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The Elephants In The Room Of B2B Ecommerce

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Everyone wants to B2B. It is the flavour of the season with investors, with the media and with entrepreneurs who jumped from Uber-of-x in 2014 to foodtech in 2015 and want to B2B in 2016. Heck, even I’m running a B2B startup that has ecommerce in it.

It going to be great, right?

Ha!

Here are things about B2B in general and B2B in India specifically:

B2B is unexciting

  • No twitter endorsements by a top supermodel or cricket player!
  • No teenagers gushing over your products.
  • No old men complaining that your B2B products make the younger generation lazy.
  • No discussions with classmates on your latest B2B purchase and who got a better deal.
  • No social sharing (Any takers for this FB status: Yay! Look at the 100 kgs of industrial strength grease remover for my shop floor that I just ordered).

But this is ok, after all, most manufacturing, construction, trading, brokerage and consulting businesses are unexciting.

Don’t complain if procurement for these unexciting businesses is also unexciting.

B2B is not sexy

Most industrial products are designed to be in market for years and last years as well. I know someone who still requires floppy disks to operate their CNC machine (ok, extreme example. But you get the idea)

The only thing longer than the purchase/procurement cycles of B2B products is the usage cycle.

Companies do not like changes in their processes.

Change means they need to re-train. They need to stop production during upgrades. Lost productivity. Potential downtime.

You have to get ’em, put ’em away. You lose ’em, yuck.

B2B is not quick

B2B products and services don’t sell themselves. (Even SaaS Inside Sales)

The sales process requires calls, emails, reminders, follow-ups, proposals, approvals, negotiations, payment cycles, post-sales support.

They take time and serious attention from your team.

It’s not you. It’s them (the enterprise customers). Their processes cannot handle a quick add-to-cart+checkout functionality. Sure some of them have started to buy stationery and IT equipment online, but what about the large pot of B2B gold at the end of the rainbow?

Three words for you: Slow and Steady.

B2B is neither CoD nor Card

Very few payments can be CoD as the govt. of India dislikes businesses paying businesses large amounts in cash. Even when you can collect cash, you need the customer’s PAN details, etc. Basically, a pain.

Business credit cards are super rare in India and often limited to senior managers using them for work travel related expenses or spends within preset amounts.

When they do happen <wink, wink> B2B payments are mostly by with Cheque, or NEFT/RTGS. Both are highly manual and time intensive payment instruments. You may setup a recurring phone bill payment, but let me see you try setting up a recurring payment for your monthly steel purchases for your factory producing widgets.

B2B is low margin

This one is my favourite. I am absolutely enthralled with the look on the face of investors when they finally realize that B2B doesn’t have the B2C gross margins of 50% or 75%.

Wait for the look.

  • They will try to fight it.
  • They will tell you that you are wrong.
  • They will tell that your competitors will do a better job.
  • They will re-run your numbers and overwork their analysts.
  • And then, then, they will learn. B2B is not for the faint of heart or for the “quick marketing splash” type of business models.

What the hell do we then do with B2B?

We can’t social media the hell out of it. We cannot have it on the front page of Times of India for inorganic traffic growth. We cannot TVC it. All the wonderful B2C strategies you spent millions learning over the last few years fall flat.

Here are some strategies that may help:

Work with the low margins, not against them

B2B products are a volume game.

Do you like 25% of 1 million of 5% of 1 billion?

Ensure your cost structures and burn rates are designed with this in mind. As a startup, survive till the volumes start to work in your favour. Don’t rush to grab margins on day 1 or 2 or 3.

If you are burning tens of lakhs a month on ATL marketing, you will have only a small bump in transactions to show for it.

If you are starting off with hundreds of people in your team, your burn is going to be a significant part/multiple of your revenues.

If you are quickly expanding into multiple geographies, your customer service will fall apart.
You cannot bulldoze your way to profitability in this industry.

Unsexy doesn’t mean unprofitable

Most recent grads looking for their first job usually sort by the coolness of the startup, not by the long term learning opportunities in their field. Don’t think or act like a fresher.

Having been in the construction materials industry, I’ve seen bricks manufacturers make more per month than many established retailers.

Sounds extreme, but this is true of many unsexy industries.

Look to cross-sell affiliate products. Your customers will thank you for it and your sales will be stronger as a result.

Talk. Talk. Talk.

Learn to speak with your customers or learn to perish.

Automate the hell out of quotation processes, negotiations, product discovery, logistics and QC. But whatever you do, continue to have a dialogue with your customers.

Customer references aren’t as easy as entering your UBER referral code, but the value generated over a conversation with B2B customers is manifold.

Let professionals handle payments

B2B payments are not for the faint of heart.

There is an old marwari saying, “If you start giving credit to a good customer, you lose your money and spoil the customer”.

Work hard to cultivate customers who can pay on time and without reminders. For those customers who still want credit, do me a favour and do not take on the credit risk on your balance sheet. You think you can handle it. You cannot.

Look at great companies such as CapitalFloat or LoanZen to help you in this process. They have the right processes in place and the appetite to underwrite customer credit.

