Drop Ship Versus Wholesale
June 22, 2009 by Audrey Kerwood
Filed under Drop Shipping
I’m partial to drop shipping, I always try to find a company that will drop ship a particular product. Drop shipping usually fits my business model better than wholesale stocking, for a few key reasons;
1. I have several eCommerce stores that, in total, carry thousands of different products. If I purchased those products wholesale, I’d need a very large and expensive warehouse for all of those boxes to live.
2. With that vast of a product line, inventory management would become a fulltime position along with shipping and receiving.
Keep in mind that the above situation is not true for all eCommerce storeowners. I happen to own many stores with many products per store – not everyone does.
Also, many eCommerce storeowners don’t sell products that occupy the same amount of space as a suit of armor, medieval shield, or wall-sized tapestry – I do. The products you sell may not take up a huge volume of floor space.
The bottom line is, your decision to warehouse inventory or find a drop shipper to do it for you must be based on factors specific to your business situation, like:
1. Do you have the room in your home to store goods?
2. If you don’t, do you have the means to rent a small public storage facility or share warehouse space with a local business?
3. Do you have the operating capital to purchase a quantity or products in bulk from a wholesaler?
4. Are you prepared to deal with yourself or hire someone to do your shipping and handling?
Those are pretty obvious. But what might be surprising to you is that when you purchase bulk wholesale from a company, you may be able to do so at a substantial savings over drop shipping. In fact, when I do purchase goods in volume, I often realize a savings between 10% and 40% over a drop shipped product.
If you’re in a very competitively priced market, having those extra margins may mean the difference between competing effectively, or not competing at all.
However, I want to share with you a concept that I believe can make a huge difference in your ability to grow your business. That concept is called “Effective Time Management”. What I’m talking about is not being able to schedule your business work time effectively – even though that’s important, it’s not what this is about.
I’m talking about being able to make a judgment between low value work and high value work. Here is what I mean…
The most effective use of your time online, or in any business environment for that matter, is growing your business’s sales volume. That means getting more traffic, turning that traffic into customers, and turning those customers into repeat buyers.
You turn your traffic into customers by having an effective sales presentation on your site, offering incentives to buy, and merchandising products in a unique way. You turn customers into repeat buyers by following up with them, communicating information that they are interested in, and offering a pleasant buying experience. And you spend time refining and enhancing all of the above by testing different methods.
I’d like to think that I have some experience in these areas, and it’s been that experience that all other considerations for your business, other than the above, are secondary. Sure, you need to manage your books, your Internet connection, your vendors, your credit card merchant, and your cash flow, etc. But what makes a business successful is the amount of sales volume that it generates.
And that’s what I’m talking about. low value work is the sort of work that doesn’t do anything to increase your sales volume. While it might be necessary in order to operate your business, it doesn’t do anything to grow it.
High value work, by my definition in eCommerce, consists of the following procedures:
1) Site Conversion testing and tweaking
2) Search Engine Optimization
3) Paid Advertising
4) Customer Follow-Up
5) Unique Product Offerings in the form of packages or special value purchases.
Hey, I’m a business owner. I realize that you have to do both. But your priority should always be growing your sales volume. That’s why I drop ship.
I know that is a long-winded explanation for the reason I drop ship. But consider this – when I get an order from one of the stores, all I have to do to fill that order is take the incoming email that I got from my shopping cart, and turn that into an order for our drop shipper.
That means having 2 windows open and copying information from my email into the order form on my vendor’s website. Total time to complete? 60 seconds.
Sure, as a drop shipper, I make less money per sale than I would if I were an inventory stocking eCommerce storeowner, but I spend far less time completing the transaction of the sale. No picking, sorting, packing, labeling, or shipping. In a sense, all I’m really doing it turning around an email. And that’s why I try to drop ship whenever I can.
Having said that, there are times when I can’t find a drop shipper for a product that I want to sell. When that happens, I here’s what I do:
I find a source for that product and ask the wholesaler for some samples. I then create the product listing, drive some traffic to it with some paid ads, and measure the results. I figure out exactly how much money it cost me to generate a sale for that product, then figure out if I can make a profit selling it like that.
If I can, I’ll purchase a minimum quantity from the wholesaler, ship it all to a fulfillment center or ask the manufacturer to warehouse it for me (they will sometimes do this), and start optimizing those product pages for the free search engines while I’m driving traffic to that page with paid ads.
See what I’m doing here? I’m taking a very small financial risk to determine if that product sells at a profit for my company. I’m using paid traffic to determine if I can sell that product. Testing the water before I dive in. Only after I’m able to judge that product’s effectiveness by testing will I make a financial commitment to it and buy a quantity of it from the wholesaler. Then, in order to keep the sales fulfillment cycle short and easy, I send that inventory to a fulfillment center that picks it, packs it, and ships it for me.
The best of both worlds. The key to this method is testing testing testing!
I need to find out if I can make a profit selling that product by using the most expensive method of online advertising available (at least when you compare it to free search engine Traffic) – paid ads. If I can generate a profit from a sale from this traffic, then I’m pretty confident that my profit margins can only improve once I start to optimize that product page for the natural search.
In my opinion, this is the lowest risk method of determining a product’s potential for your store, short of finding a drop shipper right off the bat.





