Business Standard

Buy & sell used goods with Zefo effort

A portal for buying & selling furniture and appliances, firm sees opportunit­y as the sector becomes organised, reports Apurva Venkat

- APURVA VENKAT

A portal for buying & selling furniture and appliances, firm sees opportunit­y as the sector becomes organised, reports

Mayuri Jain shifted to Bengaluru last December to work for a multinatio­nal company. On a tight budget, she wanted basic secondhand furniture for her small flat. Travelling across the city to meet various sellers did not help. That is when a friend suggested Zefo.

Zefo Effort Technology debuted last August as an online portal for selling and buying used furniture and appliances. “We want to be the Amazon for used appliances the Urban Ladder for used furniture,” says Rohit Ramasubram­anian, founder of Zefo. The start-up buys goods from sellers, refurbishe­s them and sells them on its portal at a fair price.

Zefo has received $6 million (~40 crore) in Series-A funding, led by Sequoia India, with participat­ion from venture capital firms Beenext and Helion Ventures, an existing investor.

Abheek Anand, principal, Sequoia Capital India Advisors, says the vision for Zefo is simple: Be the Amazon for used goods in India. “Anyone who has tried to buy, or sell, a sofa on these sites knows it takes time and effort. And, neither the buyer nor the seller trusts they are receiving the best price. Zefo solves this problem and this shows up in its exceptiona­lly high customer NPS scores,” he adds.

Zefo is already unit economics profitable and has had 7x growth in the last one year. It pays sellers upfront, refurbishe­s the product, cleans it, checks if any work needs to be done, and sells it in a transparen­t manner. Defects are are called out on the portal. Zefo has over 30,000 customers and sells 400-500 products daily. Opportunit­ies Ramasubram­anian says the market for second-hand goods is inefficien­t. Most online platforms like OLX and Quikr aid in product discovery but the transactio­n has to be carried out by the buyer and seller themselves.

“We wanted to inject both trust and convenienc­e. We wanted to solve the process fully. Our USP is that we are not a classified­s section but an e-commerce portal for used goods,” says Ramasubram­anian.

The company says since the industry is fragmented its size is hard to predict. However, Zefo assumes the two segments it operates in are a $10 billion market.

The company plans to make the process more transparen­t, simple to use, and user-friendly. “Often with scrap dealers you do not receive a fair price. It is also tedious to go to them or to ask them to come home. We come, asses the items and offer you a fair price. You either accept it or reject it. We pay cash upfront, making us trustworth­y as well,” adds Ramasubram­anian.

Zefo has tied up with Flipkart and Urban Ladder to expand its business through exchange goods. Going further, it sees opportunit­y as the sector becomes organised.

Green Dust also works in this segment, however, its focus is mobile phones and it also deals with unopened goods for bulk dealers. Business model Zefo has a clear intention of making money and burning as little cash as possible. The company says margins are high and it is unit economics positive and on the path to profitabil­ity.

Within 15 months of launch, Zefo has over 40,000 customers and is growing at 40 per cent, month on month. “We have specifical­ly taken this market because we wanted to make it efficient,” says Ramasubram­anian.

Anand says the reason his firm invested in Zefo was the founders had presented a compelling vision. “One of reimaginin­g how buying and selling of used products should work in India. Classified­s suffer from a problem of low trust and poor consumer experience­s. Using a managed model, Zefo provides a dramatical­ly better user experience,” he adds. Challenges The company says the big challenge is to keep the supply chain running. “We have to keep finding people who are willing to sell their products. Unlike general e-commerce, there is no vendor,” says Ramasubram­anian.

Zefo is looking at tie-ups with e-commerce portals so that their exchange products come directly to it. Zefo has tied up with Urban Ladder for furniture and Flipkart for appliances. The system of exchanging used goods, setting a value to the goods and reselling them will be done by Zefo for these two companies. Zefo is looking at more such arrangemen­ts.

“For Zefo’s business, after-sales service plays a significan­t role. Emphasis on last-mile delivery is key and can be ensured through training and building skill sets of staff,” says Vikas Sharma, head of operations at Pepperfry.

Sharma says to balance cost and service, Zefo must invest in systems for inventory control, order tracking, customised vehicles for damage-free movement of goods, efficient route planning solutions and a multi-skilled carpenter squad to handle tasks like assembly and polishing. Road ahead Zefo wants to go deeper into large appliances. Started in May this year, the large appliances category is growing at a steady clip. The company is also looking at entering mobile resale, which it says is the largest segment in resale. The company has no deadline to enter this segment. Anand expects Zefo to reach $50 million in sales by the end of next year.

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 ??  ?? (From left) Himesh Joshi, Rohit Ramasubram­anian, Karan Gupta and Arjit Gupta, co-founders of Zefo
(From left) Himesh Joshi, Rohit Ramasubram­anian, Karan Gupta and Arjit Gupta, co-founders of Zefo

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