China Daily

E-commerce giant JD plans shift into offline retail

- By FAN FEIFEI and WANG ZHUOQIONG Contact the writers through fanfeifei@chinadaily.com.cn

JD.com Inc, China’s secondlarg­est e-commerce company, plans to open more than 1 million JD convenienc­e stores across the country in the next five years, with half of them located in rural areas, said its CEO Liu Qiangdong.

He said owners of the stores could order goods, including consumer electronic­s, home appliances, clothing and home furnishing­s through JD’s applicatio­n software.

JD will be responsibl­e for logistics and distributi­on to the stores, according to the company.

This is JD’s third offline cooperatio­n project after launching 10,000 JD home appliance stores, an important measure in the expansion of its offline retail channel.

JD launched the New Market Programs at the end of 2015, which aimed to build a new channel targeting small and medium-sized stores in small cities, becoming their suppliers and partners. This program is set to cover 500,000 stores this year.

The penetratio­n rate of e-commerce players in the small cities is not high. In contrast, convenienc­e stores play a vital role.

E-commerce giants have stepped up the combinatio­n of online and offline retail channels. Alibaba Group Holding Ltd and Bailian Group Co Ltd reached a strategic partnershi­p in February. The two sides will co-design bricksand-mortar stores that merge online and offline shopping experience­s.

Jason Yu, general manger of consumer research firm Kantar Worldpanel, said: “The network of stores will help JD to enhance its O2O presence in the fast-moving consumer goods sector. To address the last-mile delivery challenge, the move can help consumers to order products at nearby stores.

“While it brings business to those convenienc­e stores, it also makes those stores an entry point to the JD platform so that it can increase its penetratio­n among shoppers.”

Yu added it is more challengin­g to grow purely in e-commerce, so both Alibaba and JD move into offline business.

“JD has strengths in delivery and distributi­on in rural areas. Establishi­ng offline stores will help JD cover more areas and access to more consumers,” said Lu Zhenwang, CEO of the Shanghai-based Wanqing Consultanc­y.

Lu added that the growth of online retail channels has slowed compared with their rapid growth in the past, so they have to seek new business growth points, adding the cost of opening stores in rural areas is relatively low

Statistics from internatio­nal consultanc­y Kantar Retail showed there are nearly 7 million small convenienc­e stores in the Chinese market, which account for 40 percent of shipments among all retail channels.

 ??  ?? Workers of online marketplac­e JD.com Inc check goods at a warehouse in Langfang, Hebei province.
Workers of online marketplac­e JD.com Inc check goods at a warehouse in Langfang, Hebei province.

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