A-D
goes e
Affiliated Distributors launches
supplyFORCE.com to focus on national contracts, integrated supply and
electronic commerce. It plans to generate $1.3 billion in sales by
2001.
by Richard Vurva
A spin-off company
emerging out of Affiliated Distributors (A-D) is being touted as an
answer to challenges threatening independent distributors. A-D, based
in King of Prussia, Pa., is calling supplyFORCE.com an integrated
supply and e-business solution that will enable distributors to
compete in the highly competitive world of Internet commerce.
The companys goal is to become the
leading provider of end-to-end supply chain management solutions for
the industrial and construction industries and launch the distribution
industrys most complete e-business portal site. Scheduled to go
live late in the first quarter of 2000, the site eventually will offer
customers access to more than 2 million products.
The new company begins operations with
an initial base of around $400 million in sales, obtained by acquiring
A-Ds $250 million national accounts program and the business of A-D
Northeast, a regional integrated supply provider comprised primarily
of A-D affiliates with sales volume of approximately $150 million. The
company expects 2000 sales to reach $485 million and anticipates sales
of $1.3 billion in 2001.
Affiliated Distributors was created
to help strong independent distributors compete on a national
scale, says president and chief executive officer Bill Weisberg.
supplyFORCE.com takes that concept to the next level by providing
the technology and expertise required for local and regional
distributors to more effectively service national accounts.
Furthermore, supplyFORCE.com will provide the opportunity for these
same successful distributors to engage in a sophisticated Internet
commerce strategy without incurring the major costs of going it
alone.
| Affiliates
applaud supplyFORCE.com
Affiliate
members expressed enthusiasm after learning of plans by
Affiliated Distributors to launch supplyFORCE.com.
The massive
amount of dollars it would take to develop an e-commerce site
is beyond the reach of even some of our largest affiliate
members, says Don Ruggles of Martin Supply Company in
Sheffield, Ala., a member of A-Ds board of directors.
Even some of our big electrical distributor affiliates
looked at it and dismissed it as being too pricey. This is a
fantastic way to achieve that.
This is a very
forward-looking vision, says Jim Ketter of T&A
Industrial Distributors in Brookfield, Wis. It keeps the
independent guy independent yet unifies us for our customers.
It gives us that national presence on a local level.
Im excited
about supplyForce.com, says Kathleen Durbin of General
Industrial Tool, an A-D affiliate in North Hollywood, Calif.
I think its going to open up opportunity for General
Industrial that I didnt have before.
I realize that
this is a risky business, says Ruggles. But if theres
ever an e-commerce site that has a chance of making it, this
clearly could be the one. |
A new
business model
The idea for
the new company originated from meetings of A-Ds NA2000 project
team, a group of affiliate members assembled in early 1999 to discuss
how the organization should respond to major trends impacting the
distribution industry.
Those trends include the move toward
single-sourcing, national contracts and integrated supply by major
customers, the influx of alternate channels of competition siphoning
business away from independent distributors, and the intense interest
being exhibited by technology companies and others who believe the MRO
marketplace is rife with opportunity for an electronic commerce
solution.
Developing a separate company to focus
on national contracts, integrated supply and electronic commerce frees
the supplyFORCE.com team to focus on that business without drawing
resources away from A-Ds traditional business.
During the last couple of years, A-D
has focused on the integrated supply and national contracts side of
our business, says Chris Hartmann, who was named president of A-D
to enable Weisberg to spend more time on the new company.
This new structure will enable A-D
to focus more on the relationship between distributors and
suppliers.
Operating at
Internet speed
A-D wasted
little time establishing the new business model, laying the groundwork
for the new company and hiring an experienced management team.
The A-D board approved the plan to spin
off the new company in early August. It then enlisted the help of
several experienced consultants and advisors, including Katalyst, a
company with expertise in helping businesses devise and execute
e-commerce business strategies.
The plan for a spin-off company was
unveiled at A-Ds annual North American meeting in September.
We are moving exceptionally fast,
Weisberg told A-D members at that meeting. We have to act quickly
because the competitive challenge is that significant.
