Business Standard

R IL set to join Big Billion frenzy this Diwali

Firm plans a full-fledged horizontal e-comm offering

- YUVRAJ MALIK

This festival season, online deals could get much bigger and deeper as Mukesh Ambaniled Reliance Industries (RIL) is set to time its e-commerce debut with Diwali, when up to 30 per cent of the annual sales are clocked.

RIL is preparing to launch the e-commerce venture ahead of Diwali, two sources in the know said. While so far Flipkart (now owned by Walmart) and Amazon India have been competing fiercely through their Big Billion Day and Great Indian Diwali Sale, respective­ly, the Ambani venture will make the fight tougher, analysts pointed out.

During October-November 2018, e-commerce firms made $4.3 billion in total sales, according to RedSeer, a consultanc­y which tracks the sector.

RIL is setting up infrastruc­ture for a full-fledged horizontal e-commerce offering — internally called the New Commerce — to simultaneo­usly launch pan-India by October-November, sources said. Pilot tests are underway in six cities, including Mumbai, Kolkata, Chennai and Bengaluru. A spokespers­on for RIL declined to comment on this developmen­t.

The company has carved out a dedicated team at Reliance’s corporate park in Ghansoli, Navi Mumbai, to work on the new business spearheade­d by Manoj Modi, a close Ambani aide.

RIL plans to stitch together its retail network, that includes Reliance Digital, Reliance Fresh and Reliance Trends, and hundreds of unorganise­d retail stores to power online shopping on Reliance Jio mobile platform. As a first step, RIL is installing Jio-branded point-of-sales machines at local mom-and-pop stores and certain outlets of large organised retailers in a bid to bring the transactio­n data online

and integrate with Jio systems, one of the sources said.

RIL announced its e-commerce plans last month. “Reliance Jio and Reliance Retail will launch a unique new commerce platform to empower and enrich our 1.2 million small retailers and shopkeeper­s in Gujarat,” Ambani had said at the inaugural function of the Vibrant Gujarat Global summit in Gandhinaga­r.

With this, RIL is looking at a convergenc­e of telecom, media and commerce. This is something that’s causing worry to the incumbents. While Amazon has committed $5 billion for the India business, Walmart acquired a majority in Flipkart last year in a $16-billion deal. RIL could get an advantage in the foreign versus domestic battle too.

For instance, RIL could sell its own inventory online, something foreign-owned players cannot do. Globally, the inventory model works because of the control a company has over what it sells. Reliance will leverage its retail presence — a network of over 10,000 stores in 6,500 cities selling everything from clothes to consumer electronic­s to packaged goods — and the telecom business to reach out to 280 million internet users.

RIL is present in e-commerce in a limited way. It runs an e-commerce experience operation AJIO.com, a fashion site launched in 2016, and online store-front of electronic chains Reliance Digital. Analysts have cited the disruption caused by Jio in the telecom industry to argue that a repeat of such a scenario was likely in e-commerce too. On the mobile front, RIL has already spent $40 billion building a 5G ready telecom service. It also has an array of content and entertainm­ent through Jio TV, Jio Cinema and Jio Music (through the acquisitio­n Saavn).

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from India