(This article first appeared on YourStory.com here)
Internet penetration in India has been increasing exponentially – in 2006 there were only 21 million active internet users, which rose to 243 million users by June 2014. Simultaneously, the number of active mobile internet users grew to 185 million. The significant rise not only brought heavy data usage in the form of social networking, but it also gave a thrust to the e-commerce in India. India’s ecommerce market is estimated to have reached reached about $10-16 billion last year, with an annual increase of 88% and analysts project that by 2020 it could be worth a whopping $60-80 billion.
In a way, e-Commerce in India was kick-started in 2004 when eBay started its operations in India by acquiring Avnish Bajaj’s Baazee.com, which was India’s largest online auction portal. This was followed by two IIT-Delhi and ex-Amazon employees Sachin Bansal and Binny Bansal starting Flipkart in 2007 by investing 2 lakh rupees each as an online book retailer. In the same year, Mukesh Bansal, Ashutosh Lawania and Vineet Saxena started an online portal to customize goodies called Myntra. These pioneering companies had to undergo many a hurdle and pivot countless times to arrive at the optimal model for reaching out to the Indian market, with its own unique user behaviour. With perseverance, these e-commerce portals started winning the trust and confidence of Indian population and people gradually started shopping online. But the game changer that provided the much needed growth steroid was Cash on Delivery, which made online shopping very accessible in a country like India where the credit and debit card penetration is extremely low.This unique payment collection model even gave birth to startups like Gharpay. In 2010, Snapdeal an online platform started providing daily deals but pivoted into an e-commerce company via the marketplace model. Snapdeal is one of the first online marketplaces in India.
Timeline
2004-2007:
eBay acquired Baazee.com and entered the fledgling India market
Flipkart and Myntra were started around the same time
2010:
Flipkart pioneered the Cash on Delivery (CoD) model, increasing e-commerce reach dramatically
Myntra expanded its catalogue to retail fashion and lifestyle products
Flipkart acquired WeRead (a social book discovery tool)
SnapDeal acquired Grabbon.com ( a group buying site)
2011:
Flipkart acquired Mime360 (a digital platform company)
Flipkart acquired Chakpak.com (a Bollywood news site that offered updates, news, photos and videos)
2012:
Flipkart acquired Letsbuy.com (that specialized in electronics) for an estimated $25 million cash & stock transaction, rumoured to be facilitated by the common investors Tiger Global and Accel Partners
Flipkart launched Flyte Digital Music Store, which was later shut down in 2013 due to lack of expected traction
Fashionandyou acquired Urban Touch for an estimated $30 million cash & stock transaction in a bid to consolidate
Indian Postal Service undertook a major IT project to modernize its operations and be a preferred partner for e-commerce players to reach the widest number of PIN codes across India
Rocket Internet backed Jabong started operations in 2012
Myntra acquired the Sher Singh private label created by Exclusively.in. SherSingh specialized in sports inspired lifestyle apparel while Exclusively.in specialized in ethnic wear
Junglee was launched by Amazon.in as a price aggregator and comparison tool. This marked Amazon’s low cost baby steps in the Indian market, especially at a time when the FDI regulations were in a state of flux
2013:
Myntra acquired San Francisco based Fitiquette (virtual fitting room) in an undisclosed cash & stock deal, to solve the online fit/size problem of fashion retailing
Myntra piloted a one hour delivery system in Delhi & Bangalore for delivery addresses located within a 5 kilometer radius of their warehouse by process innovation and reducing lag time
Amazon, which does not provide Cash on Delivery facility in another country across the world, started providing Cash on Delivery option in India to keep up with the market norm
Flipkart launched its own payment gateway to third party customers under the brand name PayZippy
Jabong launched its third party logistics firm JaVAS and later sold it off to Gurgaon based QuickDel Logistics
2014:
Flipkart acquired Myntra for an undisclosed sum and shortly thereafter revealed that they raised an additional $210 million led by DST Global. This was followed by Flipkart raising another $1 billion at an enormous valuation of $7 billion
Flipkart’s logistics arm eKart was thrown open to third party retailers
Flipkart given a notice by the Enforcement Directorate for potential violation of the FEMA norms while accepting FDI. Potential penalty is INR 1400 crore
Myntra launched their private label Roadster with mega budget campaigns that were hitherto run only for branded goods
SnapDeal acquired Doozton, a product discovery platform that enabled personalized way of listing and recommending merchandise
Amazon tied up with BPCL in Mumbai and Delhi & local grocery stores allowing customers to pick up their packages from the retail chain In&Out run by BPCL at select filling stations, and quietly expands to all categories that major retailers are present, and stocks 15 million products, 5 million more than Flipkart
Amazon tied up with Narayana Murthy through his private investment firm Catamaran Ventures, aiming to bring offline small sellers and SMBs online and take advantage of the fast growing online customer base in India
Amazon announces plans to invest $2 billion in building out the Indian operations
Snapdeal and Flipkart expand their categories to incude adult toys, sexual wellness etc.
Any other major landmarks in the Indian e-commerce ecosystem development? Share in the comments below!