E-commerce, M-commerce: India, X/ Twitter and India

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This is a collection of articles archived for the excellence of their content.<br/>
 
This is a collection of articles archived for the excellence of their content.<br/>
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[[File: On the rise .jpg| On the rise [https://www.indiatoday.in/magazine/the-big-story/story/20180528-flipkart-walmart-deal-1236230-2018-05-17#ssologin=1#source=magazine .<br/>“India Today”]|frame|500px]]
 
  
=Laws, rules=
 
==E-commerce intermediaries not liable for vendors’ actions: HC==
 
[https://epaper.timesgroup.com/Olive/ODN/TimesOfIndia/shared/ShowArticle.aspx?doc=TOIDEL%2F2021%2F01%2F10&entity=Ar01605&sk=F5F04FCC&mode=text  Vasanth Kumar, January 10, 2021: ''The Times of India'']
 
  
In what could be a shot in the arm for ecommerce platforms, the Karnataka high court has said that an intermediary governed by Information Technology Act, or its directors/ officers, would not be liable for any action or inaction on the part of a vendor/seller, who makes use of its website or marketplace facility.
 
  
The HC made this observation on January 7 while quashing a complaint as well as proceedings against Snapdeal Private Limited and two of its directors. The court said it cannot be expected that the provider or enabler of the online marketplace is aware of all the products sold on its website.
 
  
“It is only required that such provider or enabler put in place a robust system to inform all sellers on its platform of their responsibilities and obligations under applicable laws to discharge its role and obligation as an intermediary. If the same is violated by the sellers of goods or service, they can be proceeded with, but not the intermediary,” Justice Suraj Govindaraj stated.
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= Government requests=
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==2012-17: Content removal==
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[http://epaperbeta.timesofindia.com/Article.aspx?eid=31808&articlexml=Rise-in-Indias-requests-to-Twitter-to-drop-22092017023029  Kim Arora, Rise in India's requests to Twitter to drop content, September 22, 2017: The Times of India]
  
The complaint against Snapdeal, filed by the Mysuru drugs inspector before the CJM court in June 2020, was related to selling Suhagra-100 tablets (sildenafil citrate tablets 100 mg) between October 13, 2014 and December 16, 2014. M/s Adept Biocare, a Haryanabased company, had on November 20, 2014 sold 100 tablets to one Manjunath through the seller account created by it on Snapdeal. Snapdeal challenged the court’s summons in the HC, where Govindaraj, pointing to the inordinate delay of six years in filing of the complaint, said “neither Snapdeal or its directors can be prosecuted for the offence”.
 
  
== E-tailers must pay sellers in 2 days: RBI==
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India has shown a steady increase in the number of account information and content removal requests sent to Twitter from the government since 2012, with the maximum number of requests made between January and June 2017.
[http://epaperbeta.timesofindia.com/Article.aspx?eid=31808&articlexml=E-tailers-must-settle-seller-payments-in-2-09102017021038  Digbijay Mishra, E-tailers must settle seller payments in 2 days: RBI, October 9, 2017: ''The Times of India'']
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E-commerce players have been mandated to clear payments of merchants within two days of intimation regarding the completion of transaction, the RBI has said in response to a query sent by an online seller. The central bank's response, reviewed by TOI, makes it clear that completion of transaction means the act of making the payment. Every e-commerce company has its own agreement with sellers about intimation regarding the completion of a transaction. Although typically , it is referred to as date of dispatch. At present, however, the majority of e-commerce companies take a week to 15 days to settle payments of sellers. Flipkart, for instance, has a 7-12 day cycle for various categories of sellers, including gold and silver retailers.
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Sellers on multiple e-com merce platforms say leading etailers are not settling payments for prepaid orders according to the RBI regulations and they usually take about a week on an average. When contacted, an Amazon spokesperson said the company was compliant with the regulations. A Flipkart spokesperson declined to comment.
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India made 104 requests for content removal and another 261 requests for account information. It was the sixth largest number of requests for account information after the US, Japan, the UK, Turkey and France. Twitter released these numbers in its half-yearly transparency report.
  
E-tailers charge a payment collection fee from sellers for both online payments and cash on delivery orders.
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Twitter fulfilled 21% of the 261 account information requ ests India made. These requests covered 659 accounts. This number was up from 168 requests made in July-December 2016, where 427 accounts were specified. Although the number of requests has been lower in previous years, the number of accounts has been significantly higher before.
  
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“These fluctuations and rise in numbers is tough to ascribe to any one factor. It could be because of more people using the service, or because of the government starting to recognise Twitter and social media as places where a law and order problem can occur, or it could be censorship,“ says Parminder Jeet Singh, executive director for Bengaluru-based NGO IT for Change.
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=History/ evolution on online shopping=
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==2015-18: requests for user data==
==The spread of smartphones changes shopping==
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[https://epaper.timesgroup.com/Olive/ODN/TimesOfIndia/shared/ShowArticle.aspx?doc=TOIDEL%2F2018%2F12%2F15&entity=Ar02513&sk=376B772F&mode=text  Digbijay Mishra, Govt requests for info from Twitter surge, December 15, 2018: ''The Times of India'']
[http://indiatoday.intoday.in/story/e-commerce-online-shopping-india-smart-phones/1/397264.html ''India Today'']
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[[File: ecom.jpg|Growth of mobile shopping,smartphone sales and e-commerce, Graphic courtesy: [http://indiatoday.intoday.in/story/e-commerce-online-shopping-india-smart-phones/1/397264.html ''India Today'']|frame|500px]]  
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The spread of smartphones is turning Indians into smart shoppers and converting e-commerce into m-commerce.
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[[File: Requests made by the Government of India to Twitter for user data, 2015-18.jpg|Requests made by the Government of India to Twitter for user data, 2015-18 <br/> From: [https://epaper.timesgroup.com/Olive/ODN/TimesOfIndia/shared/ShowArticle.aspx?doc=TOIDEL%2F2018%2F12%2F15&entity=Ar02513&sk=376B772F&mode=text  Digbijay Mishra, Govt requests for info from Twitter surge, December 15, 2018: ''The Times of India'']|frame|500px]]
  
==Deals in E-commerce, US, China and India, 2012-15==
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The Indian government wants to know more about what you do on Twitter and its curiosity is only growing. The Centre’s requests from Twitter for user data has risen by over 100% in the last two years, as per the latest transparency report released by the social media major. Between January and June 2018, India sought information on 355 accounts, up from 261 and 139 in the first six months of 2017 and 2016 respectively. Twitter’s transparency data shows that the numbers every six months have been rising.
[[File: Deals in E-commerce, US, China and India, 2012-15.jpg|Deals in E-commerce; US, China and India: 2012-15; Graphic courtesy: [http://epaperbeta.timesofindia.com/Gallery.aspx?id=31_07_2015_024_067_003&type=P&artUrl=FLIPKART-BOOSTS-INDIAS-SHARE-31072015024067&eid=31808 ''The Times of India''], July 31, 2015|frame|500px]]
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'''See graphic''':
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However, Twitter provided information in the case of only 11% of the requests made by the government in the first six months of 2018. It got 246 requests for removal of accounts in this period and obliged to only about 5% of them. Twitter’s rate of acceptance of government requests has fallen sharply, from 31% in the first half of 2016, to 11% in the latest period. Indian authorities (government, police, court orders) sought to remove 144 accounts in the second half of 2017, and 104 in the first half of that year.
  
''Deals in E-commerce, US, China and India, 2012-15''
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The data showed Twitter withheld (prevented access to) two accounts and 23 tweets in response to a legal demand from the IT ministry for propagating objectionable content. Following legal requests, a total of 19 accounts and 498 tweets were withheld.
  
==2013-17:  India, the fastest growing e-comm market==
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The past few years have seen increasingly harsh, often incendiary, posts on social media. More Indians have also flocked to Twitter to air their views. The rising requests from the government is partly a reflection of its attempt to control the more inflammatory posts. When demands are made legally, based on the laws of the land, social media companies are obliged to respect the demand. In other cases, they need to take into account whether accepting the government request would amount to violating the freedom of expression of the user.
[https://epaper.timesgroup.com/Olive/ODN/TimesOfIndia/shared/ShowArticle.aspx?doc=TOIDEL%2F2018%2F11%2F29&entity=Ar02409&sk=46099EA3&mode=text  India is fastest growing e-comm mkt: Report, November 29, 2018: ''The Times of India'']
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[[File: Online retail growth (CAGR in 2017) in India and other major Asian economies. .jpg|Online retail growth (CAGR in 2017) in India and other major Asian economies. <br/> From: [https://epaper.timesgroup.com/Olive/ODN/TimesOfIndia/shared/ShowArticle.aspx?doc=TOIDEL%2F2018%2F11%2F29&entity=Ar02409&sk=46099EA3&mode=text  India is fastest growing e-comm mkt: Report, November 29, 2018: ''The Times of India'']|frame|500px]]
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In India, between 2012 and 2014, the government sent less than 100 requests for information. But in the first six months of 2015 alone, over 100 requests were made.
  
