Business Standard

Future Group readies BigBazaar for ecommerce play

The ecommerce portal is ready and will be launched pan India in three months, Biyani said

Future Group readies BigBazaar for ecommerce play

Bibhu Ranjan Mishra Bengaluru
After home furnishing and electronics, Kishore Biyani-led Future Group is taking its hypermarket format Big Bazaar online. The e-commerce portal is ready and will be launched pan-India in three months, Biyani told Business Standard.

Unlike e-commerce market places such as Flipkart and Amazon, Future Group has taken the omni-channel route for its e-commerce foray. This means the company’s online sales will be supported by a chain of physical stores across the country.

“We are building up capabilities in the warehouses. We won’t do local delivery,” said Biyani. He, however, added the company was taking a step-by-step approach for its e-commerce foray. “We believe it (omni channel) is a very expensive model. As a group, we don’t want to do any business which incurs losses.”

A fierce critic of the existing e-commerce business model prevalent in the country, Biyani has quietly made an entry into the world of e-commerce. It has already taken its electronics retail stores, eZone, online through the omni-channel model, while its acquisition of Rocket Internet-promoted Fabfurnish earlier this year has given it a footprint on the home furnishing e-commerce segment.

While relaunching the portal earlier this month, the company had said it was expecting Fabfurnish to become profitable in three months. To a query on whether Future was looking at further acquisitions for its e-commerce play, Biyani said the company was only looking at specialty retail. “We are looking at niche retail segments; anything in which we can make money.”

With the ambition to play a bigger role in the e-commerce segment, Biyani’s views about the sector have somewhat been moderated now.

“I think e-commerce has a lot of strengths. Long tail (selling less of more by focusing on offering a large amount of niche products), and sales velocity (time taken for a new lead to become a closed deal) help reach the geographies faster. So they have to build on the strengths. They have to reduce the costs of customer acquisition, transaction and delivery. Customers will have to pay for delivery; only then can it become profitable,” said Biyani. “So, it will evolve in a new form. It won’t survive in the current form.”

In the fashion segment, though, Biyani is still taking a big bet on the brick-n-mortal model. The group has started refurbishing the Central stores, the flagship retail format of Future Lifestyle Fashion, starting with its first set of Central stores on Residency Road in Bengaluru, launched 11 years ago.

Work has already started to redesign Central stores in Goregaon and Hyderabad, Biyani said, adding the company was spending Rs 7,500-8,000 per sq ft for this redesigning.

The other area where the company is making a push is to establish small store formats across the breadth of the country under the

Easyday brand, which it acquired through Bharti Retail. After the integration of Bharti Retail with itself, Future is looking to establish 4,000 Easyday stores across the country over the next five years compared with around 500 now. “That is the biggest thing that would be happening here. We will go to towns, which have even a population of around 50,000.”
 

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First Published: May 14 2016 | 12:45 AM IST

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