E Retailing
E Retailing
E Retailing
ON
Scope Of e-retailing In India
Submitted by
Vishwajeet Srivastav
MMS - Marketing
2009-2011
1
DECLARATION
Signature
__________________
2
Acknowledgement
I would like to heart fully acknowledge my gratitude and thanks to all the
panelists who took active part in accomplishing my project.
At the very outset, I wish to thank Prof.Pravin Akolkar, who helped me to choose
such an interesting topic to work upon as a full fledged project and guiding me at each
step interacting with him gave me a completely different view to look at a subject,
throughout its completion.
I am also thankful to all the faculty of my institute, who helped me in giving all
the required information in a very cooperative manner. The project would not have been
possible without the help of my friends and colleagues who have been patient enough
with me.
3
Table of contents
Chapter 1 INTRODUCTION 7
1.1 Introduction to research topic 7
1.2 Overview of the industry in general 9
Chapter 2 RESEARCH DESIGN 25
2.8 Limitations 27
Chapter 3 INDUSTRIAL PROFILE 28
Chapter 4 ANALYSIS & INTERPRETATION OF DATA 39
Chapter 5 SUMMARY OF FINDINGS, 50
SUGGESTIONS&CONCLUSIONS
BIBILIOGRAPHY 54
ANNEXURE 56
Executive summary
4
In India E-retailing is still a relatively unknown and unused entity, but with the
governments open attitude towards progression, lot of infrastructure is dedicated to this
area. The most tables of industries, the most focused of business models, and the
strongest of brands can be blown to bits by new information technologies. It can come
from nowhere and demolish brands & business that have been established for decades,
ever centuries.
In India where the internet users are growing at an alarming rate it will be helpful
for the consumer as well as for the companies, to discuss on e-retailing models, payment
methods, security features, future trends and benefits etc. this makes the study on Scope
of e-retailing in India necessary. Predictions made on this study can be used as a basis to
foresee the future level of business.
Even though the government of India has taken positive measures to facilitate the
speedy growth of E- retailing by the introduction of cyber laws, reduction of taxes on
infrastructure etc people are hesitating to buy on lines due to confusions on security and
payment methods. There are also frauds taking place in credit cards which can happen
while it on the internet. Inadequate infrastructure and excessive tariffs also make the
situation worse.
5
Questionnaire method is used to collect primary data. Simple random sampling
method is used to collect the data in the same regard. Analysis is also done on the
secondary data that are collected from past records, companies, Internet and other
journals and publications.
Questionnaire was distributed to people in and around Bangalore city. The
respondents were mostly students, officers, and house wives who had access to the
net.
Some of the findings are that the average literacy factor and the cultural factors
are important in e-retailing. The growth of e-retailing in India would be directly
proportional to the penetration of the internet.
The conclusion says that the infrastructure cost should be decreased and more
private ISPs must come with more band width. The trend we see in the current
scenario makes us to think that there is great scope for e-retailing market.
Chapter 1
6
Introduction
1.1 Introduction to research topic
E- Retailing an overview
Electronic retailing (also called e-tailing and Internet retailing) is a retail format
in which the retailer and customer communicate with each other through an interactive
electronic network. After an electronic dialogue between the retailer and customer, the
customer can order merchandise directly through the interactive network or by telephone.
The merchandise is then delivered to the customers address.
The World Wide Web can serve one or more of these roles for a retailer
7
The role assigned to the web by a given retailer depends on whether it is
predominantly a traditional retailer that wants to have a web presence or a newer firm
that wants to derive most or all its revenues from web transactions.
8
1.2 An overview of industry in general
Powering the Reinvention of Retailing
When looking at potential growth for online retailing, most analysts look at the
number of consumers who are online, what online merchandising they respond to and
what marketing it takes to make them repeat buyers. Chicago-based consultant Lauren
Freedman has one word for them: Fulfillment. How do we grow this business if people
arent home to receive their purchases when they are delivered? says Freedman,
president of The E-Tailing Group Inc. Not everyone can receive their deliveries at
work.
E-retailing Myths:
The common myths earlier were that online selling required low investment
and low cost and hence had no entry barriers and it was easy to succeed. There are four
B2C myths that can be misleading while managing e-commerce operations.
1. Stickiness is good: Many sites aspire to keep customers on the site as long as possible
by adding features and design navigation. They have too many sequential clicks through
pages and save the best page for the last. On the contrary it is observed that when it
comes to e-commerce sites, the customers would rather complete their purpose than
unnecessarily waste a lot of time on a site when looking for a particular product.
Therefore, a site should have an introductory home page, offer speed navigation, vividly
describe product benefits, update displays regularly, provide expert information and price
competitively.
