Comparing Supplier Prices with Current Market Prices
The seemingly overwhelming task can be easily made simple by breaking up
the enormous mass of information and your ultimate goal into smaller,
easier-to-tackle modules. Assuming that each of your suppliers is reputable
and honest your first task will then be the compare the prices of your
suppliers to find how they rate against the current market value. The goal
here is to find the products that will generate an acceptable level of
profit to add to your portfolio of products for sale. Regardless of the
method of e-commerce you choose to sell your items through, building your
portfolio of revenue generating items and selling them at the same time will
increase your chances of sale due to the natural synergy of your portfolio
(assuming that all of the items are different enough from each other to be
competitors within their own markets).
Auction Sites versus Regular E-Commerce Websites
Keep in mind when you're comparing your supplier prices, or performing
your market research that you distinguish between market prices obtained
through auction sites such as eBay and those gathered from non-auction
e-commerce shopping cart sites. Whilst they may appear to sell the same
product (for example Apple iPod Touch with identical packages) on both
sites, prices are generally lower on auction sites because of the
inconsistent warranties available, product conditions, new/used status, and
general accountability of sellers trading on auction sites as compared to
operators selling from there own purchased domain named website with site
related guarantees. It is not to say that you cannot make a decent profit
from auction sites and not grab an absolute bargain from non-auction
e-commerce shopping cart sites. The point is to distinguish between the two
markets because there are some marked differences in the behavior of both
buyers and sellers of each.
Tracking Your Research
To keep track of your market research you should make use of available
software specific to the monitoring of prices and market trends. If this is
not readily available you can easily develop a spreadsheet suitable for your
needs. When developing your own spreadsheet you may find it useful to list
your column headings from left to right in the following order:
- - Supplier
- - Product
- - Price
- - Market Price #1
- - Market Price #2
- - Market
Price #3
- - Market Price #4
- - Market Price #5
- - Average Price (avg prices
1-5)
- - Average Profit (Average Price – Price)
- - Average Return On Investment
% (Average Profit / Price)*100
Whilst simple, this spreadsheet will allow you to view all of the prices
at the same time and give you the opportunity to sort the higher performing
items from the lower performing ones. From here you should set a baseline
Return On Investment level and choose to sell only items achieving equal to
or greater than that goal (e.g. only Apple iPod Touch units achieving an ROI
equal to or greater than 15%. A note should be made that because of the
price movements of any given market as well as the rate at which new
products are released and developed – consequently making current items
not-so-current items – your market research is only valid for a limited
amount of time only. This means that once you have decided on your suitable
product no time should be wasted from that point to the time of sale.
For Your Benefit
It will be extremely beneficial in your early days as an Internet
Wholesale Trader if you can train your mind to think along the lines of
Return on Investment whenever you think of adding new products to your
portfolio. In the end, it doesn't matter where you want to sell your
products, implementing a process that systematically evaluates the ability
of a product to generate a profit will mean that you can measure the
feasibility of almost ANY product or service out there. This will ensure
possibly limitless product options within the general scope of your business
and your current product knowledge because you will be thinking more on how
beneficial selling that product will be for you instead of simply how much
you'd like the product for yourself, or how cool it is.
Like many professions, your success in Global Product sourcing and
Wholesale Trade will depend on your ability to put into practice the good
lessons you learned and learn from your mistakes. Whether or not the
information you have just read will help you directly in your current
business practices, it should at the very least, get you thinking in the
right direction towards wholesale sourcing success.
MoshenARTE are the Global Product Sourcing Experts! Specializing in
wholesale and drop shipping trade. For more information, visit
http://www.moshenarte.com