The Sun (Malaysia)

Shopee to begin monetising platform

> E-commerce marketplac­e aims to be ‘Alibaba of Southeast Asia’, and will start with paid ads this year

- BY EE ANN NEE

KUALA LUMPUR: E-commerce marketplac­e Shopee, which plans to start monetising its platform by introducin­g paid ads this year, wants to be the “Alibaba of Southeast Asia” and become Southeast Asia’s mobile commerce destinatio­n of choice.

Although it is focusing on growing rather than monetising now, Shopee regional managing director Ian Ho ( pix) said the company will need to bring in revenue at some point with some plans of monetisati­on.

“Monetising is not rocket science. Typically, there are three ways to monetise on e-commerce platforms, which are via listing fees, commission­s and paid ads. These are some of the monetisati­on models that we’re considerin­g and we plan to roll out something along the lines of paid ads this year,” Ho told SunBiz in an interview recently.

“The expectatio­n is to grow in the market and provide good service for buyers and sellers. We’re not bothered by what competitor­s are doing. We’re focused on growing our pie in the market. We’re predominan­tly mobilecent­ric and we want to bring on board the rights brands to our platform,” he said.

Shopee has presence in seven markets, namely Malaysia, Singapore, Indonesia, Vietnam, Thailand, the Philippine­s and Taiwan with 40 million downloads. Shopee is a platform tailored for Southeast Asia, combining customer-to-customer marketplac­e with payment and logistical support, making online shopping possible.

“We hope to be number one in terms of gross merchandis­e value (GMV) in the market in the near future. As an ecommerce platform, we’re able to leverage on economies of scale to push prices down,” Ho said.

Shopee has achieved over US$3 billion (RM13 billion) in annualised GMV across the seven markets in the first half of 2017. To date, Shopee Malaysia has garnered over 3 million downloads, with over 100 million products sold. In Malaysia, Shopee started in 2015, and has expanded its team to over 200 employees.

Shopee continues to focus on mobile commerce as mobile penetratio­n surpass computer usage with more people surfing on their mobile devices than on computers.

Ho said Shopee is free to use and does not charge any listing fee or commission. It offers free shipping up to 5kg for items over RM30 in Peninsular Malaysia.

Offering such freebies has contribute­d to Shopee Malaysia’s growth over the past two years, he said. Last year, he added, Shopee Malaysia grew 43% in GMV month-on-month.

“With these free stuff, we’re able to negotiate with the sellers to reduce the prices of items and pass on cost savings to buyers. We’ve been running campaigns with the lowest price guarantee, whereby we will refund you the difference, up to 120% (in cash vouchers), if you find the same item for a lower price elsewhere.”

Ho said categories that are popular in Shopee are typically what you buy in a shopping mall, such as fashion, mobile and accessorie­s, groceries, cosmetics.

“Shopee is just like a shopping centre on the internet,” said Ho.

Shopee is owned by internet platform company Sea Ltd, which also owns gaming platform Garena and payment platform AirPay.

“We’re fully funded by Sea. Sea has reached multiple rounds of funding and we recently (in May) raised a new round of funding of about US$550 million from various investors for Sea. Most of the funding that Sea is raising will be going to Shopee to help us grow in the seven markets that we are in,” said Ho, who oversees the operations for Shopee Malaysia and Singapore.

He said Shopee leverages on some of the user base of the entities of Sea as well as operationa­lly, as Sea already had a presence in Malaysia prior to Shopee’s entry. However, from a technology and hiring perspectiv­e, Shoppee has separate resources from its parent.

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