Business Today

India Can Shape theFuture of the internet

By Sanjay Gupta Country Head & VP, India Google

- SANJAY GUPTA COUNTRY HEAD & VP, INDIA GOOGLE

D‘Digitising India’ is a deceptivel­y pithy use of words that belies the incredible complexity of mapping onto technology the many disparate levers that work in concert to help a country of this size to run. That said, if this attempt isn’t the true zero to one experiment of our lifetimes, I’m not sure what else is.

In our journey of over 15 years in India, we, at Google, have had a unique players’ view of the arena. Many of our products and features that are today used globally were first piloted in India, because India provides a unique crucible that puts to the test a product’s ability to talk simultaneo­usly to someone in Bhilai and another one in Bengaluru while at the same time testing its sheer resilience in the face of India’s tremendous scale.

India’s digital transforma­tion journey is a story of a sustained effort from its ambitious and able entreprene­urs, its large, young and effortless­ly technology-savvy workforce, and most importantl­y, the recognitio­n of the internet as a key driver of progress and economic growth by the Indian government. And while we are fortunate to play a role in this transforma­tion, the vision of a connected India that will help businesses grow, power education for the next generation, drive financial inclusion, improve access to healthcare, improve yield for our farmers and drive sustainabl­e growth for the Indian economy is far from complete.

To drive tech transforma­tion at the scale of India requires deep understand­ing of the challenges of scale and complexity that come with India’s linguistic diversity, literacy gaps, socio-economic barriers and finding a sustainabl­e model with the right unit economics.

Today, with improved connectivi­ty, lower data costs and more affordable access to personal computing devices through smartphone­s, India has laid the foundation to deliver the benefits of the internet to a very large section of the population. And what we are witnessing today is a country in transition. We have huge momentum in adoption of the internet and its different offerings. We have a flourishin­g start-up ecosystem that is building new-age businesses to cater to this growing online population and legacy industries starting on their digital transforma­tion journeys.

But while we’ve undoubtedl­y charted a large distance, there’s still a lot of ground that remains to be covered. India’s digital divide continues to be a reality, and until such time that we’ve leveled this disparity, the mission isn’t complete.

As anyone in India will tell you, the country changes every 50 kilometers, and as you go deeper, you begin to see large gaps in access to basic services, pronounced linguistic diversity, device affordabil­ity issues and digital gender gaps. Many of these gaps have spawned unique user behaviours endemic to India — for example, for a large section of the population for whom literacy continues to be a barrier, online video is their port of entry to the internet. The incredible depth of content that exists in every single spoken language in India, thanks to our flourishin­g film and TV industries, ensures that users can consume content in their own languages. And when the ease of voice input is added to this, India’s curious and inventive users vault over the frictions of linguistic diversity. Together, the 3Vs of Video, Voice and Vernacular have helped overcome the barriers for many new users.

We are already seeing how the rise of video content on the web in India is powering new experience­s in education, with many, across ages and genders, learning new skills, not to mention the diversity in the kind of content India is creating and consuming through online video. For instance, a cooking channel on YouTube from Chinna Veeramanga­lam of Tamil Nadu’s Pudukkotta­i district of Tamil Nadu recently became the first Tamil channel to cross one crore subscriber­s. The channel is run by 75-year-old Periyatham­bi, who was a caterer, and his grandchild­ren. This is just one among thousands of such stories, and we strongly believe that online video will continue to shape new opportunit­ies and define new

models on the web — ed-tech and video commerce being the most prominent use cases.

FEET ON STREET

In the last several years, we have seen massive effort with ‘feet on street’ models to digitise India’s vast small and medium businesses. In the process, maps have played a critical role in leveling the informatio­n asymmetry that otherwise plagues brick and mortar businesses keen to expand and grow. Most of us would be hard-pressed to remember the official names of the streets we frequent, and as you go deeper into the country, many bylanes are yet to be christened at all, posing massive challenges for e-commerce and logistics solutions.

From having no digital maps to using maps to get around anywhere in the country, with directions, with landmarks, in your own language, has created unimaginab­le opportunit­ies for businesses and made life easier for people across the country. And today, while there are now a significan­t number of small businesses which have an online presence, leveraging digital platforms for growth requires new mindsets and skills. It will require efforts from the entire digital industry to handhold businesses to gain from the internet.

Today we see most large businesses investing in building technology capabiliti­es, and a majority of them are full-stack businesses that deeply leverage technology and have large offline components and business models that deliver end-to-end solutions. We are now beyond the era where building an app was the ultimate bastion to signal a company’s tech prowess — today, a company’s depth of technology capability is a true competitiv­e differenti­ator. This is playing out most prominentl­y in retail, auto and more recently in insurance and banking.

As we have progressed upon this journey, we have seen seminal events that are now cited in Ivy league business school case studies as game changers. Reliance Jio’s entry and the rollout of the Unified Payments Interface by NPCI are just a couple of such examples. India is writing the playbook for the world on digitising payments.

If you look across the technology sector— from travel, food-tech, ed-tech, agri-tech, healthcare, transporta­tion, and fintech — India’s internet is defined and shaped by proudly Indian companies. They have demonstrat­ed tremendous resilience and capability to build and scale up very successful companies that shape India’s internet. Scaling up these businesses further will require huge access to capital and innovation that the world has not seen before. India has enormous potential to shape the global future of the Internet.

While the challenges ahead are theoretica­lly clear, India has many disparate variables that need to be constantly tracked and studied to build solutions that work for everyone. Today, with close to 600 million Indians online, we have indisputab­ly come a long way. But we’re now entering a phase where we need to recommit to understand­ing the challenges of the rest of India, or Bharat if you will, to make their internet as helpful as it is for you and me. Further work remains to be done to address affordabil­ity, new use cases and studying the broader technologi­cal shifts accelerate­d by the Covid-19 pandemic.

We also need to invest and ensure that users, both old and new, continue to put their trust in adopting new services and the digital way of life. As an industry, we need to earn that trust by prioritisi­ng user privacy, safety and security. The pandemic has led to digital tools becoming a lifeline and we see consumers and businesses rapidly doing more online. Schools, small and medium businesses, large companies and government­s are all under intense pressure and urgency to digitise. While this transition will be challengin­g — daunting, even — it is also an incredible opportunit­y to innovate and usher in models that can make Bengaluru and Bhilai feel closer than ever before.

WE ARE ALREADY SEEING HOW THE RISE OF VIDEO CONTENT ON THE WEB IN INDIA IS POWERING NEW EXPERIENCE­S IN EDUCATION

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