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You can buy, sell, or
rent equipment without leaving your office. Its a very promising
proposition. The world of used construction equipment is brought
to your computer screen, courtesy of e-commerce trading services
plying the Web with billions of dollars worth of equipment.
Its happening,
but slowly. In reality, most Web sites serve as equipment advertising
services, and the deals are made when the buyer contacts the seller
after learning of the equipment on a Web-listing service. The actual
deal does not take place through Internet correspondence.
There are, however, some
bright spots in e-commerce for equipment. IronPlanet www.ironplanet.com
is successfully running online equipment auctions; the company holds
an auction every other week. And Rentmaker www.rentmaker.com
is succeeding with an online service for finding rental equipment
for contractors. The company claims to be seeing 35% growth each
month, with close to 4,000 contractors using the service.
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| A Ritchie
Bros Auctioneers territory manager catches a bid on auction
day. |
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| Crawler
tractors come across the ramp at a Ritchie Bros. auction. |
Still, most contractors
want to see and inspect the equipment theyre buyingthey
dont deal for iron over the Internet. In a survey done for
the Rental 2001 research study sponsored by the Associated Equipment
Distributors (AED), only 5% of equipment users said they use the
Internet to search or make deals for rental equipment. And of the
5%, some 80% said they just use the Internet to check price and
availability. "Only a very small percent are transacting business
on-line," reports Frank Manfredi, an equipment-industry analyst.
A number of dot-com equipment
services have recently gone out of business. And more than one company
has stopped holding online equipment auctions, at least temporarily,
in recent months. Says Manfredi, "Our industry is not well
known for early adoption of new technology, and this is certainly
one of those cases."
Glut
of Equipment
"The construction
equipment market right now has an oversupply of quality used equipment,"
observes Simon Newman, president and partial owner of TradeYard
Inc., which runs TradeYard.com,
an e-commerce service that lists upward of $4 billion in equipment
on its Web site. "Theres a massive glut of equipment
out there."
Doc Madsen, used-equipment
manager for Scott Machinery Company, a John Deere dealer in Salt
Lake City, UT, agrees that many dealers across the nation have an
oversupply of equipment. "I know theres a glut of equipment,
and were starting to see some softening of prices. I think
a lot of dealers are in troublethey have a yard full of overpriced
equipment. I look through the trade magazines and stuff advertised
over the Internet, and some of these pieces Ive seen month
after month after month. Some of its been on the market for
a year and a half."
From 1996 to 2000, the
national rental chains replaced large volumes of equipment, says
TradeYards Newman. The equipment replaced consisted of, for
example, rough-terrain forklifts, midpowered dozers and excavators,
manlifts, scissors lifts, and more. "That bubble of used equipment
is now coming up for sale, creating a glut of those pieces of equipment,"
notes Newman. "The rental chains are holding on to their equipment.
You can think of it as an avalanche waiting to happen."
In fact, says United
Rentalss Fred Bratman, vice president of corporate communications,
"We decided to age our fleet somewhat. Were selling a
fraction of the equipment this year than we sold in the year 2000.
We sold $347 million of equipment in 2000 and decided this year
to sell $130 million worth."
Moreover, says Newman,
over the past four or five years, the major equipment manufacturers
have experienced record sales, many of them through various leasing
deals for new equipment. Now that equipment is coming back off lease
and being returned to dealers as used equipment. So, he continues,
all that late-model equipment is adding to the pending flood of
equipment about to come into the marketplace.
Newman reports that the
market is adapting to Web-launched sales at about the rate that
online services might have predicted two years ago. But the amount
of interest by Wall Street and the venture-capital community in
funding new online sales initiatives has dropped off substantially.
"The buyers arent buying on-line in large volumes yet,
but we wouldnt expect them to," says Newman. "So
far, many of them shop around and look at features.
"We get several
million dollars per week in offers to buy used equipment,"
relates Newman. "Some of those are low-balled offers. The point
is, its not $500 million of offers. But well be successful
if we can capture just a small percentage of equipment purchasers
to buy machines on-line."
Newman lists some of
the equipment for sale on TradeYard.com: 14,000 aerial-work platforms;
5,000 excavators; 1,500 graders and scrapers; about 3,000 cranes,
draglines, and pile drivers; 2,700 off-road trucks; and 2,000 skid-steer
loaders.
"We match a buyer
and a seller a few hundred-thousand times a month," he says.
