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SPECIAL: Why Emerging Markets Need an eCommerce Revolution?

Justin Floyd, founder and CEO of RedCloud, explores the barriers to growth for SMEs in emerging markets and developing economies….reports Asian Lite News

JFarms Africa is a coffee producer in Rwanda. The chances are that if you have ever visited the region you would have tasted its coffee. The company exports its product to Canada, Egypt, the Ivory Coast, Nigeria and the US. It’s just one of a growing number of businesses in the emerging markets that have started in recent years. Yet, many of them aren’t reaching their full potential due to a lack of access to trade digitally, with more than 500 million having no online store.

Emerging markets and developing economies (EMDEs) account for 84% of the global population. Yet, they contribute only 37% of the world’s gross domestic product (GDP). This disproportionate contribution is caused in part by the monopoly in access to technology, digitised systems and financial support that large e-commerce retailers (who power the majority of Western economies) currently have.

As a result, millions of SMEs, which are the backbone of local communities in EMDEs face significant barriers to growth. These barriers range from how goods are bought and sold to how they are distributed and paid for.  E-commerce giants like Amazon have assumed all the power, allowing them to exploit SMEs and crush potential competition.

By 2025, there will be over 5 billion consumers across EMDEs. This increased demand for essential goods presents a tremendous growth opportunity for the millions of retailers and small businesses that will serve them. E-commerce and digital selling can help these retailers unlock the tremendous potential these markets hold. However, to maximise these growth opportunities, we need a new trading system that is different from the current exploitative, master-slave relationship between e-commerce platforms and small merchants.

Strong development of e-commerce in rural areas of China.

Traditional eCommerce is Out of Reach For Most Small Businesses

Whilst e-commerce has opened up the world to corporate giants, it has been largely off-limits to those small firms in emerging markets. There are two major reasons for this. Firstly, utilising existing e-commerce tools can be prohibitively expensive. When companies are already dealing with small profit margins and rising costs, the hefty cut big tech asks for is simply unworkable.

Secondly, many e-commerce providers have strict requirements and policies that make it almost impossible for independent retailers to access and survive on these platforms. These range from high fees, payment processing issues, competition with the platform’s own private labels, and deliberate algorithm bias and manipulation, to name a few.  In fact, Amazon and other large corporates are stifling, not aiding the growth of small businesses, with many forced close due to their control of the market and the supply chain. In the US for example, small retailer numbers declined by 65,000 between 2007 and 2017 whilst Amazon’s profits grew ever higher.

This is all compounded by the fact that many of these businesses are based in areas with limited access to traditional banking and finance services; they often have to pay for their stock in cash. This means that they often can’t buy all the inventory they need when they need it, resulting in a huge loss in revenue. Even where they can access credit, on average, they pay as much as 10% more in financial services fees than larger firms.

So, what is the way out for these small businesses?

Decentralised Marketplaces Are The Answer

One of the key ways to tackle the problem is to establish a decentralised marketplace, one which revolutionises e-commerce and enables businesses to be more competitive, efficient and profitable. One that provides access to a broader customer base, reduces costs and increases control over transactions.

Decentralised marketplaces allow sellers who don’t necessarily have the resources to invest in large-scale marketing campaigns to reach a wider audience and expand their customer base. In addition, decentralised marketplaces are much more cost-effective, removing many of the barriers to trade and thus helping SMEs to become more profitable.

These decentralised platforms also enable businesses to set their own terms, including accepting returns and providing warranty services, which helps build trust among customers and create a more positive customer experience. In addition, they are transparent, secure and allow buyers and sellers to interact without unnecessary interference.

Rise of The Third Generation Internet

Much like decentralised marketplaces, Web3 is another solution that cuts out the intermediary and gives the user back full control. Web3 can potentially transform e-commerce for SMEs by powering the new generation of decentralised marketplaces. As a community-managed market, it will enable freedom of exchange and give users complete control of buying and selling goods.

Added to that, through the use of blockchain, it will afford greater transparency, security and traceability of products. It will also make transactions quicker and more efficient.

Fintech Firms Need to Step up in Emerging Markets.

With smartphone and internet penetration at an all-time high in emerging markets, it’s an opportune time for fintech firms to get involved and establish new products, services and provisions. For example, powering digital payments for B2B merchant transactions could potentially increase the GDP of all emerging economies by six percent, unlock more than $3.7 trillion in growth, and create over 95 million jobs. That would make a huge difference in closing the global gap between economies.

It’s clear that traditional e-commerce is broken due given the limited access to traditional finance and technological solutions available for small businesses in emerging countries. The creation of a truly decentralised marketplace is the revolutionary solution that can fix it.

Here at RedCloud our mission is to democratise borderless, global commerce. Our Open Commerce solution provides EDMEs with access to a decentralised B2B marketplace, where users have full control, offering digitised payments and real-time inventory visibility, insights into the performance of sales promotions and more. We’re already helping over 200,000 retailers buy more than 250,000 products daily worth above $1 billion.

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Business

Global e-commerce revenue sinks in 2022

The initial forecast from the ‘Statista Digital Market Outlook’ projected $380 billion more revenue in 2022 than a year ago…reports Asian Lite News

After registering years of impressive growth, global e-commerce revenue sank $250 billion (year-over-year), falling from $3.84 trillion in 2021 to $3.59 trillion this year which is a first for the industry, a report showed on Monday.

