Pubdate: Thu, 5 Nov 1998 Source: San Jose Mercury News (CA) Contact: http://www.sjmercury.com/ Copyright: 1998 Mercury Center Author: Scott Herhold 2 START-UPS VIE FOR PRESCRIPTION DRUG SALES ON WEB SITES Online medical battle enlists venture elite A report from the trenches of the Great Online Drugstore Battle resembles a dispatch from a real war. Neither side is anxious to talk about strategy, tactics or casualties. In an Internet-commerceworld where people are usually only too happy to preach the merits of their products, the answers from PlanetRx and Drugstore.com are the terse and maddeningly vague recitations of a military press briefing. But the color of the uniforms and the shape of the weaponry attract inescapable interest. Two start-ups, each with a high-profile CEO, each backed by the venture elite, are aiming to open Web sites, probably early next year. Drugstore.com, begun as a concept by entrepreneur Jed Smith, is backed by the venture firm Kleiner, Perkins, Caufield & Byers. Its CEO is Peter Neupert, who once served as vice president of news and publishing in Microsoft's interactive media group. (Among other things, he supervised Slate, the Microsoft-backed online magazine). Drugstore.com's board includes Kleiner Perkins' John Doerr and Brook Byers. Its locale of business: Redmond, Wash. PlanetRx, which was begun by entrepreneur Michael Bruner, has received $5 million from the venture firms Benchmark Capital and Sequoia Capital. (Kleiner Perkins does not reveal the size of its investments.) PlanetRx's CEO is Bill Razzouk, a former executive at Federal Express, and, briefly, at America Online Inc. Its board members include David Beirne at Benchmark and Michael Moritz of Sequoia (Beirne, in fact, recruited Razzouk). Its locale: Oakland, with a move to San Francisco planned. Both companies are trying to tackle the complicated task of filling prescriptions -- and offering related products -- online. What makes it difficult is that any online pharmacy has to meld its current efforts with the traditional world of paper and doctors' scrawls. Because many doctors' offices do not use the Web and because many states do not allow electronic submission of prescriptions, both start-ups will have to field phoned or faxed prescriptions from medical offices. The idea is that, ultimately, the customer will find far more convenience in ordering, say, tetracycline from the Web -- and then waiting for a speedy delivery -- than in trekking to the nearest pharmacy. While they pledge to be competitive on price, neither Drugstore.com nor PlanetRx claims that lower cost is a fundamental part of its appeal. A lot of other people have their eye on this same market, which is estimated to be as large as $160 billion per year through traditional outlets. An Austin start-up, Rx.com, plans to be operational next year. And some of the big drugstore chains could follow. But on Sand Hill Road, the question is: Which of the two venture-backed start-ups is ahead: Neupert or Razzouk? Kleiner Perkins or Benchmark and Sequoia? Redmond or Oakland? It's almost impossible to tell from the outside, though it is fair to point out that Neupert has been in his job a few months longer than Razzouk. Both PlanetRx and Drugstore.com say it's more important to do things right than to be first. ``We're up and running,'' says Suzan DelBene, Drugstore.com's vice president of marketing. ``There's only one big milestone: Opening our front door, and we're not ready to do that.'' ``I think we've got an excellent blueprint. We're pouring concrete as fast as we can,'' says Razzouk. Ask him when the Web site will open and he says only: ``Soon.'' Contact Scott Herhold by telephone at (408) 920-5877, by fax at (408) 920-5917, or by e-mail at . - --- Checked-by: Rolf Ernst