Skip to content

Tuesday, November 24th, 2009

Franchise Autopsy: eBay Dropoff Stores (Scott Pooler)

March 22, 2008 by Sean Kelly  
Filed under Business

ebayflip (FranchisePick.Com)  The eBay Dropoff Store Franchise was yesteryear’s hot new franchise opportunity.

Unfortunately, it was so hot that it burned up the cold, hard cash of many an iSold It, Snappy Auctions, and AuctionItToday franchise owner.  What happened?  Scott Pooler provides his take in his article eBay Franchise Drop Stores – Why they failed, excerpted below. 

Do you agree with Scott? Disagree?  Leave a message below.

The concept:

eBay drop stores came upon the scene with a great fanfare and promise….

These franchises promised individuals an easy way to be in business for themselves – a way to “have a store without investing in inventory” by offering a simple effective solution to everyone in America’s battle with clutter. People heard the story and they believed; they read about eBay’s fabulous growth and the amount of merchandise sold every moment on eBay and they felt it was a sure thing. If any franchise could work for them, this type would because it was easy and it was new and customers would clamor over themselves to get in the door…

The investment:

Anyone could own a store if they agreed to the franchise terms. Most of these terms included a simple up-front franchise fee of about $25,000, an added expense for signage and fixtures of anywhere from $5,000 to $25,000, plus a continuing monthly national advertising fee and a royalty fee on all sales of about 4% (of Gross Sales), some with a cap at $1,250.00 per month but most with no cap on the royalty fee.

The struggle:

…the store owner is now looking for ways to drive business into his new store. He has more overhead than he initially had envisioned so he must get to work. Staring at a monthly nut to crack of nearly $8,000 on average, most store owners realize fairly quickly that they need items to sell on eBay. Where to get them? …

…Initially the pool of prospective customers was much larger than it is today because more people now have internet access, more people are familiar with eBay and eBay has made it much easier for people to list a single item on their own. eBay classes are taught by certified eBay education specialists at retirement centers nationwide and these classes are sometimes free. People would rather realize 100% of net profit from a sale than 60 or even 50%.

The drop store owner is now on a mission to bring in customers.

He/She must have products to sell. If it become apparent that advertising and location simply do not provide the traffic he needs, the store owner will try different tactics. Sometimes the franchise will offer assistance in the form of “outside sales” seminars, conference calls and the like. These sales ideas are offered as a way to show that the franchise is on the side of the store owner. (To be honest, most employees of franchise operations are honest hard working people who want nothing more than to help the store owners).

In the end these outside sales ideas boil down to selling cars, RV’s and boats – all of which are now precluded by eBay and some States as being illegal or unacceptable without special licenses for each. The franchise failed to mention that a store owner may need a car dealer’s license and a boat broker’s license or an auctioneer’s license to operate a eBay drop off store and sell these types of items. Business-to-Business is another source of income promoted by franchises, but rarely do other businesses wish to split profits in the manner required to make the deal attractive for the drop store owner. This leaves only household merchandise, collectibles and toys, generally creating a garage sale type of atmosphere.

Processing becomes the key – reduce processing time, become more efficient, write shorter descriptions, shoot less photos and speed up the process for each item. This only serves to reduce the final sale price of those items. Store owners soon realize that selling any item worth less than $100 is not worth the expense of processing that item. They react by turning customers away with low value items. This is not always the wisest course of action because that customer will never return and one never knows – they could have been just trying you with a small item before bringing in a diamond ring….

The outcome:

Some eBay drop stores do survive with perseverance, skill and entrepreneurial spirit…

These stores would have survived and possibly thrived without a franchise but going in, the store owner did not know that he would have to find ways to make it work on his own. He purchased a franchise and this usually implies the investment in a proven system which will yield dividends if the system is followed. In most cases, in the eBay drop store business, if the franchise model is followed and the store owner does no more than what the franchise recommends, the store will not be profitable. The overhead, eBay fees, insurance, lease payments, employee costs and advertising costs are a tough enough nut to crack on a net of 30% of the net profit from used merchandise. Adding in a franchise fee, national advertising fee and royalty fee just makes the entire business model collapse upon itself.

Read the entire article here:  eBay Franchise Drop Stores – Why they failed

Want to submit a Franchise Autopsy on this or other failed concept?  Email us at info[at]ideafarm.net.

WHAT DO YOU THINK?  SHARE A COMMENT BELOW. __________________________

Visit FRANBEST’s: Unbiased franchise information, franchise interviews and detailed, searchable information on 400 franchise and business opportunities.

.

top new franchise opportunitiesFranchisees, customers & experts vote for their favorite new franchises at Top New Franchise: Who’s hot. Who’s not.

  • StumbleUpon
  • Digg
  • Facebook
  • Mixx
  • Google
  • TwitThis
  • Reddit
  • Yahoo! Buzz
  • Slashdot
  • E-mail this story to a friend!
  • BallHype
  • YardBarker

Comments

6 Responses to “Franchise Autopsy: eBay Dropoff Stores (Scott Pooler)”
  1. Scott Pooler says:

    Sean,
    Thanks for the quoting my article here. I respect your perspective and appreciate you asking my opinion on your project.
    Please contact me directly via eMail or through my blog contact form, LinkedIn or Facebook. I can also be found on Twitter: Scott_Pooler.
    Skype: allbusinessauctions or Yahoo Messenger: allbusinessauctions

  2. sean says:

    After 3 years, Brian and Gail Eischeid are throwing in the towel. A story in USA Today had drawn them in:

    iSold It eBay Dropoff Franchise to Close in Savannah

  3. Matt Naso says:

    Other than the obvious reasons, I believe a lack of proper technology played a role in the demise of the eBay drop off model. The rush to brand copy cat franchises left behind a solid forethought as to how they would handle the amount of transactions that were required for profitability. Properly managing customer service inquiries, getting items listed, shipped etc and reporting profitability is critical to a successful eBay sales operation. I agree with Scott in that these store owners sort of expected product to drop into their laps without actually reaching out and working the business to business angle.

Trackbacks

Check out what others are saying about this post...
  1. [...] idea, but they quickly learned it wasn’t such a great idea.  Sean Kelly at Franchise Pick discusses why these reseller stores may not be the franchise opportunity they were billed [...]

  2. [...] idea, but they quickly learned it wasn’t such a great idea.  Sean Kelly at Franchise Pick discusses why these reseller stores may not be the franchise opportunity they were billed [...]

  3. [...] idea, but they quickly learned it wasn’t such a great idea.  Sean Kelly at Franchise Pick discusses why these reseller stores might not be the franchise opportunity they were billed [...]



Speak Your Mind

Tell us what you're thinking...
and oh, if you want a pic to show with your comment, go get a gravatar!


About Us | Advertise with us | Blog for EveryJoe | Privacy Policy | Terms of Use
Get This Theme | Sitemap


All content is Copyright © 2005-2009 b5media. All rights reserved.