Archive for the 'Mighty Ape' Category

The Ape wins big at the Netguide Awards…

Last night, Mighty Ape won the Best Online Shopping Site and Best New Site / Relaunch awards at the 2009 Netguide Awards. Or brothers in arms, Gameplanet, also won Best Gaming Related site.

Unfortunately I couldn’t be there, but it sounds like it was a great evening with Oliver Driver being one of the best MC’s they’ve had yet (sorry Kerre).

We were stoked with the awards and full credit goes out to our great team. We’ve got some incredibly dedicated monkeys who work incredibly hard to go above and beyond our customers expectations wherever they can. Hats off to all the team.

As you may have noticed, I currently don’t have much time to blog, but you can follow Mighty Ape and myself on Twitter to see what we’re up to…

So how good is the rain?

After yesterdays ramblings, I did some very quick analysis of yesterdays rain-affected sales on Mighty Ape. The sales from yesterdays poor weather:

  1. blitzed all the Saturdays in February 2008
  2. were 39% higher than the average Saturday in January 2009
  3. were easily the highest for a Saturday in 2009 so far

The quick conclusion one can draw is that… rain is good for online sales (but not so good for Twenty20 cricket finals).

Goodbye Summer…

Its official. Today is the last day of summer and the weather is pretty bleak out there. But judging from our web traffic today, it seems that rain is better than sun — our web traffic is tracking 30-40% higher than a typical sunny Saturday!

We find that Saturdays are our typically the quietest day of the week for Mighty Ape and we’re starting to notice that the weather can have a real impact on the weekend sales (but less so during the work week). For example, last weekend was a little wet, and sales were up significantly on the two previous weekends. Initially we thought it was us, as one of our site tweaks had obviously made a massive impact… but eventually, we realised that the weather had played the biggest part in increasing our sales for the weekend.

Retailers have long known that the weather can play a role in determining sales and I’m very interested to track how the sales from this rather bleak weekend compare with an average summers weekend. Just how big is the impact of bad weather on online sales?

Did I mention we’re looking forward to a really wet winter. ;)

Thanks Ferrit?

Yesterday Mighty Ape set a new record for daily sales in January… co-incidence I’m sure. ;)

Is real-time too fast?

One of the great advantages of being an online business is that we have access to bucket-loads of business data. As an online store we’re able to track things like daily sales, hourly sales, hourly shipped orders, orders still to be picked, stock on hand, etc all on the fly… in real time.

But one of the downsides of real-time is that the excess data can create an addiction to the F5 key. It’s easy to become a little too obsessed with refreshing key statistics to see how the current hour is tracking.

We’re finding that too much real-time data can be distracting. The “F5 addiction” can develop to the point where observing the data serves no real decision-making purpose… other than satisfying some curiosity.

If data is not going to be used to help make good business decisions then does it really need to be viewed at all? Lately, we’ve started reducing our real-time reporting in an effort to reduce data distractions.  While its nice to be in touch, knowing how hourly sales are tracking is actually not very useful!

Is real-time data too fast? I think it often can be, and as an online businesses, we need to be careful we don’t swamp ourselves with valueless data. Yet another lesson learned…

Ferrit Canned

The only surprising thing about Telecom’s decision today to pull the pin on Ferrit is how long it took.

Telecom blames the current “retail environment” for the failure, yet this isn’t reflected in our own experience. Since relaunching in September, Mighty Ape has broken all sorts of records over the last two month and our January sales are tracking well up on last year (up over 45% so far).

And I’m sure Mighty Ape isn’t the only local web site enjoying success over the Christmas period. So with Ferrit,  maybe something other than the “environment” has gone wrong. The business model perhaps? The web site?

I’d suggest the following as the reasons Ferrit failed to deliver (in no particular order):

The web site failed – the web site while “pretty” on the outside, did not present the content well, nor did it work as a comparison site. The difficulty Ferrit faced was that all the retailers had their own product data, so price comparisons where merely a bunch of (sometimes random) search results. Then there was the old stuff presented as new… cold presented as hot …  a lot of basic mistakes that retailers wouldn’t make, if they were choosing which products to feature in their own stores.

