Thursday, June 26, 2014
Finalizing Your Technology Development Plan? Better Talk to Marketing First!
Posted By: George Deeb - 6/26/2014Most startups get a great new idea, and their immediate instinct to start coding away on building that product with their very limited budge...
Read the rest of this post in Forbes, which I guest authored this week.
For future posts, please follow me on Twitter at: @georgedeeb.
[EVENT] Hear George Deeb Present Ensemble's Startup Excubator Model at @TechweekCHI on 6/27 at 1pm
Posted By: George Deeb - 6/26/2014As many of you know, Techweek Chicago is in full swing this week. Red Rocket's George Deeb will be speaking about Ensemble's "...
For future posts, please follow Red Rocket at: @RedRocketVC.
Sunday, June 22, 2014
Lesson #180: How Retailers Can Combat Showrooming
Posted By: George Deeb - 6/22/2014Let’s face it, we have all done it. We walk into a retail store to find a product we want. We browse their huge selection of inventory...
Let’s face it, we have all done it. We walk into a retail store to find a product we want. We browse their huge selection of inventory. We talk with their highly-trained salespeople. And, then, the inevitable in today’s mobile generation: we pull out our smart phones, scan the product barcode and see if we can find the same product for sale online, at a materially lower price. At which point, we end up walking out of the store to buy it online, and the retailer is out on all their marketing, inventory, staff and real estate costs without the sale. This concept is called “showrooming”, and here a few ways offline retailers should combat it.
DON’T FEAR THE INTERNET, EMBRACE IT
Like Best Buy, offer “low price guarantees” to give customers peace of mind. Help them do the research online to help them find the lowest prices. That way, the consumer doesn’t feel guilty about doing that same research on their smart phones, and you don’t lose the sale (as a low margin sale is a lot better than no sale, in this scenario). Or, train your customers to buy from your online website, and not the stores, where they can save money from lower prices.
DON’T FEAR SHOWROOMING, EMBRACE IT
Thinking out of the box here, maybe retailers should reach out to their vendors, or even their online competitors, and strike showroom partnerships with them. Vendors are not going to want a key retail partner to go out of business, and perhaps, they would share in showroom staff costs to protect their own revenues. Or, maybe they will agree to distribute inventory on a consignment basis, so retailers can lower inventory costs and risks, to better compete on price. This same logic applies to online competitors, who know offline stores are helping them drive online sales, and could look at the retailers as marketing partners for them?
DON’T FEAR MOBILE, EMBRACE IT
Turn a consumers’ smart phone from a weapon in your store, to an asset in your store. Build stand-alone apps that improve the users’ experience in the store and help get them into your marketing lists, even if they end up buying elsewhere. This could include allowing them to scan bar codes for past customer reviews about products, or pushing them specific offers within the aisle when they pass by inventory you are trying to move, or upselling bundles of products or services that make it more difficult to compare prices. You get the point.
DON’T LET PRICE BECOME YOUR KEY DIFFERENTIATOR
The worst thing you can do is make price your only point of differentiation. Where you can, look for exclusive inventory that is only available for sale in your stores. Or, make the customer service experience so exceptional, with well-trained staff or unique add-ons and offers, that they have no choice but to want to buy from you. Abt, a highly successful consumer electronics and appliance store in metro Chicago is the pro at this. They staff plenty of highly-trained salespeople that are available anytime you need them, are not pushy and are free to lower prices with consumers, if it helps them close the sale. And, they get that lost product margin back to the business by upselling high-margin installation or extended warrantees on the products sold.
ARE THERE SMALLER FORMATS OR ALTERNATIVE USES FOR THE SPACE
Retail locations clearly help with marketing and getting your product closer to consumers, no doubt. Maybe there are more efficient ways of setting up your stores, to get more done with less space. Or, if you are locked into long term leases, maybe there are ways to get another partner to share in your space. I thought it was a very smart move for Best Buy to allow Samsung to become an exclusive store-within-a-store experience. In one move, they got someone to share in their costs, and help them to try to replicate the enviable Apple store experience.
DO YOU NEED THE RETAIL PRESENCE?
If the above does not succeed, ask yourself : do I really need the brick and mortar presence at all? It didn’t take iTunes and Netflix long to prove that a Borders or Blockbuster store no longer had a need in the market. Perhaps, that is why Barnes & Noble is still with us with their quick shift to Nook and digital content? Or, think about Staples. They are doing around $23BN in annual sales, around half of which is coming from their website. Even if they shut all of their stores, to focus solely on e-commerce, and potentially lost half of their revenues in the process, their costs would be materially lower (without rent, inventory, staff) and their valuation multiple could materially expand (from 1x to 3x revenues), potentially valuing the company at about the same level as they are today.
Retailers are clearly feeling the pressure from online competitors and customers armed with mobile devices to help them research. But, instead of retreating, go on the offensive to make yourselves relevant again, as simply selling the same products in an old-school retail way, is no longer enough to survive.
For future posts, please follow me on Twitter at: @georgedeeb.
Lesson #179: Reduce Customer Churn to Accelerate Revenues
Posted By: George Deeb - 6/22/2014Customer churn is one of the most important metrics a startup can measure and reduce over time. Churn is basically the percentage of ...
Customer churn is one of the most important metrics a startup can measure and reduce over time. Churn is basically the percentage of customers that stop shopping with you in a given period, typically calculated for businesses with recurring monthly revenue streams. The higher your churn, the poorer job you are doing at retaining your customers. And, worse yet, instead of getting lower-cost marketing efficiencies from retention marketing to current customers, you are back fishing again in expensive pools of fish for new customer acquisition.
