Hindustan Times ST (Jaipur)

Amazon, Walmart woos rural India

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NEITHER COMPANY GAVE SPECIFIC REVENUE FIGURES, THOUGH THEY CLAIMED RECORD ACTIVITY IN RURAL INDIA DURING FESTIVE SALES

BENGALURU: Amazon.com Inc. and rival Walmart Inc. reported record revenue for their six-day India sales festivals as e-commerce catches on with buyers and sellers in smaller Indian towns, moving beyond the country’s urban, English-speaking population.

The American competitor­s have been duelling in India since Walmart cut a $16 billion deal for control of local pioneer Flipkart Online Services Pvt. last year. Their latest sales—which Amazon calls the Great Indian Festival and Flipkart calls Big Billion Days—are a high-stakes battle that ran on the same days and concluded over the weekend.

Both focused on expanding t hei r onl i ne c ommerce to smaller cities and rural areas, an enormous swath of the country known by its historic name of Bharat. Neither company gave specific revenue figures, though they claimed record activity.“this has been our biggest celebratio­n ever, a digital Bharat festival,” said Amit Agarwal, Amazon’s India chief, during a telephone call from his Bengaluru headquarte­rs. “Over 65,000 sellers from 500 cities sold products.”

Millions of Indians are moving online thanks to inexpensiv­e smartphone­s and some of the lowest wireless data rates in the world. That is boosting all kinds of internet businesses, from streaming video and online gaming to e-commerce and services.

“There is a big wave of consumers in Bharat shifting their offline spending to online during these sale days, and increasing t he t i cket size of t heir purchases,” said Satish Meena, a senior forecast analyst at Forrester Research Inc. “Online retailers have been efficientl­y getting their message about the discounts, the product assortment and affordable credit offerings to the internet users in small cities.”

Flipkart said in a note that it recorded almost 50% growth in new customers compared with last year’s sale days, and a 100% increase in units sold to shoppers in small, so-called tier 3 cities. More than 40% of sellers during the sale days were from tier 2 cities and beyond. “Bharat has moved closer to India in more ways than one,” Kalyan Krishnamur­thy, Flipkart’s chief executive officer, said in a statement.

Agarwal said Amazon succeeded in attracting not just buyers but also small and medium sellers hawking local, or “desi”, brands. Among the top-selling brands were Ganesh vegetable choppers, local makers of treadmills and Boat, which makes earphones and other mobile accessorie­s. “A huge opportunit­y lies ahead as this sale event demonstrat­es,” Agarwal said. “It’s a long journey, and we are taking a 10-year-view as India will have the largest internet population in the world.”

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