Boo.com – A Lesson In Business

Boo.com was founded in the late 1990s when dot com mania was gathering pace and venture capitalists had open cheque books but little time for lessons that had stood the test of time.

The internet was new, e-commerce was sexy and missing the boat was not on the agenda. This was the New Age.

Boo.com was the brainchild of long-time friends, Ernst Malmsten and Kajsa Leander. It was to be the flagship web site for the new world of internet retailing. Selling branded fashion & lesiure clothing to a generation of people becoming addicted to this new world. The Urban Cool.

Forget ‘bricks & mortar’ – cyberspace was hip. Get on board or get left behind.

Unfortunately, the hype & the glitz was just that. Within 18 months, Boo.com would become a byword for commercial stupidity.

Rules and conventions that have stood the test of time in the real world were ignored.

Boo.com was more about ‘hey look at us, aren’t we clever’ than straightforward commercial reality. Techonology or more especially, the internet, was the new kid on the block & the old ways were just that….old.

Lesson One – Build It & They Will Come:

When the Boo.com website launched after many delays, criticism was immediate. It’s all very well setting new standards in design and function but if the majority of your target customers can’t use the site, you’ve got problems.

The site relied heavily on Javascript & Flash which may be commonplace now, but in 1999/ 2000 they were niche. Miss Boo, the sales assistant avatar, who relied on these technologies was definitely not user friendly.

The site itself was so hungry for bandwidth that for most people, still using 28k and 56k dial-up modems, the homepage took a lifetime to load. Even in the late 1990s making customers wait an age to see the online catalogue was bad news. People were more patient then with slow downloads than they are now, but Boo were just taking the … (fill in your own word here).

Lesson Two – Our Designer Says Its Hip:

Even if the target customer is willing to wait an age to get through the front door, when they come in they must be able to find what they’re looking for. You’ve spent all that money bringing them into the store, don’t disappoint them.

Boo.com didn’t make life easy. Boo.com wanted to be at the cutting edge of web development but forgot it wasn’t a new age design agency, it was a retailer who was meant to make its money selling clothing. Navigation around the site was inconsistent. Using a fixed window size limited the space to display products. Asking lots of questions about what the customer wants, then informing them that ’sorry we have nothing in stock that matches your requirements’ is well just … daft.

Press coverage may have brought many visitors but the site dynamics quickly turned them away.

Lesson Three – Stick With The Original

For all the design and development mistakes, Boo.com did have it just about right at one stage. The beginning.

In early 1999, an unreleased site was ready that had been created by Boo’s orginal technology partners. The design was good – sleek, simple, a balance between bandwidth and customers. Miss Boo was there but download times were within the realms of acceptability.

But the in-house team were flexing their muscles and wanted to show their own talent. The external contractors were dumped, the launch date put back and some months later the new ‘grand design’ was triumphantly launched.

This was the new grand design that left its customers baffled, confused, frustrated, irritated. Not the reactions that the Marketing & PR team had confidently forecast.

Lesson Four: Top Dollar Does Not Mean Top Dog

As well as creating the most advanced web site on the planet, Boo.com was also intent on creating the most overpaid & over indulged workforce on the planet. It’s one thing to look after your staff, to make them feel good & enjoy coming to work but someone has to pay for all the fuzziness.

Some contractors were being paid $200 an hour. Poor communication between departments allowed costs to spiral, an expensive ad campaign was mis-timed (the site was still not ready – visitors were greeted with a holding page) and when the business did go live, high product returns on a free postage basis (free to the customer that is, Deutsche Post still charged Boo) added to the mounting cash burn.

Boo burnt $120m in development, launch and during its brief life.

If Boo.com had an accountant, they certainly came from a different finishing school to the one that most companies are familiar with.

Staff and contractors were recruited in large numbers yet were giving very little direction or accountability. Decision making was poor and leadership at times non-existent.

Companies like Amazon and Ebay may have been spending a lot of $ but they had real sales, real growth and real potential. Boo had none.

Lesson Five – Start With The Basics

Boo failed for many reasons but uppermost was a failure to understand its customers and the basics of retail. Failure of management. A widely circulated article by Tristan Loius confirms this view:

http://tnl.net/blog/2000/05/19/boocom-goes-bust/

A business is still a business whether its online or off. Commercial realities affect all businesses. Boo thought it could ignore the basics and still be a global success.

Sadly not.

So where is Boo now?

Well as we identified right at the start, Boo is on its way back!

The domain name though is owned by a different company and the cutting edge software was bought by Bright Station. I hope that the New Boo has learnt the lessons and will be focus on being a real business.

In the third part of this blog, I’ll briefly look back at T2G and see if there are any comparisons with Boo. There were a lot less $ floating around but the lessons from Boo I’m sure will resonate at least in part with our own experience.

6 Responses to “Boo.com – A Lesson In Business”

  1. warren keen Says:

    hi i have a new shop http://www.globaldiscounts.co.uk
    and i am having trouble in finding time to get people to link to my shop as i have to look after my two small children and find it very difficult to get time to do this and im also a newbie to this game and need as much help as possible that is if anyone has time to help.
    kind regards
    warren

  2. Brian James Pollard Says:

    How To Use A “Marketing Pipeline” To Make Money.

    Everyday I hear the same story…

    ” I was in Program XYZ but didn’t do well
    with it because I didn’t know how to get
    enough prospects/visitors to view my offer”.

    Lets face a reality check…

    You and I both know that even if you have
    the greatest program on the planet, if no
    one knows about it, you’re SUNK!

