Business Standard

Fabogo rides on Dubai success to spread wings

- RANJU SARKAR New Delhi, 16 July

When Pasenjeet Roy was heading restaurant finder Zomato’s team in Dubai, wife Anuradha Sanyal found it difficult to find a salon online. If she visited one, she would come back and discuss the packages. Roy would visit restaurant­s in Dubai and found a couple of salons on every street but discovered less than five per cent of these were online.

This convinced Roy to start Fabogo, an aggregator for salons and spas, in 2015. After establishi­ng it in Dubai, it entered Mumbai and Pune, where it is based. Last week, Fabogo raised $2.5 million from Dubai-based early-stage investor Dunamis Ventures, which had also invested $500,000 in May 2015 and $1 million in January 2016.

The start-up claims about 330,000 customers come on its website every month or 10,000 visits every day, half of them from Dubai. It claims operations have turned profitable in Dubai, where an average customer spends around ~5,000 per visit. Fabogo now offers monthly packages that bundle a host of services and are economical for users.

Fazil Sayed, managing director, Dunamis Ventures, says Fabogo has done well with its search and discovery model and has emerged as the leading beauty and wellness platform in the UAE. It has grown its revenues at over 18 per cent month-on-month. ‘‘This team is dedicated and can go a lot further, if given the support,” he says.

The beauty and wellness market in India was estimated at $3 billion in 2013. It is now pegged at $7 billion and likely to be $12 billion by 2018. These include products and services sold through salons, spas, fitness centres and cosmetic clinics. The market includes aggregator­s like Fabogo, Zooty, Purple, Just Dial, Nearby, Little and Quikr; horizontal­s like Housejoy, and Urban Clap; home services providers like MyGlam, Vymo and Vanity Cube, which was acquired by fitness major VLCC. Vymo was acquired by Naturals, a South India-based beauty chain.

Sayed says the glam-tech industry offers a huge opportunit­y. It is highly unorganise­d and fragmented; at the same time, it is growing rapidly in emerging markets like the UAE and India. ‘‘Fabogo has a very passionate and talented core team, with a proven record in scaling internet businesses in the past,” he says.

Fabogo makes money through hyper-local advertisin­g, connecting local merchants with consumers who come looking for these services. Salons and spas advertise to gain visibility, to be listed higher on search. The company would soon enable transactio­ns through its website and charge merchants 20 per cent commission on the business it books for them. This would be Fabogo's second stream of revenue. To enable transactio­ns, it bought Bazinga Labs, a mobile developmen­t firm.

Roy says the long-term game is in transactio­ns. ‘‘Consumers are no longer only looking for a phone number. They are saying you need to take me there and ensure I get a great experience,” he explains.

 ??  ?? Pasenjeet Roy, founder, Fabogo
Pasenjeet Roy, founder, Fabogo

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