India has the fastest growing online retail market among top global economies. The country’s online retail market witnessed a compound annual growth rate (CAGR) of 53% for the period 2013 to 2017, according to a latest report by consultancy firm Bain & Company.
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India is said to have about 30 million Twitter users, as per estimates by market research firm Statista.
  
The rapid growth, albeit over a small base, has been driven by aggressive discount-driven e-commerce marketplaces, advances in delivery infrastructure and increased smartphone penetration and data usage.
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Globally too, government requests have been rising. Twitter said that in the first half of the year, it received 10% more government information requests worldwide, compared to the preceding six-month period — the largest percentage increase since 2015. There was also an 80% rise in global legal demands for removal of accounts in the first six months, compared to the preceding sixmonth period. Close to 90% of these requests came from Russia and Turkey.
  
These conditions are giving rise to large retail ecosystems. “What we’re seeing is the emergence of scale open retail ecosystem platforms across the Asia Pacific region that offer retailers a compelling alternative to building and scaling their own capabilities,” said Melanie Sanders, partner at Bain & Company.
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==2021: Twitter blocks 97% handles on govt list==
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[https://epaper.timesgroup.com/Olive/ODN/TimesOfIndia/shared/ShowArticle.aspx?doc=TOIDEL%2F2021%2F02%2F12&entity=Ar00305&sk=B9E2C5BD&mode=text  Pankaj Doval, February 12, 2021: ''The Times of India'']
  
Retail ecosystems comprise communities of consumers, retailers and partners that rapidly reshape the retail landscape. They deliver a very sticky consumer proposition by combining services like e-commerce, chat, streaming, gaming or payments in a single platform or app, which shoppers are adopting globally, the report said.
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[[File: In Feb 2021- Twitter blocked 97% handles on the govt list.jpg|In Feb 2021: Twitter blocked 97% handles on the govt list <br/> From: [https://epaper.timesgroup.com/Olive/ODN/TimesOfIndia/shared/ShowArticle.aspx?doc=TOIDEL%2F2021%2F02%2F12&entity=Ar00305&sk=B9E2C5BD&mode=text  Pankaj Doval, February 12, 2021: ''The Times of India'']|frame|500px]]
  
While Alibaba and Tencent lead the best-known Asian ecosystems, India too is witnessing the emergence of retail eco-systems, led by Reliance, Flipkart/Walmart,Amazon/Future Group and Alibaba.
 
  
India’s total e-commerce retail sales in 2017 were pegged at around $20 billion and studies have indicated that another $50 billion of online e-commerce could be unlocked by adding new users and luring back internet users that do not currently shop online due to various reasons.
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There were signs of a thaw in Twitter’s tussle with the government after the social media giant took down over 97% of the handles that the IT ministry had sought to be censured for carrying “inflammatory content” related to ‘farmers’ genocide’ hashtag and accounts backed by Khalistan sympathisers and Pakistan.
  
Despite the rapid growth, online retail penetration in India is low at 5% compared with markets such as China (20%) and the US (12%). India was ranked eighth in terms of online retail penetration among 11 countries.
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Of the 1,435 handles flagged by the government through two separate requests, 1,398 have been taken down, top sources said.
  
Consumer electronics segment in India has the highest online penetration (17%, which is e-commerce sales as percentage of total retail sales) followed by apparel and footwear (9%) and beauty and personal care (1%). Food & grocery, with overall retail sales of around $530 billion in 2017, has one of the lowest online penetrations at 0.1%.
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The breakthrough in the deadlock came after IT secretary Ajay Prakash Sawhney’s meeting with Twitter executives Monique Meche and Jim Baker late Wednesday evening, following which the American social media giant started to act against the users.
  
==2014-16: change in three major trends==
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“The compliance has come in for almost the entire list of accounts that we had asked to be taken down. For the remaining, Twitter has said that it is following the due process, which includes sending notice to the users and other such steps,” a government source told TOI.
[[File: Changing trends in online shopping1.jpg| 2014-16: Changing trends in online shopping: 1 |frame|500px]]
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[[File: Changing trends in online shopping2.jpg| 2014-16: Changing trends in online shopping: 2 |frame|500px]]
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[[File: Changing trends in online shopping3.jpg| 2014-16: Changing trends in online shopping: 3 |frame|500px]]
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[[File: Changing trends in online shopping4.jpg| 2014-16: Changing trends in online shopping: 3 |frame|500px]]
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[http://epaperbeta.timesofindia.com/Article.aspx?eid=31808&articlexml=THREE-TRENDS-THAT-SHOW-HOW-INDIAS-E-SHOPPING-09102016023014  Samidha Sharma, How India's e-shopping has changed, Oct 09 2016 : The Times of India]
 
  
THREE TRENDS THAT SHOW HOW - INDIA'S E-SHOPPING HAS CHANGED
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''' ‘A positive step by Twitter’ '''
  
This festival season is seeing the rise of a new breed of e-shopper who's as cool about shopping for a smart TV as for dal and detergent
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All the 1,178 handles that the government had flagged for possible links with Khalistani and Pakistani elements have been blocked.
  
Two years ago in 2014 when Flipkart, the country's largest web retailer kicked off its first flagship Big Billion Day sale, things didn't quite go as per plan. The e-tailer wasn't able to handle the unprecedented traffic and its founders were left apologising to disgruntled shoppers for the snafus. A lot has changed since then, not only for Flipkart and for all e-commerce players, but also in the way India shops online.
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Of the 257 handles that were sought to be blocked over the controversial hashtag, 220 have been taken down. “Some of the accounts could be duplicates,” the source said. However, some accounts such as that of CPM leader Mohammed Salim (@salimdotcomrade) and Caravan magazine (@thecaravanindia) remain functional. “We view this as a positive step that Twitter has taken. It does follow from the meaningful and healthy conversations that we had with the global executives of the company,the government source said.
  
Beyond the intense fight for capturing market share emblematic of the e-commerce sector, which reaches fever pitch this time of the year, what's starting to emerge is a breed of seasoned shoppers who is as comfortable shopping for an expensive smart TV as ordering their dal-detergent online.
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A spokesperson for Twitter in India did not respond to a questionnaire from TOI.
  
''' Small-Town India Becomes Big Online '''
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While the social media platform had earlier refused to comply with the government’s requests, on Wednesday, the IT secretary expressed displeasure over “differential treatment”.
  
If we were to believe data from companies, online retail's march into smaller Indian cities seemed to have finally made progress this year after many attempts to amp up business from these towns. What'll be interesting to watch is if these numbers sustain. Amit Agarwal, country head of Amazon India, says among the 15 million units it sold during its `Great Indian Festival', orders came from 90% of India's pin codes. The number of new customers increased five-fold over last Diwali with 70% of new shoppers coming from tier II and tier III towns, he adds. Overall, 65% of Amazon's orders come from towns categorized as tier II (population of one million) and below. Rival Flipkart says sales from tier II and below cities went up to 42% from 34% in the past one year.
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“They must be obeyed immediately. If they are executed days later, it becomes meaningless,” IT Sawhney said. He also made it clear that the use of the controversial hashtag was neither journalistic freedom nor freedom of expression as such “irresponsible content could provoke and inflame” the situation.
  
Even as e-tailers tout their strides beyond the big cities, estimates say the number of online buyers remained at around 68 million in 2016 and majority of them came from metros. “It's true that a big chunk of new customers are from tier II and tier III but their ticket sizes and frequency of purchases will take some time to increase as most of them are only shopping because of discounts,“ says Satish Meena, forecast analyst at Forrester Research.
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Sources said that during the meeting, Baker, Twitter’s VP for legal matters, assured government representatives that the company would be mindful of the concerns. “Baker said that the global management of Twitter can be approached directly in case of violations that are sensitive in nature. This is seen as a massive reassurance to tackle hate, inflammatory and irresponsible messaging,” the source said.
  
A good part of the sales during the festive season typically comes from incremental wallet share of existing buyers. The market expansion due to new shoppers is still limited, he says.
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But not for want of trying. To boost the e-tailing market which has stuttered in the past year, having remained at $10 billion in size after galloping at 400% growth the previous year, companies brought in attractive EMI and exchange schemes on electronics and white goods. Membership programmes like Amazon Prime were aimed at locking in customers on to online platforms.
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=The misuse of Twitter=
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==2014==
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[[File: twitter1.jpg|2014: The misuse of Twitter in India and the world, and action taken |frame|500px]]
  
Flipkart's co-founder & CEO Binny Bansal says the average order size is up 20% despite discounts compared to regular days. The e-tailer says it also brought in 1.5 million new customers this year versus one million that came on board last year even as cash-on-delivery (COD) orders came down from 70% to 60% of all Big Billion Day transactions.The decline in COD shows that more Indians now trust online platforms to deliver the goods.
 
