Tag: Snapdeal

  • Snapdeal ropes in Aamir Khan as brand ambassador

    By Shambhavi Anand

     

    Online marketplace major Snapdeal has roped in Bollywood actor Aamir Khan as its brand ambassador. The endorsement fee for the actor is said to be in the range of Rs 15-20 crore, according to industry estimates.

     

    Snapdeal will launch Khan as its ambassador through an extensive campaign which will be launched on television and online.

     

    The campaign has been planned by Leo Burnett, which has bagged a portion of e-commerce company’s creative account following a multi-agency pitch, which started in November last year. The account is worth Rs 100 crore, according to an executive aware of the development.

     

    Aamir Khan is known to be selective about the brands that he endorses. In the past, he has been associated with brands like Coca Cola, Samsung, Godrej, Tata Sky and Titan watches. Leo Burnett declined to comment on the development. In an email response, Snapdeal spokesperson said, “This is speculation and as a policy, we do not comment on speculations.”

     

    Most e-commerce companies have been getting celebrities, especially actors, on board to endorse their brands. Yepme roped in Shah Rukh Khan recently. Myntra got on board Ranveer Singh. LimeRoad and Jabong have Neha Dhupia and Yami Gautam as their ambassadors, respectively.

     

    Snapdeal has been working with FCB Ulka for the past three years and is believed to have retained the agency. The upcoming campaign planned by Leo Burnett will go live next week and will have Khan endorsing the campaign. Snapdeal’s campaign during Diwali had around 40 TV commercials and had more than 20 celebrities endorsing the brand. Personalities such as Alok Nath, Harsha Bhogle, Mandira Bedi and many others were a part of it.

     

    Snapdeal is believed to be negotiating terms with Alibaba for a record funding round of Rs 6,200 crore. In October last year, it raised Rs 3,800 crore ($627 million) from Japan’s SoftBank, valuing the company at Rs 11,200 crore.

     

    Source:The Economic Times

    Copyright © 2015, Bennett, Coleman & Co. Ltd.

    All Rights Reserved, Licensed to republish

     

  • After Flipkart’s Adiquity deal, Snapdeal eyes Komli for $300m

    By Pankaj Mishra & Jayadevan PK

     

    Online retailer Snapdeal is in advanced talks to acquire Komli Media in a deal that values the ad technology company at about $300 million, the same as when it raised funds from investors last year.

     

    The deal will give Snapdeal engineering capabilities in Bengaluru as it battles Flipkart, as well as help it notch up advertising revenues by selling space on the ecommerce site, according to a person familiar with the deal. “These guys have so much traffic, it makes sense to monetise it,” said another person. According to audience measurement platform SimilarWeb, Snapdeal had an estimated 79.8 monthly visitors in February and Flipkart, 110.5 million.

     

    Flipkart recently made clear its plans to sell advertising on its platform. The ecommerce firm also acquired ad technology company Adiquity. “This is incorrect, we are not acquiring Komli media,” a spokesperson for Snapdeal said. An e-mail to Snapdeal co-founder Kunal Bahl was unanswered at the time of going to press.

     

    Amar Goyal, CEO & Chairman of Komli Media, declined to comment on the deal. Komli, founded in 2006, has raised $97 million in five rounds from investors including Nexus Venture Partners and Peepul Capital. It employs nearly 300 people across India and started as a digital advertising network – buying and selling advertising inventory online in Asia Pacific.

     

    Goel also set up Pubmatic, focused on technology for online advertising in the US in 2008. Inmobi, another ad-network based in Bengaluru, was founded a year later and went on to raise $200 million from Japan’s Softbank.

     

    Driven by increased spending by ecommerce companies, India’s online advertising market is set to grow by 30% this financial year to reach a total size of Rs 3,575 crore, according to the Digital Advertising India report by the Internet and Mobile Association of India.

     

    Source:The Economic Times

    Copyright © 2015, Bennett, Coleman & Co. Ltd.

    All Rights Reserved, Licensed to republish

     

  • Snapdeal brings in Jeyandran Venugopal as Technology Advisor

    By A Correspondent

     

    Snapdeal.com has announced the appointed of Jeyandran Venugopal as Technology Advisor. Jeyandran will be associated with the Snapdeal family in an advisory capacity and work with the leadership team to lay down the strategic technology roadmap for the future.

     

    Snapdeal has been ramping up its engineering team aggressively to further build and enhance customer and seller experience on its site. With the aspiration to become a globally renowned technology leader, Snapdeal’s 1000+ people strong engineering team aims to continue raising the bar on technology that enables great buyer and seller experience.

     

    Jeyandran will work closely with Snapdeal’s technology leadership team to scale up and further improve the underlying architecture and use his rich experience to make the Snapdeal platform future ready.

     

    Jeyandran comes with over 16 years of rich experience in leading global technology companies like Amazon and Yahoo. He has been instrumental in building the right technology backbones and creating some of their core systems. He was also a part of the team that set up Amazon’s India offices during his stint at the company. He holds a number of patents in his name for his path breaking work in technology. Prior to Snapdeal, he was a Vice President and a part of the executive leadership team at the Yahoo R&D Division in Bangalore.

     

    “We are thrilled to have Jeyandran as an advisor for the Snapdeal family. He comes with a rich experience and has played game changing roles in his previous organizations. Technology and innovation are at the core of our company, and we are positive that given his passion for technology, he will enable Snapdeal to continue to innovate and create life changing experience for buyers and sellers,” said Rohit bansal, Co-founder at Snapdeal.

     

    Speaking about his appointment, Jeyandran Venugopal said, “e-Commerce is one of the fastest growing sectors in the country today. I find Snapdeal’s vision to be really inspiring and ambitious and am very excited to be a part of building world class products in India for Indian consumers and merchants.  Having worked in the internet space for several years, I want to use my experience and knowledge of the product and technology aspect of this area in assisting Snapdeal to become the best technology platform in the country.”

