Boo.com

Boo.com
Dutch NV
(Disestablished in 2000)
Industry retail
Founded 17 March 1999 (1999-03-17)[1]
Defunct 2000 (2000)
Headquarters London, England, U.K.
Key people
Ernst Malmsten
Kajsa Leander
Patrik Hedelin
Products clothing, cosmetics
Website Boo.com (Domain Now owned by Hostelworld)

Boo.com was a short-lived, British Internet company, founded in 1998 by Swedes Ernst Malmsten, Kajsa Leander and Patrik Hedelin, who were regarded as sophisticated Internet entrepreneurs in Europe by the investors because they had created an online bookstore named Bokus.com, the third largest book e-retailer (in 1997), before founding the new business Boo.com. [2][3]

After several highly publicized delays, Boo.com launched in the autumn of 1999 selling branded fashion apparel over the Internet. The company spent $135 million of venture capital in just 18 months,[4] and it was placed into receivership on 18 May 2000 and liquidated.

In June 2008, CNET hailed Boo.com as one of the greatest dot-com busts in history.[5]

Ernst Malmsten wrote about the experience in a book called Boo Hoo: A dot.com Story from Concept to Catastrophe, published in 2001.[4]

Marketing plan

Company vision

The vision of Boo.com was to become the first largest online sports e-retailer around the world and not just as a European brand. It planned to set up stores in both Europe and America simultaneously.[2]

Brand name

The brand name was initially suggested as Bo.com, which was inspired by the actor Bo Derek. The final domain name, Boo.com, was bought for $2500 from a dealer as the domain Bo.com was already in use.[6]

Strategy

The target customers of Boo.com were young, wealthy and fashionable people between 18 to 24 years old, who were expected to be attracted by sports and fashion brands offered by Boo.com.[2] Boo.com created a virtual shopping assistant, Miss Boo, to assist customers with tips given at each step. Boo.com also developed technology that allowed online customers to put their chosen products onto 3D models and then inspect the result.[7]

Headquarters and relaunch

The company had its headquarters along Carnaby Street in London in a building which it initially shared with the Erotic Review Magazine.[8] The company initially had 40 employees.[9] In October 1999, it had a total of eight offices and 400 employees[8] in Amsterdam, Munich, New York City, Paris, and Stockholm.[9] It relaunched in the autumn of 2000 with Kate Buggeln, an ex-Bloomingdale's salesperson and Internet consultant, appointed as president. She told Women's Wear Daily that they were working to "expand beyond the portal business model into Boo products and Boo licensing."[10]

Reasons for failure

Timing

Although there were several months of delays prior to launch and problems with the user experience when boo.com first launched, these had been largely fixed by the time the company entered receivership. Sales had grown rapidly and were around $500,000 for the fortnight prior to the site being shut down.

The fundamental problem was that the company was following an extremely aggressive growth plan, launching simultaneously in multiple European countries. This plan was founded on the assumption of the ready availability of venture capital money to see the company through the first few years of trading until sales caught up with operating expenses. Such capital ceased to be available for all practical purposes in the second quarter of 2000 following dramatic falls in the NASDAQ presaging the "dot crash" following the Dot-com bubble. Boo was one of numerous similar Dot-com company failures over the subsequent two years. One Boo.com manager acknowledges that the company's failure is that global marketing and advertising costs too much, and that managers and technology invest too little. It spent 135 million of its investment in 2 years.[11]

Problems with the user experience

The Boo.com Homepage as it appeared in May 2000.

The boo.com website was widely criticized as poorly designed for its target audience, going against many usability conventions.[12] The site relied heavily on JavaScript and Flash technology to display pseudo-3D views of wares as well as Miss Boo, a sales-assistant-style avatar. The first publicly released version of the site included many large pages; the home page, for example, was several hundred kilobytes which meant that many users had to wait minutes for the site to load, as broadband technologies were not widely available at the time. The site's front page contained the warning, "this site is designed for 56K modems and above".

The complicated design required the site to be displayed in a fixed-size window, which limited the space available to display product information to the customer. Navigation techniques changed as the customer moved around the site.

The site's interface was complex and included a hierarchical system that required the user to answer four or five different questions before sometimes revealing that there were no products in stock in a particular sub-section. The same basic questions then had to be answered again until results were found.

Problems with the management

Boo.com management team can not provide answers of the goal of the website visitors, the conversion percentage, each customer's minimum spend and their purchase cost to one of their going-to-be investor Pequot Capital before launching, and the founder planned to release it with thousands of tasks that some of them need to be done by employees who had not been recruited.[6]

Problems with the supply channels

At the beginning, it was difficult to become a distribution channel of prestigious sports and leisure brands as they have already have their own distribution network with high street and small retailers. These brands also concerned that their brands values would be negatively influenced when their products were sold cheaper on Boo.com or with different price in different countries.[6]

Excessive expenditure on marketing activities

$135 million of marketing investment was used by Boo.com within 18 months in order to set up a worldwide online sport and fashion brands retailer in a short amount of time. Some of the investments are shown below.[13]

1. To attract consumers to shop on Boo.com, it developed a brand new Internet virtual technology with which consumers could drag their intended clothes on the virtual 3D body model and then view it from whatever angles and distance they wanted. The investment in this technology cost Boo.com over $6 million to develop and $0.5 million every month to maintain.

2. Hundreds of staff in many countries were employed and paid for local marketing in order to set up a global brand at the beginning.

