Tuesday, November 12, 2013

Groupon

Groupon was supposed to be the next big thing when it came on the scene a few years ago.  But here is a chart of Groupon stock since it went public:


What happened?  I think these are some of the fundamental issues with Groupon:

1. Diminishing Returns

The first time a business offers a deal, everyone gets excited.  The vendor gets a bunch of new customers.  People learn about a new product or service in their local community.

But then when the same offer is presented again, it's not fresh anymore.  Most of the potential new customers already bought the deal the first time.  Each business has diminishing returns on future Groupons.

Over time, there are fewer new businesses to put out Groupons, and a saturation point is reached.  There are fewer and fewer new Groupons out there to be created, and since the best opportunities already went out first, the remaining businesses become poorer and poorer candidates for new Groupons.

Initial valuations based on extrapolation of Groupon's early successes missed out on recognizing this concept of diminishing returns.

2. Labor Intensiveness

Creating a Groupon seems very labor-intensive to me.  You have to individually hammer out all of the details with each new vendor, create the deal, get it exactly right, and then hope to do a very high volume, since there doesn't seem to be a very high margin on each of these deals.

It is easy to see the difficulty in getting these deals right by looking at all the mistakes that don't get caught before they go out.

See if you can figure out the mistakes in the images below:


Did you figure out the huge math mistake in the above example?  (hint: there's a reason only 12 people bought the second option)

If you didn't get the one above, this one is a little easier:


1 Comments:

At 7:50 AM, Blogger BrianM said...

I'd really like to meet one of those 10 idiots who purchased the second option.

 

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