E Commerce Case Study
E Commerce Case Study
E Commerce Case Study
breakthrough in technology and sometimes it’s just about thinking different in the way we
approach problems” says Andrew Garrihy, chief marketing officer for Western Europe at
Huawei.
India’s e-commerce Space
India’s e-commerce space today is mainly dominated and defined by 2 players—Flipkart and
Amazon.
Flipkart is the fashion leader. After acquisition of Myntra and Jabong, Flipkart commands
more than two-thirds of India’s fast-growing online fashion retail market. Amazon is the tech
power. Over 20 years of learnings in technology and online retail business has resulted in
faster execution and fewer mistakes. Amazon excels in providing powerful search and
recommendation engines to users.
India’s apparel and lifestyle market is worth $70-billion, and currently only 2% of that is
online. According to a recent Google report, the sector is expected to scale up to $35 billion
by 2020, growing at four times in the coming years. The report also states that fashion will
outstrip consumer electronics as the largest online retail category, accounting for about 35%
of consumers’ total online spending by 2020.
overtake
consumer
electronics
as the largest
online retail
category by
2Is Customer Value– Explored, Created, Communicated & Delivered
Related to India’s e-commerce Market 2
CASE
The Growth Story of Flipkart and e-commerce in India
For a vast multilingual nation like India, building an e-commerce company was indeed a
tough task for Flipkart. Some of the factors like weak infrastructure, myopic bureaucracy, and
above all, an ingrained distrust of the merchant class made the task even more challenging.
The Bansal’s, the founders of Flipkart were confident on one thing, that India was ready for
e-commerce. The country’s highly fragmented retail sector, mostly ruled by mom-and-pop
stores with poor services were the major problems identified by Bansals which had the
potential to get converted into opportunities for building up a new business in 2007.
Flipkart found the right gaps in the market and offered relevant products and services that
fitted those areas perfectly. Finding that few Indians use credit cards, Flipkart pioneered cash
on delivery. In Mumbai, it deployed dabbawallas, the famed lunch delivery network, to get
packages to customers. Its pledge to take back unwanted goods for a full refund was a big
propeller. Two of its strongest ethos of customer-friendliness and genuineness of its products
connected very well with the Indian consumers.
The company added third-party sellers to its platform and set up its own logistics company,
Ekartin 2009, with warehouses and an army of delivery personnel. By 2011, sales had
reached $100million, and very soon Flipkart was seen in different categories sports
equipment, electronics, baby goods and more.
In 2012, sales in the Indian e-commerce market were estimated at $1.6 billion. Flipkart,
Jabong& Myntra, all home-grown players were leading the Indian e-commerce market at that
time. Some of the major tactics which helped these players to gain market share in the Indian
market were cash-on-delivery payments, liberal return policies, free or subsidised shipping
and in-house logistics.
Since its founding nine years, Flipkart has become the nation’s most valuable start-up
which introduced online shopping to the Indian masses.
Amazon launched its Indian website on June 5th, 2013 with the third-party marketplace
model instead of selling directly. This forced consolidation in Indian market and Flipkart
acquired the online clothing retailer Myntra in 2014 followed by Jabong in 2016. This deal
further strengthened its ‘number one position in the fashion and lifestyle e-commerce
category with an estimated market share of 60-70%.
In this hyper competitive market, consumer is having last laugh and is being pampered with
choice, service and experience. Each player is continuously forced to innovate and take steps
that add value to its consumers in a “real and meaningful way”. Stuart Eames,
OperationalImprovementManager at Waitrose put it very well “If you don’t evolve, if you
don’t do something better or different to the competition you end up not being around.”
changing Models of Business Enhancing Value
The online stores from the inventory model moved to third-party marketplace model where
independent merchants in their network sell products directly to shoppers. It turned out to be
available way to work in order to overcome the problems posed due to poor logistics and high
costs of inventory. Further movement has come in when many online commerce companies
have now started venturing into the hybrid model of running online stores with selective
physical presence.
Global e-commerce giant Amazon in 2016 opened a brick-and-mortar store in New York. In
India, players like furniture e-tailer Pepper fry and eyewear seller Lens kart have explored the
offline route as well.
E-tailers are under pressure to grow profitably and hence, Fashion e-tailer Myntra has created
“top-selling” outdoor lifestyle brand, ‘Roadster’, which has a current sales of Rs.600
crore, contributing8% to the overall revenue and expected to reach sales of Rs.1,000 crores
by2019. Seeing this kind of growth potential of this brand, Myntra. in association with one of
its franchise partners, has in March 2017, launched the first retail store for its private label
Roadster in Bangalore.
Cost Efficiencies on Value Chain
New companies indulge in market expansion activity and have high spent in the initial period
hoping for future gains resulting in negative cash flow (known as burn rate). In a bid to
acquire maximum customers, Flipkart indulged in aggressive spent on marketing and
discounts, biggest being in October 2016 “Big Sale”, resulting in its burn rate at its highest
two years ago. As of 2017, its burn rate is said to be $40-50 million per month, according to
industry estimates. Flipkart successfully lowered its burn rate by 5-10% every quarter in 2016
and wants to sharply accelerate this process.
The board has asked Flipkart to bring down the burn rate to one-fourth by March 2017 and is
forcing Flipkart management to think differently to grow and to streamline its operations. The
company also decided to slash the budget of Myntra by about 10% and re-allocate these
funds to itself to fight the ongoing war against Amazon. To ease its cash crunch situation,
Flipkart plans to save $150-200m by Dec 2017 and is also in talks with Walmart stores for
investment of $1b. At the same time, Amazon’s Chief Executive Officer Jeff Bezos pledged
in June 2016 to invest another$3 billion in his company’s Indian operations, bringing the total
to $5 billion, which definitely sounds a big threat to Flipkart, the home-grown e-tailer. To
bring in sharper focus on its core business model and make it nimbler, Flipkart is
consolidating the operations of its logistics and supply chain arm. Delivery to customer’s
doorstep even in the remotest location popularly termed as last-mile connectivity plays a vital
role in the online business and Ekart, the in-house logistics arm, has been able to provide this
service efficiently and forms the
backbone of its business. Flipkart has also started monetising EKart and offers warehousing
solutions and end-to-end logistics and supply chain capabilities to other clients.
The two fashion verticals, Myntra and Jabong, owned by Flipkart, commands a 45% market
share in this vertical. They are bringing together their back-end operations and supply chain
for stronger integration. They are also integrating their private brand portfolios in order to
give a push to the trifling private label business at Jabong. Despite such integrations, the
consumer-facing platforms continue to run
independently as the consumer segments and geographies targeted by each of them differ
widely. While Jabong’s main revenue source is North and East, Myntra is big in South and
West. Similarly, Jabong’s consumer base mainly consists of women and first-time shoppers,
while Myntra targets more towards men and affluent consumers.