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Web garb: Onestop Internet Inc. handles the online affairs of apparel companies in a sector highly resistant to cannibalizing sales from retail stores.


BRETT Morrison can be considered a dot-com stereotype stereotype (stĕr`ĕətīp'), plate from which printing is done, made by casting metal in a mold, usually of paper pulp. The process was patented in 1725 by the Scottish inventor William Ged. . After launching an online photo sharing Photo sharing is the publishing or transfer of a user's digital photos online, thus enabling the user to share them with others (whether publicly or privately). This functionality is provided through both websites and applications that facilitate the upload and display of images.  company in 1998, he and his partners were flush with venture capital funding, but not a workable business plan. As a result, Ememories.com Inc. never made any money. Morrison's takeaway: "Don't be just a pure e-commerce player. Mix the online part with old-school shipping and packing, trucks, warehouses."

Morrison, John Tomich and Steve Tandberg are now trying to do that with Onestop Internet Inc., an e-commerce business that operates virtual storefronts for one of the oldest of old-school players: apparel manufacturers.

Onestop is among a handful of companies that develop and manage Web sites, investigate Internet scams, operate customer service lines and run warehouses for shipping out client products.

The company is on target to hit $10 million in annual revenues this year and counts as its clients T-shirt maker Von Dutch Originals LLC (Logical Link Control) See "LANs" under data link protocol.

LLC - Logical Link Control
, denim manufacturer True Religion Apparel Inc. and Trunk Ltd., which specializes in vintage rock T-shirts. "There is this huge opportunity for us," said Tomich.

The three partners have fixed their sights on mid-market owners of apparel firms who want to sell on the Web but are nervous about the hassles involved or the possibility of cannibalizing from their customer base. "If you take a list of the top 500 apparel brands, greater than 50 percent do not sell online still today," said Tomich. "Part of the reason is that they can't get their head around it. It doesn't fit into their operational infrastructure."

Fortunate meeting

The partners cooked up the idea for their business following the dot-com bust Refers to the years 2000 to 2002, when the bottom fell out of the dot-com industry and hundreds of dot-com companies went bankrupt. All the rest lost a huge amount, if not almost all, of their stock valuation. See dot-com bubble. . Tomich was working as an analyst at Shelter Capital Partners, an L.A. venture capital firm, where Morrison had an office as an e-commerce consultant. Tandberg founded PayCom Inc., one of the leading credit card processing firms for Internet merchants. Before selling out in 2001, PayCom had reached worldwide revenues of over $300 million.

The three saw their opportunity after meeting the marketing director of Von Dutch and learning that the company was struggling to fill Web sales orders The sales order, sometimes abbreviated as SO, is an order received by a business from a customer. A sales order may be for products and/or services. Given the wide variety of businesses, this means that the orders can be fulfilled in several ways.  through e-mail and fax. "The e-commerce experience was very behind," recalled Morrison. "We recognized that immediately and said, 'Yeah, we could do much better than this.'"

Onestop would do everything Internet-related for Von Dutch, from Web design to shipping merchandise to trolling (1) Surfing, or browsing, the Web.

(2) Posting derogatory messages about sensitive subjects on newsgroups and chat rooms to bait users into responding.

(3) Hanging around in a chat room without saying anything, like a "peeping tom."
 eBay and other auction sites for counterfeit To falsify, deceive, or defraud. A copy or imitation of something that is intended to be taken as authentic and genuine in order to deceive another.

A counterfeit coin is one that may pass for a genuine coin and may include a lower denomination coin altered so that it may
 goods.

As for payment, they opted for a share of Internet sales instead of charging up front. (The company would not divulge that revenue share, but in a Securities and Exchange Commission filing, True Religion disclosed that its agreement calls for Onestop to receive 25 percent.) "We have our skin in the game," said Tomich. "If the site is not successful, then neither of us are successful."

