Excite Careers
Advertisement
drugstore.com 13920 SE Eastgate Way, Ste. 300, Bellevue, WA 98005
www.drugstore.com (425) 372-3200    Fax: (425) 372-3800  

The Scoop  

A winning formula

With thousands of products - from bubble bath to birth control - drugstore.com is changing the way that Americans shop for personal care items by shipping everything to their doors. CEO and founder Peter Neupert, a former Microsoft executive, is battling it out with Planetrx.com for supremacy in the online drugstore business - and so far, it appears that drugstore.com is winning. The company's investors and partners include Amazon.com, venerable Silicon Valley venture capital firm Kleiner Perkins Caulfield & Byers, and Rite Aid (customers can order prescriptions off drugstore.com and pick them up at their local Rite Aid). The company's July 1999 IPO - which came only five months after launch - raised nearly $70 million. A second public offering early in 2000 raised $100 million. And according to industry analysts, by November 1999 drugstore.com's share of the online drugstore market stood at 65 to 70 percent.

Aromatherapy, aisle six

Drugstore.com divides its site into seven categories: health, beauty, wellness, personal care, pharmacy, solutions, and boutique. Each offers a range of products and advice, from what to do if you get motion sickness to how to pluck your eyebrows so that they look like Lara Flynn Boyle's. In the non-pharmaceutical categories, the site offers mostly drugstore brands like Cover Girl and L'Oreal, as well as items like vitamins, diet products, razors, and anything else usually available at your local CVS. The launch of the boutique section in late 1999, with high-end brands like Philosophy, Ahava, Zirh, and Peter Thomas Roth Clinical Skincare, signaled drugstore.com's eagerness to reach out to a more upscale customer. The acquisition of Beauty.com, a posh purveyor of makeup, skin care, and fragrances, in January 2000 for $42 million in stock also helped solidify the company's upmarket strategy. Beauty.com will keep its web site, brand, and offices separate from its parent, but will benefit from drugstore.com's distribution network and back-office systems.

Profitability? On the horizon

While CEO Neupert is confident that the company will turn a profit within three years, like most e-commerce companies drugstore.com is still hemorrhaging cash. The hope is that as consumers grow more accustomed to ordering everything from groceries to power tools to lipstick off the Web, they'll also buy into drugstore.com's promise to change the way they shop for their family's sundries. The site also got a boost with the January 2000 announcement that Amazon will integrate its mega-store with drugstore.com's products, even creating a drugstore.com "tab" on its web site - the first time that Amazon has agreed to permanently feature an investment partner on its site. Amazon also upped its stake in drugstore.com, from 26.8 percent to nearly 28 percent.

Drugstore.com now has over one million customers and is growing quickly, as new customers join the repeat users. All this interest in the company comes thanks to features such as product comparisons, shopping guides, and rewards for frequent and multiple purchases. Drugstore.com opened its own distribution center in February 2000 to help fill orders.

Getting Hired  

Drugstore.com lists job opportunities on its web site for both its Seattle, WA and Bridgeport, NJ locations. Prospective employees can e-mail their resumes to jobs@drugstore.com. The company also has a campus recruiting program for MBAs, which provides management opportunities in several departments; MBA candidates can e-mail their resumes to mbajobs@drugstore.com with their school's name as the subject header. Drugstore.com also hires newly-minted pharmacists to work in its distribution centers, and these candidates should send an e-mail to jobs@drugstore.com with Campus Pharmacy Recruiting as the subject header. In addition, drugstore.com actively recruits students with technical degrees in subject areas like computer science, electrical and industrial engineering, and applied math.

In keeping with the site's focus on wellness, drugstore.com offers full medical and dental coverage to its employees. Other benefits include two weeks' paid vacation, 401(k), and stock options.

Products and Services  

Online drugstore

More Company Profiles

For more career information, go to Vault.com
©2000, Vault.com Inc


 Click here to email this page to a friend  


SEARCH ANOTHER COMPANY
A B C D E F G H
I J K L M N O P Q
R S T U V W X Y Z

VAULT RESOURCES
Vault Message Boards
Vault Member Directory

Advertisement