STORES Magazine - September 2008 - (Page 26) EXECUTIVE SUITE / RETAIL PEOPLE E-Commerce Evangelist Shop.org co-founder reflects on the online channel’s growth Elaine Rubin President, ekrubin Woodbury, N.Y. laine Rubin has been chairman and chief marketing strategist for iBaby.com and senior vice president of interactive commerce for iVillage. Prior to that, she was head of interactive services for 1-800-FLOWERS and worked for Amazon.com. Rubin also co-founded and is former chairman of Shop.org, the trade association for online retailers that is now a division of NRF. lowed for in-person meetings and networking events for sharing stories and business experiences was the best way to serve the growing industry and to provide guidance. What prompted you to go on your own? E In 1998, I had just left my role as chairman and chief marketing strategist for a company I helped create, iBaby.com. The Internet/e-commerce opportunities were exploding and there was a great demand for people who understood the space, who worked in online services and the Internet and understood selling direct to consumers. My first consulting job was with the Estee Lauder company … I helped support the launch of Clinique.com, which was the company’s first directto-consumer effort outside of stores. If you had the attention of all retailers great and small, what would you tell them? Industry recognition includes being named to Internet Retailer’s “5 Who Made A Difference” and Advertising Age’s “Top 20 Interactive Executives.” In January, Rubin received NRF’s annual Silver Plaque award for being one of the retail industry’s most innovative leaders. Today she’s president of ekrubin, the online commerce consulting firm she founded in 1998 to advise manufacturers and retailers. What moved you to co-found Shop.org? What were your goals? Focus on your customer. Listen to them; engage them. Let them have a seat at your table and help set your business priorities. Over the past 10 years, we have seen the world change dramatically. Technology has fueled an age-old phenomenon – word of mouth. Consumers now have a voice that can broadcast as quickly as a company advertisement. So what’s the greatest — or worst — customer service you’ve experienced? In those days, the concept of retailing online was pretty much unheard of. There were a few companies — mostly catalogers and direct marketers that had the concept of selling remote as part of their business and their infrastructure – that were dabbling in online services. They ranged from Prodigy, CompuServe and America Online to JCPenney, Eddie Bauer and 1800-FLOWERS. While there were a few conferences addressing the growing online marketplace, [they] usually consisted of one panel on online shopping and the rest was on media and publishing. At one conference in 1996, a few of us online retail pioneers got together to discuss the business and how there was no roadmap, no guidance and no experience in building out online retail experiences/stores. Meanwhile, Lisa and Cliff Sharples, who were starting Garden.com, came to me to share their idea for an educational concept called Shop.org, which they envisioned would help businesses, retailers, investors and consumers embrace the concept of online shopping. I loved the concept and took it to my network of early adopters. We had our first meeting in 1996. Creating a B2B community member organization that al26 STORES / SEPTEMBER 2008 It’s not been in retail, but in the hospitality industry. We in the retail space, both online and offline, can learn a lot from Enterprise Rent-A-Car or The Four Seasons [Hotel Company]. In offline retail, I like personal service and pampering; I find the small boutiques do the best job at this. A personal favorite is Marsh’s/Richards/Mitchells here in the Northeast. However, in the department store space, Lord & Taylor has been exceptional. Online, it’s about efficiency so I like speed, recognition, convenience and ease. I have had continually excellent experiences at Zappos.com and Amazon.com. What other interests might you have pursued? I might have been a broadcaster, a psychologist or a teacher. It’s quite possible in the future I will teach. Your guests at a dinner party if you could ask anyone living or passed? Lucille Ball, Tim Russert, George Clooney, Arthur Ashe and Grandma Mary. StORES — Janet Groeber WWW.STORES.ORG http://Shop.org http://iBaby.com http://iBaby.com http://Amazon.com http://Shop.org http://Zappos.com http://Amazon.com http://WWW.STORES.ORG
Table of Contents Feed for the Digital Edition of STORES Magazine - September 2008 STORES Magazine - September 2008 Contents Executive Editor's Page President's Page Office Depot Unveils First Green Store Dunkin’ Donuts Debuts DDSMART What Shoppers Think 10 Things You May Have Missed Numbers Worth Counting Full Price/Markdown Retail People Are You a Facebook Fan? RFID Concept2Watch E-commerce Supply Chain Marketing ERP Credit Web Optimization LP Vantage Point Newsbeat Cover Story LP Program Building Biometrics Industry Perspective Customer Service Site Selection E-Commerce LOEB Retail Letter Arts Update Point of View NRF News Retail Crossword Retail Industry Calendar Last Laugh STORES Magazine - September 2008 STORES Magazine - September 2008 - STORES Magazine - September 2008 (Page Cover1) STORES Magazine - September 2008 - STORES Magazine - September 2008 (Page Cover2) STORES Magazine - September 2008 - STORES Magazine - September 2008 (Page 3) STORES Magazine - September 2008 - STORES Magazine - September 2008 (Page 4) STORES Magazine - September 2008 - STORES Magazine - September 2008 (Page 5) STORES Magazine - September 2008 - Contents (Page 6) STORES Magazine - September 2008 - Contents (Page 7) STORES Magazine - September 2008 - Contents (Page 8) STORES Magazine - September 2008 - Contents (Page 9) STORES Magazine - September 2008 - Executive Editor's Page (Page 10) STORES Magazine - September 2008 - Executive Editor's Page (Page 11) STORES Magazine - September 2008 - President's Page (Page 12) STORES Magazine - September 2008 - President's Page (Page 13) STORES Magazine - September 2008 - Office Depot Unveils First Green Store (Page 14) STORES Magazine - September 2008 - What Shoppers Think (Page 15) STORES Magazine - September 2008 - What Shoppers Think (Page 16) STORES Magazine - September 2008 - What Shoppers Think (Page 17) STORES Magazine - September 2008 - What Shoppers Think (Page 18) STORES Magazine - September 2008 - What Shoppers Think (Page 19) STORES Magazine - September 2008 - 10 Things You May Have Missed (Page 20) STORES Magazine - September 2008 - 10 Things You May Have Missed (Page 21) STORES Magazine - September 2008 - Numbers Worth Counting (Page 22) STORES Magazine - September 2008 - Numbers Worth Counting (Page 23) STORES Magazine - September 2008 - Full Price/Markdown (Page 24) STORES Magazine - September 2008 - Full Price/Markdown (Page 25) STORES Magazine - September 2008 - Retail People (Page 26) STORES Magazine - September 2008 - Retail People (Page 27) STORES Magazine - September 2008 - Are You a Facebook Fan? (Page 28) STORES Magazine - September 2008 - Are You a Facebook Fan? (Page 29) STORES Magazine - September 2008 - Are You a Facebook Fan? (Page 30) STORES Magazine - September 2008 - Are You a Facebook Fan? (Page 31) STORES Magazine - September 2008 - Are You a Facebook Fan? (Page 32) STORES Magazine - September 2008 - RFID (Page 33) STORES Magazine - September 2008 - RFID (Page 34) STORES Magazine - September 2008 - RFID (Page 35) STORES Magazine - September 2008 - Concept2Watch (Page 36) STORES Magazine - September 2008 - Concept2Watch (Page 37) STORES Magazine - September 2008 - E-commerce (Page 38) STORES Magazine - September 2008 - E-commerce (Page 39) STORES Magazine - September 2008 - Supply Chain (Page 40) STORES Magazine - September 2008 - Supply Chain (Page 41) STORES Magazine - September 2008 - Marketing (Page 42) STORES Magazine - September 2008 - Marketing (Page 43) STORES Magazine - September 2008 - ERP (Page 44) STORES Magazine - September 2008 - ERP (Page 45) STORES Magazine - September 2008 - Credit (Page 46) STORES Magazine - September 2008 - Credit (Page 47) STORES Magazine - September 2008 - Web Optimization (Page 48) STORES Magazine - September 2008 - Web Optimization (Page 49) STORES Magazine - September 2008 - Web Optimization (Page 50) STORES Magazine - September 2008 - Web Optimization (Page L1) STORES Magazine - September 2008 - Web Optimization (Page L2) STORES Magazine - September 2008 - LP Vantage Point (Page L3) STORES Magazine - September 2008 - Newsbeat (Page L4) STORES Magazine - September 2008 - Newsbeat (Page L5) STORES Magazine - September 2008 - Newsbeat (Page L6) STORES Magazine - September 2008 - Newsbeat (Page L7) STORES Magazine - September 2008 - Cover Story (Page L8) STORES Magazine - September 2008 - Cover Story (Page L9) STORES Magazine - September 2008 - Cover Story (Page L10) STORES Magazine - September 2008 - Cover Story (Page L11) STORES Magazine - September 2008 - Cover Story (Page L12) STORES Magazine - September 2008 - Cover Story (Page L13) STORES Magazine - September 2008 - LP Program Building (Page L14) STORES Magazine - September 2008 - LP Program Building (Page L15) STORES Magazine - September 2008 - Biometrics (Page L16) STORES Magazine - September 2008 - Biometrics (Page L17) STORES Magazine - September 2008 - Industry Perspective (Page L18) STORES Magazine - September 2008 - Industry Perspective (Page L19) STORES Magazine - September 2008 - Industry Perspective (Page L20) STORES Magazine - September 2008 - Customer Service (Page 71) STORES Magazine - September 2008 - Customer Service (Page 72) STORES Magazine - September 2008 - Customer Service (Page 73) STORES Magazine - September 2008 - Site Selection (Page 74) STORES Magazine - September 2008 - Site Selection (Page 75) STORES Magazine - September 2008 - Site Selection (Page 76) STORES Magazine - September 2008 - Site Selection (Page 77) STORES Magazine - September 2008 - E-Commerce (Page 78) STORES Magazine - September 2008 - E-Commerce (Page 79) STORES Magazine - September 2008 - E-Commerce (Page 80) STORES Magazine - September 2008 - E-Commerce (Page 81) STORES Magazine - September 2008 - LOEB Retail Letter (Page 82) STORES Magazine - September 2008 - LOEB Retail Letter (Page 83) STORES Magazine - September 2008 - Arts Update (Page 84) STORES Magazine - September 2008 - Arts Update (Page 85) STORES Magazine - September 2008 - Point of View (Page 86) STORES Magazine - September 2008 - Point of View (Page 87) STORES Magazine - September 2008 - NRF News (Page 88) STORES Magazine - September 2008 - NRF News (Page 89) STORES Magazine - September 2008 - Retail Crossword (Page 90) STORES Magazine - September 2008 - Retail Crossword (Page 91) STORES Magazine - September 2008 - Retail Crossword (Page 92) STORES Magazine - September 2008 - Retail Industry Calendar (Page 93) STORES Magazine - September 2008 - Last Laugh (Page 94) STORES Magazine - September 2008 - Last Laugh (Page Cover3) STORES Magazine - September 2008 - Last Laugh (Page Cover4)
For optimal viewing of this digital publication, please enable JavaScript and then refresh the page. If you would like to try to load the digital publication without using Flash Player detection, please click here.