Tuesday, January 19, 2016

STARTUP SPECIAL ....................All Dressed Up

 All Dressed Up


LimeRoad's unique social shopping thrust makes it a potential unicorn -as well as a potential acquisition target for an ecommerce horizontal

Founders will give you various reasons for starting up their ventures, but few will mention “utter frustration“ as one of them. In 2010, while flipping through a glossy magazine after the birth of her second child in London, Suchi Mukherjee, one of the three cofounders of LimeRoad, glanced upon a piece of jewellery made by a small store in Mumbai. Enamoured, Mukherjee tried to buy it but couldn't as it was not accessible. “I realised that there was no con sumer technology play that made discovery of lovely products easy and entertaining,“ she recalls, adding that absence of a place from where one could access the vast array of products made in South East Asia left her exasperat ed. That's how LimeRoad, a social shopping portal focused on women and fashion was founded, says Mukherjee, along with Ankush Mehra and Prashant Malik.
LimeRoad claims that there are 20,000 sellers on its platform, its gross merchandise has jumped 600% over the last 12 months, the scrapbooking community has increased from 30,000 to 75,000 over the past year and the 3 million style statements posted as scrapbooks amount to over 100 times growth in less than a year, and it has increased its headcount from 50 to 450 in three years.
Small wonder, the startup has managed to raise $50 million in three rounds of funding so far and counts Tiger Global, Matrix Partners and Lightspeed Venture Partners as its investors.
But is the business model scalable enough to make LimeRoad a potential unicorn? Mukherjee thinks so, since nearly half of online shoppers are women in India, and shopping is more of a behavioural attribute, she says.“LimeRoad, being a women's only discovery platform, is the only player in Indian ecommerce to have grown 600% in the last one year,“ she asserts.
The use of technology is what differentiates LimeRoad from other players in the market, she contends, as she rattles out the numbers. Consumers come back on an average 84 times a year on the app, with conversion rates to buying hovering at 8% per month. LimeRoad has always managed a super thin fixed cost structure, using technology to scale, she adds for good measure.
Another feature that differentiates LimeRoad from its rivals is user-generated content. Mukherjee believes that for women, lifestyle product access and discovery is a huge problem, particularly given the long tail in options across categories. LimeRoad, she claims, provides the most extensive discovery plat form, where consumers come because they get to discover simply great products at affordable prices. “We do this by not merely loading products on a platform, like most old school marketplaces, but by making them discoverable through user-generated content,“ she says.
What is more, Tiger Global, one of the investors in LimeRoad, is also a top investor in Flipkart. Does Mukherjee lose sleep over the prospect of being acquired or merged into another fashion startup at some stage, what with inves tors likely to consolidate their portfolio over the next few months? Mukherjee doesn't rule it out. “Everything is al ways a possibility -to be acquired or acquire a company.
Our goal is to reach out to every single woman in this coun try and convert her into a LimeRoad user,“ she says.

ETM3JAN16

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