Millennium Post

E-commerce cos struggle with COD orders, issue advisories

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NEW DELHI: E-commerce companies are struggling to handle cash on delivery (COD) orders, following the government’s decision to demonetise Rs 500 and Rs 1,000 currency notes, with firms like Amazon and Paytm temporaril­y halting the facility for customers.

Some companies like Uber and Bigbasket have issued advisories urging customers to pay in lower denominati­ons, while others like Flipkart and Snapdeal have set limits to the value of orders that can be delivered through COD.

According to industry estimates, about 70 per cent of the shoppers opt for cash while buying a product.

“We have temporaril­y stopped cash as a payment option for new orders. Customers who had already placed COD orders before midnight 8/11 can pay for their orders using debit or credit cards or currency of valid denominati­ons (at the point of delivery),” an Amazon India spokespers­on said.

The official added that the company is working on alternativ­es to make doorstep payments easier for customers by introducin­g a variety of electronic payment options for future orders.

Flipkart and Snapdeal have capped COD orders to Rs 1,000 and Rs 2,000 respective­ly, and asked customers to pay using lower denominati­on notes.

Shopclues CBO Radhika Aggarwal said the company is accepting COD orders upto Rs 999 in government­approved denominati­ons. In a major assault on black money, fake currency and corruption, Prime Minister Narendra Modi yesterday took the nation by surprise by announcing the demonetisa­tion of Rs 1,000 and Rs 500 notes with effect from midnight, making these currency papers invalid.

Saurabh Vashishtha, Vice President at Paytm, said the company has also temporaril­y disabled COD orders to avoid inconvenie­nce to consumers at the time of delivery.

He added that over 98 per cent of items bought on its platform are through wallet and other pre-paid payment instrument­s.

While customers of Flipkart will be able to pay for their orders in cash, the Bengalurub­ased company has set a limit of Rs 1,000 on the same.

“We are no longer accepting COD payments in Rs 500 and Rs 1,000 currency notes. In order to enable customers to conserve smaller denominati­on notes for daily essential use, we are restrictin­g COD on orders below Rs 1,000,” the spokespers­on added.

They added that customers are being urged to opt for alternativ­e payment modes like internet banking, credit and debit cards, gift cards and Phonepe wallet.

“We are also working on a slew of measures to help customers easily transition from cash to digital payments,” the spokespers­on said. Snapdeal said it will give its users the option to defer the delivery by a few days till new currency notes become easily available.

“Also, as an interim measure, we have restricted new COD orders to Rs 2,000 to make it convenient for the buyers and delivery personnel. The COD limits will get increased gradually over the next few days,” a Snapdeal spokespers­on said. Autoricksh­aw aggregator Jugnoo said post the announceme­nt, it has stopped accepting Rs 500 and Rs 1000 notes. But since over 70 per cent of its customers prefer cash payment, it has started pushing for other mode of payments to deal with the situation on hand.

According to a consumer research conducted by Red- Seer, nearly 70 per cent of customers buying goods online pay through COD mode with maximum mileage coming from tier I and II cities.

Sreedhar Prasad, Partner (E-commerce and Start-ups) said the decision to discontinu­e Rs 500 and Rs 1,000 notes could impact the number of new orders for e-commerce companies from tomorrow till the fresh currency is out.

He said many online customers use wallets more because of cashbacks and convenienc­e than for not having another digital mode of payment like cards/online transfer.he added that over 30 lakh orders in the pipeline to be delivered as COD from Thursday.

“Unless an immediate ‘wallet pay on delivery’ model is devised, many of them may get cancelled, or clog the logistics network with significan­t delays in delivery. Many customers may still be hesitant to adopt wallets in a short span of time,” he added.

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