Onestop was established in 2003 just as Von Dutch's signature product--the trucker hat--became hot. "With the way that this company grew and as few people as we had multitasking multitasking

Mode of computer operation in which the computer works on multiple tasks at the same time. A task is a computer program (or part of a program) that can be run as a separate entity.
, it would have been just another burden on our shoulders," said Chris Detert, Von Dutch's spokesman. "They are very good at what they do."

When Onestop got a second client, Los Angeles-based shirt maker Teenage Millionaire LLC, the company rented a 5,000-square-foot storage space to warehouse and ship inventory. They ended up staying only a few months before moving into their current space: a 50,000-square-foot warehouse in the Garment District The Garment District is a store in Cambridge, MA and is well known for its Dollar-A-Pound clothing store. The Garment District started out as an offshoot of Harbor Textiles, a textile company which produced wiping cloths for industry that began in the late 1940s.  south of downtown.

The facility is dominated by stacks of boxes filled with everything from hats to handbags. Along one of the walls is a row of offices for the technology, customer service and creative departments. At the far-end, photographers shoot models wearing merchandise to be sold on client Web sites. Onestop is also in the process of adding a bar code system that will allow employees to identify each product with the wave of a scanner.

Smaller retailers and manufacturers have little expertise in any of this. "It gets to a point when you say, 'I am not handling this, I am not an expert in this,'" said Julia Cardis, a market analyst for Mintel International Group Ltd., which estimates that the online apparel market will grow 9 percent to 12 percent per year through 2009.

Onestop has several competitors, including Secaucus, N.J.-based eFashionSolutions LLC, which targets mid-size urban streetware brands, and King of Prussia King of Prussia, industrialized suburban area (1990 pop. 18,406), Montgomery co., SE Pa. It has glass and steel fabricating, food processing, printing and publishing, and varied manufacturing (textiles, liquified petroleum gas, water-treatment and electrical , Pa.-based GSI Commerce GSI Commerce is an ecommerce company specializing in running online shopping sites for brick and mortar companies that wish to have an online presence. It contracts with companies such as Zales,[2] iRobot,[3] Hershey's, Palm Inc.  Inc., which handles both apparel manufacturers and sporting goods Noun 1. sporting goods - sports equipment sold as a commodity
commodity, trade good, good - articles of commerce

sports equipment - equipment needed to participate in a particular sport
 retailers.

Edward Foy, eFashion's chief executive, said the biggest challenge is convincing apparel makers to sell online. "They want to be leaders when it comes to design, but they don't want to be leaders when it comes to technological processes," he said.

Foy said that his company will generate $35 million in revenues this year, but noted that that there are hundreds of brands still not selling online that could become big on the Internet.

True Religion was a recent convert, although Chief Financial Officer Charles Lesser remains cautious. "Our customers are wholesale customers, whether that is our stores or the Interact sites of our stores," he said. "You better have respect for those people."

PROFILE Onestop Internet Inc.

Year Founded: 2003

Core Business: Outsourced Web design and operation, and e-commerce fulfillment ful·fill also ful·fil  
tr.v. ful·filled, ful·fill·ing, ful·fills also ful·fils
1. To bring into actuality; effect: fulfilled their promises.

2.
 services

Revenues in 2003: $3.3 million

Revenues in 2004: $7 million

Employees in 2003: 7

Employees in 2004: 22

Goal: To double its client base in 2006

Driving Force: Providing simple, turnkey See turnkey system.  services for apparel manufacturers offering direct Internet sales
COPYRIGHT 2005 CBJ, L.P.
No portion of this article can be reproduced without the express written permission from the copyright holder.
Copyright 2005, Gale Group. All rights reserved. Gale Group is a Thomson Corporation Company.

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Article Details
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Title Annotation:Small Business
Author:Brown, Rachel
Publication:Los Angeles Business Journal
Geographic Code:1U9CA
Date:Jul 4, 2005
Words:907
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