     

     

     

  • Snapdeal enters into strategic tie-up with Hungama

    By A Correspondent

     

    Hungama.com has entered into a strategic partnership with Snapdeal, India’s largest online marketplace to offer digital entertainment content to its shoppers. The tie-up between the two leading digital entities will begin with an offer wherein shoppers on Snapdeal’s mobile app will get access to Hungama’s Premium PRO service free for a period of nine (9) weeks.

     

    Hungama PRO, which is a paid premium subscription service, offers users HD quality music videos with the lyrics of songs, and can be accessed offline without any internet charges. It is also an ad-free app, which further makes for a hassle-free experience. The mobile app is available for download from the Google Play Store and the iOS App Store. After the first nine weeks, the service will later be made available to the users at a price of Rs 120 per month.

     

    Both Snapdeal and Hungama have been focusing on expanding their leadership position by tapping into developing Tier-II markets. The recent update that brought transliteration features to Hungama’s Android app, made it one of the first India apps to be available in five languages – English, Hindi, Tamil, Telugu and Punjabi – an ideal service for Snapdeal’s userbase that is spread across 5000 plus cities and towns in India.

     

    Speaking on partnering with Snapdeal, Siddhartha Roy, CEO at Hungama.com, said: “With music and shopping being among the primary drivers of mobile internet consumption, our tie-up aims to offer users an enhanced value proposition. 2015 is likely to be a vital year for brands to out to Middle Bharat, and tie-ups like this will help our brands to attract a larger share of the consumer’s mind space.”

     

    “We at Snapdeal are focusing hugely on making sure our customers get a great shopping experience on our app. The partnership with Hungama brings shopping and music together, both are a way of life for Indian consumers. We want to encourage the growing love of apps by providing customers with what they love most –high quality uninterrupted music and awesome deals on the go,” commented Mr. Sandeep Komaravelly, SVP, Marketing at Snapdeal.com

     

  • Snapdeal leaves shoppers high and dry on sales day

    By John Sarkar

     

    Snapdeal, one of the country’s largest online retailers, did a Flipkart on Tuesday, failing to deliver on its promises of big discounts and speedy deliveries on its Savings Day sale. The mess-up evoked the ire of hundreds of online shoppers, who took to social media to accuse the e-tailer of cheating them in the name of a ‘big sale’.

     

    “After spending crores to advertise for today’s sale, Snapdeal payment checkout page is not working,” tweeted Rohit Bhardwaj.

     

    With bitter memories of cancelled orders, out-of-stock products and website crashes on Flipkart’s Big Billion Day sale, online shoppers were hoping that its rivals would have worked out a seamless strategy to handle surges in demand.

     

    But at 7am on Tuesday, when Snapdeal started its sale, shoppers were confronted with numerous surprises including a blank site, discounted products that were conspicuous by their absence and checkout pages that did not work. It reminded them of Flipkart’s Big Billion Day sale when millions of online shoppers were left high and dry despite the e-tailer raking in Rs 600 crore in 10 hours. Later, Flipkart founders Sachin and Binny Bansal tendered a public apology for not meeting the expectations of their consumers.

     

    “Snapdeal cannot get its site to open on their sale day. At least Flipkart got that right,” tweeted The Greater Fool.

     

    While a Snapdeal spokesperson refused to comment on the day’s proceedings, industry leaders said that e-tailers in India and their logistics partners are not yet ready to handle huge spikes in demand that are usually witnessed during flash sales and festivals. “You cannot build so much of extra capacity that it will remain unused for the rest of the year,” said Praveen Sinha, co-founder of Jabong, an online fashion and lifestyle retailer.

     

    Source:The Economic Times

    Copyright © 2014, Bennett, Coleman & Co. Ltd. All Rights Reserved

    Licensed to republish

     

  • Success of Flipkart and Snapdeal spawns name-copying in the e-commerce market

    By Rasul Bailay

     

    You have an e-commerce business model, you have startup funding, you are all fired up, and now you need a name for your company. Take note – the online bazaar is stuffed full of something ‘kart’ or something ‘deal’, a manic copying frenzy thanks to headline grabbing successes of Flipkart and Snapdeal.

     

    There are at least 15 e-commerce sites that have ‘kart’ appended to their name. ‘Deal’ has attracted at least a dozen ventures. So, you have relatively well-known HealthKart and LensKart to relatively less-known e-tailers such as VeggieKart, SafetyKart, Mygreenkart, Metalkart, Bagskart, Jewelskart, Yaari Kart, AssamKart and even a Spritualkart. Just as you have entedeal, freedealsguru, indiasmartdeal, Dealtz, and the very prosaic, Daily Deal.

     

    Ecommerce entrepreneurs are divided over whether such name cloning works. Some like Arun Chandra Mohan are dead set against ‘kart’ or ‘deal’ or ‘for you’, another awfully common online venture naming strategy. Mohan’s venture went online in 2011.

     

    And the name? Jabong. Jabong, as everyone knows, has done pretty well for itself, despite being nonkart and non-deal.

     

    But e-entrepreneurs still finding their feet in the tough online marketplace differ. There are startups that say naming ventures ‘kart’ and ‘deal’ will quickly identify them as ecommerce websites.

     

    “Many ecommerce ventures now use the ‘kart’ thing so people can easily understand what they are about,” says Bikash Kalita, cofounder of Guwahati-based AssamKart. com.

     

    AssamKart sells e-books in Assamese as well as English language books written by Assamese authors. “If we had any other name then we would have had to explain ourselves. Since Flipkart, Lenskart, etc, are well known, people know from our name what we are about,” Kalita says.

     

    Aasheesh Mediratta, CEO, Fashionandyou. com, takes a ‘it doesn’t matter’ line. ‘Karts’ and ‘deals’ may give short-term advantage to newbies and irritate the established ‘karts’ and ‘deals’, but what matters over time is service quality, Mediratta argues. “This can divert small share of traffic to such sites. But along with the name, it is the business model, execution and offering which make the brand difficult to be cloned or impacted,” he says.

