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Setting Sale on Smartphones

This mobile storefront solution ushers small-business owners into the growing world of ‘m-commerce.’
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Carolina Rustica is no stranger to virtual commerce. The North Carolina-based retailer specializing in handcrafted iron and wood furniture went online in 2000. Between 85-90 percent of the current sales originate via the web, says founder and president Richard Sexton, with the average order exceeding Rs.45,000.

Now Carolina Rustica is moving its showroom to the smartphone—and though dining room tables and four-poster beds may seem at odds with the digital impulse purchases synonymous with mobile commerce, Sexton says that keeping up with the competition makes mobile a necessary evolution. “We’re going up against the big outfits, like [home décor powerhouse] CSN Stores, so it’s important to keep pace with what they’re doing,” he says. “You can’t exclude mobile commerce. People are doing everything on their smartphones, including shopping.”

Amazon.com can vouch for mobile commerce’s potential: In July 2010, the company said its customers spent more than Rs.4,500 crore using their phones during the previous year. But Amazon is Amazon. Hopping on the m-commerce bandwagon is exponentially more challenging for smaller retailers.

“It’s very difficult to launch a mobile presence,” says mShopper founder and CEO David Gould, citing the lack of uniform mobile web standards and the array of devices. “You’ve got to rethink your entire page layout for mobile because of the tiny screens. The context is also a challenge—you’re trying to reach a user who’s on the go and whose needs are different.”

Carolina Rustica launched its fledgling mobile website in partnership with Colorado-based mShopper, which in September introduced Mobile Commerce Platform. With it, merchants of all sizes can build customized smartphone storefronts, or “mStores.” Included are design tools, built-in merchandising mechanisms and SEO resources, as well as an analytics dashboard to measure traffic and sales. Every order generated by a client’s mStore is input directly into the retailer’s existing shopping cart, ensuring that standard order and customer service processes still apply.

Retailers simply upload their product data feed and design their mStore, guided by mShopper’s videos. Once it’s live, merchants also can leverage mShopper’s GetFirstDibs mobile marketing program, which transmits text-based discounts and promotions to customers on the retailer’s mobile mailing list. “We’re here to help generate buzz and awareness and to drive traffic to your homepage,” Gould says. “We only make money when merchants do.”

mShopper charges retailers a monthly licensing fee ranging from Rs.4,455 to Rs.44,955, depending on website traffic. The firm collects a commission of at least 5 percent of the sale, or the store’s published standard affiliate rates.

Besides Carolina Rustica, over 10 other retailers signed on with mShopper during Mobile Commerce Platform’s first few weeks. “The obvious question is why you should create an mStore when customers can browse your website on a smartphone,” Sexton says. “The answer is that people need to start seeing your products right away. You can’t keep your website as it is and hope it all resolves on a phone.”

©Entrepreneur December 2010 by Entrepreneur Media, Inc. All rights reserved.


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