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Amazon plans to expand its online grocery delivery operations even as homegrown rivals Flipkart and Paytm scale back in India’s $413-billion grocery market.
The focus is on increasing the customer base over the next few years and not chasing profitability, said Saurabh Srivastava, head of the fast moving consumer goods (FMCG) category at Amazon India.
Getting into groceries is tempting for an e-tailer but it’s a tricky segment, said Harminder Sahni of retail consultancy Wazir Advisors.
Srivastava said it’s a habit-forming category. If somebody is shopping for their daily essentials on a website or storefront, chances are they will buy other products as well, he said.
Amazon will build multiple platforms and adapt to local needs, said Srivastava. The e-tailer aggregates and also has an inventory for groceries in India.
While sellers stock items like soaps to butter and decide the prices, the e-tailer delivers them by taking orders via the Amazon Now app.
Amazon also allows sellers on its marketplace to stock products at its warehouses for a charge, and delivers them through its ‘Amazon Pantry’ and ‘Subscribe & Save’ services.
Three months after its launch, Amazon Now promises two-hour grocery delivery in Delhi, Hyderabad and Mumbai. Amazon Pantry, which guarantees next-day delivery, is available in 29 cities.
More than half-a-dozen grocery delivery startups shut shop last year as they ran out of cash to acquire customers.
The business model they followed was not right, said Ankur Bisen, senior vice-president at management consultancy Technopak Advisors. Aggregation or simply tying up with nearby vendors does not work in grocery delivery, he said.
To succeed, Amazon will have to maintain margins, said Anirudh Damani of Mumbai-based venture capital firm Artha Ventures that has backed dairy delivery startup SuprDaily. Amazon cannot always burn money to acquire customers, he said.
(This article was originally published on BloombergQuint)
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