2. More is better: Some sites try to attract customers with flashy technology by
bombarding them with fancy graphics, animation and sound effects. But fancy visual and
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sound effects slow sites to a crawl. A recent survey from Jupiter Media Metrix found that
visitors were twice as likely to return to a site with faster loading pages as they were to
sites that provide rich media. The Jupiter survey also found that 59 percent of those
surveyed would be more likely to return to a site that offered more product information.
4. You can sell anything on the web: One can sell many products like CDs, books, gifts,
online. But certain products arent a good fit for e-commerce sales, either due to legal
restrictions like in the case of alcohol, or the customers need to touch and feel the product
or try an expensive piece of apparel to make sure it fits. Sometimes the discounted price
shoppers find on the Web may not offset the hefty shipping charges for large, heavy
items such as an oven or Jacuzzi. Although, in the case of such products one may not be
able to complete the transaction on the Web but it can assist the sale. The web-site can be
used to inform customers about these items and direct them to an appropriate sales
channel, like its stores or distribution network.
5. Some common myths now are that e-commerce entails high cost and hence is not
viable. E-commerce is undoubtedly a high investment business requiring substantial
investment to set up the web site, the software for data capture, records and interactive
systems for customer dialogue. These are sometimes underestimated and often cause
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downfalls. But they are investments like any bricks and mortar business; only the heads
under which they are made are different.
6. Another myth is that e-commerce cannot make money. But e-commerce can be
made profitable by generating volumes to make money and given time to mature and
taking up the challenge to change customer behavior. However, it cannot be a gold mine.
7. According to the Ernst & Young Global Online Retailing report, the main reasons
that non buyers dont buy online are: they are uncomfortable sending credit card
information, preference for seeing the product before purchasing, no existence of credit
card, and insufficient information about products to make decisions, lack of confidence
with online merchants and limitation of talking to the sale person. In addition, the main
concerns of online buyers are overly high shipping costs; need to try for fit in the case of
apparel, high prices, inappropriate for large, perishable and luxury items, need to feel and
see and concern of privacy. The report also charted that 3 biggest barriers consumers
feel hinder their online shopping experience is price, security and ease of navigation.
8. The e-tailers have high fulfillment of costs (which can be as high as US$16 an order
for most dotcom e-tailers) and lack of scale makes the business unprofitable.
9. Poor inventory management also causes major losses for many dotcoms. This fact
along with inexperienced merchandising teams, brutal price competition, inefficient
product return systems, result in poor gross margins for online only players.
10. High marketing costs: Experienced offline brands spend about 18% less than
startups on establishing retail websites. E tailer-marketing costs are high. Online rent,
a term for the price of time and space on media channels for on-and offline brand
marketing, has inflated hugely over the last decade of the twentieth century. According to
Thomas Weitzel Partners (August 1999) where a superstore spends an average of
US$2.50 promoting a product, e-retailers spend US $17.29 per product.
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11. Online customer acquisition costs: Most consumers still need to be persuaded to go
online and at the same time almost all e-retailers lose money on every customer. Their
customers generate too few orders and too little profit per order to cover the costs of
winning them, which can be as high as 65% per order. According to a study by The
McKinsey Quarterly in July 2000, for e-tailers to achieve comfortable contributions on
each transaction, they would need efficient order fulfillment processes, average orders of
at least US$100 and gross margins of at least 25%.
In September 2002 about 605.60 million around the world had access to the
Internet. Majority of these web surfers were living in Europe, followed by Asia/Pacific,
Canada & USA, Latin America, Africa and the Middle East. According to the United
Nations Conference on Trade and Development (UNCTAD report) Internet usage is
seeing an annual rise of about 30-percent which is equivalent to about 2.5 percent of the
global population. A growing share of new internet users is in developing countries,
which accounted for nearly a third of all new Internet users worldwide in 2001. Already
Asia, excluding Japan and the Republic of Korea, added almost 21 million new users to
the Internet in 2001, more than North America. With 77 million people under 18 expected
to be online globally by 2007, teenagers and children constitute one of the fastest
growing Internet populations, Surfing the net is a highly regarded activity by this age
group. However, adults over 50 years old are one of the fastest growing markets on-line.
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A large number of this age group has home access to the Internet. Studies have revealed
that older people are receptive to new technology and have time, money and enthusiasm
to surf the web regularly. Apart from staying in touch with far-flung family and friends,
the older people tend to purchase merchandise and services online because shopping in
stores can be difficult for them.
Perceived Risks in Electronic Shopping
13
score higher on this account as their salespeople know what their preferred customers
want and help indecision making by limiting the choice.
Cost of Merchandise:
Since electronic retailers do not have to spend money building and operating stores
at convenient locations, they have much lower costs, as much as 25 percent lower than
in-store retailers. But the electronic retailers or the customers will have higher costs to get
the merchandise to homes, deal with the high level of returns and attract customers to
their website. It is quite costly to deliver merchandise in small quantities to customers
homes. Customers presently incur these costs when they spend their time and money
going to stores to pick out and take home merchandise and then going back to the stores
to return the merchandise they dont want.