     

    But what about cases where similar sounding names are a coincidence? Then the less-famous ‘kart’ or ‘deal’ just has to live with it. Peyush Bansal, founder of online eyewear seller Lenskart, says his company had registered the domain name in 2008, “years before Flipkart became famous”.

     

    “Were I naming my company today there’s no way I would pick the same name,” Bansal says, “but now I have no choice because our brand is well known.” This Bansal simply didn’t know that the other Bansals, running the big daddy of all ‘karts’, Flipkart, would one day make it so big.

     

    There’s a darker side to the name cloning story – straight copying and infringement. Last year, Shopclues executives were shocked to discover a site registered in Dubai that not only used Shopclues’ logo but even copied the Gurgaonbased firm’s contents.

     

    “They had completely copied the whole thing. That was copyright infringement more than anything else. They had even copied the management profile by just changing the names,” says Radhika Aggarwal, co-founder of Shopclues.

     

    Aggarwal says there are many cyber squatters in China sitting on cloned names – Shopklues and Shopcluss are among the more inventive ones. “Many times we let it go…but if there is blatant copyright infringement we make sure to send legal notices,” Aggarwal says.

     

    India’s largest fashion and accessories portal Myntra.com had a name problem, too. Its Twitter handle was stolen and then restored and on YouTube, ‘Myntra’ was taken. So, the Bangalorebased company had to settle for Myntra.com for its YouTube account. But at least, Myntra is tougher to name-clone than a kart or a deal.

     

    Source:The Economic Times

    Copyright © 2014, Bennett, Coleman & Co. Ltd. All Rights Reserved

    Licensed to republish

     

  • It’s a deal! Ratan Tata invests in Snapdeal

    By A Correspondent

     

    Ratan Tata, chairman emeritus at Tata Sons, has invested in Delhi-based online marketplace Snapdeal. The company did not disclose the amount invested. The announcement comes a day after Snapdeal entered into a partnership with Tata Value Homes to sell apartment units of projects spread across five cities, namely, Bangalore, Chennai, Pune, Mumbai and Ahmedabad.

     

    Snapdeal’s cofounder and chief executive Kunal Bahl termed Tata’s investment a validation of the company’s growth. “An investment by a legendary and respected figure like Mr. Tata is an excellent validation of our focused strategy on building a long term enterprise and marks the start of a very important phase for the company,” said Bahl.

     

    This investment also underlines the growing interest shown by India’s traditional industries in the fast-growing ecommerce sector. Recently traditional retail majors like Reliance and Arvind have made forays online.

     

    The sector has also attracted large investments in the past few months. Snapdeal raised over $233 million this year in two rounds from investors like eBay Inc, Singapore-based Temasek and Wipro chairman Azim Premji’s family office Premji Invest. Market leader Flipkart too raised two rounds of funding this year. In July it raised $1 billion from existing investors and Singapore sovereign wealth fund GIC. Global major Amazon also announced a $2 billion investment for its India operations in July.

     

    Snapdeal, which is estimated to have crossed $1 billion in sales this year, is rapidly adding new categories of products. Apart from apartments, it has launched a catering supplies segment recently. In the next few months the four-year-old platform is planning to add 10 more categories.  Bahl has stated in the past that the company will focus on adding new merchants, new categories and focus on mobile commerce to ensure growth.

     

    Source:The Economic Times

    Copyright © 2014, Bennett, Coleman & Co. Ltd. All Rights Reserved

    Licensed to republish

     

  • FCB Ulka highlights ‘Shake Feature’ for Snapdeal

    By A Correspondent

     

    Smartphones have empowered consumers to shop on the go, at a time convenient to them. This calls for a shift in focus to a more tech savvy way of shopping i.e. via a mobile phone. But how do online retailers get consumers to download their mobile app instead of the competition? One way of course, is to innovate and introduce new features and thereby create a superior shopping experience. Snapdeal’s Shake Feature does exactly that. The new TVC created by FCB Ulka gets the message across, by highlighting the app cleverly.

     

    Keeping the quirkiness that is the hallmark of Snapdeal’s communication, the Shake Feature TVC, crafted by FCB Ulka, shows the protagonist (played by actor Pulkit Samrat) dancing at a colorful Indian wedding. Every time he does a shake with his smartphone in hand, he is given money by an enthusiastic relative in the wedding party. The voice over meanwhile tells the viewers that using Shake Feature is a sure shot way to get additional discounts from Snapdeal.

     

    Sachin Das Burma, Group Creative Director, FCB Ulka, commented on the campaign “The shake feature is a new thing and we wanted the communication to demonstrate this in an interesting manner, without losing out on the entertainment quotient and slice of life situation that has been our attempt for all work we do on snapdeal. I think we have managed to achieve that.”

     

    Sandeep Komaravelly, Vice President Marketing, Snapdeal.com, said, “The smartphone has become an extremely important medium to reach out to our customers. 50% of our transactions on Snapdeal.com come via our mobile app. The Shake feature is an innovative step to amplify the user experience while shopping on the mobile application. The customers will be able to avail exciting offers on diverse range of 4 lakh products across 6000+ brands.”

     

  • Ready to take on Amazon

     

    By Rahul Sachitanand

     

    Eleven months ago, India’s e-commerce sector got an ominous warning of a sleeping giant’s rise. Amazon, the $74.5-billion giant, which had been quietly watching the local market grow from $2.5 billion in 2009 to $16 billion in 2013, according to industry lobby Assocham, decided to make an understated entry.

     

    Even as its largest Indian rival, Flipkart, was cruising towards a billion dollars in revenues and another, Snapdeal, was making similar intentions known, Seattle-based Amazon made a low-key foray. It launched in a couple of categories – books and movies and TV shows – with firm plans to take a large bite of a market expected to reach up to $56 billion by 2023. Amazon has been quick off the blocks.

