Estimated reading time: 15 minutes.
By carefully studying a recent SHOPLAZZA survey through feedbacks from our merchants around the world, one thing, as SaaS platform operator, we’ve elicited that learning new business models is essential to stay ahead under current rapidly evolving business environment. Many of our merchants told us, “Luckily, we added ePackaging business and POD to current business operation, so that we can counterbalance the loss of plunging offline sales volume by new online business leads.”
To adopt or bring in a new business model is probably one of the most critical decisions that you have to consider pursuing and integrating besides product sourcing. SHOPLAZZA is confident to support anyone who just starts a new business or any existing eCommerce owners to explore and expand a new field through the offerings of different built-in tools and business resources.
In this article, we will share high-level breakdown on available business models and resources that will help you start a new eCommerce business or integrate a new product service line to your existing operation.
There are pros and cons for each business model, depending on your existing business model, products, target market, costs and business structures, and other factors. You may find one business model more suitable for your business than others.
The term business model refers to a company's plan for making a profit. It identifies the products or services the business plans to sell, its identified target market, and any anticipated expenses. Business models are important for both new and established businesses.
In simpler terms, “business model” is a process of identifying your targets. By breaking down to a more detailed bullet points: target markets, target audiences, products or services to sell, cost structure, business framework.
Business models are essential to new and existing eCommerce business owners to consider and examine the current plans for maintaining a sustainable advantage and market presence, as well as discovering new opportunities.
There are four main types of eCommerce business models that illustrate the transactions between the business and the customers.
Business-to-consumer (B2C)
The business-to-consumer (B2C) business model refers to commerce between a business and an individual consumer. For example, when you buy a shirt from a retailer online. While this includes brick-and-mortar business, it’s also become associated with ecommerce, or retailing.
Business-to-business (B2B)
Business-to-business (B2B) refers to any commerce between two businesses. For example, when a SaaS company sells software to another company. Wholesale retailers typically fall under this category, versus companies that sell at a retail level.
Brands can also include business-to-business offerings as a retailer. For instance, a coffee brand can sell its beans to shoppers on its website (B2C), but also sell in bulk to coffee shops (B2B).
Consumer-to-consumer (C2C)
The consumer-to-consumer business model is when a consumer sells a product or service to another consumer. For example, when you sell a used laptop on Facebook Marketplace. Individual sellers often begin selling on online marketplaces then start an online store to build a brand and capture more profits.
Consumer-to-business (C2B)
The rise in the creator economy led to a spike in consumer-to-business (C2B) companies. This business model refers to when a consumer sells their own products or services to a business or organization. If you want to become an influencer or a photographer selling photos online, this is the type of business model you’d use.
SHOPLAZZA is a global eCommerce platform offering leading SaaS web building services.
What is SaaS? SaaS, or software as a service, is a delivery model in which a centrally hosted software is licensed to customers via a subscription plan. In simpler terms, a brick-to-mortar business owner rents a physical store and pays monthly rents around few thousands of dollars to get operating space and a range of services, electricity, water, security etc.
In eCommerce world, a brick-to-mortar store owner finds the rent of physical store is unbearable, instead, he found he only has to pay a monthly subscription fee around USD$30 to $100 dollars to receive way more built-in tools and services that he needs to maintain and grow his business. In this case, SHOPLAZZA is the platform to offer not just online stores but also a range of tools and resources to let business owners succeed in virtual business environment.
SHOPLAZZA featured business models base on different product sourcing, manufacturing supply chain, shipping methods. In the following article, we will introduce several proven business models to you.
DTC, direct to consumer business model refers to the direct selling process from seller to consumers around the world, without through any third-parties’ platforms or retailors, such as Amazon, eBay, Esty. Because of its business nature by directly selling to end users, companies are now able to accumulate, create and manage their own sales related data, avoiding costly third-party platform charges.
If you are a manufacturer, factory owner or other type of business that manufacture or produce your own products, DTC could be a great way to sell and reach broader range of customers around the world.