"That means if a buyer is looking for a certain type of equipment,
we supply the buyers contact information to the seller a few
hundred-thousand times a month."
All those visits to the
Web site result in "a lot of phone calls from buyers to sellers,"
notes Newman.
Online
Auctions
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| A real-time
Internet buyer during a controlled test at a Ritchie Bros. auction
in Ontario, Canada |
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| IronPlanet
offers live auctions on-line two to three times a month. |
The online auction business
is growing rapidly at IronPlanet, say company officials. Just this
year, through July 12, IronPlanet had sold more than $10.9 million
of equipmentmore than double the $4.6 million sold at online
auctions in all of 2000. With these online auctions, equipment from
widespread geographic locations can be bid on by, and sold to, buyers
at equally diverse locations. IronPlanet helps arrange for transportation,
financing, and warranties.
To help buyers know the
equipment theyre bidding on, IronPlanet gets all of the equipment
listed on its Web site inspected by DynCorp, a firm that has inspected
military off-road equipment for the Department of Defense. Inspection
fees are paid by the seller as part of the cost of listing the machines
with IronPlanet. Results of the inspection reports are available
on-line for prospective buyers to view.
At its September 6 online
auction, IronPlanet sold 61 pieces of equipment for nearly $2.8
million. On July 12, the auction sold IronPlanets two highest-priced
pieces ever: two Caterpillar 771D off-road rock trucks. One sold
for $267,000 and the other for $264,000. IronPlanet had scheduled
to sell 67 pieces of equipment at its November 15 auction.
Other firms have many
more listings, but everything IronPlant has is fully inspected,
and the inspection reports are insured. When a piece is sold from
the companys Web site, the buyer first pays IronPlanet. Once
100% of the funds are in an escrow account, IronPlanet calls the
seller, who can then approve the release of the equipment. IronPlanet
earns a commission based on the selling price.
When the equipment arrives
at the buyers site, he has 24 hours to compare the actual
piece to the inspection report. If the piece matches up to the inspection
report, which it most often does, IronPlanet releases the funds
to the seller. If there is a dispute over the actual condition of
the equipment, IronPlanet has a dispute-resolution process. It will
send the inspector back out to inspect the piece. If its something
the inspector missed, IronPlanet will pay to make it right. But
if its something the seller changed, the seller will pay for
it. The insurance behind the inspection report assures the buyer
that hell receive the piece of equipment represented in the
inspection report.
According to IronPlanet,
business isnt sluggish despite the slowing trend found in
other online equipment arenas. IronPlanet believes that it has developed
a trustworthy marketplace with which buyers feel comfortable. The
good prices the company gets for its sellers and the full information
furnished in the buyers inspection reports are also factors
that bring about customer satisfaction.
Although Ritchie Bros.
Auctioneers, the big British Columbiabased equipment auction
firm, had not introduced online-only auctions as of mid-November,
the firm offers bidders the ability to place online bids at live
auctions in real time. "A large number of our customers expressed
great interest in this tool," reports Bob Armstrong, vice president
of Internet services for Ritchie Bros. "Its an Internet-based
tool. A bidder can access our auctions through our Web site, complete
with live sound, live video, and live bid and asked numbers. And
he can follow the auction and place bids.
The test phase was completed
in July, and the service is now available to bidders, sellers, and
viewers with assistance from rbauction.com Premium Services. However,
Armstrong adds, "The majority of our bidders will still attend
auctions live. The equipment must be inspected live." He says
the online tool will be useful only to people who have personally
inspected the equipment beforehand or who have hired someone to
do the inspection.
Bidders also can buy
equipment on-line at Ritchie Bros. auctions by placing their top
bid on-line before the auction starts. If a buyer bids $50,000 on-line
for a piece and at the auction the top offered price is $40,000,
then the online bidder gets the machine for $41,000the next
bid increment up from $40,000.
All used equipment for
sale at Ritchie Bros. auctions is listed at www.rbauction.com.
The Web site "is designed so you can find it by auction location,
by equipment type, by manufacturer, by modelyou specify what
youre looking for, and well show it to you," states
Armstrong. The database of equipment is updated daily.
In 2000, Ritchie Bros.
held 121 auctions in eight countries around the world. The company
achieved record gross auction sales of a little more than $1.23
billion. The largest auction of the year was a $45 million, three-day
sale in Ft. Worth, TX, in September 2000.