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E-TAILING CHALLENGES
Text Chat: Text chat over the net allows a client to send a question and receive a real
time written response. This allows almost instantaneous communication with more than
one customer at a time or in a group. Depending on how it is implemented, it may appear
to be slow to some users. Collaboration/Co-browsing: Web collaboration technology
allows a customer support representative and the customer to share the same screen so
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that the representative can see exactly what the customer is doing. This type of interaction
will help the support representative solve a problem if the customer is stuck at a certain
place on the website. On the other hand co-browsing offers the capability where more
than one person can browse a site together, with one of the users doing the driving while
the other has secondary control. This type of interaction will provide the representative
with capability to handle a customer who seems lost on the website.
Call Centers: Plain old call centers should be enhanced to support calls from online
customers as well as catalogue shoppers. Earlier, the call centers had to be confined to a
geographic area or country to provide the best support, with the Internet, the call centers
can be spread across multiple countries to provide the same, or better, quality of support
and reduce the cost of providing the support.
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3. Customer Acquisition:
Gaining information about customers and potential customers and converting such needs
into demand is more feasible in electronic commerce than any other marketing channel.
The Internet allows e-tailers to gather huge amounts of information about their customers
easily. They can use this information for personal pricing and customer specific targeted
promotions. It might also be used to directly offer customers related products, either in
real time during the on-line shopping process or by e-mailing them with special offers.
This possibility offers benefits for customers. It is a convenient opportunity to get to
know new products they would like to buy without having to look for information in
many places.
Educate: As a rule, the more potential customers know about the product or services the
e-tailer is selling, the more theyre likely to buy. Education does not only have to be
about the product but also of the e-tailers business, quality assurance and processes.
Guarantee: Any purchase represents a risk to the buyer. The risk may be of paying much
more than what its worth or the item may not look as good at home as it does on the web
site. The e-tailer should not only eliminate the risk but also reduce the customers
perception of risk by having risk-free return or exchange policies.
Manage Expectations: The e-tailer will need to manage customers expectations so that
they are not disappointed or frustrated by the shopping experience. The expectations may
be as simple as those about availability of the item or shipping time or the total cost.
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the more likely they are to spend an increasing amount of money and thus generate
profits for the e-tailer. For instance, in apparel, the average repeat customer spends 67%
more overall in the third year of shopping relationship with an online vendor than in the
first six months. And over three years, customers referred by online grocery shoppers
spent an extra 75% above what the original shopper spent. Products that are generally
bought on impulse purchases usually have several of the following characteristics:
Low touch:
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Advanced visualization techniques: graphics technology (animation, sound / image
effects) gives many opportunities to present a product in a way that will impress the
consumer and motivate them to buy it. Purchase expediting: on line retailing allows on
click purchasing (for registered customers or members) which leaves virtually no time for
second thoughts or reasoning about the purchase of product.
In case of the Serious Shopper Approach, the e-tailer builds a relationship based
on service levels and quality of products. The e-tailers have to proactively anticipate and
handle consumer expectations and ensure that whats being delivered is better than what
users expect. So retailers constantly need to analyze their product/service categorys
relationship with consumers and ensure that their own business isnt becoming
disconnected from general expectations.
5. Customer Retention
E-business is redefining the way the e-tailers manage customer relationships and
place new demands for customer support throughout the sales cycle and thereafter. This
task has been made more complex by individualization of customers. The e-tailers cannot
afford to ignore even an individual customer because word -of- mouth spreads very fast
on the Internet. User groups, communities, web chat and e-mail each have enough
individual power to drain away revenues or create bad publicity. Only personalize
support and sophisticated customer interaction can help the e-tailer convert more
browsers into buyers, resulting in higher revenues per customer. Also, it costs about five
to eight times more to acquire a new customer than to keep an existing one. Therefore, it
is essential for the e-tailers to build loyalty, aim to achieve zero error operation, to create
continuing excitement at the stores and have a mix of impulse and need based products to
induce customers to visit the site often. Some notable consumer-driven e-commerce site
content already in use:
I. Testimonial pages: Testimonials are a powerful tool to establish credibility, which is
especially important for a website in the early stages of existence
and/or in the early stages of developing any individual consumer
relationship. A web site can also request feedback for testimonials
from happy customers and opinion leaders.
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ii. Awards: This is another credibility tool as well as a tactic to increase traffic.
Iii. Extensive and useful links or resource pages.
iv. Contests, sweepstakes, sign-ups to get visitors to voluntarily opt for future
marketing Efforts targeting their specific consumer interests.
v. Information: according to an MSN Sidewalk survey, 74% of Internet users seek
Information
vi. Reviews/ Opinions, especially product related.