     

    Since its launch in June 2013 (it launched Junglee India, an online comparison engine in 2012), the company has gone from two categories to 24, from zero sellers on its marketplace to around 1,000.

     

    Amazon has been on the move, not only by launching category after category, but pushing the envelope on other fronts. It was the first to launch next day and same day delivery; it innovated by piloting deliveries at HPCL and BPCL outlets and even dropping off packages at small kirana stores in select locations.

     

    “We believe that the growth is at an inflection point and there is tremendous opportunity,” says Amit Agarwal, vice-president and country manager, Amazon India. “India is a large opportunity from a consumer and service standpoint to create differentiation and we were ready when we launched to take advantage of that.”

     

    Amazon is dead serious about the Indian market. It spent nearly $3.5 million on lobbying in 2013, according to filings to the US Senate, including efforts to push through foreign direct investment in retail. In the first quarter of this calendar year it again spent around $1.5 million to press its case.

     

    Junglee , meanwhile, has emerged to be India’s No. 1 comparison site with over 30 million products, over 1,900 online sellers and over 80,000 local sellers. Even as the global giant goes to battle, its two largest rivals aren’t prepared to be sitting ducks.

     

    Sachin Bansal

    According to industry insiders, the battle is evolving into an Amazon vs Flipkart one, with Snapdeal as a scrappy third rival. Sachin Bansal, CEO and co-founder of Flipkart, has had a firsthand view of Amazon’s global adventure, as a software engineer for the web giant for nearly two years between 2006 and 2007.

     

    It was this stint that convinced him to team up with IIT Delhi batchmate Binny Bansal, to start an online book selling venture in 2007 that began in a rudimentary 800-sq ft office and grew into a billion dollar online hypermarket, with over 100,000 shipments a day for products across some 20 categories. Today, Sachin Bansal is preparing to go to battle with the company he ardently admires.

     

    “We are prepared to take on global rivals,” he says. “We are strongly customer-focused and we believe we have the best logistics, supply chain and technology in the industry.”

     

    This strong focus has helped Flipkart. The company, which has raised $550 million from marquee investors such as Tiger Global and Accel amongst a host of others, started off as an inventory-led e-retailer but transitioned into a full-fledged market place, lining up an assortment of 4,000 sellers in its quest for $1 billion in revenue.

     

    Having reached that landmark (a year before its expectations), Sachin Bansal believes that the next battle will be fought not on computers and broadband connections but over mobile broadband users. “In our next stage of evolution, we want to be recognized not as an e-commerce company, but as an m-commerce company,” he says.

     

    The firm is rapidly adding sellers and expects to rapidly increase this to up to 15,000 sellers in the next year. Flipkart’s switch from an inventory-led company to a market place was hardly trouble-free. The firm struggled with plunging customer satisfaction, quality issues and logistical headaches as it faced up to an exponentially larger business.

     

    More recently, it found itself in hot water for allegedly violating the Foreign Exchange Management Act to the tune of Rs 1,400 crore. While this investigation by the Enforcement Directorate dates back to before April 2013, when it switched to the market place model, Flipkart says it had broken no rules even back then.

     

    With Amazon making its presence felt in the fast-growing Indian market, its largest domestic rivals know they need to act and act decisively. The market has been through several rounds of churn, as VCs initially chased opportunity in the market, only to see many of their investments crash and burn.

     

    According to estimates from NextBigWhat, a website focused on entrepreneurship, 136 e-commerce firms shut shop between November 2012 and April 2013. According to other data from Allegro Capital, an investment banking boutique in Bangalore, 80 per cent of all Indian ecommerce companies are on their last legs, having failed to raise fresh funds.

     

    Between 2010 and 2013, 52 e-commerce firms raised some $700 million in funding, but just 18 of them attracted a follow-up round. In the past year to 18 months, there has been a substantial clear-out in India’s e-commerce space, as investors have been wary of investing in this space, either backing largescale players such as Flipkart or putting smaller amounts into high-margin niche start-ups.

     

    The Other Challenger

    Snapdeal’s co-founder and CEO Kunal Bahl says that with their initial focus – on group buying – the company risked being swept away in this tumult. Instead, Snapdeal pivoted from its early focus to also become perhaps India’s largest marketplace with some 20,000 sellers on its platform. Now, Bahl claims, the firm is on track to clock revenues of $1 billion – within five years of starting up.

     

    “When we launched in the group buying segment, we were the seventh player and in six months there were 50 more rivals jockeying with us,” says Mr Bahl. “We got 70 per cent market share in 14 months and, when we decided to change business strategies, our idea was called ridiculous, stupid and dumb.”

     

    Despite the criticism, the founders of Snapdeal persisted and, backed by funding from the likes of eBay, today claim they are months away from clocking revenues of $1 billion. “Had we run an inventory business, we would have been a distant follower,” says Mr Bahl.

     

    “From being six steps behind in the race, we went to being four steps ahead.” He points out that from an overcrowded market of some 800-1,000 companies in 2011, only a handful survived and Snapdeal’s decision to pivot its business model helped it be one of them. “We have five million products on our site and we’re adding a new product every 30 seconds.”

     

    Mr Bahl wants to face up to Amazon’s might and is confident of putting up a strong fight. Despite the aggression of its domestic rivals, Amazon’s Agarwal is unmoved. “There is significant potential for innovation to improve customer experience,” he contends. “While Indian e-commerce is growing rapidly, it is still in nascent stages. It’s truly Day 1 for e-commerce in India and we are committed to aggressively invest over the long term and relentlessly focus on earning customer trust.”

     

    Rather than building a monopoly in India, he admits there is space for multiple formats and players here. “We are going to relentlessly focus on expanding our selection, bring significant cost savings, provide fast and reliable delivery, and raise the bar for online shopping experiences in India, much like we have done everywhere else in the world,” adds Mr Agarwal.