  
''' Size And Price No Bar For Buyers '''  
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'''See graphic :'''
  
Mobile phones still account for a huge chunk of sales but there's been a palpable focus on high-ticket categories like white goods and large appliances. Devita Saraf, CEO of Vu Television, a brand which sells more than 60% of its products online at an average price point of Rs 25,000, says there's an emergence of a new kind of customer who is online-first in their shopping behaviour. She says her brand was among the top sellers on Flipkart during the five-day sale.
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''2014:The misuse of Twitter in India and the world, and action taken''
  
Amazon was seen pushing daily consumables heavily, a first during the sale season which is defined by deals on mobiles and electronics. During the five-day sale consumers were looking for deals on everyday use products like detergents, diapers, grocery and household products indicating that they did not forget their everyday purchases while shopping for other deals, the company says.
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=The usage of Twitter=
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==2016: The emoji tweeted most often==
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[[File: The emoji tweeted most often, India and the world, 2016.jpg| India and the world, the emoji tweeted most often, 2016 <br/> [http://epaperbeta.timesofindia.com/Article.aspx?eid=31808&articlexml=ITS-NAMASTE-INDIA-06112016019018 ''The Times of India'']|frame|500px]]
  
''' Less Discounting, More Sales? '''  
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'''See graphic :'''
  
Post March this year, most e-tailers reduced promotional campaigns after the Indian government introduced new policy guidelines which outlawed online marketplaces from offering discounts directly. While companies did eventually find ways to get around the re gulation, this year's sales haven't offered the kind of deep discounting as previous years. But despite that, volumes are up. Consumers are getting used to buying online more with over 20-25% of users now making a purchase once in two months, says Sahil Barua, co-founder and CEO of e-commerce logistics startup Delhivery .
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''The emoji tweeted most often, India and the world, 2016''
  
Radhika Aggarwal, co-founder and CBO, ShopClues, sees this as a sign of the Indian ecommerce market maturing. “E-commerce was built on discounts to change consumer behaviour as there were no other hooks at the time.But now people wait for the sales because of the kind of selection of products they find online,“ she says. What happens post the sale-month spike will be decisive in understanding if the overall market has grown spawning new buyers or the growth was just seasonal.
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==2019: politicians, their parties and their gender==
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[https://epaper.timesgroup.com/Olive/ODN/TimesOfIndia/shared/ShowArticle.aspx?doc=TOIDEL%2F2019%2F03%2F21&entity=Ar00807&sk=6F9E4782&mode=text  Mohammad Ibrar, Get a handle on this: Women calling poll shots on Twitter, March 21, 2019: ''The Times of India'']
  
==2017-2022==
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[[File: Handles of women with maximum number of followers, 2019..jpg|Handles of women with maximum number of followers, 2019. <br/> From: [https://epaper.timesgroup.com/Olive/ODN/TimesOfIndia/shared/ShowArticle.aspx?doc=TOIDEL%2F2019%2F03%2F21&entity=Ar00807&sk=6F9E4782&mode=text  Mohammad Ibrar, Get a handle on this: Women calling poll shots on Twitter, March 21, 2019: ''The Times of India'']|frame|500px]]
See graphic.
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[[File: Growth in e-commerce, 2017-2022, expected.jpg|Growth in e-commerce, 2017-2022, expected; [http://epaperbeta.timesofindia.com/Article.aspx?eid=31808&articlexml=HOW-FAST-WILL-INDIAN-E-COMMERCE-GROW-04062017022017 The Times of India], June 4, 2017|frame|500px]]
 
[[File: India Today , August 29,2016 .jpg| India Today , August 29,2016 |frame|500px]]
 
  
=Background/ profile of online shoppers=
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It is politically prudent perhaps to give women their place in politics. After all, as research with Twitter data shows, handles of women on the platform have more followers on average than men and these handles also generate more content than men do. And even if the handles of women produce less original content, their retweets and engagement are high on Twitter, making them an asset for political parties especially in the coming general elections.
==70% of new customers from tier II & III towns/ 2016==
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[http://epaperbeta.timesofindia.com/Article.aspx?eid=31808&articlexml=70-of-new-customers-from-tier-II-III-03102016025026    70% of new customers from tier II & III towns, says Amazon, Oct 03 2016 : The Times of India]
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After a year of tepid online retail sales, etailers like Flipkart, Amazon and Snapdeal witnessed a wave of consumers flocking to their platforms as the much-publicised annual festive season sale kicked off over the weekend.
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Admittedly, of the 1,252 verified political handles analysed, only 133 belonged to female political activists, the rest being those of male politicians or party handles. Analysed and studied at Indraprastha Institute of Information Technology (IIIT) Delhi and International Institute of Information Technology, Hyderabad, by a team of eight students as part of the focus on the 2019 Lok Sabha polls, these were culled after going through “over 21 million posts by roughly a million handles collected from the 2014 general elections”.
  
Interestingly, a significant chunk of the new online shoppers is reported to have come from smaller towns in states like Sikkim, Tripura and the Andaman and Nicobar Islands. These towns are a potentially huge market that online retailers are eyeing to expand the overall ecommerce pie, which has largely failed to grow over the past year. For the Seattle-based Amazon, traffic from tier II and tier III towns increased 17 times compared with last year indicative of how discounting has aided the entry of a new se of buyers. The top six-eight citi es typically contribute 90% of sales for all the consumer inter net players, leaving a yawning gap between these markets and the still largely untapped smal ler towns.
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Ponnurangam Kumaraguru, associate professor at both IIITs, said he and his team of researchers covered data of over 2,585 Twitter handles which showed some sort of affiliation to an Indian political party. “This list was manually curated and we have been collecting data for these handles from late 2018 through the Twitter Application Programming Interface (API).
  
Manish Tiwary , VP , catego ry management at Amazon In dia, said, “We have seen a five fold growth in new customer ac quisition and 70% of them ca me from tier II & III towns.
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On March 12, Trinamool Congress announced a list of candidates for West Bengal that had over 40% women. Similarly, Biju Janata Dal has said 33% of its candidates in Odisha will be women. A push of this nature is reflective of the increasing female participation on social media. On Twitter, for instance, the study showed that on average, women’s handles had 36,85,000 followers, with the minimum at 422 and the maximum of 12.2 million for external affairs minister Sushma Swaraj.
  
While Flipkart and Snapdea are still to detail the growth in number of shoppers from smal ler towns, Shopclues claimed to have notched up double of the business from last year with a significant rise in traffic co ming from users in tier II cities.
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On average, the feminine handles generated 9,834 tweets each. Compare that with the 7,432 by their male counterparts. This is despite handles belong to men numbering 865, or 69.1%, of the 1,252 verified political handles. A majority of the female tweeters showed their origin to be in Maharashtra, Delhi and UP, the hotbed of political activism.
  
A Google trends report sha red by Shopclues, which posi tions itself as targeting markets outside of metros, said these cus tomers searched for “online shopping“ in the run up to the annual sale event. “Every consu mer is a deal seeker and during such events it is likely that users from smaller towns will come to these sites. A lot of it is channe led by rising smartphone penet ration,“ said Arvind K Singhal ,chairman at Technopak, retai advisory firm.
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Social media will be a distinct factor in this election, felt Kumaraguru, and women politicians appeared to have a lot of clout on social media. “Gender diversity is a universal topic, and we find interesting patterns like female handles re-tweeting more,” said Kumaraguru. “Tweets by females on average get retweeted more than those by men — 550 times compared with 530 times for tweets by males.
  
The country's largest e-tai ler Flipkart, which began its an nual Big Billion Days sale on Sunday , claimed to have sold half a million units within the first hour of the event. Amazon, which started its sale on Satur day, said it registered a billion hits on the first day, clocking 1.5 million units in the first 12 ho urs. Delhi-based Snapdeal claimed it was getting 180 orders per second in the first half and it ended up with 11 lakh buyers purchasing on its platform in the first 16 hours, registering a sixfold growth in sales volume.
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==2021: What Indian women tweeted about==
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[https://epaper.timesgroup.com/Olive/ODN/TimesOfIndia/shared/ShowArticle.aspx?doc=TOIDEL%2F2021%2F03%2F07&entity=Ar01511&sk=DC66DD1E&mode=text  Shobita Dhar, Passions & pursuits: What Indian women tweet about, March 7, 2021: ''The Times of India'']
  
“We have seen a three-time growth on day one compared with last year. The trend is that we are outpacing Saturday's sale on Sunday which is unusual because traditionally sales are lower on day two of most sale events,“ Tiwary said, adding that smartphones have been the biggest grosser for Amazon. Television sales, usually most popular during the festive season, grew 25 times on the back of exclusive partnerships with the likes of Sanyo.
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What do Indian women talk about on twitter? “Passions and pursuits” is the most discussed topic of conversation, with 25% of all women users coming on to Twitter to seek and consume this content. Out of this 25%, the majority (30%) seek content on fashion, 28% on books, 25% on beauty, 21% on movies and TV and 14% on sports. Over 40% of women said they discovered a new interest on Twitter.
  