Weekly content fails – Ferrit lacked good sticky content — there was no reason to come back tomorrow or the day after. The front page was changed once a week and the category pages are changed less often. Sites like Trademe are very sticky — i.e. it’s worth visiting often. I still remember pricing mistakes with some of our products on the front page of Ferrit… and we literally had to wait a week for the next site update to get the prices fixed. We were incredulous at the time.

The combination of a poor web site and stale content meant that Ferrit had to heavily advertise to get traffic to their web site — people did not come back of their own free will.

Business model – then there was the business model. The infrastructure needed to support a web site like Ferrit is substantial and when coupled with the very low commission model, it was always going to be very difficult to break even. To make matters worse, New Zealand is small, so they had to penetrate the market very well to just break-even. I’d suspect that the maths were pretty basic for Telecom in the end.

Overall, I think the main reason that Ferrit failed was that it just wasn’t very useful. People didn’t really need it.

We were retailers on Ferrit up until September 2008, at which point we decided that we didn’t need to compete with our own web site. I remember the last sale we participated in, we heavily discounted music… and Real Groovy discounted games. That typified the problem for retailers. Why bother to help something grow so others can compete with you? For us it was purely a business decision.

Speaking of which, I believe a pretty sensible economic decision has been made… finally.

I do have to say that in our dealings with Ferrit, while we’ve had to deal with some pretty “awkward” systems (being awfully polite), the people have always been great! We’d like to pass on our best wishes to all of Ferrits staff…

More Cake…

Last week Mighty Ape broke more records:

  • We set a new all-time daily sales record on Tuesday.
  • We set a new record for all-time weekly sales.
  • We set new records for weekly sales for DVDs, Books & Toys.
  • We set a new record for weekly traffic.

Its pretty reasonable to expect that more and more people are shopping online each Christmas and we’re certainly seeing evidence of that.

We’ve had our warehouse processing orders and customer service team answering messages over the weekend to make sure we are not swamped in these last few days before Christmas.

Maintaining a high level of service at this time of year takes a huge effort… and the whole team are certainly looking forward to the holidays! :)

And DVD isn’t exactly dead…

Last week I blogged about the Blu Ray format gaining momentum, so it’s somewhat ironic that last week we actually set an all-time record for DVD orders in a week.

Sales of DVDs suggest that the DVD format is weathering the recession very well and our sales are significantly up on the same period last year. Its been suggested that during a recession, people tend to stay at home, watch TV, watch DVDs and play video games (all those forms of entertainment offer a higher “bang for the buck” when compared to going to the movies, eating out, etc).

While I’m at it… it should be noted that we also set records for highest books sales in a week and highest toy sales in a week…

Cake anyone? :)

Blu-Ray gaining ground…

Dark KnightThe Dark Knight was released in New Zealand yesterday on both the DVD and Blu Ray formats and this release has highlighted that Blu-Ray is finally gaining some momentum in New Zealand.

For us, The Dark Knight is the first big theatrical release where the Blu Ray format has actually out-sold the standard DVD format.

While admittedly our customers tend to be early adopters with a gaming bias, it’s still very encouraging to see Blu Ray gaining traction locally.

While I’m talking DVDs, its also interesting to note that even a blockbuster like The Dark Knight can’t knock New Zealands own Outrageous Fortune Season 4 off the  #1 Top Seller spot. Just quietly, we’ve shipped well over 1000 Outrageous Fortune Season 4 DVDs in the first 4 weeks since release (to customers all over the world at that!)

Outrageous Fortune is proving to be one heck of a Kiwi success story… all four seasons are now in our all time Top 10 sellers.

Australia here we come…

I just spent two weeks in Australia on a mix of business and holiday. I must confess one of my main motivations was getting to The Gabba to watch the (once) mighty Black Caps take on the Aussies in the First Test. Even though the result wasn’t great, watching cricket at The Gabba was a great experience (its a fantastic ground for watching sport and television doesn’t do the ground justice).

The second part of our trip was spent on the Gold Coast. Its been 20 years since I’d been to the Gold Coast and that place has just exploded. While there I took the opportunity to catch up with one of Australia’s biggest entertainment distributors to discuss any opportunities in the Australian market.

After these discussions, its getting very very hard to ignore the much bigger market across the Tasman (especially since we already have infrastructure and staff in Australia running our www.gpstore.com.au site).

Australia here we come… :D