When bricks take on clicks…

- Advertisement -

Multi-brand brick and mortar stores are where Indian customers compare and shop for electronics and home appliances. These stores now face a new challenge: e-commerce sites. Are they holding their own, or succumbing?

By Anand Parthasarathy

The retail trade in the US was recently bombarded with an ominous new phrase, coined by the investment research firm CFRA (Centre for Financial Research and Analysis): ‘Death by Amazon’. It is a new index the research firm has created to rate stocks that it recommends for selling, based on a company’s vulnerability to competition from Amazon, the online e-commerce behemoth. Every time Amazon announces that it is entering a new vertical, the value of stocks of existing players in that sector plunge, as investors worry that the online giant will soon scoop up all the sales.

- Advertisement -

And how did CFRA arrive at the index? It simply compared how much traffic generated by a consumer’s Google search word for, say, LED smart TVs, was going to the website of a particular retailer versus how much was going to Amazon. In CFRA’s initial shortlist of vulnerable retailers were two of the largest electronics retail chains in the US—Best Buy, and the specialist console games chain, Gamestop.

There was a report on the ‘Death by Amazon’ index recently in the Business Insider, the business news website, and one can be sure analysts in other geographies will soon do similar surveys.

Interestingly, the India based electronics and home appliance retail businesses woke up much earlier to the challenge posed by e-commerce giants like Amazon and Flipkart (with its new Walmart backing).

In late 2018, leading consumer electronics retailers, mostly headquartered in South India, like Viveks, Vasanth & Co., Girias and Sathya, approached major appliance manufacturers like Godrej, LG, Panasonic, Samsung, Sony, Whirlpool and others, asking these brands not to allow deep discounting of their products by online vendors. Apparently, the retail store chains received some assurance of parity, because six months later they continue to deal in these brands. But this approach did not work for all brands. Some of the retailers mentioned above decided to stop selling the products of the German brands Bosch and Siemens. There has been no official explanation for this, but industry watchers say this could be because the products of these two companies—best known for washing machines and dish washing machines —were still available at big discounts online compared to the prices that retailers could offer.

Online retailers, Amazon and Flipkart, have generally pleaded innocence by saying they control only the platform, not the price set by individual brands.

New e-commerce regulations kick in
Roughly at this point in time, the government of India decided to step in and frame rules to regulate who could sell online and how they operated. Scattered across the new commerce policy were provisions that sought to regulate how low the online prices could go. The business media in India has condemned these provisions as anti-consumer and needless interference in what is something the market should define.

Be that as it may, the retail electronics chains in India have shown that, unlike their American counterparts, they are not about to roll over and die. They have one big thing going for them —the archetypical Indian customers, who unlike Western buyers, believe in serious touchy-feely comparison shopping before making a purchase that they deem to be paisa vasool.
For this sort of careful buying, there is no substitute for the neighbourhood retail store – which could be standalone or, increasingly, located in a shopping mall—when it comes to buying that smart TV, fridge, microwave or home theatre.

Results from a major study of the Indian electronics and appliances retail market
A major study recently released by the UK based strategic market analyst EuroMonitor, examines for the first time how Indian retailers hold their own against two challenges: the single stores and the Internet marketplace. The report, titled ‘Electronics and Appliance Specialist Retailers in India’ (42 pages, March 2019, US$ 990) analyses key demand trends, forecasts future markets, identifies market shares of international and desi players in India, and suggests strategies for growth.

According to the EuroMonitor study:

  • Reliance Digital, a part of Reliance Retail, remained the leading retail brand among electronics and appliances retailers in 2018. Competitive pricing and offers on par with the major online marketplaces, such as Flipkart and Amazon, helped drive its sales.
  • Croma, the flagship brand of Infiniti Retail, owned by the Tata Group, continued to be amongst the fastest growing retail brands among electronics and appliances retailers in 2018. This is because consumers have strong faith in the Tata Group, and associate its brands with quality and affordable pricing.

The report concludes with why multi-brand retail stores in electronics and appliances remain the preferred choice of Indian consumers: “Consumers increasingly prefer to shop at multi-brand outlets, especially for electronics and appliances. As consumers become more price-conscious, they are attracted by the choice of brands and product offerings at different price points in multi-brand outlets.”

