Orderzone.com
OrderZone.com was an online business-to-business website for business products and services, allowing companies to purchase from multiple suppliers and processing transactions on the site. It was online from 1999 to 2001.
History
[edit]OrderZone.com was launched in 1999 by the maintenance, repair, and operations (MRO) company W. W. Grainger (NYSE:GWW), with participating supplier companies at this time being Grainger Industrial Supply, Cintas Corporation, Corporate Express, Inc., Lab Safety Supply, Marshall Industries, VWR International, Fastenal Company, and Motion Industries.[1] Each supplier covered a different product area, and by 2000 the site had more than 420,000 products in its database and was ranked as the #3 B2B website by Advertising Age's Business Marketing.[2] W. W. Grainger's initial budget for the site was US$10 million.[3]
W. W. Grainger's e-commerce strategy at this time aimed to create a digital business group that expanded their catalog (reaching more than 4,000 pages in length[4]) and allow buyers and sellers to buy and sell over the internet. Orderzone also allowed more prices to be listed, something that was not always possible in the print catalog.[5] At this time W. W. Grainger also released FindMRO.com, which specialized in sourcing hard to find products.[6][7] There were also a number of other sites at this time trying to create online marketplaces for the MRO industry, including EqualFooting.com, iProcure, MarketSite, MRO.com, OnlineMRO.com, ProcureNet, PurchasingCenter.com and TPN Register.[8]
OrderZone.com did not generate as many paying customers as W. W. Grainger originally estimated,[9] and in 2000 the company was merged with Works.com, an office and technology products e-commerce business based in Austin, Texas, as part of a deal where 40% of Works.com was sold to W. W. Grainger for US$21 million.[10] OrderZone.com was then closed in 2001.[11]
References
[edit]- ^ Magill, Ken (April 22, 1999). "Grainger, 5 Partners Set to Market Mega BTB Site". Direct Marketing News. Retrieved 11 June 2011.
- ^ Segal, Bob (January–February 2000). "Online Marketplaces: OLMs signal changes for MRO distributors". Progressive Distributor.
- ^ Magill, Ken (April 22, 1999). "Grainger, 5 Partners Set to Market Mega BTB Site". Direct Marketing News. Retrieved 11 June 2011.
- ^ Feder, Barnaby J. (September 22, 1999). "For This Supplier, the Sum of Its Parts Adds Up to Success". The New York Times. Retrieved 11 June 2011.
- ^ Gardner, Elizabeth (February 2000). "A Supermiddleman" (PDF). The Pricing Advisor Newsletter: 7–8. Retrieved 11 June 2011.
- ^ Segal, Bob (January–February 2000). "Online Marketplaces: OLMs signal changes for MRO distributors". Progressive Distributor.
- ^ "Two Grainger(R) Web Sites Ranked in Top 200 B2B Sites: OrderZone.com(SM) Ranks No. 3 Grainger.com(R) Ranks in Top 50". PR Newswire. Retrieved 11 June 2011.
- ^ Segal, Bob (January–February 2000). "Online Marketplaces: OLMs signal changes for MRO distributors". Progressive Distributor.
- ^ "W.W. Grainger, Inc. - Strides into the New Millennium". International Directory of Company Histories. eNotes.com. Retrieved 11 June 2011.
- ^ Ferguson, Kevin (2000-06-14). "Works.com, Grainger Swap Customers, Products". Forbes. Retrieved 11 June 2011.
- ^ "About OrderZone". OrderZone.com. Retrieved 11 June 2011.