6. Earning Customer E-loyalty
7. Managing Technology
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blowout and the downturn in the economy e-tailers are reviewing strategies, processes
and questioning IT spending as they strive to improve performance and boost profits in a
difficult economic climate. It is more critical to have a robust, reliable and scalable
software platform than have bells and whistles. Therefore e-tailers should not try to
attract customers with flashy technology with fancy graphics, animations and sound
effects but should offer more product information. A recent survey found that visitors
were twice as likely to return to a site with faster loading pages as they were to sites that
provided rich media. It also found that percent of those surveyed would be more likely to
return to a site that offered more product information.
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Channel Comparison
Category, search,
and sorting
mechanisms
Interactive product
locators
22
Bricks-and- Catalog Retail e-Retail
Mortar Retail
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E-Retail + Traditional Retail Operations
Sites like macys.com and gap.com, as well as relative late comers walmart.com
and jcpenney.com, are evolving into online branches of brick-and-mortar operations. This
kind of site is not limited to the rich, famous, and nationally well-branded. Many smaller
stores have used the Web to broaden their market by opening online branches, which
make available to Web shoppers goods that were once accessible only to people near the
store.
The inverse image of this model is also evident: businesses that started out as
Web e-retailers but have since added brick-and-mortar operations to their sales channels.
Gazoontite.com launched its Web site selling hypoallergenic products before opening its
flagship store in San Francisco. Additional stores have opened on both coasts and in the
Chicago area. Originally intended to reinforce the site's branding and credibility, the
brick-and-mortar operations have proven to be a huge success, even as the e-retail site
has stopped selling.
In this category are well-known catalog merchants like Lands' End, which has
expanded its popular direct merchant business through landsend.com. For catalog
retailers, expansion to the Web is a relatively easy development. They already conduct
most of their sales through remote media and are already equipped to handle customer
service and order fulfillment.
This model also has an inverse, in the form of dot-coms that have added print
catalogs or other print sales tools to their online site offerings. Print sales tools can serve
as a tangible reiteration of an e-retail brand and its product offerings. Garden.com, for
example, added a print catalog to the many merchandising techniques the company uses
to drive sales at its Web site.
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E-Retail + Web Site Content
The combination of targeted information and retail is a powerful one that cannot
be easily replicated offline. To be sure, many traditional retailers of all kinds offer their
customers print newsletters, loyalty programs, educational opportunities, and more.
However, the Web uniquely enables customization of that content, allowing customers to
pull from the site exactly the content they want and need, when they want it, and, many
times, in the form they want it. From the e-retailer's perspective, this customization is
automated; the company need not employ envelope stuffers to select and mail the
appropriate materials to a customer on a regular basis. From the customer's perspective,
this feature creates the experience of becoming a "market of one," with a direct
relationship to the retailer.
Content and e-retail sites may mix their revenue streams in a variety of ways
with any number of tools such as membership programs, advertising, sponsorships, retail,
subscriptions, and syndication of content. Affiliate programs, which credit a referring
Web site for sales made through the site, can make almost any site a de facto e-commerce
site. For the purposes of this book, we considered sites that rely on product sales of 50
percent or more of their revenues.What format best suits your business? What sales
channels will prove successful for you? The balance between Web sites, brick-and-mortar
stores, and catalogs depends on your retail strategy, goals, and budget. Although our
focus throughout the book will be on the Web-based retail operation, take some time to
consider whether additional sales channels make sense for your product, market, and
unique selling proposition
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Chapter 2
Even though the government of India has taken positive measures to facilitate the
speedy growth of E- retailing by the introduction of cyber laws, reduction of taxes on
infrastructure etc people are hesitating to buy on lines due to confusions on security and
payment methods. There are also frauds taking place in credit cards which can happen
while it on the internet. Inadequate infrastructure and excessive tariffs also make the
situation worse.
In India E-retailing is still a relatively unknown and unused entity, but with the
governments open attitude towards progression, lot of infrastructure is dedicated to this
area. The new economics of information can transform business definitions industry
definitions and competitive advantage. The most tables of industries, the most focused of
business models, and the strongest of brands can be blown to bits by new information
technologies. It can come from nowhere and demolish brands & business that have been
established for decades, ever centuries.
In India where the internet users are growing at an alarming rate it will be helpful
for the consumer as well as for the companies, to discuss on e-retailing models, payment
methods, security features, future trends and benefits etc. predictions made on this study
can be used as a basis to foresee the future level of business.
26
2.3 OBJECTIVES OF THE STUDY
27
2.7 LIMITATIONS
28
Chapter 3
Industrial profile
With a stable Government with 2nd stage reforms in place, India can be
reasonably proud of having put in place some of the most widely accepted Corporate
Ethics (Labour Laws, Child Labour Regulations, Environmental Protection Lobby,
Intellectual Property Rights, and Social Responsibility) and major tax reforms including
implementation of VAT, all of which make India a perfect destination for business
expansion.
