaleCentral’s site search engine. It also sells advertising spots throughout its site with fees ranging up to $1,500 per month.

Setting records

DollarDays, privately held with venture capital from Boston-based C.P. Baker & Co., doesn’t release revenue figures. But the wholesaler, which currently attracts more than 750 new customers daily [to its website], up from about 500 six months ago, […] set a record for sales in a single month when April sales increased 199% year-over-year, Joseph says. April also set a record for number of orders, rising 205% over April 2003, he adds. The wholesaler has been profitable for the past year, Joseph says.

DollarDays serves more than 187,000 U.S. merchants, including single mom-and-pop gift shops and small regional chains of general merchandise stores, Joseph says. About 10% of his registered merchants drop out every year, but at the current net rate of growth he expects to have close to 400,000 merchants by the end of this year. The online wholesaler offers about 30,000 consumer products, including toys, household décor, apparel, electronics and seasonal items.

When Joseph launched DollarDays in 1998, he sold to retailers partly online and partly through more traditional means of appearing at trade shows and making sales calls. He went completely online in 2001, about the same time he secured venture capital from C.P. Baker.

Joseph staffed his customer service department with 20 reps with experience as retailers—many of whom had operated their own businesses. The retail-veteran reps have proven key to the wholesaler’s growth, because they play a role in helping more merchants to make the shift from offline to online buying, Joseph says.

A new customer who is unsure of the online buying process will talk on the phone with a rep while each views the same web pages on DollarDays.com and conduct a test run of filling a shopping cart. DollarDays encourages the new merchant to study the order overnight, then review it the following day with the rep to discuss how it could be modified to hit targeted costs and merchandise assortments.

Successfully luring retailers online can require flexibility to let merchants place orders and communicate with wholesalers as they choose, experts say. PriceMaster, for example, plans to redesign its site as a more useful tool for attracting clients. “Jobbers can order online in half the time it takes to order over the phone,” Rosen says.

More tools

It new website will provide clients with more tools and data for managing orders and inventories. It will show what they ordered in the past, provide real-time availability of products and reminders on what they need to order, and show price histories to support analysis of prices and profit margins.

But PriceMaster will not force clients to order online. “A lot of our customers are old-school, not used to using the web, and some don’t even have web access,” Rosen says. “But even the more technologically sophisticated customers still need human interaction,” he adds, “including jobbers who need help in explaining new products to retailers.”

PriceMaster has also kept the automation of online orders to a minimum. Rosen will print out batches of online orders and hand them to sales reps, who then key in the information to order management software while calling the customers to confirm the order information, answer any questions, and, at times, suggest additional sales. “We have the capability to automatically integrate online orders with other software, but we don’t want to lose the human touch,” Rosen says.

Getting to jobbers and retailers

The web is making wholesalers more nimble. Take PriceMaster—[i]ts core clientele is jobbers who sell to retailers. And, in fact, the web has made PriceMaster more attractive to jobbers, says Jeff Rosen, Marketing Director. They come for the same reasons that retailers do: the convenience, the selection and the prices.

But the web is also allowing PriceMaster to sell directly to more retailers because there are many areas of the [United States], mostly outside of major metropolitan areas, where jobbers don’t operate and where there are growing numbers of retailers who, like jobbers, are finding PriceMaster on WholesaleCentral.com and […] Wholesale411.com. The result is a net increase in sales to jobbers, as well as directly to stores, Rosen says.

“We’ve seen a tremendous increase in customer activity in the past year, and we expect even more,” Rosen says.

PriceMaster, however, trains its customer service reps to encourage new retailer clients to use jobbers, if available. PriceMaster would rather deal with jobbers because they present the opportunity to sell larger volumes of products in fewer transactions. An average jobber order is $3,000-$5,000, but the average store order is $500-$750, Rosen says.

“But as long as there are retailers without jobbers, the web offers the ideal way to sell to them,” he adds. “If jobbers aren’t selling to stores in an area, we still want those retailers’ business.”

What retailers expect from online wholesalers

The web is going to change the retailer-wholesaler relationship—and fast, says “Facing the Forces of Change,” a study commissioned by the Distribution Research and Education Foundation of the National Association of Wholesalers.

For instance, by 2008, 83% of wholesaler-distributors expect their retailer customers to require some form of electronic ordering, up from only 24% today. The study defines electronic connections as ordering from a wholesaler’s website, through e-mail or through EDI, including web-based EDI.

The web will also continue to change the way in which retailers find and evaluate sources of products, the study says. It found that 53% of wholesaler-distributors believe that the Internet will become the most common channel for retailers to source products by 2008, and that 48% of wholesaler-distributors believe that the Internet will become the most common tool for retailers to evaluate multiple sources of products.

Merchants will also expect information about products and orders to be available on wholesalers’ websites, as the web encourages a broader use of self-service tools. The National Association of Wholesalers study notes that by 2008:

  • 33% of retailers will expect to have the ability to gather product information from their wholesalers’ websites, up from 8% in 2003
  • 34% will expect to access pricing information online, up from 6%
  • 36% will expect to communicate with their wholesalers’ sales staff via e-mail, up from 14%
  • 27% will expect to review purchase history online, up from 2%.

Original article here:
https://www.digitalcommerce360.com/2004/06/03/direct-to-retailers/