Big brands like Apple, Tesla, Samsung, and many other globally tangible manufacturers adopt this model and sell directly to global consumers online or through most of the mobile sales channels. Customers can easily access, browse, and order through DTC brand product catalogs anytime and anywhere.
Over the years, SHOPLAZZA developed its unique and industrial leading DTC services offering a range of featured services to our global merchants.
The services include:
Merchants benefit from SHOPLAZZA featured DTC services to focus on their product improvements, production optimization or other essential business process. SHOPLAZZA only charges a small percentage as commission from the revenue generated.
DTC manufacturers stay in full control by directly interacting with customers, it may take time to establish reliable distribution channels, or reaching target audiences. But it is a great way to create your brand and bring your presence to the world market.
As the current global pandemic may go on for a while, we have witnessed many brick-and-mortar stores in crisis. The traditional model of retail business is undergoing irretrievable changes. The huge investments in staff, warehouses and stores put a strain on brick-and-mortar companies. As the result, plenty of them have gone belly-up, and many are expected to do so.
But for eCommerce, the moving-out of traditional business model does leave a huge gap in the market waiting to be filled by different niches of eCommerce. Dropshipping is certainly one of those critical niches.
Dropshipping is a business model that allows you to sell and ship products you don’t own and don’t stock. Your suppliers could be wholesalers or manufacturers who produce the goods, warehouse, or the sellers who sell on AliExpress or Amazon, they ship products to your customers for you.
The process is simple:
At SHOPLAZZA, we offer automated dropshipping tools for anyone to quickly setup, sync product feeds and sell. Simply follow our article of "A quick guide to dropship with SKUowner from SHOPLAZZA" to get more insights and tips.
With Dropshipping, you gain profits through the margin between how much you pay to your seller and how much you sell to your customer. Typically, your profit margin varies between 20% 40%, since shipping cost could vary. The bigger volume you sell or order, the lower unit shipping cost to bear.
If you wish to enter the designer domain and sell products with your signatures, voilà, print on demand may be the suitable business model for you.
Basically, POD is to sell made-to-order products featured with your designs. It allows you to focus on the design and creation part, leave the complicated manufacturing process to the professional manufacturers. Therefore, when a customer orders a dozen T-shirts with your design and from your online store, you as the POD merchant to pass the order to a third-party printing or manufacturing services for fulfilling production, packaging and shipping.
Print on demand is similar to dropshipping, instead it focus solely on selling designs and holding no inventory for materials, no upfront investments are required.
You can sell products like:
Depending on what you sell, you will have to select your supplier who offer the printing production matching the products that you wish to sell.
If you have an existing business or offline physical store, and you need to manufacture products with your labels. Your manufacturers can produce two types of labels, private labels and white labels.
Private label products are produced by a third-party manufacturer chosen by you and sold under your business name and label. You have full control on design, package, how label looks like.
White label products are also produced by a third-party manufacturer chose by you, and when you receive the goods, you resell them to various retailors under their own brands. They are generic products usually you can sell to much broader spectrum of customers.
If you craft your own products, from leather bags to artisan pottery, from hand-made jewelry to natural beauty products, you have the full control throughout the production, sales, shipment and aftersales stages.
There are some costs that you need to take into account if you craft your own products.
Throughout our experiences with crafter merchants, it is best to sell items with higher unit value or unit price.
Generally, if you sell non physical products like your podcast radio records, stock image, stock videos, songs etc., you may choose to distribute online, repeatedly, no inventory ever needed.
These multimedia products are usually digital files with following natures:
The formats vary from MP3, videos, plug-ins, PDFs, templates, JPEGS, PNG, Vectors etc.
Another significant advantage in this niche is the possibility of lowering your unit price to reach a larger sales volume, because you bear very little costs.
The subscription eCommerce market is projected to hit $470 billions by 2025 according to recent university study. If you are developer and selling your plug-ins or apps through SHOPLAZZA AppStore, you can make money by charging customer a reoccurring monthly or annual fee to enable customer gain access to your apps or plug-ins.