29
with the lifestyles and buying habits of India's burgeoning population. As people look for
ways to spend their money, global retailers should be looking for prime locations
Investments
A report by investment banker Goldman Sachs, credits India with the potential to
deliver the fastest growth over the next 50 years. According to Standard & Poor's, foreign
direct investment (FDI) to India is likely to grow the fastest in next few years. As targeted
FDI is to hit $13 billion in the 12 months ending March 2007, more than double India's
previous best of $5.5 billion hit in the previous year.
India is investing over US $130 billion in infrastructure by the end of this decade.
Indian retail industry itself has attracted investment of over INR 200 billion (over $4
billion) in creating infrastructure, systems & shop-fit. The additional retail space is
expected to add INR 300 billion ($ 6.67 billion) of business to organized retail.
With the largest young population in the world - over 890 million people below
45 years of age! India is indeed a resplendent market. India has more English speaking
people than in the whole of Europe taken together. Its 300 million odd middle class, the
"Real" consumers, is catching the attention of the world. As the economy grows so does
India's middle class. It is estimated that 70 million Indians earn a salary of over INR
800,000 ($18,000) a year, a figure that is set to rise to 140 million by 2011. The number
of effective consumers is expected to swell to over 600 million by 2010 - sufficient to
establish India as one of the largest consumer markets of the world.
With the changing face of retail, the Indian consumer is in for a rapid
transformation. While the consumer spending continues to grow at double digit figures,
30
leading retailers have recorded an increase in sales between 50 to 100 percent in the
calendar year 2006 over the previous year.
According to India Retail Report 2007, the total private consumption touched
INR 20,000 billion (US $ 445 billion) at current prices in the calendar year 2006 with
organized sector accounting for INR55,000 crore ($12.4 billion) business increasing its
share to 4.6 per cent of the total Indian Retail Value that stood at INR12,000 billion ($270
billion). Moving forward, organized retailing is projected to grow at the rate of about 37
per cent in 2007 and 42 per cent in 2008. Organized retail in India has the potential to add
over INR 2,000 billion ($45 billion) business by the Year 2010.
Retail Formats
The term retail institution refers to the basic format or structure of a business.
Classification for Retail institutions is necessary to enable firms to better understand and
enact their own strategies: selecting an organizational mission, choosing an ownership
alternative, defining the goods/ service category and setting objectives. The classification
is not mutually exclusive; that is, an institution may be correctly placed in more than one
category. For example, a department store unit may be part of a chain, have a store-based
strategy, accept mail order sales, and have a Web site. These are commonly used
typographies. They are likely to vary between countries. For instance, a Kirana store in
India or car boot sales in the UK. Ownership Based Retailing is one of the few sectors in
our economy where entrepreneurial activity is extensive. Although retailers are primarily
31
small (80% of all stores are operated by firms with one outlet and over one-half of all
firms have two or fewer paid employees), there are also very large retailers. Retail firms
may be independently owned, chain owned, franchisee operated, leased departments,
owned by manufacturers or wholesalers, consumer owned. From a positioning and
operating perspective, each ownership format delivers unique value. Retail executives
must work on the strengths and weaknesses inherent in each of these formats to be
successful.
1. Independents
An Independent retailer owns a single retail unit. In the United States, they
account for nearly 80 percent of total retail establishments and firms generate just 3
percent of total U.S. store sales. One half of all independents is run entirely by the owners
and/or their families and has no paid workers. The high number of independent retailers
is associated with the ease of entry into the marketplace, owing to low capital
requirement, no or relatively simple, licensing procedures. The ease of entry into retailing
is reflected in the low market shares of the leading firms in many goods /service
categories as a percentage of total category sales. For example, in the grocery store
category where large chains are quite strong, the five largest grocery retailers account for
only about 22 percent of sales. A similar large format in India contributed to less than 3%
of total retail sales. The Indian retail market has around 12 million outlets and has the
largest retail outlet density in the world. However, most of these outlets are basic mom-
and-pop stores with very basic offerings, fixed prices, and no ambience.
2. Chains
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purchases. They generally bypass wholesalers. Many of them buy directly from the
manufacturers. Suppliers service the orders from chains promptly and extend a higher
level of proper service and selling support. New brands reach these stores faster. Most of
these chains sell private. Chains achieve efficiency due to the centralization of purchasing
and warehousing and computerization. Wider geographic coverage of markets allows
chains to utilize all forms of media. Most of the chains invest considerable time and
resources in long term planning, monitoring opportunities and threats. Chain retailers
suffer from limited flexibility, as they need to be consistent throughout in terms of prices,
promotions, and product assortments.
3. Franchising
4. Leased Department
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5. Vertical Marketing System
A Vertical Marketing System consists of all levels of independently owned
businesses along a channel of distribution. Goods and services are normally distributed
through one of these types of vertical marketing systems: independent, partially
integrated, and fully integrated.