     

    Despite Amazon’s swagger, Flipkart isn’t easily intimidated – Bansal the CEO is working overtime to keep the fires going. When ET Magazine spoke to him in Bangalore, it was his wedding anniversary and he spoke to this writer in between attending a public function and before getting to other official meetings and calls. “We are constantly thinking of new ways to grow the business,” he says.

     

    “In a few years we want to go from a few thousand sellers to millions of sellers on our platform.” Flipkart can expect some stout competition from Amazon in this race to accumulate sellers. “We offer the most comprehensive suite of options for sellers to grow their business online and make profits in India,” boasts Mr Agarwal of Amazon. He points to solutions such as Fulfilment by Amazon (FBA) service, a pay-as-yougo fulfilment service, as enticements for sellers, wherein Amazon takes care of packing, shipping and delivery of sellers’ products.

     

    “We strive to do the heavy-lifting on their behalf while they focus on their core business functions,” adds Mr Agarwal. Today over 75 per cent of units shipped are FBA. Over 200,000 products are available for next-day delivery on Amazon. Over 60 per cent of existing demands are already eligible for next-day shipping.

     

    Amazon isn’t holding back in its pursuit of both sellers and buyers. Another initiative it is aggressively rolling out is Amazon Easy Ship, an assisted shipping service that makes it easy for sellers to ship products across India. With Easy Ship, after order confirmation, sellers pick and pack the shipment, confirm to Amazon that they are ready to ship and Amazon collects the shipment and ensures that the product is delivered to the customer.

     

    Sellers benefit from low shipping rates, COD and pre-paid orders, scheduled pick-ups, faster delivery and automated shipment tracking. Experts feel that India’s e-commerce industry has reached an inflection point. “Amazon’s entry has bought some urgency and competition into the market,” says Pragya Singh, associate vice-president, Technopak, an advisory firm.

     

    According to her, the arrival of Amazon will likely catalyze a further consolidation in the market, which will see the emergence of three or four large Indian players and a long tail of high-margin speciality players in categories such as apparel, accessories and jewellery.

     

    “With electronic retail accounting for barely 1 per cent of overall organized retail, there is plenty of headroom for growth,” adds Ms Singh. It is this headroom that both Flipkart and Snapdeal are chasing, with varying strategies. Analysts and investors say that Flipkart has built a stronger brand for itself due to its stronger urban reach and positioning, while Snapdeal is stronger in the hinterland.

     

    Flipkart is also the more valuable of the two – it was valued at $1.6 billion in its last round of funding – compared with $400 million for Snapdeal (as in February). Both Flipkart and Snapdeal are bulking up with an eye on the future.

     

    Flipkart’s chief executive Mr Bansal told this writer in a previous interaction at the headquarters in Bangalore that the firm was open to inorganic growth. One such deal may shortly come its way, as it seeks to nail down a protracted deal for Myntra, a provider of fashion and apparel online. While the deal appeared to be progressing on schedule, at least two investors said the Myntra team balked at a final valuation.

     

    To try to have the scale to compete with Amazon, Snapdeal too is keen on inorganic growth. Most recently it acquired Doozton, an online product discovery firm, to expand its presence in apparel and fashion. Previously, it acquired Grabbon, Esportsbuy and Shopo to expand into areas such as sports equipment and Indian handicraft and strengthen its presence as a full-fledged e-commerce market place.

     

    “We are accelerating before takeoff,” says Mr Bahl of Snapdeal. “E-commerce is going to be a $100-billion industry in the next 10 or 15 years and we need to stay nimble and scrappy and pick our battles.” Even as both companies add muscle to their businesses inorganically, the real scale may come the hard way – from adding new categories and products to their baskets.

     

    For example, Flipkart has rolled out a range of furniture and wants to expand its presence in white goods. Snapdeal too is constantly ramping up several categories – including some unexpected ones such as car tyres where it is seeing strong sales.

     

    “People are buying sets of four tyres worth Rs 40,000-50,000 online,” says Mr Bahl. It also stocks 600 types of air-conditioners, 300 varieties of refrigerators and 400 water coolers from an assortment of sellers. Ms Singh of Technopak thinks that the e-commerce industry is graduating from one where companies are relentlessly chasing consumers to the next phase, where companies focus on value-added services such as supply chain and logistics and on how to retain customers, rather than spend precious money on lassoing new ones.

     

    Having been beaten to the punch by Amazon, Flipkart and Snapdeal are both hoping to make up for lost time with their competing offerings on this front. “Value-added services will be the next big battle in India’s e-commerce market,” says Mr Bansal of Flipkart. The firm, which launched eKart, its in-house logistics arm around a year ago, is now preparing to offer its services to third parties.

     

    Even as Flipkart, Snapdeal and the rest of India’s e-commerce industry fortify themselves against Amazon, the multinational behemoth is setting itself to face the onslaught. “We are committed to the India market and we continue to invent and invest on behalf of customers,” says Mr Agarwal of Amazon India.\

     

    “With Amazon.in, we endeavour to build the most trusted and convenient shopping experience.” With revenues north of $200 million, according to industry estimates, Amazon India may have already laid down a daunting gauntlet for its Indian rivals.

     

    Source:The Economic Times

    Copyright © 2014, Bennett, Coleman & Co. Ltd. All Rights Reserved

    Licensed to republish

     

  • It’s Amazon v/s Flipkart & Snapdeal

     

    By Radhika P Nair & Aditi Shrivastava

     

    Amazon India is casting a snare to draw more small merchants into its fold as it battles India’s top online retailers Flipkart and Snapdeal for supremacy in the country’s booming ecommerce industry. Beginning Wednesday, merchants can sell their wares on the same day they register on Amazon’s portal compared with the nearly two weeks it takes on competing platforms.

