The concept is an "Amazon" style shopping experience which supports local businesses. Let's ignore shipping logistics and synchronising stock inventory for now. Why is there no single global site for consumers to search local neighbourhood inventory for a product as a starting point. Yes, large department and retail stores often have nearest branch stock checking and online checkout, but I still feel the experience is frictious and fragmented. I understand many small businesses already operate on Amazon and eBay through fulfillment programmes. It seems like a fairly concrete and scalable problem to solve in principle, but probably quite difficult to operate sustainably.
That's ignoring the most important part?
- convincing local Shop-Owners at first (this should be a no brainer but it isn't - many won't see still today any value for this )
- to invest in modern Systems (even if you subsidize the cost of it, there is a chance that many owners dont do/want it)
- bring local shops/stock online (the easy part, because it can be done without further involment of the owner)
- train the local shop owners (it is still a big part in this kind of projects and the costs are high, because many would prefere a face to face training. - lack of PC / Web Skills)
- keep the owners on the marketplace (some local shops will see a increase in transactions but most of the shops will not(they get just more work with no gain), so you have to subsidize some kind of cost(no fees for example) and pamper the shops to stay)
- getting steadiliy new shops into the system (because many shops will leave at the moment you want money from them or - see point above.)
- keeping officials of city/county, VC's etc. involved (with money, press or whatever - subsidizing all of this needs money and manpower)
I like the basic idea of fostering local business in some way. I just don't really see an Amazon style fulfillment deal working. I feel like Etsy is the Amazon of local retailers.
But how do we turn this into a means to give pushback against the big getting bigger and eating the world? How do we use the web to help solve some of the problems it is helping to create?
My local business concept in development is http://www.doPlaces.com - a better local guide; geared for tourists as well as locals, has more detail and uses a lot of categorization and cross-linking, also some mapping to make finding stuff around here easier. Lists businesses groups, services, makers, entertainers, events, attractions, etc.
Similar has been done by numerous big guys but most of their listings are out of date, inaccurate, or just woefully incomplete.
I figure there is a niche for mom-n-pop community guides, that provide better information that are locally maintained.
They were acquired by eBay, but it seems the service no longer exists. http://www.ebay.com/local/
It'd be more or less a turnkey solution. The small business owners would be bringing their own decor, atmosphere, style and charm to the table; something other than a corporate chain or big box feel.
Of course, the appeal of big box retail is that everything is in one place. Therefore it might make sense to make this a real-estate play as well: group shops with complimentary offerings together, or even facilitate a market/bazaar style setup.
Why go to Walmart when you can go to a high-tech bazaar backed by modern logistics and bleeding edge point of sale tech, that offers the same goods at the same price.
Creating Amazon-scale logistics is no small investment though, so it's not really feasible idea unless you've billions to burn bootstrapping it.
That said, the idea of liberating capable people who are currently stuck in hellish retail jobs is very cool. Granted they'd still be in retail, but as shop owners with relatively high amounts of freedom and a living wage. It'd be a huge win for individuality and quality of life. The same function to society would be fulfilled, but with massive benefits to both the worker and consumer.
I hope someone does this one day, because bigbox retail and massive corporate chain restaurants need to fucking die. Their monoculture and asthetics suck the magic right out of society. There's no better illustration of this than comparing variety in big city commerce to a typical suburb. Most suburbs are veritable wastelands by comparison, and that's not even considering the extreme cases where the only store in town for most essential items is the local Walmart.
I am co-founder of a startup producing an ECM product. The product is, amongst other things, designed to be able to address the need you are pointing out. The company is named 'Carbon State' and the website can be seen here: https://carbonstate.com
What is needed to be able to have an "Amazon style shopping experience" is a site that can easily allow anyone to list any known object that could be sold in a cleanly organized way. This requires many different things:
1. A system that can scale to enterprise levels ( meaning many servers working together but appearing to be a single website to the user )
2. A hierarchical tree of categories in which items are located, that can easily be updated by many different groups simultaneously and audited for accuracy.
3. The ability to allow multiple structured definitions of products at any point on the tree. That is, the ability to define what constitutes 'a thing that can be sold' at that point in the tree. Different types of things with different sets of attributes could be at each point in the tree.
4. The ability to let product owners define visual layout for their products in an appealing fashion that is compatible with all users of the system. ( and the ability to prevent them from messing up the large system by doing this )
5. The ability to let individual shop owners control their payment process entirely, while still allowing a 'global payment gateway' to exist. This essentially means that different stores will have their own websites as well, but they will feed in a clean structured way into the global system.
6. A system that does not charge any percentage of the value of the products on sale, and charges a very minimal fee for businesses to join the global gateway.
The product my company is working on will, when complete, address all of these needs.
Local shops would be provided with point of sale devices and stock control software. Their stock data would be fed into their own store websites/profiles and a wider marketplace.
Users could either purchase from an individual store or the marketplace. If they did the latter the system would find products from stores closest to their location. Users could arrange in-store pickup or same day delivery using spare capacity from nearby takeaway drivers.
Money made from sales would be nominal, but the real value would be providing data to suppliers.
Second problem is you can't count on other people to build your platform. Until you get past a certain critical mass of stores/products, the site won't be very useful and so it's going to be tough to convince businesses or customers to use it.
Few companies from that space: https://atalanda.com/ https://www.lokaso.de https://www.locafox.de/
I suppose someone will try again. It's largely a network effect and economy of scale, perhaps?
But then again, people build new browsers, car and/or space technology companies, or similarly "insurmountable" projects.
An in-stock item may be bought by another party before order or pickup.
Inventory may show more inventory than actual. Shoplifting is one reason for this.
In the end I think prioritizing in-store shopping conflicts with pick-and-ship operations.
They can’t scale their business, why do you think you can do it for them?
Recipe for disaster.