Globalization has both constrained and empowered small businesses
and entrepreneurs with increasing regularity, no longer enabling a small
regional craftsman to maintain a regional business without at least some form
of global competition. Similarly, local
small businesses can now utilize the power of the internet to expand their
sales reach to almost any corner of the world.
On such company helping to foster this innovation is Etsy.com, an online
marketplace primarily aimed at skilled craftsmen, such as furniture makers,
artists, jewelers, and other small batch producers formally limited to selling
out of small stores or marketplace booths.
As described in “The Kitchen-Table Industrialists” by Anand
Girdhardas of the New York Times, there is a resurgence in America of craftsmen
competing with the might of Chinese manufacturers to “make things” for domestic
consumption. While many of these small new-world
industrialists are producing things with new technologies such as 3D-printers,
tabletop CNS’s and other personal fabrication machines, many of the “makers” on
Etsy.com are using traditional methods such as wood carving and hand-painting
to create simple yet elegant wares.
Typically the items being sold are comparable to works of art, and are
far to delicate and detailed to be mass produced in a factory setting.
Etsy’s model can be compared today to the more robust
manufacturing capabilities of the “makers’ on Alibaba.com, a Chinese
marketplace that connects small factories in China to designers and producers
all over the world. In a Wired Magazine
article entitled “The Next Industrial Revolution, Atoms are the New Bits”, Jack
Ma calls the Alibaba model, “C to B” (Consumer to Business”, which is “ideally
suited for the micro-entrepreneur” movement.
Similar to Etsy, both companies are enabling small, entrepreneurial
manufacturers to thrive in the competitive global marketplace by vastly expanding
their potential customer base and including a platform that creates both accessibility
and trust.
One of the differences between Alibaba and Etsy is that the
former relies almost entirely on the customer to specify the product’s design,
while Etsy’s venders usually provide examples of either pre-made or prior
designed items available for order.
However, in a nod to the increasingly varied demands of customers, many
of Etsy’s craftsmen are opening up to more user input in the customization of
desired products. This follows a trend
of companies such as “Black Label”, discussed in a New York Times article
entitled “Putting Customers in Charge of Design”. By allowing customers to have the ability to
customize a product, craftsmen are able to increase their abilities to meet
customer demand, giving them an advantage over the large-scale industrial
manufacturers.
Etsy’s craftsmen can also be seen following a trend of sustainability
and material recycling. As predicted in “Manufacturing
Resource Productivity” printed in the McKinsey Quarterly, manufacturers looking
for future cost cutting strategies will need to be more conscientious of ways
to reuse either their own discarded products or the waste created from the
manufacturing process. Many of Etsy’s
craftsmen are already taking advantage of this strategy, using refuse and
recycled materials to create new forms of artwork, remolding old jewelry into
new designs, and even using reclaimed wood in the creation of new furniture. By utilizing forward thinking manufacturing techniques,
offering higher degrees of customization, and using the internet to remain
globally competitive, the small craftsmen, in collaboration with essential marketplaces
such as Etsy will remain competitive in the future markets of tomorrow.
References
http://www.cio.com/article/703190/Continuous_Deployment_Done_In_Unique_Fashion_at_Etsy.com
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