     

    The world’s largest online retailer is also expanding the range of products that will be delivered to customers within a day, displaying the trademark aggression that marks its global operations nearly 10 months after launching services in India.

     

    “A few thousand sellers have already registered for the new service,” said Amit Deshpande, a director and general manager at Amazon India who said the company already has a roster of 4,000 sellers.

     

    These moves, coming days after the company launched a high-voltage advertisement campaign including television spots during the current edition of the Indian Premier League, is aimed at getting the largest number of merchants and the widest variety of products for Amazon customers.

     

    “Amazon is moving from first gear to fourth,” said Arvind Singhal, chairman of retail advisory Technopak. “They have the basics in place.”

     

    Amazon is Trend-Setter

    Market leader Flipkart, which just reached the milestone of $1 billion (over Rs 6,000 crore) in sales, also has about 4,000 sellers on its marketplace. But it follows an invite-only model to sign on sellers which is more time-consuming.

     

    “Even though I am already a seller on Flipkart, if I need to add a new category it will take about two weeks to start selling,” said Eshan Arif, 24, co-founder of Bengaluru-based music and movie merchandise store Hysteria. For a first-time registration it takes about three weeks from signing up to a live listing. Flipkart declined to comment for the article.

     

    Industry estimates peg Amazon India’s sales at over $200 million (Rs 1,200 crore) although the company declined to share sales numbers. At current growth rates, Amazon is capable of clocking sales of $1 billion (Rs 6,000 crore) by the end of March 2016.

     

    This will make Amazon the first online retailer in India to reach the magic number within three years of launch. Flipkart, which reached the milestone in March this year, took seven years. Snapdeal, launched in 2010, expects to reach $1 billion in sales this year.

     

    Snapdeal did not respond to email queries. Merchants who do business with all the top Indian portals said Amazon has taken a lead in categories including books and watches and is set to duplicate it in jewellery and baby care.

     

    The company’s latest delivery service, ‘easy ship’, will allow sellers to ask for a product to be picked up and shipped by Amazon. It will also provide cash-on-delivery for these sellers’ orders, an option so far available only to those who stocked products with Amazon. The service, which has 400 sellers already registered, will be available in 30 cities to start with.

     

    “We now have a complete suite of services for sellers which will help them sell more and make more money,” said Mr Deshpande, who has been with the company since 2010.

     

    This is just the latest in a string of initiatives from the Seattle-based company that is stirring up the Indian online retail industry estimated at $3 billion (over 18,200 crore).

     

    Last December, Amazon launched in-a-day delivery service forcing Flipkart and Snapdeal to follow suit. Flipkart and Amazon also launched their Apple iPhone and iPad applications within a day of each other. “Amazon is forcing Flipkart to push ahead with its customer and seller services,” said Ashish Jhalani, head of advisory services firm eTailing India. In Delhi and Mumbai, Amazon.in is piloting pick-up services where customers can pick up their orders from In & Out stores located at BPCL petrol stations.

     

    “Amazon is pretty much the trendsetter,” said Mahesh Murthy, founding partner at early stage venture fund Seedfund. “When Amazon started charging for delivery, Flipkart did the same.” Industry experts said Amazon India has done right by first focusing on backend processes instead of blindly chasing customers upon entry. “They built the logistics network, warehouses and built up a large selection of products that is helping them win customers now,” said Technopak’s Singhal.

     

    The company now has about 1.5 crore products listed on its site and two warehouses, each measuring over 150,000 square feet, in Mumbai and Bengaluru.

     

    Earlier this month, Flipkart said it had millions of products across 21 categories and 40 sub-categories. At peak times, the Bangalore-based company ships 1.3 lakh products a day.

     

    Amazon said its strong backend infrastructure is helping it scale up fast. “When we decide on areas of focus, we always work backwards from the customer,” said Mr Deshpande of Amazon.in. “Selection, delivery experience, logistics, payments and website experience are areas we are super-focused on.”

     

    Customers are taking note. “I used to buy books from Flipkart, but now I buy from Amazon.in as I see better variety there and it is the same price if not cheaper than Flipkart,” said Shradha Patnaik, 24, a communications professional who lives in Delhi.

     

    Merchants too are happy with their experience on the site. “Margin cut at Amazon is about 6-7%, compared with 10-12% at Flipkart,” said Hysteria’s Arif.

     

    While these indicate that Amazon is chipping away at the fortress that Flipkart has built, overtaking the market leader will take some doing.

     

    While prices in categories such as books are similar or Amazon.in is cheaper, in areas such as mobiles and tablets, Flipkart is cheaper in most models and brands. Flipkart is able to do this as WS Retail, a seller on Flipkart, is its subsidiary and gets most of its inventory directly from brands.

     

    “Flipkart’s WS Retail also buys outright from us and accounts for about 80% of our volume on Flipkart,” said Vivek Prabhakar, co-founder of design merchandise firm Chumbak, for whom online sites account for 18% of overall sales.

     

    Experts too believe that Flipkart has been able to fight back, for now. “Flipkart has the people and has built processes and technology. They are fighting back powerfully,” said eTailing’s Jhalani.

     

    Many believe the battle will only truly begin when Amazon.in launches apparel. Flipkart is believed to be in talks to acquire rival fashion portal Myntra to shore up its defences.

     

    Amazon, which launched other fashion categories lately, the most recent being shoes, is expected to launch apparel in the first two weeks of May.

     

    Source:The Economic Times

    Copyright © 2014, Bennett, Coleman & Co. Ltd. All Rights Reserved

    Licensed to republish

     

  • Billon Dollar Bansals

     

    By Radhika P Nair

     

    It was a 10,000-a-month allowance from their parents for almost 18 months that helped Sachin Bansal and Binny Bansal launch an e-commerce website retailing books in October 2007. Today, the near-20% stake they hold, along with the top management, in Flipkart is valued at almost Rs 2,000 crore.