The Indian legal system makes it absolutely impossible to get money out of someone who does not want to pay. If the

SBI cannot get Mallya to pay, you are definitely not going to do better.

Patience you must have, my young padawan

Finally, understand that the Indian B2B landscape is improving. Not as rapidly as you or I would like, but improving nonetheless.

If you are a B2B marketplace or tech enabled startup, don’t go out and burn it all away in a big splash. Temper your expectations and work hard to ensure your investors look at B2B with correctly coloured glasses.

Who am I to give you this gyan?

Actually, I’m nobody.

I learnt to survive in this industry the hard way. I run a B2B ecommerce startup that broke-even from its 2nd month.

Like you, I’m working my butt off to ensure I can build a stable, profit-making behemoth in an industry that is scared of ecommerce and so hates it*

I’m an entrepreneur who wants to share what little knowledge I’ve picked up and hope you will share with me too.

[Vinit Bhansali is the founder and CEO of Buildkar.com — India’s largest building materials website.]





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Blinkit delivers Lenskart products in 10 mins.

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In an announcement on Friday, Albinder Dhindsa, the founder of Blinkit, revealed that the quick commerce firm, owned by Zomato, will now offer delivery of eyewear products from Lenskart in under 10 minutes. This partnership allows Blinkit customers to access Lenskart.com products swiftly, initially focusing on sunglasses and Lenskart’s Hustlr range, which includes computer glasses. Dhindsa expressed curiosity about the evolution of the Hustlr brand over time.

The expansion of quick commerce services beyond groceries is evident as various categories such as beauty, toys, health, and electronics witness significant sales growth on such platforms. For instance, Arindam Paul, a founding member and CBO at Atomberg, recently shared on LinkedIn that the company has started selling its products on a quick commerce platform, maintaining the same prices as offered on other e-commerce platforms.

Additionally, Blinkit recently announced its availability of PlayStation 5 on its platform. Dhindsa noted that Blinkit customers in Delhi NCR, Mumbai, and Bengaluru can now have the all-new PlayStation 5 Slim editions and controllers delivered within 10 minutes. However, due to high demand, the product quickly went out of stock within a week of its launch. Dhindsa reassured customers on LinkedIn that the company is actively working on restocking PlayStation 5 units at its stores to meet demand.

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Amazon collaborates with neighborhood stores to offer community New Year items.

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In Kolkata, approximately 15,000 local shops spanning across Bengal have partnered with Amazon India to provide a diverse range of items essential for various community New Year celebrations. These items include fresh flowers, rangoli, and puja essentials necessary for rituals during festivities such as Poila Baisakh, Ugadi, Gudi Padwa, Bohag Bihu, and others.

Furthermore, not only shops specializing in traditional festival items, but also those selling home furnishings, kitchen appliances, personal care products, computers, and peripherals have joined Amazon for this occasion. The collaboration aims to cater to the diverse needs of customers during the New Year celebrations of different communities.

These local partner shops of the e-commerce giant are situated in prominent locations across Kolkata, Howrah, Durgapur, Nadia, Hooghly, and Kharagpur. Abhishek Jain, the head of local shops at Amazon India, assured that orders placed would be promptly delivered to customers.

The festivals such as Poila Baisakh, Ugadi, Gudi Padwa, Bohag Bihu, Maha Vishubha, and Sankranti are celebrated with great fervor in various regions. In Bengal, these New Year festivals are embraced by the respective communities residing in the state.

Jain further elaborated that this year, nearly 4,700 sellers are offering approximately 60,000 festival-themed products across India through Amazon’s platform. The company anticipates an increase in the number of sellers partnering with them, thereby enhancing the variety and accessibility of festival-related products for customers nationwide.

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Indiamart shakes up management, names new CFO, CIO.

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Indiamart, a prominent B2B e-commerce platform, has announced the appointment of Jitin Diwan as its new Chief Financial Officer (CFO), effective May 15, according to a regulatory filing on Monday. Diwan brings over 17 years of experience to his new role, having previously served as the Head of Finance (Vice President) at Upstox Securities and holding positions at companies like Amazon India, Bharti Airtel Limited, and Vodafone.

Diwan will succeed Prateek Chandra, the current CFO, who will transition into a new role within the company as Chief Strategy Officer starting June 15.

The filing also revealed Indiamart’s recent investments totaling Rs 1100 Cr in pursuing inorganic growth opportunities across B2B, Fintech, Logistics, and business SAAS sectors. It mentioned acquisitions of Busy Infotech and Livekeeping Technologies, along with multiple minority investments. To further nurture and grow these investee companies while exploring organic and inorganic growth opportunities, Indiamart has created the new role of Chief Strategy Officer.

Furthermore, Indiamart has appointed Nikhil S. Prabhakar as its Chief Information Officer. Prabhakar, with over 13 years of experience, brings expertise in business management, sales management, product management, and leadership. Before joining Indiamart, he was associated with companies like Pristyn Care, Ola Financial Services, and Bharti Airtel.

In addition to these appointments, Dinesh Chandra Agarwal has been re-appointed as the Managing Director and CEO for a term of 5 years, effective from January 8, 2025.

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