How To Build an Importing Empire You Can Be Proud Of

Customer acquisition is hard! SEO is competitive. Paid acquisition is, well, paid and therefore expensive. Here is how you can build an e-commerce empire you can be proud of by building killer margins.

E-commerce is a !#(%(#$%

Let’s face it: e-commerce is a bear.

Andy Dunn said it, Josh Hannah said it, and I think I heard the guy in the MUD truck say it to me five minutes ago. I swear.

OK so why is everybody saying it?

Because customer acquisition is hard! SEO is competitive. Paid acquisition is, well, paid and therefore expensive.

And once you’ve acquired a customer, you often have to spend up to re-acquire that same customer again!

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High acquisition costs = a high hurdle you have to overcome before you make a dime.

High acquisition costs mean you either have to do one of two things to make money:

  1. Build acquisition into your model to reduce the costs over time (eg., flash sales like Zulily, subscription commerce like Craft Coffee). Let’s call this Model A.
  2. Achieve adequate margins to allow you to spend up on acquisition in the first place (eg., vertically integrated manufacturer-retailers like Everlane). Let’s call this Model B.

Building Killer Margins

I want to talk about the second of these two options, Model B: achieving killer margins.

If a higher-margin retailer is what you aim to create, think about producing your own product. Given the realities of global commerce, this often means importing a line of product and, yes, selling that line on Amazon as well as through your own direct-to-consumer website.

Far-and-away, the people I see achieving gains quickest in e-commerce are adhering to this model. If you nail your product, ramping to $5K, $10K a month within months is not uncommon.

Alibaba makes it easy to source the product; Amazon gives you a great channel through which to acquire the customers.

So where do you start? Should you log onto Alibaba now and order up a container load of skin care products shipped directly to your apartment?

No.

You learn first from people have done it before.