Monk E-business

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Rise of the New Dot Com Entrepreneurs

In Web 2.0, everybody is selling online. In this case, seven Wisconsin monks have established a several million dollar business selling office supplies online. The funds are then used for the monks' charitible ventures.

From Wired:
It's early morning in the dense woods of western Wisconsin, and inside a remote abbey at the end of a winding dirt road, seven monks are praying. Father Bernard McCoy, an intense, watchful man draped in black and white robes, bows before the halogen-lit sanctuary. He has been a cloistered monk for 17 years and believes strongly in silence, ­humility, and prayer. Today he is contemplating the adage that we were born of dust and to dust we will return. While that may be true, McCoy has also realized that you can make a ­fortune packaging and marketing a different kind of dust â€" one never mentioned in the Bible.

McCoy is the self-styled chief operating monk of the abbey's multimillion-dollar online printer-cartridge business. Four years ago, the monastery had little income, mounting debt, and steadily declining cash reserves. All members of the 900-year-old Cistercian Order are expected to work part of every day to support their abbey. As the monastery's steward of temporal affairs, it fell to McCoy to save the brotherhood from financial ruin. His solution: dust.
Trend Themes
1. E-commerce for Social Good - The rise of e-commerce businesses that sell products online and use the proceeds to support charitable ventures.
2. Niche Market Dominance - Small businesses with unique products or services are dominating niche markets through e-commerce.
3. Non-traditional Entrepreneurship - Individuals and groups who may not fit the traditional profile of an entrepreneur are building successful businesses through e-commerce.
Industry Implications
1. Office Supplies - Office supply retailers can take advantage of e-commerce platforms to sell products and differentiate themselves from larger competitors.
2. Charitable Organizations - Charitable organizations can explore e-commerce as a way to fundraise and support their cause.
3. Religious Groups - Religious groups and organizations can use e-commerce to support their mission and generate revenue for their community.

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