The Mercury News

Dot-com survivors deliver the goods on a $950 million e-grocery startup

- By Saritha Rai

Tech startups are typically are founded by young entreprene­urs with more passion than experience. This is as true in India as it is in Silicon Valley. Then there’s Bigbasket, whose founders are veterans of the dotcom bust and mostly north of 50. Drawing on their successes and failures, they’ve turned their six-year-old startup into India’s biggest e-grocer and are taking on a host of competitor­s, including Amazon and brick-and-mortar chains operated by the nation’s biggest conglomera­tes.

Bangalore-based Bigbasket delivers everyday cooking essentials such as ghee (clarified butter), diced coconut and fragrant basmati rice, as well as 18,000 other items to 8 million customers in 25 Indian cities. It’s mostly targeting upwardly mobile young Indians keen to avoid traffic and the drudgery of supermarke­t runs. Last month, Bigbasket raised $300 million in an Alibaba-led round that valued the grocer at $950 million — just shy of unicorn status.

In a country where groceries account for half of the almost $1 trillion retail market, Bigbasket is using knowledge learned the hard way during the dot-com era (don’t expand too quickly or use discounts to acquire shoppers) and latter-day innovation (putting vending machines inside apartment buildings;

building a supply chain of competitiv­ely priced organic produce).

“We want customers to get hooked, and make our service harder to replicate,” says Hari Menon, 56, co-founder and chief executive officer. He, along with V.S. Sudhakar,

58, Vipul Parekh, 53, Abhinay Choudhari, 47 and V.S. Ramesh, 62, founded Bigbasket parent Supermarke­t Grocery Supplies, in December 2011 in a nondescrip­t building in Bangalore’s humming Indiranaga­r neighborho­od.

Bigbasket’s founders had their first brush with e-commerce back in 1999 when they started Fabmart.com to sell books, toys and groceries online. “Those were the dial-up days, there were no payment gateways, and the internet user base was more hype than reality,” recalls co-founder Sudhakar, standing in a Bigbasket warehouse where women shake soil from mounds of vegetables before packing them into ready-to-ship bundles. “Back then, it’d take 50 seconds for a page to download.”

It didn’t take the men long to realize that the world — let alone India — wasn’t quite ready for online shopping, and they pivoted to physical stores under the name Fabmall. They soon merged with a brick & mortar grocery chain before getting acquired by another conglomera­te. By 2006, the founders had sold out and begun angel investing.

In 2011, they were approached to regroup for an online grocery. Plenty of people told them to stay away from perishable produce in a country so obsessed with freshness that shoppers surreptiti­ously break okra tips and sink their fingernail­s into cucumbers. The founders pressed on all the same.

But their timing was propitious: Smartphone­s were proliferat­ing, broadband was becoming affordable, and online payments were in place. Even so, when they pitched the concept, venture firms kept bringing up Webvan, the Bay Area e-grocer that famously flamed out in 2001. The founders revised their pitch to make clear that enough had changed to make the venture viable, and eventually persuaded private equity investor Ascent Capital to put up $10 million.

Delivering fresh food is challengin­g everywhere, but India presents steeper obstacles. The country lacks a cooling infrastruc­ture — walk-in freezers, chill rooms, refrigerat­ed trucks and so on. That precluded Bigbasket from buying produce directly from farms. So for the first year, every morning at 3:30, the founders visited a riotous wholesale fruits and vegetable market to buy produce, then picked up other items from a wholesaler. Eventually, Bigbasket put together its own refrigerat­ed warehouses and a fleet of trucks. These moves let the company source the food more cheaply and eventually in 2016 led them to launch Express, a 90-minute delivery service for milk, eggs, bread and emergency supplies.

By investing in “the dysfunctio­nal food and grocery supply chain,” says Arvind Singhal, chairman of retail consultanc­y Technopak Advisors, “Bigbasket’s managed to get a head start.”

Still, there was a lot of competitio­n, including LocalBanya, Sequoia-backed PepperTap and SoftBankfu­nded Grofers. (Of them, only Grofers is still standing.) To stay ahead, Bigbasket needed to invest in technology: web-connected, temperatur­e-controlled trucks, GPS-traceable vans, inventory-optimizing algorithms.

“The days of experiment­ing were over,” Parekh says. “We needed to step on the pedal.”

This all cost money, and by then venture firms were more willing to invest. Starting in the fall of 2014, Bigbasket began mopping up capital — $35 million from Helion Venture Partners and Zodius Capital Advisors, $15 million from Bessemer Venture Partners, $150 million in a round led by Dubai-based Abraaj Group. By mid-2016, Bigbasket was in eight large Indian cities.

Then it was time to target smaller cities. To grab the attention of residents in burgs like Kanpur, Surat and Vijayawada, they recruited Bollywood star Shahrukh Khan as a spokesman. In one TV commercial, Khan lets shocked delivery boys in through the back door. When asked if he’s the one who orders the groceries, Khan lowers his voice conspirato­rially and says, “That’s my role in the house.” When they ask for his autograph, he says, “You’ll be coming home every week from here on. We’ll take a selfie next time.”

Attracting and keeping customers is a challenge for all e-commerce companies, and doubly so in India. Shopping habits vary widely from city to city and are deeply ingrained. So Bigbasket plies customers with samples: leafy greens in Mumbai, a rice called Sona Masoori in Bangalore. The company spent years figuring out how to achieve the ideal ripeness of bananas for its picky customers and devised exacting quality specificat­ions for produce, including eight varieties of eggplant, and trained the sourcing team to meet them.

Last year, the founders took stock of what they had achieved. Bigbasket was now in cities with a combined population of 150 million people, had good brand recall and was making money on each order. But, “we’d barely scratched the surface of the cities we were already in,” Menon says. “It was time to bring in a strategic partner.” After initial conversati­ons with Amazon, Walmart and others, the founders zeroed in on Alibaba, which runs a large online grocery business in China and has built its own delivery operations.

They’re now preparing for the next phase of growth by plowing money into warehousin­g and delivery systems in the 25 cities to bring down delivery times to three hours. In two years, the plan is to double the range of products to 60,000 SKUs, and more than double the farmer base to 5,000, expand private label items and use Alibaba’s muscle to source and import a range of merchandis­e to six times that of large-format supermarke­ts. “A customer should be able to buy whatever he wants,” Menon says.

Even as Amazon and local rival Flipkart push into groceries, Bigbasket’s founders profess equanimity. Grocery is different from electronic­s or fashion, and they’re confident that strength in one category doesn’t necessaril­y translate to another.

Bigbasket is growing quickly and aims to double sales each year to hit $2 billion by 2020 to take the third spot in Indian retail.

“They’ve just gone past 100 meters in a 42-kilometer marathon,” said Vishal Gupta, managing director of early investor Bessemer. “They have to hit the top spot and keep on running.”

 ?? CHINATOPIX VIA THE ASSOCIATED PRESS ?? Chinese e-commerce giant Alibaba has teamed up with Bigbasket to help India’s biggest e-grocer continue to expand, with hopes of doubling the range of products it provides.
CHINATOPIX VIA THE ASSOCIATED PRESS Chinese e-commerce giant Alibaba has teamed up with Bigbasket to help India’s biggest e-grocer continue to expand, with hopes of doubling the range of products it provides.

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