In the US, the circumstances may be dire for retailers, who might have to prepare for an early demise at the hands of Amazon. But as studies like this show, Indian electronics retailers are in a position similar to that of the late and great American humorist and writer Mark Twain, who while holidaying in Europe read his own obituary in a home town newspaper. In response, he cabled the paper’s editor: “Rumours of my death are an exaggeration!” Right now, the Indian electronics retail sector could say much the same thing!


The author is the editor at IndiaTechOnline.com.

- Advertisement -

Most Popular Articles

LEAVE A REPLY

Please enter your comment!
Please enter your name here
Captcha verification failed!
CAPTCHA user score failed. Please contact us!

Exclusive

“Capitalise On ‘China Plus Two,’ Where Products With Higher Value Addition Become The Focus”

0
EPIC Foundation aims to transform India into an electronics hardware product nation by collaborating with governments, universities, design houses, and startups. In a conversation...

Exclusive: Electric Two And Three Wheelers In Focus For AMP 2030

0
It seems that the Indian government is going to focus on electric two— and three-wheelers. Taking these beyond Tier 1 and 2 Indian cities...

Report Suggests India’s EV Sales Will Surge, Rising 66% In 2024

0
In 2023, sales of electric vehicles (EVs) in India almost doubled due to increased consumer interest, government actions, better infrastructure, and climate change worries....

Buzz

solar panels

Tata Power Solar And Indian Bank Forge Partnership To Propel Residential Solar Adoption

0
This collaboration aims to facilitate easy access to financing for homeowners, setting the stage for a greener future. Tata Power Solar Systems Limited (TPSSL) has...

Honda plans major EV factory construction in Canada,

0
Honda's dedication to this facility reflects its wider ecological objectives, which include a target to only offer zero-emission vehicles by 2040 and to attain...

Scoop: Finayo Plans Rs 100 Cr Financing Fund For EV Dealerships

0
While EV finance is improving in Bharath (Tier 2, 3, 4 cities, and rural India), it is still one of the biggest challenges! Can...

Important Sectors

solar panels

Tata Power Solar And Indian Bank Forge Partnership To Propel Residential Solar Adoption

0
This collaboration aims to facilitate easy access to financing for homeowners, setting the stage for a greener future. Tata Power Solar Systems Limited (TPSSL) has...

Log 9 Enters EV Asset Management Via Amphion

0
Commercial electric vehicle asset management and finance is becoming one of India's biggest emerging business opportunities. Here's Log 9 joining the segment! Log 9 has...

Honda plans major EV factory construction in Canada,

0
Honda's dedication to this facility reflects its wider ecological objectives, which include a target to only offer zero-emission vehicles by 2040 and to attain...

Scoop: Finayo Plans Rs 100 Cr Financing Fund For EV Dealerships

0
While EV finance is improving in Bharath (Tier 2, 3, 4 cities, and rural India), it is still one of the biggest challenges! Can...

Macquarie Group To Invest $1.5 Billion In Indian Fleet Electrification With Vertelo Launch

0
Vertelo has entered into a long-term lease agreement with Tata Motors, committing to purchase up to 2000 electric cars within the next three years....

Manufacturing

Honda plans major EV factory construction in Canada,

0
Honda's dedication to this facility reflects its wider ecological objectives, which include a target to only offer zero-emission vehicles by 2040 and to attain...
Sona Comstar

Sona Comstar Launches Mexico Plant For North American EV Demand

0
The new facility, established to address the increasing demand for premium driveline solutions for BEVs in North America, will focus on manufacturing differential assemblies...

Sterling Tools Inks MoU With Yongin For EV Components Facility

0
Sterling Tools announced that this strategic partnership is anticipated to bring in Rs 250 crore in business over the next five years. This collaboration...

Tata Elxsi-Renesas MCU Boosts EV Cost Efficiency And Market Speed

0
The Motor Control Unit's modular, scalable design facilitates integration across various EV applications, reducing time to market by 40%, lowering design and development costs...

Ramkrishna Forgings To Supply Powertrain Parts To Top US Electric Carmaker

0
Indian producer of rolled, forged, and machined products enter the US electric vehicle market for the first time. Ramkrishna Forgings, an Indian supplier of rolled,...