Supply chain issues, inflation, rising digital advertising costs, and changed consumer behaviour have all had their share in the first-ever e-commerce revenue drop, according to data presented by AugustaFreePress.com.

The initial forecast from the ‘Statista Digital Market Outlook’ projected $380 billion more revenue in 2022 than a year ago.

However, as of July, the global e-commerce revenue projection slipped from $4.22 trillion to $3.74 trillion.

Although China generated nearly one-third of total e-commerce revenue in 2022, the world’s largest market is ending the year with a massive $212 billion revenue drop alone. Other leading markets, Japan, the UK, and Germany, also saw their revenues plunge.

On the other hand, the US is the only one among the top five markets whose e-commerce revenue increased this year.

According to Statista, the US e-commerce industry generated nearly $905 billion in revenue this year, 5 per cent more than in 2021.

In 2023, the entire market is expected to generate $4.48 trillion in revenue and then hit a $5 trillion benchmark in 2024.

One of the significant drivers for recovery will be the swelling e-commerce user base, said the report.

Last year, the global e-commerce market had a massive 50.4 per cent penetration rate, with nearly 3.8 billion people who shopped online.

Statistics show that online shoppers are expected to grow by 315 million YoY to 4.1 billion in 2022.

“Also, the market’s penetration rate is set to reach 54.1 per cent this year. Statista expects more than 4.8 billion people to shop online by 2025,” said the report.

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Business India News

E-com platforms power digital ads in India

The total advertising market in India stood at $11 billion in 2021, out of which 37 per cent comprised the digital ads market….reports Asian Lite News

E-commerce platforms are now the fastest growing medium for digital ads in India, with a $6-8 billion opportunity by 2030, according to a new report.

The growth in product e-commerce user base is expected to be faster than search and social media platforms, with 300-350 million new online shoppers from tier 2 markets expected by 2030.

India’s digital ads market is expected to touch $35 billion in the same time-period and e-commerce platforms will be one of the biggest contributors enabling this upward spiral, according to homegrown strategy consulting firm Redseer.

The total advertising market in India stood at $11 billion in 2021, out of which 37 per cent comprised the digital ads market.

“The fact that millennials and Gen Z spend so much time on digital platforms are helping in the growth of the adtech market. This is likely to continue as more people use websites, apps, and social media to engage with each other,” said Sanjay Kothari, Associate Partner,ARedseer Strategy Consultants.

The contribution of e-commerce platforms to the adtech industry has rapidly increased from 15 per cent to 20 per cent in the last two years, and will contribute between 20-25 per cent of the market share.

Product e-commerce driven ads market is dominated by online marketplaces Flipkart and Amazon with 75 per cent share.

The overall advertising market, which includes traditional and digital ads, is poised to touch $45-50 billion by 2030, out of which a staggering 70-75 per cent will comprise digital ads.

A drastic increase in digital consumption as well as digital penetration in Tier-2 cities are the primary growth drivers responsible for the spike in India’s digital advertising ecosystem.

“Additionally, an increase in GDP per capita and the rise of D2C (direct to consumer) challenger brands are the other key enablers of this growth,” the report noted.

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Business

Shiprocket buys e-commerce platform Pickrr

The two platforms process 10 million shipments per month with a substantial customer base of more than 75,000 merchants, including direct-to-consumer (D2C) brands, SME e-tailers, and social commerce sellers….reports Asian Lite News

Logistics technology platform Shiprocket on Wednesday announced it has acquired a majority stake in Pickrr, an ecommerce software-as-a-service (SaaS) platform for D2C brands and SME e-tailers for around $200 million (nearly Rs 1,560 crore).

The cash, stock and earn-out deal will create a single gateway for other enablers and suppliers to service the digital retailer community and strengthen Shiprocket’s position as the leading D2C enablement operating system, the company said in a statement.

The two platforms process 10 million shipments per month with a substantial customer base of more than 75,000 merchants, including direct-to-consumer (D2C) brands, SME e-tailers, and social commerce sellers.

“Shiprocket and Pickrr are uniquely positioned to capture this opportunity by laying the building blocks of this software infrastructure. We look forward to building a formidable e-commerce logistics ecosystem with our complementary products and customer segments,” said Saahil Goel, Co-founder and CEO of Shiprocket.

Shiprocket and Pickrr have built robust technology stacks and operational excellence to enable their customers to benefit from their unparalleled growth in the e-commerce ecosystem.

The combined platform will be a boost for the ecosystem comprising shipping partners, warehouse providers, shopping carts, marketplaces, ERP systems, payment players, identity and credit information providers.

“Both Shiprocket and Pickrr are frontrunners in the industry, and we are keen to work closely with them to build futuristic solutions and transform the e-commerce logistics sector by driving it to its next growth phase,” said Gaurav Mangla, Co-Founder of Pickrr.

Established in 2017, Shiprocket is backed by investors such as Temasek, Bertelsmann India Investments, PayPal, Tribe Capital, Zomato, Lightrock, March Capital, Moore Strategic Ventures, Infoedge, etc.A

Started in 2018, Pickrr is backed by investors such as Omidyar Network, Guild Capital, Amicus, IIFL and Ananta.

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