Russian Internet - No Longer Terra Incognita
Russian Internet - No Longer Terra Incognita
Russian Internet - No Longer Terra Incognita
DIGITAL MEDIA
Important disclosures appear at the back of this report. GP Bullhound LLP is authorised and regulated by the Financial Services Authority in the United Kingdom
Internet Audience in 2010A 31m Germany 30m 24m Russia UK France Italy Spain Netherlands
79%
43% 83% 69% 52% 63% 89%
Source: comScore World Metrix, January 2007; International Telecommunications Union, June 2010
89% 73%
37% 75% 40% 77% 42%
91%
82% 48%
63% 68% 72%
20%
0% 2003A
2004A
2005A
2006A
2007A
2008A
2009A
2010A
Source: FOM Report Internet in Russia #32 at www.fom.ru, March 2011; GP Bullhound
1 Source: comScore World Metrix, unique visitors age 15+ January 2006 2 Source: International Telecommunications Union, June 2010
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67%
55%
38% 31% 43% 76m 85m 60m
61%
93m
44m
53m
2008A
Sophisticated Audience
In addition to having one of the largest audiences in the world, Runet has also amassed one of the most sophisticated: Well educated: 28% of the employed Russian population have a higher education degree ; Highly engaged in social networking: Russian social networking audience, estimated at c.38m , spends an average of 10.8 hours per month social surfing versus 4.7 hours for USA and 4.6 hours globally ; Mobile Internet penetration: monthly mobile Internet audience in Russia reached 10.8m in February 2011, or 18% of the Internet audience just behind
3 Source: JSon & Partners, September 2010 4 Source: TNS Web Index, December 2010 5 Source: eMarketer, January 2007 6 Source: JSon & Partners, September 2010; Accenture, December 2005 7 Source: Screen Digest, June 2010 8 Source: Rosstat, 2008 9 Source: JSon & Partners, September 2010 10 Source: comScore, July 2010
10 9 8
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the 20% for the EU-5 average (France, Germany, Italy, Spain and the UK) . The number of active 3G users is expected to reach 71m by 2013, or 50% of the total population . Through this rapid development of the Russian Internet sector, there has also been some significant growth of spending online, both from the consumer and business segments.
12
11
$5k
$0k
1992A 1993A 1994A 1995A 1996A 1997A 1998A 1999A 2000A 2001A 2002A 2003A 2004A 2005A 2006A 2007A 2008A 2009A 2010E 2011E 2012E 2013E 2014E 2015E
It is estimated that the distribution of income has become more equitable: according to the Gini Coefficient method and the other BRICs ; Emergence of the Russian middle class now estimated at c.68% of the total population, vs. 31% in Brazil, 13% in China and 3% in India .
16 15 14
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E-commerce reach of online users in Russia has grown to 59% from 43% in the year to January 2011 , with turnover estimated at $8bn (Exhibit 5) . This market, however, is still in its infancy as e-tail represents only 1.6% of total retail turnover, in comparison to 10.5% for the UK and 8.0% for Germany in 2010 .
19 17 18
$20bn
$8bn $5bn
$6bn
2008A
2009A
2010E
2015F
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14% $1,620m
$1,030m
2007A
2008A
2009A
2010E
2011F
2012F
2013F
Source: GroupM, September 2010; Euromonitor, August 2010 Note: online advertising penetration represents advertising spend online as percentage of total advertising spend
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25
Rank 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 10
Site Mail.ru Group Yandex vKontakte Google RBC Wikimedia BitTorrent Rambler Media Microsoft SUP
Site Google Microsoft Facebook.com Yahoo! BBC eBay Amazon Wikimedia Glam Media Apple Inc.
Whilst Russian companies have the highest online overall reach, they also dominate the most mature categories, such as online classifieds (Avito), auctions (Molotok.ru), and electronics retail (Ozon.ru) (Exhibit 8).
EXHIBIT 8 LEADERS IN KEY DEVELOPED VERTICALS GLOBALLY AND IN RUSSIA
Global Leader Russian Leader
Category Search engine Online portal Social network Online classifieds Online auctions Electronics retail
Source: comScore, March 2011; GP Bullhound
To an extent, the emergence and dominance of local players has benefited from the relatively slow entry from the international giants. As the Russian market became more attractive, several international players attempted to enter but with little success. Examples include:
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Google: entered Russia in 2001 and ten years later the company controls less than 22% of the online search market, with Yandex, the local incumbent, at 65% ;
26
Yahoo: launched its Russian website in 2009 but current traffic is below 1m unique monthly
27
visitors
(less
than
Yahoos
properties
in
Sweden
or
Switzerland) ; Facebook: Russian website launched in 2008 and had 19% online reach in December 2010 vs. 72% for vKontakte .
