eBags.com

eBags is an online retailer of handbags, luggage, backpacks, laptop bags, and travel accessories based in Greenwood Village, Colorado near Denver. The main website, eBags.com, carries bags and accessories from more than 650 brands. eBags also operates both Handbags.com and the eBags Corporate Sales site and offers its own private label products under the name The eBags Brand.

eBags
Public Company
Traded asSMSEY (OTC)
IndustryRetail
Founded1998
HeadquartersGreenwood Village, Colorado, United States
Key people
Dan Hogan, President & CEO
ProductsHandbags, luggage, backpacks, laptop bags, duffel bags
Number of employees
100+
ParentSamsonite
Websitewww.ebags.com

History

Five people founded eBags in the late spring of 1998: Jon Nordmark, Peter Cobb, Frank Steed, Andy Youngs, and Eliot Cobb. The first four worked more than 50 years collectively at Samsonite. Eliot Cobb worked as VP of Finance at Wherehouse Music, a national music retailer.

The company purchased two domains, eLuggage.com and eBags.com, not knowing which domain they would use. Ultimately they chose eBags.com because it lent more opportunity to expand into multiple categories.[1] The website eBags.com launched on March 1, 1999 with seven brands including Samsonite, JanSport, and Skyway luggage. The focus was primarily on luggage due to the backgrounds of the founders.

From summer 1999, eBags' starting experiencing rapid growth. eBags drop-shipped most products direct from manufacturers to consumers. In addition to lower inventory costs, eBags lowered operating costs by outsourcing their call center outsourced to the Philippines, although today it is back in the U.S. The company also focused on garnering customer reviews which was a relatively new concept in e-commerce in 1999.[2]

eBags' growth slowed following the "dot com bomb" of 2000, the recession of 2001, and the terrorist attacks on September 11, 2001.

In October 2004, eBags launched eBags.co.uk with the intent of expanding further into Europe at a later time. The eBags UK offices were located in Cambridge, England. That year marked eBags' expansion of its brand representation to more than 600 total in the United States and Europe. eBags.co.uk was later closed in December 2008 and the company focus returned to growing the main site, eBags.com.[3] By the end of 2008, eBags passed $100 million in annual gross orders.

In Fall 2011, prior to the start of holiday season, eBags moved its call center operations back to the U.S. They currently use in-house employees to handle calls, and contracted with HGS Ltd. to handle overflow. The shift allowed the company to shave about 34% off its customer care expenses because the U.S.-based customer service representatives were able to resolve customer complaints more efficiently. American customer service reps shaved about a minute and 20 seconds from each call and resolved customer issues on the first contact 80% of the time, compared with 69% for calls handled in the Philippines.[4]

Today eBags.com continues to sell bags and travel accessories from over 650 brands but now also offers accessories including jewelry, hats, scarves, iPhone cases, travel clothing and camping gear. As of 2016, they have sold over 25 million bags and have over 3 million reviews on the website.

eBags was sold to Samsonite in May 2017.

Corporate Sales

eBags has a Corporate Sales division that operates the eBags Corporate Sales website, ebagscorporate.com. This division handles large orders for conferences and tradeshows, corporate gift programs, and other promotional-type events. In addition to bags and travel accessories, they provide a much broader scope of products including writing instruments, mugs, mobile tech items, and outdoor/leisure products.

Handbags.com

eBags purchased the Handbags.com domain in 1999. For several years, the website was a blog offering advice on handbag trends, styles, and brands. In July 2011, eBags rebranded Handbags.com into an online retailer of handbags, women's bags, and fashion accessories. The website's slogan is, "Handbags.com: Bag Obsessions Begin Here". Unlike eBags.com, Handbags.com is targeted specifically to women and was the first of the eBags sites to offer social features like signing in with Facebook and a shareable wishlist. eBags still operates Handbags.com today.

GTS and 6PM.com

In 2002, eBags took what they learned from eBags.com and formed Global Technology Services (GTS) - a division that operated e-commerce sites for two other brands in the bag industry: Tumi and Case Logic. In October 2002, they began operating Tumi.com followed by Tumi UK in October 2005, Tumi Germany in July 2006, and Tumi Japan in August 2006. The Case Logic GTS site launched in July 2005.

During this same timeframe, eBags also launched 6PM.com. Purchased as Shoedini.com in March 2004 and renamed in November 2005, 6PM.com combined eBags' knowledge of bags with the complementary business of shoes. 6PM's main feature was matching bags with shoes. 6PM was sold in October 2007 to Zappos and eBags returned focus to the eBags.com site. Similarly, the GTS division was dissolved and resources were reallocated to the core business.

References

  1. "The 2009 TGA Award" (PDF). Archived from the original (PDF) on 2014-02-21. Retrieved 2019-11-20.
  2. Niesche, Christopher (2013-04-07). "Entrepreneur's e-commerce success in the bag". The Sydney Morning Herald. Retrieved 2019-11-20.
  3. Silverman, Scott (February 23, 2009). "Q&A With eBags' Peter Cobb on Why They Shut Down Their UK Site". shop.org. Archived from the original on 2009-06-11. Retrieved 2019-11-20.
  4. Moore, Stefany (January 19, 2012). "Bringing its call center in-house and back to the U.S. helped boost eBags' holiday business". Internet Retailer. Archived from the original on 2012-06-06. Retrieved 2019-11-20.
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