Showing posts with label on-line shopping. Show all posts
Showing posts with label on-line shopping. Show all posts

Tuesday, 17 June 2014

Wal-Mart India Woos Mom-and-Pop Stores to Tap $50 Billion

Wal-Mart India Woos Mom-and-Pop Stores to Tap $50 Billion



Wal-Mart Stores Inc. (WMT) has opened an e-commerce website to supply goods to mom-and-pop merchants in India as the world’s largest retailer seeks to dominate a market it estimates will be valued at $50 billion by 2020.
Wal-Mart is counting on its online operations to help fuel sales as it grapples with a slowdown both at home and abroad. The Indian website is only for existing users of its members-only cash-and-carry stores and may help draw orders from small businesses more than 20 kilometers (12 miles) from outlets and that aren’t serviced by sales representatives, said the company’s chief executive for India Krish Iyer.
“The mandate from Wal-Mart for me is to focus on the cash-and-carry business.” Iyer said in an interview in New Delhi June 13 . “We are into cash-and-carry for the long-haul and the prize is big.”
The retailer this month promoted Latin America executive Fernando Madeira to chief executive officer of Walmart.com, the e-commerce division that’s leading the company’s battle against Amazon.com Inc. Online revenue accounts for less than 3 percent of the Bentonville, Arkansas-based group’s total sales.
Unlike the Sam’s club and other member-based store formats, India’s cash-and-carry services are only for mom-and-pop shops and other traders who need government tax documents to become members. Ordinary shoppers are not allowed to enter the stores or shop on this new website.

Photographer: Udit Kulshrestha/Bloomberg
Two customers with share a laugh as they browse teas on display at a Walmart India Pvt.... Read More

Educating Customers

The web-based ordering platform is being being piloted in two cities -- Hyderabad in southern India and Lucknow in the north -- and will be rolled out across all its stores by January 2015, Iyer said. The company’s sales reps will train small business customers to use the website, Iyer said.
“The small mom-and-pop shops is where the challenge lies in terms of converting them into e-shoppers,” said Iyer, who was appointed chief executive in January. “A deliberate effort is required to educate them in the whole process,”
The company aims to have 10 percent of orders for each store from the website within two years of operation, Iyer said.
The operator of Sam’s Club outlets said in April it will add 50 more stores in India over the next four to five years. Most of the new locations will be in the nine states where the company already has a presence, and the first of those will be opened next year, Iyer said. Rival Metro AG said last month that it plans to have 50 outlets by 2020, from the 16 now.

Photographer: Udit Kulshrestha/Bloomberg
Customers browse household goods at a Walmart India Pvt. Best Price Modern Wholesale... Read More

‘Huge Potential’

Wal-Mart’s e-commerce initiative may boost orders from hotels, hospitals and web-savvy businesses, said Ruchi Sally, head of retail advisory at consultant Elargir Solutions Pvt. in Mumbai.
“Initially it may be only in the cities where they have stores, but they can roll it out nationwide,” Sally said via phone from Mumbai. “I see a huge potential in this.”
Competitors such as Metro and Reliance Retail may follow Wal-Mart’s lead and offer similar services, she said.
Billionaire Mukesh Ambani’s Reliance (RIL) Retail was a late-entrant into the cash-and-carry business, though it has grown bigger than rivals. Reliance had 32 stores as of the end of March, compared with Wal-Mart’s 20 and Metro’s 16.
Asia’s second-most populous nation doesn’t allow foreign-controlled companies to sell products online. That’s led web retailers to a different model than the one pioneered by Amazon: they operate online marketplaces and local traders sell goods on them.
Amazon, EBay Inc., and local rivals Flipkart.com and Snapdeal.com operate such marketplaces selling everything from t-shirts to mobile phones, in a market that CLSA Asia Pacific Markets estimates was worth $3 billion last year.

Photographer: Udit Kulshrestha/Bloomberg
A cashier checks banknotes at a checkout counter inside a Walmart India Pvt. Best Price... Read More

During his election campaign earlier this year, Prime Minister Narendra Modi indicated he might loosen rules to allow foreign control in all kinds of e-commerce. This would allow operators who also sell their own inventory, as Wal-Mart does in the U.S.
Any such rule changes would present a “future opportunity” for the retailer, though the current focus is on growing the wholesale business, Iyer said.
To contact the reporter on this story: Adi Narayan in Mumbai atanarayan8@bloomberg.net
To contact the editors responsible for this story: Stephanie Wong atswong139@bloomberg.net Suresh Seshadri, Dick Schumacher

Saturday, 28 September 2013

ONLINE GROCERY SHOPPING TO TRIPLE BY 2023

ONLINE GROCERY SHOPPING TO TRIPLE BY 2023

BARRINGTON, Ill.—A recent report found online grocery shopping, lead by wealthy and young shoppers, will expand to 11% of total U.S. grocery spending by 2023—a significant increase from the current 3.3%, as reported by the International Business Times.


The report, "Six Degrees of Digital Connections," by Brick Meets Click, surveyed  more than 22,000 shoppers across six retail brands, and identified wealthy and young shoppers are fueling the adoption of online grocery shopping, who represent about one-fifth of all grocery shoppers. Currently, 10% of U.S. grocery shoppers regularly buy food and produce online.

The report concluded wealthy shoppers opted for online shopping for rare natural, organic and artisanal products to save time, while young shoppers are already accustomed to online shopping for other purchases. Young shoppers, however, will be more sensitive to added delivery costs since they spend the least per month on groceries.

Amazon.com, Inc., was reported the most popular single source for online grocery purchases, serving 39% of online shoppers, compared with 28% by all other grocery retailers.

Brick Meets Click Principal Bill Bishop told IBTimes in order to sway the remaining population to shop online for groceries, supermarkets must keep the cost of online grocery shopping no more than 10% over traditional shopping cart totals. Current price difference in larger cities, like New York, range from 15% to 20% more due to complex delivery and distribution models.

In certain markets prone to be more tech-savvy, like San Francisco, online grocery shopping is already higher, accounting for 6% percent of total spending, according to Bishop. New online grocers in San Francisco include Instacart, Good Eggs and ventures from Safeway, Inc.

Although one-tenth of the market migrating to online groceries may not seem like much, Bishop said the impact on notoriously thin profit margins in the industry could be severe. “There will be markets that will experience significant disruptive impact, if online goes over 10%," he said to IBTimes.

Other changes on the grocery shopping front include a consumer preference towards warehouse clubs and other retail channels like drugstores, dollar stores and limited assortment chains.
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