     

    Sachin Bansal

    Sachin Bansal, the chief executive of Bengaluru-based Flipkart, says he has a knack for underestimation. That is exactly what happened in March 2011 when he and Binny Bansal, who are not related to each other, announced they would reach the $1-billion (Rs 6,100-crore) sales mark in 2015. Last week, the site, which now sells everything from books to electronics, apparel and jewellery, reached the milestone, a full year ahead of the target.

     

     

    Flipkart, Lenskart, Myntra & Snapdeal: All have Bansals at the helm

     

    By Biswarup Gooptu & Harsimran Julka

     

    Even a decade ago, the name “Bansal” would have brought in images of coaching classes in Rajasthan’s Kota, but today it is the common factor binding the who’s who of India’s fledgling e-commerce sector.

     

    Five young men who answer to that name have emerged as trailblazers of Indian e-commerce, taking on global biggies like Amazon and eBay for top honours in the country’s exploding market for online retail.

     

    Online marketplaces Flipkart and Snapdeal, apparel retailer Myntra and eyewear retailer LensKart all have Bansals at the helm. Such is their clout that they account for nearly Rs 10,000 crore of the total online retail pie of about $2 billion.

     

    But their adeptness at trade and commerce is not a state secret. As a sub-sect of the Aggarwal community, the Bansals are known for running a tight ship when it comes to business and entrepreneurship.

     

    “We (Bansals) have the math, finance and data skills that are extremely important for e-commerce,” said Rohit Bansal who teamed up with schoolmate and Wharton alumnus Kunal Bahl to set up online marketplace Snapdeal in 2010.

     

    The Bansals of the new economy also sport degrees from IIT and IIMs. The five Bansals with their four companies – Flipkart, Myntra, Snapdeal and LensKart – set up shop within the last seven years and control about 85% of India’s entire e-tailing industry.

     

    But they have to contend with the might of $75-billion (Rs 4.5 lakh crore) Amazon, which entered India last year and is investing heavily.

     

    Heading the fightback are Sachin Bansal, 32, and Binny Bansal, 31- founders of Bengaluru-based Flipkart – who met each other while studying at IIT-Delhi. Their company today generates about Rs 6,100 crore in sales, half the industry total.Flipkart is also the biggest challenge for Amazon, a company where both the Bansals honed their skills before setting up on their own in 2007. Coming second is Snapdeal, whose Rohit Bansal, 31, graduated ahead of Sachin and Binny from IIT Delhi.

     

    “My ancestors from my paternal and maternal sides have all been businessmen,” said Rohit Bansal, who is from Malout, a small town in Punjab, just four hours from Chandigarh where the Bansals from Flipkart grew up.

     

    Snapdeal’s turnover is now half of Flipkart, and it is expected to cross the $1 billion mark next year. The Bansals are making a mark not just in horizontal marketplaces, but also single-category retail. Bengaluru-based Myntra Designs, founded by another IITian Mukesh Bansal, is giving stiff competition to Flipkart in apparel, one of the highest-margin categories, where profits range from 30 to 50 percent.

     

    “It has come full circle with me getting in fashion retail online,” said Mukesh Bansal, CEO at Myntra, who hails from Haridwar. His father had opted for a public sector job over joining the family business — ironically, clothes trading. “No family influence made me think of entrepreneurship. But the startup bug bit me in Silicon Valley,” said Myntra’s Bansal, 38, who moved to India to start Myntra in 2007. His venture is targeting sales of Rs 1,500 crore next fiscal from apparel sales, the largest in its category.

     

    LensKart, founded by another Peyush Bansal, 30, is considering selling his other portals such as WatchKart, BagsKart and JewelKart to a horizontal player at the ‘right price’ to focus on the eyewear market. “My parents didn’t understand while I was starting up. But they came around later. You have to understand that they are products of their generation,” said Bansal, who is targeting revenue of Rs 100 crore from LensKart next fiscal.

     

    RBI Chair Professor for Economics & Social Sciences at IIM Bengaluru Charan Singh says that a community’s dominance over a certain trade is a factor of its social interactions. “It can be likened to the Jewish community in the US which continues to hold top posts in US banking and technology industry.” Ashish Jhalani, head of retail advisory firm eTailing India, agrees. “Certain communities in India do encourage entrepreneurship. The Bansals and Aggarwals have definitely dominated businesses in India, particularly retail trading, for centuries.”

     

    (With inputs from Radhika P Nair)

     

    Source:The Economic Times

    Copyright © 2014, Bennett, Coleman & Co. Ltd. All Rights Reserved

    Licensed to republish

     

    “To say billion-dollar in 2011 was crazy when we were doing a $10 million (Rs 61 crore) run rate,” says Sachin, 32, in his first interview after the firm achieved the sales target. “It was just a belief.”

     

    Sachin, like his co-founder, grew up in Chandigarh. That is not the only coincidence. Both went to IIT-Delhi and worked at different companies for about a year before ending up in the same team at Amazon. It was during this stint that the two decided to start up.

     

    The duo pooled in Rs 2 lakh each and with two computers launched the site from their two-bedroom apartment in Koramangala, a primarily residential locality in Bengaluru where the company now has multiple offices. For 10 days, the site did not see a single sale and then a customer from Andhra Pradesh placed the first order for the book ‘Leaving Microsoft to Change the World’ by John Wood.

     

    “We were not thinking about numbers then, but we knew something big can be built out of ecommerce,” says Binny. The two co-founders, who have a tendency to finish each other’s sentences in conversations, are close friends. What has helped maintain the bond through the ups-and-downs of entrepreneurship? “By fighting every day,” says Binny, 31, as the two burst out laughing. “But seriously, it is important to know what the other guy is thinking. That becomes very important as the message and the thinking become consistent. Communication is key.”

