The saga about our second fund raising campaign is going to end today with a recurring question: "What are you going to do with the 4M€?"
Even if some of our colleagues teasingly suggest that we should buy out all the pizzerias in our surrounding area, (and others who have far more adventurous ideas that I don't dare mention here), we're going to use the 4M € differently.
1. First and foremost to
continue the industrialization of our model on 3 levels
- Style and Substance: Everyone concentrates on style, the site itself, the catalog and things like the "add to cart" button. They concentrate much less on substance.
What's behind that style? How is my online business connected to the business world (banks, ERP, etc.)? How is it open to other technology? How is it open to other third parties (graphic artists, SEO experts, developers)? How do you optimize sales and average cart values? How do you get the client to come back? These are the real questions.
- Reliability: Of course, all e-commerce players claim to be reliable! But the reliability of an e-commerce platform is like the reliability of an airline carrier. It's when problems pop up that you can be happy you chose the right company. Oxatis is exceptionally reliable (http://startandgo.oxatis.co.uk/OxMonitoring.asp), a reliability that has been measured for almost 10 years. And like a quality airline, that reliability is acquired through investment, material and software architecture and especially through the quality of their staff and the procedures put in place. When you have 100 or 200 merchants, you might think you can tell yourself that you can address the issue later when you have thousands of e-tailers. But this questions needs to be addressed every day, for every merchant.
- Price: The big question...What can you do so the price satisfies your client? There only two ways:
- Explain to them why they can't use a shared platform and why they need to pay a lot for a tailor-made solution. It's Oxatis' job to make our solution more efficient, open and customizable so that this argument can be used less and less (it's already hard to use it today, and we'll do everything we can so that it's impossible to use 95% of the time)
- Assure them that they don't need to pay a lot and with a little work on their part they can achieve what their looking for. It can work. It's craftsmanship and what we did at Oxatis nearly 10 years ago in 2001/2002 when there were only 2 of us and we made up for our lack of industrialization with the 100 hours of work we put in every week. But all of that has to come to an end. As soon as the team starts to grow, you can't explain to your colleagues that you have industrialized your business model by reverting back to the 19th century where everyone works 70 hours a week! So, the more time passes, the more you need to do to really industrialize your business model to make your services affordable for the client, valuable for your employees and profitable for the company. This is achieved through the industrialization and optimization of all business processes: R&D, customer acquisition, sales, training, technical support, services, customer follow-up, etc…
2.
Become a European leaderBig project! In terms of reach, e-commerce is nothing like Facebook or Twitter. You can't just create a product and wait for people to come and use it.
Even if word of mouth is still big, there's no viral effect when adopting an e-commerce solution because for every company, heading toward e-commerce is a major, complex and thought out step. No entrepreneur worthy of the name would try e-commerce out "just to see how it goes". They choose a solution and count on it to see them through.
And there is an enormous eco-system in e-commerce. Payment systems, marketing systems, logistics systems...but also business management and accounting systems as well, and I'm not just talking about 10 or 15 banks and a few price engines, I'm talking about thousands of resellers, business accounts software manufacturers, etc. that need to be educated, connected, trained…
So, with the ambition to become a European leader, Oxatis can't simply translate its tool into 3 or 4 languages and offer it "as is". We need to establish ourselves in each market, work on each markets month after month, get them to accept us, etc. Simply put, "act global, think local".
And vice versa, there isn't a Franco-French market. American, British or German solutions are coming or will come to France. And paying for R&D with 500 or 1,000 clients when a competitor is doing so with 5,000 or 10,000 …that can bring you to your knees before you've even had the time to learn how to walk. Of course, it's always possible to "take" a few hundred clients by putting caring treatment up against industrial quality measures, but that won't last very long…
3.
Grow stronger and buy other companiesHere's an even more recurring question… So, I'm going to try to answer it in an open manner.
If we raise a lot of money while we are profitable in our main market - and we don't plan on blowing millions of Euros in TV advertising (which was the standard in the Internet bubble era), then it's probably because we intend to make a few acquisitions.
I'm not going to pretend the contrary. But… to buy what? Basically, two things can be bought: technology or clients.
• Technology refers to breaking technologies in our principal business activities or complementary services that may impact our thousands of clients.
• Clients means a significant amount of customer accounts – a minimum of several thousand real clients (you know, the ones that actually pay, no free subscriptions?), that will allow you to grow even faster.
Here again, it's about saving a year or two of development time. To put it clearly, a company that has several thousand new clients a year has little interest in acquiring a company that only has a few hundred...unless you're trying to launch an activity in a new country. And still…
4.
Evangelize, make things easier, get involved on a local levelOxatis plays a key role in "education", evangelism of e-commerce practices and now has the means to fully embrace and take on that role.
The
Instants e-Commerce program and Education/E-Commerce program are more than ever a top priority on the agenda.
I said it when I announced our investment funds: 200,000 sites for 4.6 million SMEs in the UK, 65,000 sites for 2 million
SMEs in France, the few companies in Spain, Italy, and other European
countries that are under-equipped...it's high time to provide these
companies with modern, reliable, standardized and affordable tools to
help them towards modernization and a transformation of their
distribution channels.
So, our teams aren't going to sit around twiddling their thumbs and wait for these companies to find us. We're going to get out there and find them, wherever they are, to educate and support them.
An ambitious and motivating program that these investment funds are going to allow us to accomplish.
Thanks again to everyone: To some...readers, future e-tailers and even competitors, for the interest you've shown in Oxatis. To others...clients, partners, investors and Oxatis team members for the complete trust that you've always demonstrated.
And that brings this saga to a close!
• If I haven't answered a question you have, feel free to leave it as a comment below. I'll try to answer it to the best of my ability.
• If you're feeling inspired by the journey ahead and want to join our team, feel free to let me know. Illustration