For Flipkart, which is locked in a battle with Amazon for the leadership position, the number of large LED TVs sold in six hours was higher than the total number of TVs sold during The Big Billion Days last year . The Flipkart-owned Myntra saw its revenues increasing three times in the first hour compared with last year . “What makes it special is that the number of units sold in the first six hours of sale surpassed the total units sold in a day during the first day of Big Billion Days in 2015,“ said Kalyan Krishnamurthy , head, category design organisation, Flipkart. Both Flipkart and Amazon are investing aggressively to garner as much market share during the annual sale event on the back of discounts and the promise of faster services and better user experience.
+
‘Current affairs’ is the second most searched and consumed content, with 21% of all women users using Twitter to know what’s going on around them. Women from Delhi and Guwahati led this segment. About 21% use Twitter to stay informed on local and international news. Tweets about #StudentExams, #COVID19 related updates and #DelhiElections2020 dominated the conversation in this category.
  
=Business practices=
+
These are findings from a research commissioned by Twitter India ahead of International Women’s Day. For the report, a qualitative curation and analysis of 5,22,992 tweets sent from Twitter accounts of women between January 2019 and February 2021 in 10 Indian cities was done.
== Large sellers pay much less as platform fee==
+
The majority of women, 33%, use Twitter while commuting; 29% catch up on the latest tweets during breakfast and 22% don’t go to bed without looking it up. Although Twitter doesn’t have data on how many women users it has in India, their research found that almost 9% use it to create and participate in social movements like #MeToo and #TimesUp.
[https://epaper.timesgroup.com/Olive/ODN/TimesOfIndia/shared/ShowArticle.aspx?doc=TOIDEL%2F2019%2F01%2F07&entity=Ar01504&sk=9CCD4581&mode=text  Digbijay Mishra, Biggies pay lower online platform fee than small cos, January 7, 2019: ''The Times of India'']
+
  
[[File: 2017, 2018- What online sellers paid as platform fee.jpg|2017, 2018: What online sellers paid as platform fee <br/> From: [https://epaper.timesgroup.com/Olive/ODN/TimesOfIndia/shared/ShowArticle.aspx?doc=TOIDEL%2F2019%2F01%2F07&entity=Ar01504&sk=9CCD4581&mode=text  Digbijay Mishra, Biggies pay lower online platform fee than small cos, January 7, 2019: ''The Times of India'']|frame|500px]]
+
While Twitter can often be a toxic place for women with many journalists, celebrities and politicians often receiving abuse and even rape threats on it, this doesn’t deter women from using the platform. About 40% said it provides them with freedom of expression.
  
 +
About 12% used the platform to connect and network with others in their communities, like #WomenInScience and #GirlGamers. Women from Chennai, Bengaluru and Hyderabad were especially found to be active in this category. Nearly 7% women used Twitter to share and talk about everyday hardships like #Parenting, #WorkingFromHome.
  
''‘E-Commerce Players Favour Alpha Sellers’''
+
“We commissioned this research to build our understanding about women on Twitter. Access to a free and open internet has made it possible for everyone to express themselves freely without barriers,” said Manish Maheshwari, managing director, Twitter India. While 41% of women have sought advice/tips/recommendations on the service, 37% have given advice/tips/recommendations.
  
Large online sellers who have affiliations or investments from e-tailers like Amazon and Flipkart are paying only about 5-11% of their revenue as marketplace fee, while regular third-party sellers typically pay at least 15% as platform fee.
+
[[Category:Culture & Learning|T TWITTER AND INDIA
 
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TWITTER AND INDIA]]
The latest balance sheets of major online sellers like Cloudtail, Appario Retail, and Tech-Connect Retail show the amount they pay as platform fee to online marketplaces. Cloudtail paid Rs 315 crore as platform fee to Amazon on a revenue of Rs 7,149 crore in FY2018. That’s 4.4%. It’s about 11% for Tech-Connect Retail, which owns one of the largest sellers on Flipkart, RetailNet. These entities drive large volumes of sale for companies like Amazon and Flipkart.
+
[[Category:Economy-Industry-Resources|T TWITTER AND INDIA
 
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TWITTER AND INDIA]]
Small third-party sellers have frequently alleged that e-commerce players favour these alpha sellers on their platforms. This is among the reasons that persuaded the government recently to issue a circular stating that sellers that have direct or indirect investment from the e-commerce platforms cannot sell on these platforms.
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[[Category:India|T TWITTER AND INDIA
 
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TWITTER AND INDIA]]
Industry sources also say that these platforms are subsidising the logistics spends of the big sellers. They point to the rising spends on delivery—or ‘logistics service charge’—for these platforms in the last two financial years. The annual reports of the entities that run Flipkart and Amazon’s marketplaces show these spends are increasing, but do not give specific details on them.
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[[Category:Pages with broken file links|TWITTER AND INDIATWITTER AND INDIA
 
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TWITTER AND INDIA]]
When contacted on these figures, Amazon India did not respond to the queries. Flipkart said: “We have several tiers that sellers are classified into on the basis of several metrics such as business volume, number of returns, customer experience and satisfaction, etc. Commissions, fees, value added services like logistics etc, are priced based on the tier a seller is in. We provide them with the tools and support to help them grow and to climb the tiers.”
+
 
+
Previously, online seller associations like AIOVA have raised these issues with government and authorities such as the Competition Commission of India (CCI). Both Flipkart and Amazon have maintained they do not treat third party sellers in a biased manner.
+
 
+
The new FDI rules are an attempt to comfort small traders. The timing of the policy change is being linked to the general elections later in the year. E-tailers are trying to come up with new structures that will allow them to continue with their operations with the least possible impact on revenue.
+
 
+
= Complaints against e-commerce companies =
+
== 2014-Dec 16, an increase of more than 300%==
+
[http://epaperbeta.timesofindia.com/Article.aspx?eid=31808&articlexml=E-comm-plaints-up-by-300-in-3-08022017013027  E-comm plaints up by 300% in 3 yrs, Feb 3, 2017: The Times of India]
+
 
+
 
+
The number of complaints against e-commerce companies has increased by more than 300% during the past three years, the government told the Lok Sabha. This points to the need for a robust mechanism to deal with such complaints in view of the government's thrust for digitisation and more and more people shopping online.
+
 
+
Quoting the number of complaints received by the National Consumer Helpline (NCH), minister of state for consumer affairs C R Chaudhary submitted that the provi sions of the Consumer Protection Act cover all goods and services, including e-commerce. The NCH data show while had received only 418 compla it had received only 418 complaints relating to e-commerce in 2014-15, the number increased to 1,386 in 2016-17 (till December end). NCH has received complaints against some popular entities, including Paytm, Snapdeal, Amazon, Flipkart, eBay , Myantra and Jabong.
+
 
+
“A consumer can file a complaint relating to e-commerce transactions in the appropriate consumer forum established under the Act,“ Chaudhary said. He also said that before approaching a consumer forum, complainants can use alternative dispute resolution mechanism through the NCH and Online Consumer Mediation Centre in the National Law School, Bengaluru.
+
 
+
==Complaints against e-commerce companies/ 2017==
+
[http://epaperbeta.timesofindia.com/Article.aspx?eid=31808&articlexml=Complaints-against-e-comm-cos-top-list-at-22052017012020  John Sarkar & Dipak Dash, Complaints against e-comm cos top list at national consumer helpline, May 22, 2017: The Times of India]
+
 
+
[[File: Top 4 sectors by user grievances, April 2015-March 17.jpg|Top 4 sectors by user grievances, April 2015-March 17; [http://epaperbeta.timesofindia.com/Article.aspx?eid=31808&articlexml=Complaints-against-e-comm-cos-top-list-at-22052017012020  John Sarkar & Dipak Dash, Complaints against e-comm cos top list at national consumer helpline, May 22, 2017: The Times of India]|frame|500px]]
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+
''' list 15% Of All Plaints Against Shopping Sites '''
+
 
+
 
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As more Indians flock to the the internet to shop for their daily needs, complaints are building up about e-commerce companies.
+
 
+
The National Consumer Helpline (NCH), a joint initiative of the consumer affairs department and Indian Institute of Public Administration (IIPA), receives about 3.5 lakh grievances annually.
+
 
+
This is only a fraction of the complaints registered by consumers, as there are other avenues for dispute redressal, including the consumer approaching the companies directly. But NCH said complaints relating to e-commerce overtook all other sectors since September.
+
 
+
“Due to increased penetration of internet and more companies pushing for online sale of their products, the number of complaints has also increased,“ said Prof Suresh Misra of IIPA.
+
“We have tied up with 35 e-commerce companies for faster resolution of complaints and it's doing well,“ he added.
+
 
+
E-commerce received the highest number of com plaints this year, of the total complaints received by NCH.
+
 
+
Most complaints against e-commerce companies were related to “paid amount not refunded“, according to data provided by NCH. Makemytrip, the country's largest online travel agent, agreed.
+
 
+
“Issues like customer requesting for full refund for airline tickets due to a personal emergency takes a while as it requires us to go to our partners for special waivers,“ said a Makemytrip spokesperson.
+
 
+
Most companies attributed the rising number of consumer calls to requests for cancellation and not complaints.
+
 