28
29
Rambler 2%
Sohu 5%
Google 33%
Yandex 62%
Baidu 52%
France Bing 2% Yahoo! 3% Others 4% Germany Others 3%
Bing 2% Yahoo! 5%
Google 91%
Google 90%
Language Complexities
Similar to China, Japan and Korea, one of the key barriers to entry to the Runet market is the language: not only is it from a different family of languages to the major western
26 Source: LiveInternet.ru, February 2011 27 Source: comScore, March 2011 28 Source: comScore, December 2010 29 Source: Greenlight Marketing, 2010; GP Bullhound
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languages with a different morphology, it also uses the Cyrillic rather than Latin alphabet. Yandexs search technology was developed around the Russian language first, and overcame a lot of the morphology issues, which have slowed down Google. According to the company, their global search competitors did not begin to focus on the intricacies and nuances of Russian-language search until the mid-2000s , giving them sufficient time to solidify their market leading position.
30
Cultural differentiation
Since the transition to a market economy, certain consumer products and services have become status symbols in Russia such as foreign holidays. The Russian outbound tourism market has been growing at about 10% a year since 2000, with popular resorts in Egypt, Turkey, Dubai and others . The majority of Russian holiday makers select places well known and highly visited by their countrymen, rather than trying new destinations 2.4m or nearly one in five of international Russian tourists go to Turkey, the same proportion as was the case in 2006 . An anecdote from a Russian online travel agent illustrates this: his efforts to introduce packages to new travel destinations have been met with reluctance from the Russian customers who after reviewing a number of options continue to prefer Turkey and Egypt for their summer vacation. Similar prejudices exist in other consumer categories. High-end brand demand in particular has been driven by an erstwhile lack of access to luxury in countries of the former Soviet Union, now replaced with rife consumerism. Similarly, Russians behaviour online also varies from the West. Notably, online monetisation has been restricted by the users lack of trust in online retail and payments, preferring to use the Internet for reviews and price information and making purchases by visiting the store directly. Although this mentality is slowly waning with growing online sales, it is an important factor to consider when dealing with Russian consumers. On the other hand, the market of goods and services requiring smaller payments, particularly for IVAS such as virtual goods and social games, has been advancing rapidly. In addition to having lower payment barriers, this sector has also been aided by the availability of mobile payment solutions.
32 31
30 Source: Yandex SEC Form F1, 28 April 2011 31 Source: Financial Times, Thomas Cook invests in Intourist brand, 25th November 2010 32 Source: Federal Tourism Agency of Russia (Rosturism), 2010 33 Source: Bank of International Settlements, Central bank of Russia, Morgan Stanley Research, December 2010
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The issues arising from payment method constraints are not limited to e-commerce players. For instance, when Google first launched in Russia, it did not have alternative payment methods in place to cater for the many small businesses that did not have credit cards or online payments. The Russian counterparts, on the other hand, had developed ways to receive payment for Internet ads using traditional accounts at bricks-and-mortar banks , thus maintaining a competitive edge.
