Saturday, September 20, 2014

E TAIL SPECIAL.................. Now, small towns fuel e-tailers Flipkart, Myntra, Jabong

 Now, small towns fuel e-tailers Flipkart, Myntra, Jabong

One of the reasons why India has the fifth largest retail destination globally is the growth in consumption for a wide variety of goods and services exhibited by a significant portion of its 1.25 billion people living in small towns, cities and villages.
It was this India growth story that led many big global retailers like Walmart, Tesco and Carrefour to seriously eye an entry into this market. That regulations governing foreign investment in Indian retail weren’t conducive is a different matter.
Interestingly, the recent e-commerce revolution in India, which is attracting millions of dollars in funding, is going the same way and is being fuelled by the so-called tier II and III cities (other than major cities like Delhi, Mumbai, Kolkata, Chennai and Bangalore). This is despite challenges that range from low broadband penetration (which forms the backbone for e-commerce) to lack of adequate logistical facilities to ensure that goods can be delivered to far-flung areas of the country.
E-tailers and industry experts state that while customers in these non-metro cities have purchasing power and aspiration, lack of access to contemporary offerings by international brands makes online shopping an attractive option. And what lacks in terms of broadband penetration is being compensated through the proliferation of low-cost smartphones, mobile internet penetration, and a plethora of shopping apps.
For instance, Jabong.com, the online marketplace for clothes, fashion and lifestyle accessories, is witnessing 65% of its sales coming from tier II and III cities, according to its founder and chief executive Arun Chandra Mohan. Jabong sold good with a gross merchandise value of $35 million in July and sales have been growing 10-12% month-on-month over the last six months.
While many of the Indian brands that Jabong sells through its website and mobile apps will be available to Indian customers in smaller cities through physical stores, it is the introduction of international fashion brands like River Island and Selfridges, exclusively on its platform, that are likely to attract customers in those regions of India that don’t have access to such high street fashion.
The proportion of turnover coming from these tier II and III cities is sizeable for other retailers as well. Jabong’s competitor Myntra, which was acquired by Flipkart in May, sees 45% of its revenues coming from these smaller Indian cities and towns, and expects the contribution of these regions to its topline to keep growing.
With mobile evolution, the smaller cities will grow faster. Mobile will transform demand from these cities,” says Myntra’s chief executive officer Ganesh Subramanian. He also brushes aside the popular perception that customers from smaller centres scout for only value products that are available online at great discounts, and not higher-end premium merchandise.
It’s all about the customers’ aspirations and access to products that they didn’t have before,” says Arvind Singhal, chairman and managing director of Technopak, a retail-focused management consulting firm. “The same television shows and films that are used to advertise products reach the Indians in small and large cities alike. But earlier people in the smaller cities didn’t have access to these products and that gap is being addressed by online retail.”
A study by international audit and consulting firm KPMG states that the share of online buying from tier II and III cities and rural areas stood at 50% of overall transactions. “Industry players estimate that as the reach of e-commerce increases, a large portion of online shoppers (more than 60-70%) would come from beyond the top eight metros,” the report said. “We believe that the non-metro markets are where the new phase of growth lies for the Indian e-commerce industry,” says Shoumyan Biswas, senior director of marketing at Flipkart. “It would be interesting to highlight that not only customers, even our new sellers are concentrated across the smaller markets.”
Biswas says that Flipkart’s product categories like books and mobile phones (a whole host of affordable smartphones ate being launched in India) see great traction in these smaller cities.
Nitin Bawankule, director for e-commerce and online classifieds at Google India, corroborates the trend of smaller towns and cities progressively generating a greater proportion of the online traffic towards e-commerce websites.
Since 2012, Google has been organising the Great Online Shopping Festival (GOSF) in India through which it brings leading e-commerce players on a common platform to provide customers the best deals available online.
Bawankule says that during GOSF 2012, around 70% of the online traffic came from the tier 1 metros. In 2013, the share of traffic from tier II and III cities rose to over 50%, and at present more than 60% of the online traffic towards retail sites comes from the smaller centres. By December, when GOSF 2014 would be organised, Bawankule expects this percentage to go up even further.
Online retailers are acutely aware that they have only managed to tap into a fraction of the demand that exists outside the big Indian metros. Indian retail is expected to be $520 billion at present, growing 13% annually and on target to reach about $1 trillion by 2018. Online retail constitutes roughly 1% of that. But this demand can only be catered to if issues like internet connectivity and logistics are sorted out.
E-commerce companies have to reject 10-15% of orders daily because they originate from destinations where they cannot reach,” Bawankule says. “That is one of the worst ways to lose customers.”
E-tailers like Jabong have begun exploring tie-ups with India Post, coffee shops, and petrol pump outlets to cover a larger number of pin codes for service delivery in India, while Amazon may launch drone delivery services in India.
With inputs from Sayan Chakraborty in Bangalore
Window to world
* Introduction of international brands like River Island and Selfridges, exclusively on Jabong’s platform, is likely to attract customers from regions lacking access to high street fashion
* The proportion of turnover coming from tier II and III cities is sizeable for other retailers as well
* A study by international audit and consulting firm KPMG states that the share of online buying from tier II and III cities and rural areas stood at 50% of overall transactions


Aveek Datta  FE Sep 15 2014, 12:03 IST


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