"Way
Fun"
Scott Machinerys
Madsen credits AEDs online Machine Mart with helping him sell
seven used machines in the last two years. Six of the seven machines
were bought sight unseen, he says. "Ive sold a dozer,
a wheel loader, and five rubber-tired backhoes. This Internet has
been way fun. Ive been really pleased with what those listings
generated for me."
In selling one machine,
a John Deere 310D backhoe-loader, the New Mexicobased buyer
asked Madsen some 15 questions about the machine. The questions
concerned the amount of looseness in the pins and bushings on the
backhoe, tire wear, overall condition, and so on. "I responded
to his questions, we agreed on price, and he said hed take
it," Madsen recalls. "We arranged for a wire transfer
of money.
"For all seven machines
that weve sold, people called us and said, I saw your
ad for a certain machine. It still comes down to people after
they call. They find out its a well-established John Deere
dealer, and they get the feeling they have some leverage if something
isnt right."
Despite the shake-out
in equipment-sales services doing business on the Web, a large number
of them have survived and are prospering to one degree or another.
The list of such services includes:
- AEDs Machine
Mart www.machinemart.com,
which lists used equipment for sale by AED member-dealers. According
to Bill Hermanek, an AED staff vice president, more than one-third
of AED member-dealers now list equipment with Machine Mart. As
of mid-November, the site listed 10,500-plus pieces of used equipment
worth more than $585 million. Machine Mart permits a member to
log in to his account and add, delete, or edit various listings
on the site. Buyers conduct searches for equipment, and when they
find something theyre interested in, they can e-mail the
seller with reference to the piece of equipment in question.
- Both Caterpillar
and Deere have Web sites that list used equipment stocked by their
dealers. Cats site is located at www.CatUsed.com,
and Deeres is at www.usedconnection.com.
The sites offer used equipment for sale by Cat and Deere dealers,
and prospective buyers are referred to the listing dealer.
- Point2.com
lists more than 50,000 pieces of equipment for sale on its home
page. In addition, the company designs software systems "that
allow industry to take advantage of, and profit from, the power
of the Internet," states Wendell Willick, CEO of Point2 Internet
Systems Inc. Recently Point2 announced a licensing agreement that
will allow Caterpillar and its dealers to take advantage of the
online sales tools developed by Point2. Its free to use
Point2s heavy-equipment search engines.
- IronMax.com
allows potential buyers to submit a request for quote (RFQ). Interested
buyers or renters submit an online form listing the type of machine
theyre interested in, how much theyre willing to pay,
and the geographic area in which theyre searching. Dealers
who have registered with IronMax then receive the RFQ and can
respond. Access to IronMax is available to buyers at no charge
and to suppliers for a small fee.
- You can buy used
equipment on-line at unitedrentals.com,
but the primary channel United Rentals uses to sell equipment
is its rental stores. United Rentals publishes regional used-equipment
catalogs that are available on-line, from any United Rentals salesperson,
or by mail.
- Rental Service Corporation
(RSC) offers its services on the site rentalservice.com.
"All of our equipment on rent is available for sale, so you
have the ability to view and test drive the equipment
you are interested in purchasing," states RSC on its Web
site. The company has an online catalog listing of several thousand
pieces of used equipment. You can shop for a piece and submit
an online inquiry about a machine that interests you. And you
get information about which RSC yard owns the equipment and a
Web link to that location.
Renting
On-Line
Rentmaker, the Internet-based
service that helps renters find the equipment they want, says it
has seen $150 million worth of quotes pass through its site. To
use the site, prospective renters complete a brief online RFQ form
on Rentmakers Web site. The request goes out to rental stores,
and several of them respond with a quote. The renter chooses the
quote he likes best and contacts the rental store directly.
"The typical contractor
using Rentmaker is generally medium to large in size, with multiple
regional offices, since these are the same companies that tend to
take an organized approach to the Internet at an earlier stage,"
relates Jerome Meier, Rentmaker president. He says repeat usage
of the Rentmaker site has climbed to about 30-50% on a weekly basis"which
indicates that almost half the contractors who have tried Rentmaker
became faithful, repeat users within just a weeks time."
Its true: The promise
of buying, selling, and renting equipment on-line is happening.
Certainly the machines are out thereworth in the billions
of dollarsbut theyre only fetching a single-digit percentage
of buyers. How fast online business will grow depends to a great
extent on how well trust can be built among the online services,
the buyers, and the sellers.
Dan Brown is the owner
of TechniComm, a communications business based in Des Plaines, IL.
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