EXHIBIT 10 EXAMPLE OF A PAYMENT TERMINAL
34
2% 7% 8% 9% 16%
3% 12%
2% 13%
17%
10%
14% 15%
10%
27%
17% 12%
2009A
2010E Paid at the post office upton receipt Bank transfer SMS
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Other 20%
IMHO VI 60%
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8%
6% 4% 2%
0%
-2% -4% -6% -8% -10% USA Italy Russia UK Spain Germany France
-12% 2001A 2002A 2003A 2004A 2005A 2006A 2007A 2008A 2009A 2010A
Source: Capital IQ; GP Bullhound
Intellectual property: the standard of IP protection in Russia is not yet as sophisticated as in most western countries, as the recent cases against Mail.ru and vKontakte show: both sites are well known among Russian Internet users as sources of free copyrighted content, from Hollywood blockbusters to musical hits. On 15th March 2011, the Supreme Arbitration Court of the Russian Federation freed the administration of social networks from liability for content uploaded by their users, forming a bad precedent for the industry . Russia has also been listed as having one of the worst records of preventing copyright theft for the 14th straight year in the US Trade Representative's Special 301 Report . One of the issues frequently mentioned is the absence of a unified law or procedure in Russia, like the USs Digital Millennium, leading to conflicting interpretations by the courts. There is gradual progress such as the new complete copyright legislation is being drafted by the Ministry of Communication ;
39 38 37
Legal complexities: differences in laws may result in complications for foreign entities. For example, the Strategic Companies Law, adopted in May 2008, restricts foreign ownership of companies involved in certain strategically important activities. While the Internet is not an industry specifically covered by the law, companies holding licences to use encryption technologies are covered. As a result, Yandex, whose subsidiary YandexMoney holds an encryption technology licence, may be covered by the law and the acquisition of more than 25% of the voting power would require permission from a Russian government committee . Another example is the taxation system, which is less transparent creating difficulties for start-up businesses;
40
Corruption and political interference: whilst Russia is not alone in the protectionist behaviour of its strategic sectors, it comes alongside concerns of
37 Source: The Moscow Times, 16 March 2011 38 Source: Reuters, 2 May 2011 39 Source: Financial Times, 4 November 2010 40 Source: Yandex SEC Form F1, 28 April 2011
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corruption. There have been a number of high profile cases where western investors have lost all or part of their investments in Russia examples include, Hermitage Capital, British Petroleum and Yukos. In addition, the threat of state control over Internet, as with traditional media, is alarming. For instance, in April 2011 Yandex came forward to say it was forced to give Russias federal security service, FSB, personal information about Russians who had used a Yandex payment service to donate to a whistleblowing website, launched by Alexander Navalny. In addition, Russias security service had criticised encrypted communication providers like Skype, Gmail and Hotmail as they cannot be monitored by the security service ; Online security issues: Runet has been subject to cyber-crime ranging from malware to accessing bank accounts, to political cyber-attacks on leading websites, such as the April 2011 incidents resulting in the closure of LiveJournal, one of the most popular blogging platforms, and Novaya Gazeta, the website of an independent newspaper .
42 41
41 Source: Financial Times, 11 April 2011 42 Source: Financial Times, 8 April 2011
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16
7
8 6 3 3 2008 7 1 2009 2010 9 5 3 2 2011YTD
Source: Capital IQ; GP Bullhound, April 2011 Note: foreign investment includes syndicates with at least one foreign investor
Incubators: due to the rapid development of the market, established enterprises and investors have founded management teams to test out and implement new business models in Russia examples include Yandex.Fabrik, DST Investment, Fast Lane Ventures, Kite Ventures and Digital October. Although many of these
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seed investors are of Russian origin, they are backed by foreign investors. This investment strategy enables: 1) 2) 3) 4) Better risk diversification; Rapid implementation of numerous models, including copy-cats; Leveraging management skills and other resources between projects; Knowledge transfer particularly through management training schools within incubators. Given the rapid development and high quality innovation of Runet, exit opportunities are also emerging, with the Mail.ru IPO completed in November 2010, the Yandex IPO announced in April 2011, and the acquisition of 20% in Kaspersky Labs by General Atlantic.
1996
1998
2000
2002
2004
2006
2008
2010
Online travel
Online services
E-commerce aggregator
Russian equivalent
Source: GP Bullhound
To an extent, the new business models are an evolution of the older models and an answer to some of their predecessors issues. For instance, many of the new successful models (group buying, private sales etc.) rely on targeted, limited offerings and thus avoid
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the heavy task of creating a large offering in a country where online penetration remains low among suppliers: Apparel e-commerce: straightforward e-tail models such as YOOX, ASOS and Net-a-Porter have been bypassed by a private sales site, KupiVIP. In particular, the stock build-up and more prudent consumer spending as a result of the crisis aided the expansion of this model in Russia. While in the US, the launch of niche shoe shop Zappos pre-empted private sales, in Russia this business model, Sapato, emerged after KupiVIP, once the logistics and payment methods had been proven; Online travel: the development of online travel properties has been hindered in Russia by: 1) a cumbersome visa application procedure for international travel, which necessitates physical delivery of the passport; 2) a tendency to pay large sums in cash, which negates the advantages of travel tickets and bookings online; 3) a low inherent rate of online connection for Russian hoteliers. As a result, online traditional models such as OTAs and meta-search engines have struggled, whereas private / flash sale sites, similar to Jetsetter and Voyage Priv, are growing fast and benefit from not having to maintain an exhaustive offering as well as targeting a more sophisticated audience that is more likely to pay electronically. One of the players in this sector mentioned that 90% of transactions on the OTA site are in still cash vs. 20% of transactions only on their new flash sales site; Online services: the daily deals model was quickly adopted by Darberry, which was then subsequently acquired by Groupon. The more long-standing model of restaurant reservations, on the other hand, did not take off as rapidly because the restaurants themselves do not have significant online presence. In addition, niche category group buying sites have also emerged such as KupiBonus (health and beauty products); E-commerce aggregators: as with online reservation services, price comparison websites require a critical mass of suppliers to operate online. Instead online marketplaces, which provide online stores for business both online and offline, are emerging first.