+
The rising number of consumer grievances has not gone unnoticed by the government. In June 2016, PM Modi had flagged concerns over the large number of consumer complaints relating to e-commerce including booking of tickets and hotel reservations. He had asked officials for a review of the nature of issues and had asked the consumer affairs ministry to list the number of complaints against each company .
+
 
+
=Digital transactions=
+
==2016-19==
+
[[File: Digital transactions in India, 2016-19.jpg|Digital transactions in India, 2016-19 <br/> From: [https://epaper.timesgroup.com/Olive/ODN/TimesOfIndia/shared/ShowArticle.aspx?doc=TOIDEL%2F2019%2F07%2F17&entity=Ar02708&sk=6210FA24&mode=image  July 17, 2019: ''The Times of India'']|frame|500px]]
+
 
+
See graphic, ‘Digital transactions in India, 2016-19  ’
+
 
+
==2012-23==
+
[[File: Digital penetration in India, 2012-23 (projected).jpg|Digital penetration in India, 2012-23 (projected) <br/> From: [https://epaper.timesgroup.com/Olive/ODN/TimesOfIndia/shared/ShowArticle.aspx?doc=TOIDEL%2F2019%2F08%2F05&entity=Ar00207&sk=3303DC49&mode=image  August 5, 2019: ''The Times of India'']|frame|500px]]
+
  
 +
=The most followed Indians=
 +
==As in 2020==
 +
[[File: The Indians most followed on Twitter, presumably as in 2020 Feb.jpg| The Indians most followed on Twitter, presumably as in 2020 Feb <br/> From: [https://epaper.timesgroup.com/Olive/ODN/TimesOfIndia/shared/ShowArticle.aspx?doc=TOIDEL%2F2020%2F03%2F03&entity=Ar00508&sk=BD401EF4&mode=text March 3, 2020:  ''The Times of India'']|frame|500px]]
  
 
'''See graphic''':
 
'''See graphic''':
  
'' Digital penetration in India, 2012-23 (projected) ''
+
'' The Indians most followed on Twitter, presumably as in 2020 Feb ''
 
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[[Category:Cuisine|EE-COMMERCE, M-COMMERCE: INDIA
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E-COMMERCE, M-COMMERCE: INDIA]]
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[[Category:Economy-Industry-Resources|EE-COMMERCE, M-COMMERCE: INDIA
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E-COMMERCE, M-COMMERCE: INDIA]]
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[[Category:India|EE-COMMERCE, M-COMMERCE: INDIA
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E-COMMERCE, M-COMMERCE: INDIA]]
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[[Category:Pages with broken file links|E-COMMERCE, M-COMMERCE: INDIAE-COMMERCE, M-COMMERCE: INDIA
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E-COMMERCE, M-COMMERCE: INDIA]]
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=Digital wallets, digital payments=
+
==Limited liability==
+
[https://epaper.timesgroup.com/Olive/ODN/TimesOfIndia/shared/ShowArticle.aspx?doc=TOIDEL%2F2018%2F12%2F06&entity=Ar02312&sk=376BBD96&mode=text  Ombudsman, limited liability cover to make e-wallets safer, December 6, 2018: ''The Times of India'']
+
 
+
 
+
To inspire confidence among users of digital payments, the RBI has said that it will introduce the concept of limited liability for prepaid instruments, which includes digital wallets. Also, a new office of ombudsman for digital transaction is being created to take up complaints from individuals for prepaid instruments.
+
 
+
Last year, the central bank had introduced the concept of ‘zero liability’ for card users, provided they acted prudently in not divulging credentials and reported frauds in time. Under this policy, cardholders who lost money due to a thirdparty breach and who reported the loss within three days would get all their money back.
+
 
+
Even where there is some negligence on the part of the customer in not responding to alerts and not notifying the bank, the maximum liability was capped at Rs 5,000 for a basic savings account and Rs 10,000 for most other accounts. For credit cards with limits above Rs 5 lakh, the maximum liability has been fixed at Rs 25,000. However, where the customer has shared his password, he will be liable for all the losses until he reports it to the bank.
+
 
+
On Wednesday, the RBI said that the same limited liability concept will be extended to users of prepaid instruments. The liability limits will be announced by the RBI. According to banks, the liability limits for e-wallets is likely to be lower, considering the smaller transaction size and lower balances.
+
 
+
The creation of an ombudsman for digital transactions, besides providing a platform for customers, will enable the RBI to keep track of discrepancies.
+
 
+
“RBI’s endeavours to promote a less-cash society has resulted in a significant rise in the volume, value and channels for conducting digital transactions. For promoting the level of trust, a dedicated and empowered grievance redressal system is a pre-requisite,” said RBI deputy governor M K Jain. “It will cover all entities falling within RBI’s jurisdiction, which means nonbanks as well,” said Jain.
+
 
+
==The usage of digital wallets/ e-wallets==
+
===2016-18===
+
[[File: The use of Digital wallets, 2016-18.jpg|The use of Digital wallets, 2016-18 <br/> From: [https://epaper.timesgroup.com/Olive/ODN/TimesOfIndia/shared/ShowArticle.aspx?doc=TOIDEL%2F2018%2F12%2F06&entity=Ar02312&sk=376BBD96&mode=text  Ombudsman, limited liability cover to make e-wallets safer, December 6, 2018: ''The Times of India'']|frame|500px]]
+
 
+
 
+
'''See graphic''':
+
 
+
''The use of Digital wallets, 2016-18''
+
 
+
===2018: Indians install e-wallets, but don’t use them===
+
[https://epaper.timesgroup.com/Olive/ODN/TimesOfIndia/shared/ShowArticle.aspx?doc=TOIDEL%2F2019%2F01%2F28&entity=Ar02110&sk=A3445A2E&mode=text  Rachel Chitra, January 28, 2019: ''The Times of India'']
+
 
+
[[File: Indians and e-wallets, presumably as in 2018.jpg|Indians and e-wallets, presumably as in 2018 <br/> From: [https://epaper.timesgroup.com/Olive/ODN/TimesOfIndia/shared/ShowArticle.aspx?doc=TOIDEL%2F2019%2F01%2F28&entity=Ar02110&sk=A3445A2E&mode=text  Rachel Chitra, January 28, 2019: ''The Times of India'']|frame|500px]]
+
 
+
 
+
As many as 85% of Indian users install e-wallets and fintech apps like MobiKwik and Paytm, only to let them remain dormant, according to a study.
+
 
+
“Companies spend huge sums of money to advertise, market themselves, offer discounts and cashbacks to get users on board. But after getting them on board, if usage is low, then it is an indicator that the apps aren’t doing enough to keep customers engaged. And the churn rate (defined by no transaction done in the first two weeks) for India at 85% is worrisome — and is higher than the global average of 77%,” said Almitra Karnik, head of marketing and global growth at CleverTap, which conducted the study.
+
 
+
CleverTap is a Californiabased behavioural analytics company that measured usage patterns in 700 million mobile devices globally for the study. Karnik said if the app is not used in the first two weeks, it will invariably remain dormant thereafter, until a day when the user decides to uninstall it.
+
 
+
About 27% of Indian users uninstall e-wallets within two weeks of usage. But Indian apps seem to have better retention power than their global peers, who have a higher uninstallation rate of 35%. The average rate of reinstallation in India was a low 3%, showing that when a customer has a bad experience with a financial services app, s/he is unlikely to ever return to it.
+
 
+
Paytm did not respond to a request for a comment. Payment services firm PhonePe’s CEO Sameer Nigam said its app retention numbers are much healthier than what the CleverTap study shows. He said that was because a large percentage of its installs are organic (without providing incentives for the download) or referral-driven. “More than 75% of uninstalls happen when the installs are driven by low-quality digital marketing,” he said.
+
 
+
Fintech firm PayU’s CEO Jitendra Gupta also said 85% of downloads of its consumer-facing app LazyPay is organic. The user, he said, sees a clear proposition and is not driven by things like cashbacks. He admitted that the uninstall rate is 28-30%, but said this cannot be the only criterion to judge an app by. “On an average, every user is using LazyPay six times a month. We have 90% repeat users on a monthly basis. Besides, our uninstalls happen in cases where we don’t provide credit facility to the user, and those are obvious cases for uninstallation,” he said. LazyPay provides personal loans and pay-later options.
+
 
+
=Food ordered online=
+
==2015: Kolkata, Delhi top Zomato survey==
+
[http://epaperbeta.timesofindia.com/Article.aspx?eid=31808&articlexml=Kolkata-online-food-orders-fattest-Delhi-2nd-02012016001029 ''The Times of India''] Jan 02 2016
+
 
+
Rachel Chitra
+
 
+
The bhadralok of West Bengal, known for their discerning palate and robust appetite, lead the country with the biggest online food orders, at an average order size of Rs 690, a survey by Zomato shows.
+
 
+
Delhi comes second -at Rs 640 -but pulls off the high est single-value order at Rs 21,500. The food portal did not name the customer, though.
+
 
+
The other cities down the list are Hyderabad (Rs 625), Bengaluru (Rs 540) and Chennai (Rs 500); Mumbai (Rs 490) and Pune (Rs 450) draw up the end. Chicken biryani, burgers, butter chicken, pizza and hakka noodles are customers' most preferred orders.
+
 