     

    The two are demanding bosses, say their employees. “Both have high expectations, but that raises our bar. That makes working with them rewarding as well,” says Amod Malviya, head of engineering at Flipkart. He says the Bansals have complementary personalities. While Binny is analytical and driven by logic, Sachin is more instinctive and is driven by emotion and passion, says Malviya, who joined the company in 2010 as a senior manager.

     

    Employees are also impressed by the simplicity the duo has managed to retain. As they live close to work, both walk to office. They also fly and stay budget while travelling and eat with other employees whenever possible. “They are very much in the Azim Premji mould and shy away from ostentation,” says an employee, who did not want to be identified.

     

    Experts say the success of Flipkart can be chalked down to the founders’ attitude. “The two have the right attitude. They are cocky and confident, and along with that they have the ability to execute,” says Arvind Singhal, chairman of retail consultancy Technopak. This attitude has helped them deal with the ever-shifting baselines in Indian ecommerce.

     

    After raising about $190 million (over Rs 1,150 crore) until 2012 from Tiger Global and Accel Partners, industry insiders had begun questioning the viability of the business, which was burning about 50 crore of cash each month. In 2012, the company took action, by tightening its employee base, using more technology to cut costs and shutting down its music downloads category, which was not scaling up. More importantly Flipkart, which started out as a direct seller of goods, changed to an asset-light marketplace model where multiple merchants, along with the company’s own WS Retail, sell to customers on the site.

     

    In 2013, the company raised $360 million (about Rs 2,200 crore) in two tranches, primarily from South African Internet major Naspers at a whopping valuation of $1.6 billion (Rs 9,772 crore). At the time, Sachin termed the cash infusion as a “great validation” and one which refuted the scepticism about his company in particular and Indian ecommerce in general.

     

    Supam Maheshwari, founder of online babycare site Firstcry, says Sachin and Binny Bansal managed to find early investors who kept backing them. “They executed well, especially in logistics and warehouse, and did not lose focus,” says Supam. “But they have had to spend a lot to reach the billion-dollar mark.”

     

    Flipkart’s sales milestone could also send out a signal to international players that the Indian ecommerce market is mature enough for them to enter, says Maheshwari. One such player could be Alibaba, which only has its business-to-business portal at present in the country.

     

    Comparisons with Alibaba’s Jack Ma are inevitable. Jack too started out from a small apartment in China’s Hangzhou in 1999.

     

    Jack diversified into payments, cloud computing and multiple ecommerce models. Bansals have made their intentions to diversify clear and have already done so by opening up their online payments solution and logistics for use by other Internet companies.

     

    Jack has, however, already beaten Amazon in China. Alibaba expects to triple the volume of transactions to $490 billion (almost Rs 30 lakh crore) in 2016. For Flipkart, the battle has just begun. Peyush Bansal, founder of Delhi-based eyewear e-tailer Lenskart, says competition will intensify between the large multi-category portals. Amazon, which entered the Indian market a little over six months ago, has rapidly expanded into 18 categories of products and has been busy setting up its logistics and warehouse network. Snapdeal, which is targeting $1 billion in sales next year, recently raised a further 830 crore from investors led by eBay. “The site that would come out on top could be the one with the deepest pockets or the one with the best economic efficiencies,” said Peyush Bansal.

     

    Technopak’s Arvind says Flipkart, which employs about 10,000 people, will have to continue to maintain its lead in technology, customer experience, supply chain management and consumer logistics to hold onto leadership.

     

    “It is like a three-hour movie where just the first 30 minutes are over; the plot is still unfolding,” says Arvind.

     

    Flipkart, which has over 1,000 sellers on its platform, is now shifting focus towards scale with intelligence, which will lead its mobile commerce drive. Sachin believes mobile will revolutionise ecommerce and Internet businesses. “My four-year-old son does not even understand keyboard. He expects the television to also be a touchscreen device,” says Sachin, who expects Flipkart to become a mobile commerce platform in the near future with features customised to individual users. “The next six-and-a-half years are going to be even more exciting.”

     

    (With inputs from Biswarup Gooptu and Harsimran Julka)

     

    Source:The Economic Times

    Copyright © 2014, Bennett, Coleman & Co. Ltd. All Rights Reserved

    Licensed to republish

     

  • 40% preferred COD in their online Diwali shopping: IAMAI

    By A Correspondent

     

    While credit card usage took precedence over cash in online shopping during Diwali 2013 as per a survey by the Internet and Mobile Association of India (IAMAI), the COD delivery is not insignificant at 40 percent giving an indicator of confidence levels over sharing vital credit card info online. The dipstick study conducted from October 30 to November 4 in 15 cities, to understand the online shopping trends during the festive week, finds that majority of the transactions took place through credit card, debit card or net banking. The survey finds that 59% of the respondents used credit card to shop online, while 28% used debit card, reflecting the maturing of consumer behaviour in urban markets. 40% of the respondents however, mentioned that they opted for cash on delivery as their payment mode. A total of 3480 responses were received to the survey.

     

    Source: IAMAI, 2013

     

    The survey also revealed that electronics and accessories topped the list of items for online shoppers during Diwali. 41% respondents said they purchased travel tickets online, while 39% said they purchased garments.

     

    Source: IAMAI, 2013

     

    29% of the respondents mentioned that they purchased products in the range of INR 3000 to INR 5000. Interestingly, 20% of the respondents said that they purchased goods worth more than INR 10,000 and above. A mere 5% said they purchased goods worth INR 100 to INR 500.

     

    According to the survey, Flipkart was the most frequented e-tailing site followed by ebay, Snapdeal and Jabong. Among the booking sites, IRCTC was the top followed by Bookmyshow, MakeMyTrip, Yatra and Cleartrip.

     

    Source: IAMAI, 2013

     

    According to the survey, 31% of online shoppers were from Delhi NCR followed by greater Mumbai with 22% respondents. Bangalore was third with 12% respondents.

     

    Source: IAMAI, 2013