In an independent firm vertical marketing system, there are levels of independently
owned firms: manufacturers, wholesalers and retailers. Such a system is most often used
when the manufacturers have to reach a wider market or retailers are small. Also when
company resources are low and channel members want to share costs and risks such an
arrangement is desirable. Independent retailers capitalize on their targeted customer base
and build loyalty by playing the role of a friendly shop-owner and build a good word of
mouth communication. With a partially integrated vertical marketing system, two
independently owned businesses along a channel perform all production and distribution
functions without the aid of the third.
6. Convenience Stores
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Superstores are large supermarkets ranging from 20,000 to 50,000 square feet.
They cater to consumers grocery needs and offer them the ability to buy fill-in general
merchandise. The advantages of food-based superstores are that they are efficient, offer a
degree of one-stop shopping, stimulate impulse purchases and feature high profit general
merchandise. Other advantages are that it is easier and less costly to redesign and convert
supermarkets into food-based superstores than combination stores. Management expertise
is better focused in food-based superstores. Many consumers feel more comfortable
shopping in true food stores than combination stores. Most of the supermarket chains
have also started offering food to compete with these stores.
9. Warehouse Store:
A warehouse club is a retailer that offers a limited assortment of food and
general merchandise, with limited services, at low prices to ultimate consumers and small
businesses. It appeals to priceconscious consumers, who must be members to shop
there. Its inventory turnover rate is several times that of a department store. Stores are
large and located in lowrent areas. They have simple interiors and concrete floors. Aisles
are wide to facilitate pick up pallets of merchandise. Specific brands and items differ
35
from time to time as the stores buy merchandise available on special promotions from
manufacturers. The clubs pass on these savings to shoppers through lower prices. Most
warehouse clubs have two types of members. Wholesale members who are small business
people and individual members who purchase for their own use.
36
merchandise, and increasing store visits by offering easily accessible convenience store
merchandise.
12. Specialty Stores
A traditional specialty store concentrates on a limited number of complementary
merchandise categories and provides a high level of service. They are smaller in size.
13. Drugstores
Drugstores are specialty stores that concentrate on health and personal grooming
merchandise. Pharmaceuticals often represent over 50 percent of drugstore sales and an
even greater percentage of their profits. Drugstores are facing considerable competition
from discount stores and supermarkets adding pharmacies. In response, the major
drugstore chains are building larger stand-alone stores offering a wider assortment of
merchandise, more frequently purchased consumer products and drive through windows
for picking up prescriptions.
The category killer concept originated in the U.S. due to abundance of cheap
land and the dominant car culture. A category specialist is a discount store that offers a
narrow variety but deep assortment of merchandise. These retailers are basically discount
specialty stores. By offering a complete assortment in a category at low prices, category
specialists can kill a category of merchandise for other retailers. Most category
specialists use a self-service approach. They use their buying power to negotiate low
prices, excellent terms and assured supply when items are scarce.
37
controlled tenant mix, with manufacturers operating separate units on a single co-
coordinated site. Additional amenities include car parking, restaurant and leisure
facilities. Factory outlet stores are located out of town, lowering development and
operating costs and the distribution channel for certain categories of merchandise is
shortened, cutting out the functions and profits of traditional retailers
16. Hypermarkets
Hypermarkets were created in France after World War II. A hypermarket is a
very large retail store offering low prices. It combines a discount store and superstore
food retailer in one warehouse like building. Hypermarkets can be up to 300,000 square
feet and stock over 50,000 different items. Hypermarkets are unique in terms of store
size; low operating margins, low prices and the size of general merchandise assortment.
The store sells a broad variety of basic merchandise ranging from food to consumer
electronics. All hypermarkets are based on three concepts of: one stop shopping, ample
free parking and a discount pricing strategy. The main limitation of hypermarkets is that
many consumers find that shopping in stores over 200,000 square feet is too time
consuming. It is hard to find merchandise and checkout lines can be very long.
38
outside a store, in a hotel corridor, at a station, airport or a street corner. Although many
attempts have been made to vend other products, beverages and food items remain the
largest category. Hotels, restaurants and at train stations are highly visible spots for
vending but they account for a small proportion of sales.
19. Electronic Retailing
Electronic retailing (also called e-tailing and Internet retailing) is a retail format
in which the retailer and customer communicate which each other through an interactive
electronic network. After an electronic dialogue between the retailer and customer, the
customer can order merchandise directly through the interactive network or by telephone.
The merchandise is then delivered to the customers address. The World Wide Web can
serve one or more of these roles for a retailer:
39
Chapter 4
Analysis & Interpretation
Table No. 1
Age
group No. of Respondents Percentage
Below 30 41 41
31 - 40 32 32
41 - 50 16 16
Above 50 11 11
5%
15%
33%
20%
27%
40
Interpretation
The above chart shows that 41% of the respondents are below 30 years, 32% of the
respondents are between 31 40 years, 16% of the respondents are between 41 50
years, 11% of the respondents are above 50 years. This gives us a feeling that it is
youngsters that prefer on line buying and the use of internet.