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propagated through social networking have grown at a dramatic pace, powered by electronic word of mouth. As a result of this viral effect, businesses are able to reach scale without significant advertising cost outlay. While this has been a global phenomenon, the distinctive social networking environment in Russia will continue to drive the development of new dynamic business models. Drivers of the characteristic social networking audience in Russia include: 1) Convenience: as a result of adverse weather conditions, as well as slow traffic in urban areas, social networks provide a more convenient way to connect with friends. In addition, due to the occasionally poor landline quality or expensive mobile connection, instant messaging within social networks is proving more effective for communication. 2) Information: price-sensitive consumers, especially during the recent crisis, are turning to the Internet to seek reviews and good deals. This is particularly important in Russia, where consumer protection is poor. 3) Opinion: as a result of state control of the traditional media, social networks and blogs have become key arenas for political discussion.
EXHIBIT 16 SOCIAL NETW ORK USERS IN RUSSIA (2009A 2015E)
Number of social networks users (m) Social network users as percentage of Internet users
67%
70% 65m
73% 72m
77% 76m
55%
58%
38m
31m
2009A
2010E
2011F
2012F
2013F
2014F
2015F
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Internet reach continues to expand, the Russian social networking audience is projected to grow at an annual rate of 15% to 76m by 2015 (Exhibit 16) . The Russian social networking audience is also the most engaged in the world with over 35m users spending nearly 10 hours per month on social networks more than double the worldwide average (Exhibit 17) . Social countries tend to use more online services, such as online office applications and Internet telephony for instance c.40% of Internet users in India and Russia have made a phone call online with services such as Skype. That is nearly three times as many as in the US and almost six times as many as in Japan .
EXHIBIT 17 TOP 10 COUNTRIES FOR SOCIAL NETW ORKING RANKED BY TIME SPENT PER VISITOR
9.8hrs
48 47 46
5.8hrs
4.5hrs
45 Source: eMarketer, January 2011 46 Source: JSon & Partners Consulting, September 2010 47 Source: comScore, August 2010 48 Source: Harvard Business Review, July August 2010
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EXHIBIT 18 LEADING RUSSIAN SOCIAL NETW ORKS BY PERCENTAGE REACH OF ONLINE POPULATION
45%
24% 20%
5%
3%
3%
2%
1%
1%
1%
To an extent, diversity in social networking communities balances bargaining power amongst players down the supply chain. Furthermore, it also promotes a wider variety of monetisation tools. Similar to Asian communities, Runet users purchase a range of products and services including virtual goods, premium subscription services such as an invisible profile (where users can access other profiles without being detected, whereas with normal accounts they can be seen), additional services such as page design and group creation (Exhibit 19).
EXHIBIT 19 INTERNET VALUE ADDED SERVICES CATEGORY BREAKDOW N IN RUSSIA
Group creation, 4% Avatars, 5% Page design, 7% "Invisible status" option, 9% Other, 5% Virtual gifts, 31%
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cluster of Russian bloggers focus on politics, writing predominantly in Russia but frequently linking to English-language news websites such as the New York Times, Washington Post, Wall Street Journal, The Guardian and the BBC .
50
Trust
Furthermore, Russian Internet users appear to trust the information from blogs more than other more official data sources, particularly as other mass media channels are increasingly dominated by the state. In turn, within the mass media, blogs information is increasingly used to reflect public opinion: in 2010 over six thousand blogs were referenced by other mass media
51
(Exhibit 20).
Reviews
In addition to public discourse, the blogosphere is also an important source of user reviews and recommendations. According to speakers at the WPP Stream Digital Conference, 45% trust official websites, while 85% trust opinions of people they are connected with via Internet but have not necessarily met in person.