In a series of meetings during
November, A-D released details of the supplyFORCE.com strategy to
affiliates and suppliers and also offered A-D member companies a
chance to invest in the new company.
Launching a new company is never easy.
Its especially difficult when the effort requires management to get
buy-in from nearly 300 affiliate members and suppliers spread across
North America.
Complicating matters further, A-D
decided to forego traditional sources of financing, despite
considerable interest shown by venture capitalists and private equity
sources to help fund the launch. Instead, A-D elected to raise seed
money from among its membership.
The strategy paid off.
In less than six weeks, 244
distributors signed on and supplyFORCE.com raised $35 million in a
private offering.
What prompted A-Ds desire to move so
quickly?
For starters, several studies predict
that sales of MRO products and services will quickly migrate to the
Internet. One research project conducted by Texas A&M University
for the American Supply & Machinery Manufacturers Association and
the Industrial Distribution Association indicates 22 percent of
end-users plan to buy via the Internet within two years.
Additionally, research indicates that
it will take a major capital investment for companies to compete on
the Internet. A study by the Gartner Group of Stamford, Conn.,
suggests leading e-commerce companies are spending $15 million to $20
million on technology annually.
The threat is real, Weisberg
says. The reason it is a threat to distributors is because,
individually, they have a very limited capacity to address what the
customer wants in terms of electronic commerce. Distribution has
very thin margins. The net profitability for distributors is 1 to 1.5
percent before taxes. So its difficult for an independent
distributor to make a significant investment in a solution.
The company expects to invest up to $20
million in Web site development and technology in the next 12 months,
plus make additional investments in brand development and marketing,
working capital and other operating expenses.
Three-part ownership
Ownership of
the company initially will be split between participating
distributors, company management (a strategy designed to recruit and
retain world-class executives) and strategic investors, including
suppliers and distributors that choose to make additional investments.
Participating distributors will receive
an initial equity position in the company just for signing up and
additional equity over the next several years based on their sales
through supplyFORCE.com.
Dave Crum, president of Crum Electric
Supply of Cheyenne, Wyo., a member of the supplyFORCE.com board of
directors, says granting distributors an equity position in the new
company without requiring them to make a cash investment was a wise
decision.
It recognizes the value of
distributors at the fulfillment level, he says. Its also a
way to reward distributors for the investment theyll be required to
make from a technology standpoint.
Adds Weisberg, Making distributors
owners of the business motivates them to drive customers to the Web
site. Were giving them a positive incentive to help write national
contracts and drive customers to our Web site.
Weisberg says the company ultimately
plans to go public and may file an initial public offering of stock by
2001.
If the new company is going to
succeed, it needs to have the same kind of resources that our major
competitors have, he says. The only way to achieve that,
ultimately, is to take it to the public market.
New
competitors
Several
companies will compete against supplyFORCE.com to establish Internet
procurement solutions. They include traditional distributors and
others planning to develop online marketplaces, such as Ariba,
Commerce One, MRO.com, and PurchasingCenter.com.
There are companies that some of us
never even heard of a few months ago that are targeting MRO and
construction supplies, Weisberg says. According to their
business plan, theyre going to make their living as dominant
players in MRO and construction supplies.
Some of the companies competing for
e-business are public companies with massive market capitalizations.
PSDI, parent corporation of MRO.com, has annual sales of $145 million
and a market capitalization of $848 million. Commerce One generated
just $2.6 million in sales last year yet has an $8.2 billion market
cap. Ariba has $45 million in sales and a $9 billion market cap.
Weisberg says A-D was approached by
more than one Internet company hoping to establish a relationship with
the marketing group.
They would love to have us sitting
on the other end of their system, he says. Theyd love to tell
the customer we have this tremendous distribution network.
He says A-Ds network of 300
distributors, representing more than $14 billion in sales, gives it a
leg up on the competition.
What makes our business model very
compelling is that we have the inventory and distribution network in
place, Weisberg says. Were combining the best of traditional
distribution and the best of virtual distribution into a clicks and
mortar strategy.
This article originally appeared in the
January/February 2000 issue of Progressive Distributor magazine. Copyright 2000.
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