Cyber 46 46
Caf
Total 100 100
50 46 46
45
40
35 31 31
30
23 23 NO. OF RESPONDENTS
25
PERCENTAGE
20
15
10
5
0
House Office Cyber Caf
41
Interpretation
From the above graph it is assumed that 23% of respondents browse in their own house,
31% of respondents browse in their office, 46% of respondents browse in cyber caf,
which gives us a feeling that most of the respondents do not have browsing facility in
their house. This makes them depend on cyber caf which is expensive.
Yes 41 41
NO 59 59
200
180
160 100
140
120 Percentage
100 59 No. of respondents
80 Have purchased on-
41 line
60 100
40 59
41
20
0 0 0
0
1 2 3 4
42
Interpretation
The above graph shows that 41% of Respondents have purchased on line and 59% of
respondents have not purchased. This draws light to the fact that there is still a lot to do to
make people buy on line.
4. Table showing the reason why people are reluctant to buy on line
Table No. 4
No. of
Reason respondents Percentage
Un aware of
the mode of
payment 4 6.78
Absence of
salesmanship 20 33.89
Absence of
personal touch 12 20.33
Fear of doing it
for the 1st time 23 38.98
total 59 100
3%
17%
UN aware of the mode of payment
Absence of salesmanship
Absence of personal touch
51% 10% Fear of doing it for the 1st time
Total
19%
43
Interpretation
The above chart 4 respondents are unaware of the mode of payment, 20 respondents feel
there is absence of salesmanship in on line buying, and 12 respondents feel that there is
absence of personal touch. This gives us a feeling that respondents vary in their
opinion about on line buying. Most of them are reluctant to take a decision for the first
time to buy.
Table No. 5
Availability 17 41.46
Cost saving 4 9.76
Total 41 100
44
Interpretation
From the above chart it is found that 12 respondents feel that it is convenient to buy on
line, 3 respondents feel that it is time saving, 5 respondents feel that it is a variety to buy
on line, 17 respondents feel products will be available when ordering on line and 4
respondents feel it is cost saving. Where in most of the respondents are of the opinion that
on line buying is advantageous due to the availability of the product.
Table No. 6
40 - 50 11 26.83
More than 50 14 34.15
Total 41 100
5%
15%
33%
10 - 20
20 - 30
30 -40
40 - 50
20% More than 50
27%
45
Interpretation
From the above chart it is seen that 5% of respondents waited for 10 20 hours for the
delivery of the goods they had ordered on line, 15% of respondents waited for 20 -30
hours, 20% of the respondents waited for 30 -40 hours, 27% of the respondents waited
for 40 50 hours, 35% of respondents waited for more than 50 hours. This gives us a
feeling that different products and different sellers give the products ordered on line at
different time lag.
Father 09 21.95
Mother 03 07.31
Children 17 41.46
All 06 14.63
Total 41 100
Table No. 7
46
45 41.46
40
35
30
25 21.95
20 Percentage
14.63 14.63
15
10 7.31
5
0
Father & Father Mother Children All
Mother
Interpretation
The above graph shows that 15% of respondents feel that it is the Father and mother who
influence the buying behavior. For 22% of respondents it is the Father who influences
the buying behavior. For 7% of respondents it is the Mother who influences the buying
behavior. For 41% of respondents it is the children who influence the buying behavior
For15% of respondents it is the all together that influence the buying behavior.
8. Table showing the web sites that respondents usually visit in relation
to on line shopping
Table No. 8
Yahoo.com 6 14.63
Hotmail.com 4 09.75
Fabmart.com 10 24.39
Homedel.com 7 17.07
47
Ecomart.com 5 12.19
Total 41 100
12%
22%
Rediff.com
17%
Yahoo.com
Hotmail.com
Fabmart.com
Homedel.com
15%
Ecomart.com
24% 10%
Interpretation
From the above chart it is assumed that 22% of the respondents visit rediff.com in
relation to shopping, 15% of the respondents visit yahoo.com in relation to shopping, 9%
of the respondents visit hotmail.com in relation to shopping, 24% of the respondents visit
fabmart.com in relation to shopping, 17% of the respondents visit homedel.com in
relation to shopping, 12% of the respondents visit ecomart.com in relation to shopping
Table No. 9
No 11 26.82
Total 41 100
48
100
26.82
90
80
70
60 No
50 Yes
73.17
40 11
30
30
20
10
0
No. of Respondents Percentage
Interpretation
The above graph shows that 73% of respondents are interested to shop again through the
Net and 27% of respondents are not interested shop again through the Net.