+
Overall, north Indian fares on top in the 14-city suvey conducted from May to December 2015, but Chinese, Italian, south Indian and `healthy food' are also popular.
+
 
+
The data shows 86% of customers order from their mobile phones; 53% use Android devices, 29% on iOS handsets and 4% via mobile web gadgets. Only 14% use desktops to order food.
+
 
+
Despite most online payment sites like Paytm and Citrus Pay offering discounts, it is surprising that up to 70% of customers prefer to pay cash on delivery, the data shows. The Indian fondness for a good bargain notwithstanding, big discounts of more than 30% on online food orders actually fail to attract loyal customers, a recent report by food portal Zomato shows. Measuring a six-week retention rate, it found that 43% of repeat customers used discounts of 10% to 15%; 38% used discounts of 20-25% but only 14% made use of steep discounts of 30% or more.
+
 
+
Also, up to 70% of customers preferred to pay cash on delivery despite discounts offered by online payment sites. “It comes from the Indian psyche,“ Travelkhana.com former operations director Siddharth Misra says.“We have an ingrained suspicion of advancing money. So even with the best discounts online you'd still have a long way to go before you can con vince people to pay money ahead of delivery .“
+
 
+
Card payments have nonetheless recorded a growth of 12% to 16 % from September through December, Zomato's data shows.
+
 
+
The fallacy of big discounts is a lesson that not just Zomato learned; TinyOwl and Foodpanda, also clued in, have scaled back their operations. Earlier this week, Food Panda laid off 15% of its workforce and stopped blanket discounts across brands a few months ago.“Deep discounts don't work in the long run because they affect sustainability,“ Misra says.
+
 
+
Thirukumaran Nagarajan, co-founder of online grocery retailer Ninjcart, which boasts 1.18 lakh customers, says his company has stopped offering discounts and now focuses on improving backend operations. “Even though we've stopped offer ing discounts, we are still growing sizeably and receive between 1,200 and 2,000 orders a day ,“ he says.
+
 
+
Suvadip Guin, a software engineer in Bangalore, says Foodpanda and TinyOwl offered discounts of more than 50%. “Add my Patym 10% discount and say a food coupon from Ammi's biriyani or Pizzahut and I can purchase something worth Rs 1,250 for as little as Rs 400,“ he says.
+
 
+
=Government e- marketplace (GeM)=
+
==2016-18==
+
[https://timesofindia.indiatimes.com/business/india-business/startups-want-government-e-market-to-list-their-services-give-business/articleshow/67017932.cms  Digbijay Mishra, December 10, 2018: ''The Times of India'']
+
 
+
 
+
[[File: The Government e- marketplace (GeM), as in 2018, Dec.jpg|The Government e- marketplace (GeM), as in 2018, Dec <br/> From: [https://timesofindia.indiatimes.com/business/india-business/startups-want-government-e-market-to-list-their-services-give-business/articleshow/67017932.cms  Digbijay Mishra, December 10, 2018: ''The Times of India'']|frame|500px]]
+
 
+
 
+
'''See graphic''':
+
 
+
''The Government e- marketplace (GeM), as in 2018, Dec''
+
 
+
GeM was started in 2016 as a platform for online procurement of common goods and services for different central and state government departments, organisations and public sector companies.
+
 
+
=Government policies=
+
==The changes of 2019==
+
[https://www.livemint.com/Industry/4e8rKuiaJSGmsNU5BXUSvM/What-India-ecommerce-policy-entails-for-online-retailers.html  Asit Ranjan Mishra, January 16, 2019:: ''Livemint'']
+
 
+
[[File: What India e-commerce policy entails for online retailers.jpg| What India e-commerce policy entails for online retailers <br/> From: [https://www.livemint.com/Industry/4e8rKuiaJSGmsNU5BXUSvM/What-India-ecommerce-policy-entails-for-online-retailers.html  Asit Ranjan Mishra, January 16, 2019:: ''Livemint'']|frame|500px]]
+
 
+
 
+
''The new rules for FDI in e-commerce, to be implemented from 1 February, could throw a spanner in India's thriving online retail sector''
+
 
+
 
+
In a speech at the All India Traders Convention on 27 February 2014 ahead of the general election, Bharatiya Janata Party’s prime ministerial candidate Narendra Modi surprised everybody by not playing to the gallery.
+
 
+
“I don’t know whether I will gain politically or not by saying this," Modi told an audience full of traders, his party’s core vote bank. “Whether you like it or not, we need not be afraid of the global challenges in the business world. We should convert this to opportunity. We should not think that ‘if online trade comes, we will be finished’. You should demand (of) the government how to increase your capability to meet this new global challenge rather than telling the government, ‘shut down online trade’. How will you stop it? We have to accept the modern science and technology. We should not plan to flee, but to fight," Modi said.
+
 
+
Four years later, after extensively liberalizing retail trade, except allowing foreign direct investment (FDI) in multi-brand retail—which was a 2014 manifesto pledge—Modi is showing signs of nervousness. Poll reverses in recent state assembly elections and a resurgent opposition seem to have forced Modi to cosy up to his original voter base, the traders.
+
 
+
On 26 December, a day after Christmas, while festive sales peaked, the department of industrial policy and promotion (DIPP)—the nodal agency for formulating FDI policy—surprised everybody with fresh regulations that could throw a spanner in India’s thriving e-commerce marketplaces. The Modi government allowed 100% FDI under the e-commerce marketplace model but prohibited FDI in inventory based e-commerce. In the first, e-commerce companies act as platforms for vendors to sell their products and in the second, they can sell their own products.
+
 
+
The changes, which will take effect on 1 February, are five-fold: First, marketplace entities cannot buy more than 25% from a single vendor; second, marketplaces will not directly or indirectly give discounts on products; thirdly, entities in which there is equity participation by the marketplace entity cannot sell their products on the platform run by the marketplace; fourthly, e-commerce marketplace entity will not mandate any seller to sell any product exclusively on its platform only; and fifthly, marketplaces will have to submit a compliance report to the Reserve Bank of India (RBI) by 30 September every year.
+
 
+
While the first and second criteria were mandated even earlier, the DIPP always looked the other way when they were violated. The latest changes in the policy are widely believed to be a political move ahead of the general election due in April-May to assuage the trading community which has been hit by demonetization and the implementation of the goods and services tax.
+
 
+
Traders were also miffed with the Modi government’s e-commerce policy, as online trading platforms were harming their businesses by providing deep discounts.
+
 
+
India’s $18-billion e-commerce industry initially thrived in a policy vacuum, aggressively funded by venture capital firms. To legitimize the existing businesses of e-commerce companies operating in India, the government in March 2016 through press note 3 (of 2016 series) allowed 100% FDI in online retail of goods and services under the so-called ‘marketplace model’ through the automatic route and notified new regulations. DIPP through its 26 December notification has now added new stringent regulations to the ones existing in press note 3 of 2016.
+
 
+
While the fresh regulations could spoil plans for greater synergy between Flipkart and its new owner Walmart which operates in the cash-and-carry retail space where 100% FDI is permitted like in e-commerce marketplace entities, it also bars Amazon from selling products from subsidiaries like Cloudtail and Appario where it has significant investments. Cloudtail is a joint venture between Amazon and N.R. Narayana Murthy’s Catamaran Ventures.
+
 
+
The move to ban exclusive deals for products also hurts top online retailers such as Flipkart and Amazon. Flipkart, for instance, has exclusive partnerships with top smartphone brands such as Xiaomi and Oppo. Smartphones make up over 50% of e-commerce sales in India.
+
 
+
A DIPP official speaking under condition of anonymity insisted that press note 3 of 2016 only issues a clarification. “We have not formulated any new policy. We have not even gone to the cabinet for a new policy," he said. The department is formulating an e-commerce policy, a draft version of which is expected to be released soon, after a similar draft policy by the commerce department was rejected by e-commerce players.
+
 
+
When asked about the motive behind the clarifications, the DIPP official said: “Marketplace should be a pure marketplace. We hope these steps will ensure establishing a pure marketplace and influencing price will be more difficult," he added.
+
 
+
An official of an e-commerce company speaking under condition of anonymity said the new regulations are draconian and a bigger retrospective move than even the Vodafone tax issue. “It will not only impact e-commerce sector but also FDI inflow in other sectors because regulations can change overnight. The ecosystem is seeking more time for implementation. Under the current political scenario, we don’t expect a review of the regulations immediately. We will have to wait till the election season is over," the official added.
+
 
