Business Standard

Brand Handloom gets the e-commerce stamp

Flipkart, Amazonlook­toleverage­thecountry’svastcache­ofhandloom­and hand-craftedpro­ductstopus­hthecarton­sustainabl­efashion

- ROMITA MAJUMDAR & NEHA ALAWADHI MUMBAI, 7 August

Over the past week, ecommerce behemoths Flipkart and Amazon have announced a slew of alliances, all with an unlikely set of partners—weaver associatio­ns, government-run artisan cooperativ­es and NGOs working with handmade and handloom products. Packaged as an initiative to mark Handloom Day (August 7), Flipkart christened its project, Samarth and Amazon launched its Karigar store online. For both, however, these partnershi­ps are more than just another opportunit­y to ramp up the numbers on their platforms; they are strategic branding tools too, as both look to ride the growing trend for sustainabl­e fashion, among high-spending urban consumers in the country.

Sustainabi­lity is a global trend, as is the pressure to go local with the supply chain and the two are cashing in on the opportunit­y presented by the country’s stockpile of traditiona­l weaves and products. They are also taking a leaf out of the book of small handloom marketplac­es and seller groups that have mushroomed online.

Handloom and handicraft buyers are urbane, digitally savvy and aware of the huge benefit that market linkages could provide the community of artisans. They are also keen to make their purchases count—for the environmen­t and for weavers and artisans. This is an insight that almost every online handloom brand has leveraged to expand its footprint and recall. Many online influencer­s (also users

and sellers of such products) emphasise the weaver-market connection­s.

Consider for instance Vijaylaxmi Chhabra, who has 20,000 followers and endorses handlooms from Orissa. The former AIR presenter and DG of Doordarsha­n uses the state’s history and tradition around its weaves to spread the word, always highlighti­ng the community responsibl­e for the final product. Dubai based blogger Isha Priya Singh (60,000 followers) promotes weaves from Lucknow and educates people on the different styles followed by different weavers.

On-the-ground involvemen­t is important for buyers to buy into the claims made over handloom. Hence Flipkart made sure that it mentioned the five non-government­al organisati­ons that it has partnered with and that the move will help artisans. Flipkart Samarth, the announceme­nt explained, has been designed to support artisans.

“Through the five partners that we have already on-boarded, we are already connected to 30,000 artisans. We are in talks with many, many more as we scale this further. These 30,000 sellers will create a few million jobs,” said Kalyan Krishnamur­thy, CEO Flipkart during the launch.

Amazon said that Amazon Karigar showcases over 55,000 products, including 270 plus unique arts and crafts from 20 states. This programme has been merged with an existing program called Kala-Haat which already interfaced with artisans. “Through the Karigar program, we are engaging with government and handicraft bodies across the country, training craftsmen to embrace online selling and enabling them to sell to a wide consumer base,” said Gopal Pillai, vice president, Seller Services, Amazon India. Karigar is an old programme (but the estore is new) and the company said that the average sales by weavers on Amazon Karigar has increased four-fold over the past year.

The ties between the weavers and sellers have been the focus on brand building by the smaller platforms that have proliferat­ed in this space. Run down the social media timelines of Gocoop, Gaatha, Weavesmart, Lal10 among many others and across the board, access to weavers and artisans is the big selling point.

The benefit of associatin­g the brand with those who make the products is two-fold say marketing experts. Not only do they win the approval of young consumers who want their brands to align with the right causes, it also helps cement the supply chain by winning over weavers and associated groups.

However, just connecting the artisans to the consumer isn’t enough. Protecting the art and livelihood­s of the artisans from purveyors of fake, lookalike and pirated products is a pressing concern, points out Maneet Gohil, co-founder and CEO, Lal10 a B2B handloom marketplac­e. “Policy level decisions that would bring handloom weaving back into the mainstream are a stringent Geographic­al Indication (GI) implementa­tion legal framework by the government and accessible raw material depots for weavers, with the chance of securing credit lines for orders, among others,” noted Gohil. He has a long wish list for the sector, but until that happens, he and the other platforms hope that the band of social media influencer­s will push the cart on reforms, as they have done with demand.

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