■007599 Biv-tH Con-brol Supplies f Sexual Beal-tH Sewiees. For men and women Planned Parenthood • 1670 High, Eugene • 344-9411 Sheppard m “You don’t have to pay more to get more!" '99 VW Passat Sedan ■~,J99 Drivers wanted! 2300 West 7th • EUGENE • 343-8811 www.sheppardmotors.com E-commerce Continued from Page 1 LeeKwai, Entrepreneurs Club co founder and president. “It’s an easy business for students to do be cause all you need is the same tool you use for learning: a computer. ” LeeKwai, a senior majoring in Japanese and business adminis tration, started his own business in May called Maxxx Co. LeeK wai sells Fin-blockz, a product he invented to protect the fins of surfboards while traveling. The Fin-blockz are made of poly styrene, a foam-like substance, and fit like a plug over the fins. “I travel a lot surfing, and each time I’ve ended up with broken fins due to the impacts of luggage in travel,” LeeKwai said. “I’ve also come across many other surfers who’ve encountered the same problem.” As a student, LeeKwai did not want to take on distribution is sues. His solution was to sell his Fin-blockz on-line at www. bigfoot.com/~maxxxco. “My future plan was to do in ternational distribution,” LeeK wai said. “After an analysis, the international market proved to be relatively untouched.” International or local, LeeKwai said the Internet can be a relative ly cost-effective way to distribute. “In my opinion, electronic commerce is the most efficient business available to students,” LeeKwai said. So far, LeeKwai has sold all of his prototype de signs for $25 a piece. After summer, LeeKwai’s busi ness took a back seat to school and other activities. Subsequent ly, Maxxx Co. is for sale. But LeeKwai concedes that his ven ture was well worth it. “The money I invested in my company was more valuable than anything I could have studied in school,” LeeKwai said. LeeKwai said Maxxx Co. has grown from a hobby to a business and admits it would be a great in vestment for anyone looldng to enter the electronic commerce market. • “The money is there waiting for someone to take it,” LeeKwai said. “But it would have to be someone that knows about the surfing industry.” Alex Hughes, a junior majoring in journalism and a member of the University’s Entrepreneurs Club, has grossed nearly $6,000 since he started X-ray Visionz in June. As an independent Web site and graphic design consultant, Hughes charges $50 an hour for his services. Hughes has designed every thing from intranet sites to mass mailings to wedding invitations. As a graphic-design consultant for Kemper/Ford Marketing, Hughes created a mass-mailing campaign for Modell’s, a sporting goods store in New York. The campaign, which went out to 30,000 people in Manhattan, was designed to boost sales of Nike shoes at their stores. ESCO, an international steel manufacturing firm based out of Portland, sought Hughes to de sign an intranet site to aid depart ment executives in using the Web to research their competitors. “The site makes it so execu tives can use the Internet as a source for looking at competitors and their financial statements,” Hughes said. “It also serves as a form to announce information to their own department.” Although his business is thriv ing, Hughes is concerned that the attention paid to X-ray Visionz is detracting from what he wants to do after he graduates. “I don’t want to have to worry about making this successful if it’s not what I want to do for a liv ing,” Hughes said. “I’m worrying because it’s taking away a lot of the energy I need to put toward an internship in my field of study.” But Hughes agrees with LeeK wai that the Internet has a great deal of opportunities for students at very little cost. “Doing business over the Inter net speeds things up, increases productivity and it’s often a free way of advertising,” Hughes said. “All it cost me was a computer, and that was tax deductible.” Brian Jennaro, a senior finance and economics major, is a part ner in the Internet venture uo bookhunt.com, which started in May and allows University stu dents to trade their used text books on-line. Jennaro said that students can save an average of $129 each term on books if they use his site. Jennaro said students get an average of 10 to 15 percent return on their used books at the Uni versity Bookstore. He said stu dents buy, on average, five books a term for a total of $250. At UO Bookhunt, students can sell their books at the bookstore rate and make up to 75 percent on the sale as opposed to only 15 percent. Although the service to stu dents is free, Jennaro expects to profit from advertising revenue. He hopes that as more students take advantage of the service and post their books on-line, local businesses will want to advertise on his site. If the service stays here, Jennaro said he expects revenues to cover the cost of maintaining the Web site, plus a little more. But he also said that if the service is successful, he will expand to other campuses. “There’s no doubt that e-com merce will touch all facets of business,” Jennaro said. “It’s im portant to have your feet wet. 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