+
=== Govt: e-tail majors violated regulations, influenced prices===
+
[https://epaper.timesgroup.com/Olive/ODN/TimesOfIndia/shared/ShowArticle.aspx?doc=TOIDEL%2F2019%2F02%2F06&entity=Ar03302&sk=1412CFCE&mode=text  John Sarkar, Govt accuses e-tail giants of violating FDI regulations, February 6, 2019: ''The Times of India'']
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[[File: Govt- e-tail majors violated regulations, influenced prices.jpg|Govt- e-tail majors violated regulations, influenced prices <br/> From: [https://epaper.timesgroup.com/Olive/ODN/TimesOfIndia/shared/ShowArticle.aspx?doc=TOIDEL%2F2019%2F02%2F06&entity=Ar03302&sk=1412CFCE&mode=text  John Sarkar, Govt accuses e-tail giants of violating FDI regulations, February 6, 2019: ''The Times of India'']|frame|500px]]
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''Says Amazon, Flipkart Influenced Prices, Cos Deny Charges''
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The government has defended its decision to rework the rules for the marketplace model, accusing the country’s top e-tailers Flipkart and Amazon of operating “hybrid” versions, which were anchored by inventory-based operations through a network of controlled sellers.
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This is the first time since the new rules were announced on December 26 that there is clarity on how the e-tailers, who were lobbying at all levels in the government, were “circumventing” the previous rules. Earlier, the government had said it was acting on complaints submitted by several stakeholders.
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“Flipkart and Amazon were influencing prices of goods on their platforms through various means, including direct price discounts, covering marketing expenses (marketing campaigns, EMIs, exchange offers) and extending concessional logistics services (packaging, courier, returns), e-wallet cashbacks,” a source told TOI. “Both Flipkart and Amazon involved various intermediaries and group entities in the chain to divide these discounts and spread losses, which impact the domestic retail sector.”
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For instance, Amazon Wholesale India would buy branded goods in bulk from manufacturers and allegedly sold to sellers such as Cloudtail, Rocket Kommerce and Green Mobiles at a discount, with the losses shown on its books. Amazon Seller Services is accused of paying for marketing, zero-cost EMIs and some of the other expenses. It would also handle the logisticsrelated activities, with a discount built in. Amazon Pay was also offering cashbacks, which were seen as discounts.
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Similarly, Flipkart India allegedly bought goods in bulk, sold it to sellers linked to it such as RetailNet, SuperComNet and OmniTech Retail, Truenet Commerce and India Flash Mart at a discount. Then, Ekart Logistics undertook packaging and shipments, with PhonePe offering cashbacks.
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While sources said the operations violated Press Note 3 of 2016, Amazon and Flipkart denied any irregularities. “These comments are completely baseless and untrue. We have received no such communication from the government. We have always been and continue to be compliant with all local laws and regulations,” an Amazon India spokesperson said.
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A Flipkart Group spokesperson refused to comment. “The impact on Flipkart seems to be less in the short term but there will be long-term ramifications on its business model due to the tweaks in the policy,” said a company executive.
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Several sellers had complained about the practices adopted by e-tailers, which prompted the government to step in, sources said.
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=Grocery=
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==Physical Stores Offer More Grocery Than E-Tailers: Sachs, 2012==
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[http://epaperbeta.timesofindia.com/Article.aspx?eid=31808&articlexml=When-offline-deals-beat-online-ones-04102017023029  Digbijay Mishra, When offline deals beat online ones, October 4, 2017: The Times of India]
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'''Physical Stores Offer More Grocery Discounts Than E-Tailers: Study'''
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Goldman Sachs is slaying the perception that online players like Amazon and BigBasket have outsmarted brickand-mortar retailers with better pricing in daily consumables and groceries. In a recent research report, Goldman Sachs analysts noted that Amazon and BigBasket sold personal care products at 1030% premium compared to traditional supermarkets like D-Mart. The report though predicts online ordering would account for 22% of the modern Indian grocery retailing in five years, up from 3%.
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While modern retail is still a small part of overall retail market in India, e-commerce in specific is at a nascent stage. In a bear market, e-commerce could see the highest growth in modern Indian grocery market compared to traditional brick-and-mortar retailers. Traditionally, the grocery play has been a low margin business that requires continuous investments to build a strong supply chain.
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“We believe there is an ad ditional cost of about 3-5% of sales for home delivery as compared with pickups from a delivery centre or purchasing from a store. We believe consumers that value convenience over incremental cost will use the home delivery option, while price-sensitive consumers will prefer to pick up the order.Amazon and BigBasket also have the option of express delivery for an additional charge.In our base case, we assume a rapid acceleration in the adoption of online ordering,“ the report noted, while covering Avenue Supermarket, the parent of D-Mart, which offers 10-15% cheaper pricing compared to online grocers.
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While D-Mart has presence in132 locations across the country, both BigBasket and Amazon have been ramping up their operations. Amazon, with no worry for capital, has been pushing its grocery business with two products -Pantry and Amazon Now . Pantry , which is for monthly grocery bulk sales, is present in 34 cities and Amazon Now is present in four cities with a promise of a two-hour delivery. BigBasket is delivering across 21 cities with 40,000 orders per day . According to the report, BigBasket accounts for 85% of online grocery market. Kishore Biyani, CEO of Future Group that owns Big Bazaar, said a reason for higher online prices was the mounting pressure on e-commerce players to make profits.“We also have a wide range of products cheaper than many online players. More importantly , they have realised they can't scale grocery business online like other segments and that's why they have gone slow on discounting,“ Biyani added. Murali Krishnan, who recently quit as CEO of Nilgiris, added that traditional retailers have an advantage in logistics compared to the online rivals and that margins are typically about 3-4%. “For brands, the shelf presence created by brick-and-mortar retailers offers more brand awareness than being online -which makes for better negotiations. Online players have figured fashion, electronics as categories but grocery has not seen that yet with the likes of Amazon and others.However, BigBasket has been an exception,“ he added. BigBasket co-founder and CEO Hari Menon told TOI that D-Mart had an advantage of owning the real estate of their stores, which helps their margins.“Their direct sourcing from various FMCG companies and the movement of stock keeping units (SKUs) has helped them further. Not only online grocers but other traditional retailers, too, keep a wider range of SKUs than D-Mart,“ Menon said. An email sent to an Amazon spokesperson did not elicit any response.
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About 18-24 months ago, most online grocers were trying to scale up their businesses through the market place model but that did not work out with some forced to shrink their operations. BigBasket is increasingly sourcing from FMCG brands and using its own warehouses.Other companies like Grofers too are trying to do the same. Amazon, too, has partnered with BigBazaar, Spar, and HyperCity for Amazon Now, which promises a two-hour delivery .According to sources, the cart rate (number of products actually sent to consumer compared to original order) for Amazon Now has been about 70-80% since it does not have direct control over the inventory .
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=Market share=
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==Indigenous e-commerce peaks in Dec 15; Amazon closes in==
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[http://epaperbeta.timesofindia.com/Article.aspx?eid=31808&articlexml=Indian-e-commerce-cart-hits-a-plateau-27062016017013 The Times of India], Jun 27 2016
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Samidha Sharma
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''' Indian e-commerce cart hits a plateau '''
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Behind numerous headlines of a cash crunch hit ting major Indian ecommerce companies, and commerce companies, and their valuations being questioned, is a revelation not too many people are talking about. Indian e-commerce was emblematic of frenetic growth until very recently , but the last six to eight months have seen the industry come to a grinding halt, making it an inflection point for all the players involved.
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TOI accessed and analysed data for top e-tailers, which revealed that the online retail market stagnated between May 2015 and 2016 in terms of the value of goods sold. While in May 2015, the e-commerce biggies clocked a gross merchandise value, or GMV , run rate of $9 billion, that number has only inched up to about $10 billion at the end of May this year, translating into an 11% annual growth. In December 2015, the total GMV run rate had reached $10.5 billion on the back of the festive season, which typically sees a rush of discounting from all e-tailers.
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GMV is overall sales on an online marketplace, excluding discounts and returns which are an integral part of the e-commerce market.
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The data gleaned from primary research and vetted by multiple stakeholders in the industry indicated that Flipkart, the country's largest online retail player, has seen its GMV run rate stall at about $4 billion for almost a year, while an aggressive Amazon has gone from clocking $1 billion to $2.7 billion in gross sales. However, Amazon's operations in India only began three years ago and it's been gaining ground on a smaller base.What's worth noting is that Flipkart notched up a 400% growth the year before, when it's GMV zoomed from $1 billion to $4 billion, post which the numbers have gone flat.Gurgaon-based Snapdeal, on the other hand, has seen an almost 50% knock-down in sales numbers after similar highs it touched exactly a year ago. The company said as of June, its GMV run rate was more than $2.5 billion.
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An email sent to Flipkart's spokesperson did not elicit a response till the time of going to press. In an earlier interaction with TOI, Amit Agarwal, Amazon's India head, had said the online retailer hadn't witnessed any signs of a slowdown and, instead, had grown shipments impressively at 150% in the first quarter of the calendar year.
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E-commerce companies earn anywhere between 5% and 15% in commission from sellers, which makes up their revenue. GMV had been the key metric for all e-tai lers in India to show rapid growth and ratchet up their valuations in multi-billiondollar fund-raises over the past two years. But with sales staying flat or declining, most e-commerce players are now starting to focus on returning customers, which their founders keep stressing in media interactions.GMV run rate varied from month to month and is pretty jagged, depending on promotions and discounts that are available at the time. But the data collated by TOI points to a palpable slowdown for the first time after a heady period of growth.