10. The Table showing the overall rating of online shopping by the
respondents
Table No. 10
Satisfactory 14 34.14
Dissatisfactory 10 24.39
Total 41 100
49
45 41.46
40
34.14
35
30
24.39
25 No. of respondents
20 17 Percentage
14
15
10
10
0
Highly satisfactory Satisfactory Dissatisfactory
Interpretation
From the above graph it is found that 41% of respondents are highly satisfied about on
line buying 34% of respondents are satisfied about on line buying 25% of respondents
are dissatisfied about on line buying This gives a feeling that more number of
respondents are highly satisfied or at least satisfied about on line buying. This increases
the scope for online selling.
50
Chapter no. 5
Summary of findings,
Suggestions and Conclusion
Findings
Some of the findings from the study that might stimulate the degree of change
from the conventional strategy are given below.
1. The volumes in the Indian market lie in the middle and lower middle class. The growth
and impact of e-retailing in India would be directly proportionate to the penetration of the
internet in these categories. Currently access costs are very high. These access costs are a
function for two variables:
The cost of acquisition of computers would be a pre-requisite for internet
penetration. It is typically observed that the probability of customers making a purchase
51
on the net from a cyber caf is very low. Cyber cafes are mainly used for checking mail
and other planned search activities. Thus it is necessary for customers to possess a
computer with an internet connection o improve the scope of e- business.
The cost of connectivity that basically refers to the expenses, incurred in the
telephone bill and internet subscription costs In order for the Internet levels of the internet
to improve, these costs have to reduce thus encouraging more customers to become net
savvy.
2. Average literacy rates are also an important factor though a large percentage of the
population watches TV and is able to appreciate the nuances and meaning of the
commercials that are aired, Literacy would be an important factor in increasing internet
penetration besides actually increasing the accessibility of the bet as a medium of
business.
3. The cultural factors and Indian traditions are a key impediment to the development of e
retailing shopping in India is not just a chore, it is an enjoyable experience. In the west
most of the families shop on the week end to shore up glossaries and provisions for the
coming week it is viewed as a task that has to be completed. In such a scenario, the
Internet with its apparent benefits of greater speed, convenience and information
provided those with an attractive option the situation in India however is completely
different. For the traditional Indian house wife purchase of vegetable/ Glossaries by
bargaining with the shop keeper is an important event in the day. Add to this the fact that
a large percentage of consumer purchases in India occurs in an around festivals. This
implies a lot of color fund and gaiety that would be missing in the case of on line
shopping.
4. All the above points have focused on the B2C model of e- business. In the B2B model
in India, the key driving factor is relationship. It would take a significant amount of time
to build the required level of trust in an online relationship. Thus, a large part of the B2B
volumes would be driven by establishing connectivity among existing business partners.
52
5. Only 23% of the respondents are accessing the net in their house it means that in India
Internet in house is not yet become common. But in course of time it will definitely
increase
Recommendations
1. Buyers in fast-moving product categories should use electronic market place to save
money o the goods they buy, while sellers should seize the opportunity to reach new
customers and delay the development of a buyer controlled market place.
2. Third parties should act promptly to attract a critical mass of buyers and
sellers to their own market place.
3. Logistics systems ensure that the company delivers the product to the
customer in the shortest possible time.
53
4. IT infrastructure costs can be lowers through implementation of internet
based computing.
5. The following parameters may be taken care of, for the success of e-
retailing.
Loyalty
Customer acquisition
retentions
per-transaction value
7. There must be an e-relationship software that synchronize all of the customer contact
channels and prioritize means of conduct namely phone, Fax, Pager, or e-mail according
to individual customer preferences. The objective is to support people in the way they
want to do business and to be able to speak to customers through the devises most
appropriate to them.
Conclusion
Theres little doubt that E- retailing is the future. But, thats just the point: it is
the future. The present clearly belongs to B2B. Realizing that future will require research,
introspection, learning and educated effort. Lets then conclude by compiling a recipe for
success for E- retailers the world over:
Get your back-end systems into shape. Customers keep coming back only if
Earlier shopping experiences have been pleasant and successful. Quit gloating
over the 75% success rate of on-line purchases.Remember, you are competing
54
with the neighborhood store, which, more often than not, has a close-to- 100%
record, and a smiling, friendly shop-keeper thrown in for good measure.
Get help. Youve heard this before, but its worth repeating: e-retailing isnt
just
About building a pretty website. An established management consulting firm will
bring in the requisite skills to evaluate your business plan, check out revenue
models, help identify potential alliances and integrate supply chain processes with
your eCommerce initiatives.
55
BIBLIOGRAPHY
BOOKS REFERED
A managers guide to e commerce by kolakota
Retailing management by Swapna Pradhan
WEBSITES
http://www.amzon.com
http://www.mindtree.com
http://www.fabmart.com
http://www.yahoo.com
http://www.homedel.com
56
Annexure
Questionnaire
4. If No why?
57
6. How long do you have to wait for the delivery of goods ordered?
7. Details of the purchasing process from the point of order till delivery.
Children All
Yes No
58