EXHIBIT 20 NUMBER OF REFERENCES TO BLOGS BY MASS MEDIA IN RUSSIA (2005A 2010A)
6,208
3,555
2,144
1,303 225 2005A
Source: Public.ru, 2011
535
2006A
2007A
2008A
2009A
2010A
50 Source: Public Discourse in the Russian Blogosphere: Mapping RuNet Politics and Mobilization, October 2010 51 Source: Public.ru, 2011 52 Source: Public Discourse in the Russian Blogosphere: Mapping RuNet Politics and Mobilization, October 2010
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contrast, the US blogosphere representation has a distinctive separation of blue and purple dots or liberal and conservative bloggers.
EXHIBIT 21 BLOGOSPHERE STRUCTURE COMPARISON
Russian Blogosphere US Blogosphere
Source: Public Discourse in the Russian Blogosphere: Mapping Runet Politics and Mobilization, October 2010 Note: The colour of each dot represents different content, size of the dot reflects the number of links to the blog
One of the main reasons is the structure of the popular blogging systems in Russia, which are more like hybrids between blogs and Social Network Systems. For instance, the pioneering LiveJournal platform enables the connection of friends, groups and file sharing options, promoting links within the platform as well as to other online content, such as news websites.
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Company
Investor Fast Lane Ventures General Catalyst Partners; Kite Ventures Holtzbrinck Ventures Gmbh; Investment AB Kinnevik; Tengelmann Accel Management; Bessemer Venture Partners; Mangrove Capital Partners; Russia Partners Management; Balderton Capital Ventech; Mangrove Capital Partners; ABRT Venture Fund Baring Vostok Capital Partners Limited Runet Leader-Innovations Access Industries n.a. Angel investors Tiger Global Management Softline Venture Partners Angel investors ProfMedia Investment AB Kinnevik; Direct Group; eVenture Capital Partners; Fast Lane Ventures Northzone Ventures; Investment AB Kinnevik Mail.ru Group; Almaz Capital Partners RBC OJSC Mangrove Capital Partners; ABRT Venture Fund; Fast Lane Ventures Tiger Global Management Tiger Global Management Direct Group; eVenture Capital Partners Mangrove Capital Partners; Direct Group; ABRT Venture Fund Advance Capital Valery Krivenko and Alexey Kovsh Accel Management; Mangrove Capital Partners; Direct Group; Arlan Investment Company Mail.ru Group; 1C Company
Commentary Meta-search engine of flights Online flash sales offering travel packages Online retailer of shoes
Ostrovok.ru Lamoda.ru
Apr-11
KupiVIP
$55.0m
Apr-11 Apr-11 Mar-11 Mar-11 Mar-11 Mar-11 Mar-11 Mar-11 Feb-11 Feb-11 Dec-10 Nov-10 Nov-10 Oct-10 Sep-10 Aug-10 Aug-10 Jul-10 Jul-10 Jul-10 Apr-10 Mar-10 Jan-10 Nov-09
Oktogo.ru Ozon.ru Biglion WebMediaGroup Vigoda.ru Tulp.ru BabyBoom.ru Wikimart Emegamall HipClub.ru ivi.ru Sapato.ru Avito.ru i-Jet Media iGlobe.ru KupiBonus Wikimart anydayanyway.com Sapato.ru KupiBonus Textone.ru Tulp.ru KupiVIP Nival Network
$5.0m $50.0m $3.0m $7.0m $0.5m $0.5m $3.3m $5.1m $26.2m $20.0m $6.4m $10.0m $1.0m $5.0m $20.0m $7.0m
Online hotel booking E-tailer selling a wide range of products including books, audio, CDs and DVDs, software, electronic goods Group discount site Online video service through Zoomby platform Group discount site Online community, providing information on urban city guide Online babycare specialist retailer Online shopping marketplace Sets up third party sites on leading social networks, classifieds and auction sites and blogs Online flash sales offering travel packages Online licensed video distribution Online retailer of shoes Online C2C classifieds Online social games distributor Online travel portal operator Group discount site offering health and beauty products Online shopping marketplace Online airline ticket retailer Online retailer of shoes Group discount site offering health and beauty products Online service providing newspaper downloads as audio files Online community, providing information on urban city guide Online fashion private sales Online games publisher
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