|
Devina
Joshi, Financial Express
Mumbai,
8 September 2015
Recently,
there was news of restaurant reservation site EazyDiner expanding
operations to Mumbai from the National Capital Region, having
secured Series A funding worth $3 million led by existing investor
DSG Consumer Partners, and Saamna Capital.
As per a PwC analyst, investors have pumped more than $150 million
into companies like Grofers, TinyOwl, Swiggy, LocalOye, Spoonjoy,
Zimmber and HolaChef, among others. Judging by the patronage showered
upon them by customers and investors alike, it would appear that
hyperlocal start-ups are all set to create the next big boom in
the Indian retail sector. But is it really all that rosy? Probably
not, as can be amply witnessed by acquisitions taking place in
the nascent yet already overcrowded market.
Between November 2014 and February 2015, the Rocket Internet-backed
Foodpanda acquired rivals TastyKhana and JustEat.in, and is rumoured
to be in acquisition mode with TinyOwl. Restaurant search app
Zomato, which recently got into the food ordering space, is also
reportedly looking to acquire minority stakes in food-ordering
firms.
While investors are attracted to hyperlocal start-ups, controlling
logistics well is key to sustained growth for these businesses
all of these will definitely go through a constraint in
the supply of delivery boys, for example. In India, organising
fragmented labour is a challenge and, hence, a services-based
hyperlocal needs to figure out the mechanics of human capital
even more than a traditional, product-based e-commerce firm.
For services, another challenge is customer stickiness. If a
user uses an app to obtain the services of a plumber, for example,
he may not go through the app to contact the plumber next time
if his services are found satisfactory. Discounting can induce
trials, but just like in any other business, prove fatal in the
long run. Like what led to the end of HomeJoy in the US
excessive discounts to dissuade direct contact between servicemen
and customers.
Even for product-based start-ups, maintaining data quality is
a big hurdle as stock and prices may not be updated by retailers
in real time, making it difficult to track offline sales.
Since the game is hyperlocal, you need to be physically present
in the city to bring retailers aboard. For that, you need a city
team. Other challenges include retailer verification and assessment,
given that hyperlocals deal with small city retailers.
Stickiness is needed on both sides, and each locality will
certainly evolve into having a market leader and a follower, with
other players falling far behind. So the critical success
factor for a hyperlocal is being able to rapidly create a viable
model in each location it targets, and thento build overall
scale and continued attractiveness for investorsquickly
move on to replicate the model in another location, and then another,
says retail consultant Devangshu Dutta of Third Eyesight. As they
do that, they will become potential acquisition targets for larger
ecommerce companies, which could use acquisition to not only take
out potential competition but also to imbibe the learning and
capabilities needed to deal with microcosms of consumer demand.
(Published in Financial
Express.)
|
|