Business Standard

Walking the online-offline tightrope

Google-backed Fynd’s model helps fashion brands, stores, e-commerce platforms make optimum use of inventory, writes Romita Majumdar

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Google-backed Fynd’s model helps fashion brands, stores, e-commerce platforms make optimum use of inventory. ROMITA MAJUMDAR writes

Mitesh Mehta developed his father’s garment manufactur­ing business into a classy urban brand that found takers in both upscale malls and select online portals. Yet, he was having trouble in utilising resources effectivel­y. He would send out a fixed number of bulk units to each client but realised that buyers in stores and online are very different. Demand for fashion was not only seasonal but also differed from market to market. He would often end with unclaimed stock from different clients because the demand wasn’t gauged rightly.

Fynd turned his troubles around by integratin­g their algorithm with his inventory database. It now helps him keep track of how many units of different garments should go where, across different clients, without having to worry about wastage.

Last month, the omnichanne­l platform closed a Series-C round of funding. Fynd raised from the lead investor, Google, followed by active participat­ion from Kae Capital, IIFL, Singularit­y Ventures, GrowX, Tracxn Labs, Venture Catalyst, the Patni family office and Hong Kong-based Axis Capital, among other angel investors in the round. While the fund size has not been disclosed, the company had raised a little over $3.4 million in SeriesB last year.

“Fynd has built an impressive, tech-first, platform that has potential to scale within and beyond fashion and India,” said Seema Rao, head of corporate developmen­t-India at Google. “Its unique store-driven commerce approach, without inventory or warehouses, gives it a unique position in the marketplac­e.” Opportunit­y Fynd does not call itself an e-commerce company but as one that helps stores become more efficient. Most brands retail almost 90 per cent of their inventory through offline stores. With customers discoverin­g products on multiple channels, from e-commerce platforms and social media to shop windows, Fynd saw an opportunit­y to service multiple channels from a single touchpoint, instead of catering to these separately.

“We realised that irrespecti­ve of where a shirt is physically stored, customers could have the opportunit­y to buy it from any of these touchpoint­s. We are solving the ability to integrate with retail systems for these brands by creating a virtual inventory,” said

Harsh Shah, co-founder. The parent brand will continue to house the product wherever they wish but Fynd manages the demand and supply algorithm for them, provided they have an uncluttere­d inventory record, said Shah.

Fynd earns about 20-30 per cent on every transactio­n they facilitate for brands. It helps brands access buyers on e-commerce sites like Jabong, Amazon, brand websites, Fynd Store and even malls. Fynd caters to organised retailers like W, Soch and Nike. They also help connect young brands working out of smaller stores but with a larger reach across e-commerce.

The online to offline platform directly sources products across categories, including clothing, footwear, jewellery and accessorie­s. From some of the prominent brands in the country (via their in-store inventory) and brings these online. Besides, Fynd’s in-store product, Fynd Store, helps the brand stores save on their in-store sales.

Challenges

The biggest challenges for Fynd so far has been in integratin­g their technology with the retailer’s inventory system, apart from the actual customer acquisitio­n and multiple channel management concerns. “Acquiring customers was a challenge, as e-commerce hasn’t yet proved its profitabil­ity in India. Also, we work with multiple demand channels, with completely different styles of working — bringing everyone in sync is always a hurdle,” says Shah.

Fynd has been breaking even on every order for some time but doing so on operating earnings is still eight months away, says Shah. It currently partners with around 9,000 stores and 320 brands across 40 cities. And, delivers to almost nine million registered customers.

Over the next year, it hopes to increase the supply to almost 600 brands and add around 6,000 stores. “We have plans to expand our flagship Fynd stores from 350 to around 1,000, while increasing our registered customer base to 12 million,” adds Shah.

 ??  ?? From left: Fynd’s co-founders Sreeraman MG, Harsh Shah and Farooq Adam
From left: Fynd’s co-founders Sreeraman MG, Harsh Shah and Farooq Adam

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