3. Boo.com spent $25 million on advertising and public relations marketing before it opened and sold products.

A manager of Boo.com admitted that the failure of the company is also that the global marketing and advertising expenses were too large, and the technology investment was too small. It consumed 135 million of its investment in 2 years.

Burn rate

Boo.com spent £125 million in just six months.[14] Boo.com's sales did not match expectations, due partly to a higher-than-expected rate of product returns (a service that was offered for free, but charged for by their logistics supplier Deutsche Post). Poor management and a lack of communication between departments resulted in rapid growth in costs. The effectiveness of an expensive ad campaign was limited because the website was not ready in time, resulting in curious visitors being greeted with a holding page.

Staff and contractors were recruited in large numbers, with a lack of direction and executive decision about how many people were required, resulting in high payroll costs.

Aftermath

The biggest loser among boo.com's investors was Omnia, a fund backed by members of Lebanon's wealthy Hariri family, which put nearly £20 million into the company.

Creditors, most of whom were advertising agencies, were owed around £12 million. Over 400 staff and contractors were made redundant in London and around the world, and many had not been paid for several months.

In a widely circulated article,[15] former Interim CTO Tristan Louis broke down the problems that plagued the company, in one of the first post-mortems of a technology company posted online.

Fashionmall.com, which had been operating since 1994, bought the remains of Boo.com, which included brand, Web address and advertising materials but did not include any physical assets, software or distribution channels.[14] The deal also included the Miss Boo character. Boo's main assets, its software and technology, were sold to Bright Station, a British company run by Internet entrepreneur Dan Wagner, for $250,000 and served as the basis for Venda Inc.[16] Less than $2 million was earned by selling all Boo's remaining assets.[17]

In 2005 CNET called Boo.com the sixth greatest dot-com flop.[18]

Current state of the domain

In May 2007 Web Reservations International (WRI) turned boo.com into a travel site with reviews and listings. When the new site launched, it already had more than one million user reviews which had been collected from existing WRI travel sites.[19]

In October 2010, the new boo.com site announced that it was closing down with effect from 1 November 2010.

As of November 2017 boo.com redirects to hostelworld.com.

References

  1. "Boo.com WHOIS, DNS, & Domain Info - DomainTools". WHOIS. Retrieved 2016-08-05.
  2. 1 2 3 Chaffey, Dave; Ellis-Chadwick, Fiona (2016). Digital Marketing Strategy, Implementation and Practice (sixth ed.). Harlow: Pearson Education Limited. p. 108. ISBN 978-1-292-07761-1.
  3. Wray, Richard. "Boo.com spent fast and died young but its legacy shaped internet retailing". The Guardian. Guardian News and Media Limited or its affiliated companies. Retrieved 10 March 2018.
  4. 1 2 Malmsten, Ernst (2001). Boo Hoo: A dot.com Story from Concept to Catastrophe. Random House Business Books. ISBN 978-0-7126-7239-9.
  5. "The greatest defunct Web sites and dotcom disasters". CNET. 5 June 2008. Retrieved 2008-06-05.
  6. 1 2 3 Malmsten, Ernst; Portanger, Erik; Drazin, Charles (2001). Boo Hoo. A Dot.Com Story from Concept of Catastrophe. London: Random House.
  7. Chaffey, Dave; Ellis-Chadwick, Fiona (2016). Digital Marketing Strategy, Implementation and Practice (sixth ed.). Harlow: Pearson Education Limited. p. 109. ISBN 978-1-292-07761-1.
  8. 1 2 Wray, Richard. "Boo.com spent fast and died young but its legacy shaped internet retailing." The Guardian. 16 May 2005. Retrieved on 12 March 2012.
  9. 1 2 Sorkin, Andrew Ross. "INTERNATIONAL BUSINESS; Boo.com, Online Fashion Retailer, Goes Out of Business." The New York Times. 19 May 2000. Retrieved on 12 March 2012.
  10. Seckler, Valerie, "Boo Names New Boss: Kate Buggelin," WWD, Mon. 17 July 2000, p.14
  11. "Boocom公司为何倒闭".
  12. http://www.bohmann.dk/articles/usability_reviews/boo_com.html
  13. Roggio, Armando. "2 Ecommerce Blunders to Avoid in 2015". Practical Ecommerce. Practical Ecommerce. Retrieved 6 March 2018.
  14. 1 2 "INTERNATIONAL BUSINESS; Fashionmall.com Swoops In for the Boo.com Fire Sale". The New York Times. 2 June 2000. Retrieved 2010-04-26.
  15. "Tristan Louis (TNL.net)". Tristan Louis (TNL.net).
  16. Sorkin, Andrew Ross (2 June 2000). "INTERNATIONAL BUSINESS; Fashionmall.com Swoops In for the Boo.com Fire Sale" via query.nytimes.com.
  17. "jobfairy.com - Boo! And the 100 Other Dumbest Moments in e-Business History". www.jobfairy.com.
  18. "Top 10 dot-com flops". Archived from the original on 10 February 2014. Retrieved 2014-02-10.
  19. "boo.com in new travel guise". utalkmarketing.com. 2 May 2007. Archived from the original on 28 September 2007. Retrieved 2007-05-18.
This article is issued from Wikipedia. The text is licensed under Creative Commons - Attribution - Sharealike. Additional terms may apply for the media files.