    You have to have a never ending supply of fresh
    prospects flowing through your “Marketing Pipeline”
    at ALL times.

    What’s a “Marketing Pipeline”?

    I’m glad you asked. Here’s an analogy…

    Picture an empty water hose.

    In order for water to start flowing through that hose
    you have to connect it to a source right?

    A faucet somewhere.

    Once it’s connected, you turn the water on.

    Does water start to flow out the other end
    immediately?

    No.

    It takes time to BUILD UP as it travels
    through the turns and coils of the hose.

    Then it starts to flow.

    Continuously.

    Non-stop.

    Until the source runs dry right?

    Or you turn off the source manually as you
    would in turning off the faucet.

    Anytime you needed water, you turn on the hose.

    ( “Wait a minute! I’m a smart person. What does
    turning on a hose have to do with putting CASH into
    my pocket”? )

    Answer:

    Everything!

    Take the analogy I painted for you above and
    apply it to your marketing campaign.

    ( You’re going to love this! )

    What’s your main prospecting source?

    Is it a classified ad in a newspaper?

    Is it an email campaign?

    Is it pay-per-clicks?

    Doesn’t matter what it is.

    Take your “Marketing Pipeline” ( the hose ) and
    attach to your “Source”.

    ( You can even have multiple sources with
    multiple hoses attached to them! )

    Once it’s connected, turn it on.

    You remember what I said earlier?

    That it takes time for the water to
    BUILD UP right, before it comes out
    the other end?

    Same principle applies in your “Marketing
    Pipeline”.

    It takes time for your prospects to “BUILD UP”.

    To get to know you, like you and trust you.

    Prospects are NOT going to coming running
    to your door the same second they respond.

    Nope.

    It takes time.

    Time to BUILD UP.

    The whole time they’re in your “Marketing
    Pipeline”, you’re sharing with them ideas,
    strategies, techniques, etc….on how to
    Be, Do & Have More.

    You’re helping them get what they want by
    sharing your knowledge and experiences.

    You’re not pitching them on your “deal”.

    You’re setting yourself up to be the leader
    they’re looking for.

    The whole time they’re in your “Marketing
    Pipeline”, it’s YOU they see.

    They begin to know you, like you and trust you.

    And if your “Marketing Pipeline” has been built
    properly, you’ll have prospects flowing out the
    other end, ready and eager to join you in your
    program.

    Creating a non-stop flood of CASH for you and
    your family!

    Like the water out of a hose.

    Only better.

    My suggestion to you is that you take the
    time and effort it takes to properly build
    a “Marketing Pipeline”.

    I can assure you that the rewards are worth it.

    Brian James Pollard
    http://www.marketingwithclass.com

  3. lemaverick Says:

    Hi Warren & Brian

    Thanks for your comments.

    Brian is right, it does take time to build a customer base & that means time and effort. Although I sympathise with the juggling act – it’s a dilemna we’ve all faced.

    In the end though it does come down to how much you believe in what you’re trying to do & whether it is intended to be a primary business or just a secondary source of income. That will have a big impact on how much time you devote.

    Brian, you’re spot on. Someone can have the best idea in the world but if no one knows about it, it will remain just that – an idea. The ‘build it & they will come’ philosophy rarely rings true.

    The internet has though opened up incredible opportunities for even the smallest business to make a name for itself, to promote itself on the smallest, even zero budget. The trick is having a story that sells.

    Every one is trying to get publicity, that snowball creating bit of PR or that quirky bit of marketing that captures attention. Having something that stands out & that early customers want to tell others about. You Tube being the best example recently.

    What really annoys me though is when a business does get publicity, raises the expectation of its potential customers and then disappoints. Boo.com is a great example of that.

    Marketing & PR went live on more than one occasion only for the site to still be in development. And of course when the site did go live hardly anyone could use it!

    You are in a very competitive market with your site Warren, lots of people selling similar. You have to find a way of standing out or creating a story that generates publicity.

    Or accept that it will be a long slow build. Either way there is never an easy answer.

    One recommendation. When first looking at your site, I don’t know what it is the site offers or sells until I’ve read quite a bit. Those first couple of seconds should re-inforce what it is you do.

    Only after scrolling down do I see the product pictures & if I don’t scroll I’m left just reading which is a very quick turn off.

    Put some product images above the ‘fold’. Feature one in particular that is a ’special offer’. People still like the feeling of getting a bargain.

    Look at online networking sites like ecademy.com but don’t expect quick results. Networking is about trust & building relationships not selling.

    If you want some more help, Warren , let me know. I can’t promise to have the answers just suggestions and thoughts based on some successes and plenty of cock-ups.

    Brian, an excellent analogy. And some good advice. There is no substitute for hard work and even then it may not pay off. That though is one of the hallmarks of entrepreneurs – carrying on when when everyone else says ‘forget it’. But also having the courage to admit it isn’t working, to stop throwing money away and then to start again on the next idea.

    We tend to assume that the household name business tycoons that we hear about so often, hit the jackpot first time. In most cases they didn’t, we just don’t hear about the failures they had en route.

    Jon

  4. Jerrold Albert Says:

    Nice blog I will recommend you to all my friends. Thank you.

  5. lemaverick Says:

    Hi

    Thankyou for kind comment. I enjoy writing the blog but as so many bloggers find, writing on a regular basis is a difficult habit to acquire and an easy one to break!

    Gradually I hope to broaden the content with useful articles etc but always with the blog as the main focus.

    Hope you and your friends carry on enjoying MAMBI

    Best wishes

    Jon


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