The Elements of Defensible Barriers to Entry
Posted By: George Deeb - 6/22/2014Anybody can start a business. But, very few businesses started have long term, defensible barriers to entry to protect against potential fut...
Read the rest of this post in The Next Web, which I guest authored this week.
For future posts, please follow me on Twitter at: @georgedeeb.
Friday, June 20, 2014
[NEWS] 2014 @MoxieAwards Winners: Best of Chicago's Startup & Tech Scene
Posted By: George Deeb - 6/20/2014Congrats to all of the winners of last night's annual Moxie Awards event, produced by BuiltIn Chicago , who did a great job, as usual. ...
Best Consumer Web Startup: SpotHero
Best B2B Startup: TempoDB
Best New Startup: Civis Analytics
Best Startup Co-Founders: Jimmy Odom, Daniela Bolzmann & Kirk Lashley of WeDeliver
Best Service Provider: VineSprout PR
Digital Agency of the Year: Rise Interactive
Mentor of the Year: Chuck Templeton of Impact Engine
Investor of the Year: Stuart Larkins of Chicago Ventures
Tech Woman of the Year: Kristi Ross at dough
CTO of the Year: Aaron Rankin at Sprout Social
Best Software Company: Signal (formerly BrightTag)
Startup of the Year: Sprout Social
Best Company Culture: Centro
Best Enterprise Web Company: kCura
Breakthrough Digital Company of the Year: GrubHub
CEO of the Year: Amanda Lannert of Jellyvision
And a special shout-out to our Red Rocket client, ViaForensics; FireStarter Fund porfolio company, Hireology; and our Ensemble partners, Walker Sands and Ora Interactive, for your nominations. The full list of nominees can be seen at this link.
For future posts, please follow us on Twitter at: @RedRocketVC.
Thursday, June 19, 2014
Can Entrepreneurship Be Taught, Or Are You Born That Way?
Posted By: George Deeb - 6/19/2014Are good entrepreneurs born that way, or can entrepreneurial skillsets can be learned over time. Let’s study which skillsets make for a good...
Read the rest of this post in Forbes, which I guest authored this week.
For future posts, please follow me on Twitter at: @georgedeeb.
Thursday, June 12, 2014
[VIDEO] George Deeb Shares Startup Lessons With Jeremy Weisz at Inspired Insider
Posted By: George Deeb - 6/12/2014I recently had the pleasure of sitting down with Jeremy Weisz at Inspired Insider and sharing some of the startup lessons I have learned ov...
If you cannot view the video above, you can view the video at the Inspired Insider website.
Hopefully, there are some interesting pearls of wisdom in here, for you to apply to your businesses.
For future posts, please follow me on Twitter at: @georgedeeb.
6 Tips for Keeping Your Store Relevant to Online Shoppers
Posted By: George Deeb - 6/12/2014Likely, we have all done it. We walk into a retail store, browse their huge selection of inventory, talk with their highly-trained salespeop...
Read the rest of this post in Entrepreneur, which I guest authored this week.
For future posts, please follow me on Twitter at: @georgedeeb.
Wednesday, June 11, 2014
Want Venture Investors? Build a Recurring Revenue Model.
Posted By: George Deeb - 6/11/2014One of the first things that a venture capitalist looks for in assessing an investment opportunity is the revenue model of the business. Mo...
Read the rest of this post in Forbes, which I guest authored this week.
For future posts, please follow me on Twitter at: @georgedeeb.
Thursday, June 5, 2014
Launch Fast! Fail Fast!
Posted By: George Deeb - 6/05/2014A few key words of wisdom I give entrepreneurs is: (i) launch fast; and (ii) fail fast. Launch fast simply means figure out a minimal viab...
Launch fast simply means figure out a minimal viable product (MVP) and get it into the market as soon as possible. Too often an entrepreneur wants to build a “Rolls Royce” solution with all the bells and whistles that are in their head, instead of simply launching a functional “Ford” to start, and evolving to the “Rolls Royce” over time. The MVP advantages of the “Ford” is: (i) it is less expensive to build with your limited startup capital; (ii) it can get your product in the market faster, before your competitors do; and (iii) it more quickly allows for consumer testing, to ensure consumers really like the core service and truly need the additional luxuries that would get built into the “Rolls Royce”.
Read the rest of this post in Forbes, which I guest authored this week.
For future posts, please follow me on Twitter at: @georgedeeb.
[NEWS] Great Turnout at @EnsembleHQ "Open Mike" Q&A Office Hours Event Last Night
Posted By: George Deeb - 6/05/2014Thanks to everyone who joined us at Ensemble's "Open Mike" Q&A Office Hours Event last night. It was a great night of net...
Special thanks to our CEO panelists Mike Santoro (Walker Sands), Brent Payne (Loud Interactive), Katy Lynch (SocialKaty), Mike Kelly (Ora Interactive) and George Deeb (Red Rocket) for their insights (listed in the order pictured above, from left to right). And, additional thanks to our hosts at TechNexus, for letting us use their great new collaborative startup workspace.
To stay abreast of future events from Ensemble, please follow Ensemble on Twitter at: @EnsembleHQ. Or, follow the Red Rocket Ventures Meetup page.
Monday, June 2, 2014
Budget for Proof-of-Concept Marketing from Day One
Posted By: George Deeb - 6/02/2014It is a sad, but familiar, story in startup land. An entrepreneur raises a limited amount of funds, plows it entirely into building out thei...
Read the rest of this post in Wall Street Journal, which I guest authored this week.
For future posts, please follow me on Twitter at: @georgedeeb.