Is The E-commerce Space All About Capital?Only the big players backed by huge funding seem to be surviving

ByAgamoni Ghosh

Opinions expressed by Entrepreneur contributors are their own.

You're reading Entrepreneur India, an international franchise of Entrepreneur Media.

Shutterstock.com

WhenFlipkartfirst hit the Indian market, it was one of its kind, picking up from the success ofAmazonabroad, which also started with a narrow vision of just selling books online.

Today, some of the most valued start-ups in the world are e-commerce companies as a digital push has changed the medium where consumers are spending their money.

The latestFlipkart-Snapdealacquisition saga is, however, a testament to how mergers and acquisitions within the e-commerce industry are largely about raising more and more capital.

Latest reports also indicate thatPaytmMall, backed by Chinese e-commerce giantAlibaba, may be in talks to bid forBigBasket, the online grocery store that has grown substantially, to possibly take on Amazon that is planning big bets in the grocery section in India. The pattern shows how only some of the big players, backed by huge funding, seem to be surviving long-term.

Capital Matters

"It's more or less a game of those who can pour in more capital with most players offering consumers the same product," said Mohan Kumar, ofNorwest Venture Partners."IfSoftBankpumped in a handsome amount into Snapdeal, they would be up and fine and running. Similarly, other large e-commerce players are all about those who have a bigger capital to keep running their operations smoothly as the sector is logistically heavy and requires a huge network of manpower, whether permanent or contractual," added Kumar.

最近的收购和兼并e-commerce scene were also a result of the capital expansion plan and less to do with the acquisition of innovative products or ideas, opined Kumar. Plus the margins are low in a competitive business like this, and hence only a large capital backing can somewhat cushion the losses faced by e-commerce giants.

What makes it worse is the ongoing bargains in the from of discounts given by these companies, as there is a huge cost involved in wooing consumers online in such a touch-and-feel category.

Not Understanding the Market

While capital is a big chunk of e-commerce companies survival, at an operational level, shallow understanding of the marketplace is another problem. For instance,Flipkartis still at a marginal advantage because it understood the challenge of logistics in the e-commerce market and currently operates most of its logistics in-house.

But not all players get the market that well.

"With challenges like workforce management and low margins, it is difficult to make that kind of returns with the same old model. Most players have just jumped in the market without even understanding what the need for their company is," said Kumar. "Yes the battle was heating up in the e-commerce space sometime back when it was fresh, but now it's mostly about the two or three big players who possess the maximum capital amongst the crowd," he added.

The e-commerce space may be growing by leaps and bounds but so are its losses. The combined losses of e-commerce majors Flipkart, Amazon, and Snapdeal in India at the beginning of this year stood at INR 11,754 crore.

Wavy Line
Agamoni Ghosh

Former Staff, Entrepreneur India

She was generating stories out of Bengaluru for Entrepreneur India. She has worked with leading national and international business publications, including Newsweek, Business Standard, and CNBC in the past.

Related Topics

News and Trends

AlmaBetter Allocates INR 50 Crore Fund To Launch AlmaBetter Innovarsity

The Innovarsity will equip 5,000 learners with a globally recognized master's degree in computer science, by April 2024, the company said in a press release

领导

From Indore to BSE

EKI's journey began in 2008 as a start-up initiative in Indore and it is now present in 17 countries around the world.

Thought Leaders

I Pitched 300 People a Day For 1 Year — and Learned This Impactful Entrepreneurial Lesson

After working myself to the bone pitching 300 people each day for one year, I came out of that experience as a new man — but surprisingly, an unhappier one. Here's what I learned.

Thought Leaders

So, You've Been Hacked. These are the Best Practices for Business Leaders Post-Hack

The lasting effects of a cyber incident can impact an organization's reputation, customers, workforce, databases and network architecture.