If shopping for household essentials such as toilet paper and soap isn’t your favorite activity, a new Web site might eliminate the task – while saving you cash.
The recently launched Alice.com lets people buy all manner of necessities from different manufacturers. There are about 6,000 items to choose from so far. The site keeps an eye on the products you use, and reminds you when it’s time to replenish.
Because Alice.com is run as a platform for manufacturers to connect directly to consumers, rather than as a traditional online retailer, founders Brian Wiegand and Mark McGuire say they can keep prices low and ship all items for free.
Of course, Alice benefits, too. Manufacturers pay the company for prime placement on Alice.com or to have samples, coupons and other marketing pitches offered to customers.
Wiegand and McGuire’s last startup, comparison shopping site Jellyfish.com, was bought by Microsoft Corp. in 2007 and has since been incorporated into its new search engine, Bing.
Their idea for Alice sprung from what Wiegand and McGuire saw as the lack of easy ways to buy household necessities online. As McGuire jokingly tells it, “we really wanted to sell toilet paper on the Internet.”
Alice, which is based in Madison, Wis., isn’t the first to offer these types of products over the Web. Drugstore.com Inc. and Amazon.com Inc. are competitors.
But Alice is streamlining things by letting manufacturers sell straight to shoppers. Product makers decide what to sell, set prices and collect all the proceeds from sales. Alice stocks products in a centralized warehouse, where workers pack the stuff up and ship it to buyers.
The Associated Press
Comments
We welcome comments. Please keep them civil, short and to the point. ALL CAPS, spam, obscene, profane, abusive and off topic comments will be deleted. Repeat offenders will be blocked. Thanks for taking part — and abiding by these simple rules. A thorough explanation of rules of conduct can be found in our Terms of Service.
Comments are displayed newest first. If you would like to read a thread from beginning to end, select "Oldest first" from the drop down menu.
- Olympia: Man impersonating cop calling businesses requesting DUI bail for co-worker
- Washington's Columbia Crest cabernet named No. 1 wine
- A troubled life, a violent death for murder victim
- Deployment: It’s marriage license that counts for military
- Seahawks at Vikings: Viks' Peterson a QB's best friend
|
|
• Preps:
|



Comments


