Site icon Digital Commerce 360

Manufacturers: Think critically about ecommerce ROI

KevinHeisler-GenAlpha

Kevin Heisler

The financial implications of investing in a B2B ecommerce solution should be assessed in a similar manner to other investments for your business. A return-on-investment (ROI) calculation is generally crucial to an organization getting the necessary internal support to take the plunge in investing in an ecommerce strategy or upgrading current ecommerce capabilities. Far too often, however, businesses do not dive deep enough into the impacts of digitizing a sales channel. An appropriate calculation is not an easy task but a necessary one to make appropriate decisions.

The Basics

An ecommerce strategy includes some basic costs and benefits. The cost of implementing an ecommerce strategy will generally include implementation and other one-time costs and ongoing costs (whether managed internally or hosted and maintained by a third-party provider).  As part of an ROI analysis, these costs are compared with the benefits. The benefits include the assumptions around revenue growth, which is dependent on the specifics of an organization’s strategy, and cost reductions in areas in which the organization may be able to reduce costs through a digitized sales channel.

Benefits are often looked at very generally, but organizations need to consider the many potential impacts to their business to make a sound decision. An ecommerce site is a strategy shift and can be transformational when strategically developed.

The Next Level

While the items mentioned above are rather apparent when going down an ecommerce path, many companies often fail to take a full inventory of potential benefits. This oversight is for good reason. Companies often cannot fully anticipate the impacts on their business, and the impacts can be difficult to quantify. Considerations include the following:

Revenue Drivers

Cost Reduction Opportunities

The Bottom Line

Companies should incorporate as many impacts that they can reasonably quantify into their ROI calculation. Even if an item cannot be quantified, it should be considered as a qualitative factor in making the decision. Seeking out advice from platform providers or companies that have implemented an ecommerce strategy can be very helpful in making accurate assumptions.

The reality is that customers are choosing how to do business and are increasingly choosing an ecommerce site as the ideal business channel. Manufacturers need to critically think about the investment and find the strategic path to add value to the business.

Kevin Heisler is the vice president of finance at GenAlpha Technologies, a provider of ecommerce, e-catalog and customer portal solutions for manufacturers. He can be reached at kheisler@genalpha.com or via LinkedIn.

Favorite
Exit mobile version