Business Standard

ACROSS THE BOARD

- SHAILESH DOBHAL

After telecom, Mukesh Ambani-led Reliance Industries is reportedly planning to disrupt the country’s ~2 lakh-crore e-commerce market. Reliance is already the country’s largest brick-and-mortar retailer, with a footprint that spans 750 cities, 3,679 stores and profitable industry-leading sales of ~33,765 crore.

Should the current e-commerce leaders in home-grown Flipkart and the $136billion global e-commerce giant Amazon be worried? A cursory look at new technology disruptors and markets it has created shows that incumbents have usually missed the bus.

So Google’s dominance in search helped it little to spot the new wave in social media, and it needed new blood in Facebook and Twitter to discover and dominate the scene here. WalMart’s staggering sales and strangleho­ld over global manufactur­ers and supply chains were hardly a barrier for Amazon’s rise and rise in online retail. “The Bully of Bentonvill­e”, as Wal-Mart is often derided, is still playing catch-up in online commerce.

However, make no mistake, Reliance’s entry into Indian e-commerce cannot be taken lightly. It is akin to a combine of AT&T and Wal-Mart challengin­g Amazon on its home turf. With over 130 million telecom subscriber­s already under its belt, it aims to reshape e-commerce much like what it did to telecom in the last year or so. To be sure, all this is from media reports with no official word from the company yet.

Thanks to Reliance’s aggressive pricing, wireless data prices crashed almost 50 per cent, consumptio­n jumped tenfold and new and existing users signed up in droves for its new telecom service in Jio. It plans to leverage its base in telecom and physical retail to upend the nicely laid out e-commerce oligopoly.

Reliance’s e-commerce plan is reportedly not just omnichanne­l, but truly hydra-headed. It combines digital couponing — in tie-ups with expendable and durable marketers to target the 1.3 million unorganise­d mom-and-pop or kirana stores — leveraging its telecom and retail distributi­on networks to reach goods faster to even small-town consumers, to its shopping engine coming as a preloaded app in the millions of low-cost, data-bundled feature and smartphone­s it is pushing to add the next 100 million telecom subscriber­s.

Incidental­ly, the country’s emerging Internet demographi­cs is also playing to Reliance’s strength. Over three-fourths of the over 355 million Indians who access Internet do so over the mobile, according to Mary Meeker’s Internet Trends 2017 report. In addition, almost two-thirds of all data usage is happening on the mobile, according to another report by consultant Deloitte. Though currently just one in six Internet users shops online, and under 5 per cent of the 28 hours an average Indian spends on the mobile in a week is taken by online shopping, this figure will go up as newto-data users get comfortabl­e to start buying online.

Riding on data and by tearing down the boundaries of retail and telecom the company intends to become the ecommerce leader in three years, a truly ambitious goal. But then it did what it said it would in telecom, even while incredulou­s competitor­s virtually ignored its years-long preparatio­n to rewrite the rules of the data market at their own peril.

Is Reliance’s move into new areas — and possible dominance — a cause for bigger concern? After all, if data is the new oil, as Ambani has oft repeated, should anti-competitiv­e laws be reworked for this new emerging data-based economy? Will a pre-loaded shopping app in a phone bundled with the telecom service sold by a single firm be seen as discrimina­tory under the existing competitio­n rules? Will its data-connected march into new businesses call for more government and regulator interventi­on? To be fair, Reliance’s entry into telecom has been good for consumers as it has brought down prices and upped service quality across the industry. Moreover, there are no signs yet of abuse of “dominance”, either in retail or in telecom, where it still remains the third biggest player behind Bharti Airtel and the inthe-making Vodafone-Idea combine. And do not expect the Bansals and Bezos to sit quiet too.

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