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''' Reduced Discounting Slowing Growth? '''
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Post March 2016, most etailers have reduced promotional campaigns after the Indian government introdu ced new policy guidelines for online marketplaces. The fresh rules prohibit online retailers from offering discounts directly . Cash burn for Amazon, for instance, had risen up to almost $80-90 million per month in the early part of the year -more than double of Flipkart's -but has since stabilized, people privy to the matter said.Amazon's Agarwal, when asked about it recently, did not give details on the mounting cash burn involved in weaning away Indian consumers from rivals.
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An investor who has been tracking e-commerce says if the market has momentarily stopped growing, it's because online players have reduced investments into market development. A slug of risk capital came into India's online commerce industry , with Flipkart leading the pack. Founded in 2007 as an online bookstore, the Bengaluru-based poster boy of India's thriving startup ecosystem scooped up $3.2 billion, a majority of the funding coming over the past two years, while Snapdeal collected $1.3 billion. The Jeff Bezos-led Amazon, too, has been pumping billions into India, the latest being a $3-billion investment announcement -taking its overall commitment for the country to $5 billion in three years of launching here.
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''' Has Online Consumer Base Capped Out? '''
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India's online shopping market, according to rough esti mates, is 60-70 million, and is expected to go up to 100 million in the next few years. A notable spike happened in the past three years, but the divide between tier I and tier II cities is still very wide. The top 6-8 cities contribute 90% of sales for all the consumer internet players, including app-based cab aggregators like Ola and Uber.
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In an earlier interaction with TOI, Binny Bansal, cofounder & CEO, Flipkart, said the e-commerce major was keenly looking at ways to tap into its existing base of users. “There are 50-60 million consumers buying online today . Given the large base, it makes sense to ensure you are selling more to the same customers as that opportunity is big enough compared to three years back,“ he had said. Snapdeal's co-founder & CEO Kunal Bahl, too, has reiterated his focus on the e-tailer's high-value consumers, suggesting GMV was not the metric his company was chasing anymore. “Our GMV run rate continues to be healthy and above $2.5 billion.We are significantly focused on delivering the best experience, growing our net revenue which has increased three times in the last 12 months,“ a Snapdeal spokesperson said in an emailed response to TOI. GMV was described by many as a vanity metric during the past few years when e-commerce registered exponential growth.
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“The moment of reckoning is coming or may have come already for Indian ecommerce companies. The ease with which these companies have been able to raise money from VCs may have made them all sloppy , and the test then will be which ones can now work on the `building-a-business' channel. As for whether the fault lies with Indian consumers for not jumping fast enough onto the online wagon, it is a chicken-and-the-egg problem that we have to deal with,“ says Aswath Damodaran, professor of finance at the Stern School of Business at New York University .
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What all of this will mean for online retailers is that from here on, raising new capital at present valuations will be a very tough proposition. Flipkart has been conserving cash and has substantially brought down its burn rate to wade through this phase of slow growth.Besides Amazon, there's Alibaba stitching up plans for a direct entry into e-commerce, making it a contest between the two global powerhouses and the Indian incumbents. The next one year will be extremely significant for the local online retailers as they go back to the basics and try to make their businesses self-sustaining while moving towards a tough path to profitability.
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==Homemakers earn $9bn through social media==
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[http://epaperbeta.timesofindia.com/Article.aspx?eid=31808&articlexml=Homemakers-clock-9bn-biz-through-social-media-01062017001022  Digbijay Mishra, Homemakers clock $9bn biz through social media, June 1, 2017: The Times of India]
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Puja Singh used to run an in dependent apparel store for 10 years but had to shut shop as she moved from Hyderabad to Bokaro. She never went back to opening another physical store; instead, she opted to sell her wares using WhatsApp and Facebook, as a re-seller.
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Many Indian women like Singh are using social media to ride the e-comm wave and reach customers. A report by consulting firm Zinnnov shared exclusively with TOI says 2 million homemakers are clocking business worth $8-9 billion in gross sales by reselling lifestyle and clothing products using the two social media platforms. While e-commerce ma jors like Flipkart and Amazon hog the limelight with their transaction volumes, these homemakers, using basic internet tools, are projected to touch anywhere between $48-60 billion in gross sales by 2022, the Zinnov report pointed out.Online re-sellers typically use WhatsApp and FB to market their products after sourcing them from suppliers who typically keep a bigger stock of products.
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The re-sellers then make 15-20% of the order value as commission for selling these products.
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Singh says she sells anywhere between 70-80 units of clothing every month and has managed to get buyers from outside her state leveraging the reach of WhatsApp.“As many as 70% of my products are sold locally but I am getting order requests from other Indian cities. Based on the initial success, I plan to sell other categories as well,“ she says.
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Just like Singh in Bokaro, Nidhi Jain in Jaipur started her own retail business as a supplier using these social media channels. “I used to take small orders from other suppliers to resell but that has changed with my growing network resulting in higher sales. WhatsApp is mostly used for payments and logistics, but the expansion of consumer base and product discovery is largely through Facebook,“ Jain says. Meesho, a Y Combinator startup, which offers tools to such women to help them start their businesses through WhatsApp and Facebook, says it's banking on the mammoth opportunity this segment presents here in India.“We are not looking for revenues from this set of sellers.The fact that such a market has been created already with two million active re-sellers shows the potential of the opportunity ,“ says Vidit Aatrey, founder and chief executive of Meesho. The total market for women re-sellers is expected grow at 40-50% annually for the next five years. This means it would be over 5% of India's total retail market, he avers.
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What's aiding the growth of these re-sellers is the increased usage and access of smartphones in tier-1 cities, which make up 50-60% of the market, while tier-2 and tier-3 cities contribute the rest.Most of these sellers currently use net-banking options and digital wallets for facilitating payments as they compete with bigger online commerce players -which have a gamut of payments options for consumers. Looking at the growing base of re-sellers WhatsApp has been exploring options to start its own payments platform in India.
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“I have always been in Jaipur and used to work in an education institute. Though the job wasn't bad, I would prefer to do be my own boss. My business is growing which is why I'm planning to scale it up steadily ,“ Jain says.
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==2016, 2017: Market share==
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[[File: The market-shares of the three main e commerce players in India in 2016, 2017.jpg| The market-shares of the three main e commerce players in India in 2016, 2017; [http://epaperbeta.timesofindia.com/Gallery.aspx?id=11_04_2017_019_029_009&type=P&artUrl=Indian-e-tailing-Its-likely-to-remain-a-11042017019029&eid=31808 The Times of India] , April 11, 2017|frame|500px]]
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'''See graphic''':
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''The market-shares of the three main e commerce players in India in 2016, 2017''
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=What Indians buy online=
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==2018, 2019: cell phones’ share decreases, slightly==
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[https://epaper.timesgroup.com/olive/ODN/TimesOfIndia/shared/ShowArticle.aspx?doc=TOIDEL%2F2019%2F06%2F05&entity=Ar03019&sk=6BC81688&mode=text  Aparna Desikan, June 5, 2019: ''The Times of India'']
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[[File: What Indians bought online in 2018, 2019.jpg|What Indians bought online in 2018, 2019. <br/> From: [https://epaper.timesgroup.com/olive/ODN/TimesOfIndia/shared/ShowArticle.aspx?doc=TOIDEL%2F2019%2F06%2F05&entity=Ar03019&sk=6BC81688&mode=text  Aparna Desikan, June 6, 2019: ''The Times of India'']|frame|500px]]
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E-tailing market is moving away slowly from just selling mobile phones and electronics to grocery and fashion products.
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A study by management consulting firm RedSeer said that the share of mobiles and electronics has dropped to 38% in the January-March quarter of 2019 from 45% in the same time last year. It has been steadily dropping since then. During April-June last year it fell to 44%, and to 40% in the following quarter and to 39% in October-December last year.
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“Indian e-tailing ecosystem always had a high share of mobile devices category, with the figure often exceeding 50% of all gross merchandise volume (GMV) in certain quarters. The mobile category share started dropping below 40% since 2018 and likely to stay at 35% for 2019 as a whole,” said RedSeer Consulting director Ujjwal Chaudhry.
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Mobiles and electronics still take the largest share of the pie, followed by fashion — which hovered around 21-23%.
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Industry players feel that the change bodes well for the whole ecosystem — for horizontals; it indicates a clear pathway to profitability, with a GMV composed of higher margin non-mobile categories. For verticals, this growing comfort with non-electronics helps them to increase their total consumer base and attract buyers by offering a better experience. RedSeer’s Chaudhry adds that while for customers it means convenience and better options, for e-tailers it margins move on from just sub 10% (with mobiles and electronics) to 30-40% with smaller articles.
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[[Category:Cuisine|E
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E-COMMERCE, M-COMMERCE: INDIA]]
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[[Category:Economy-Industry-Resources|E
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E-COMMERCE, M-COMMERCE: INDIA]]
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[[Category:India|E
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E-COMMERCE, M-COMMERCE: INDIA]]
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=See also=
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[[Agriculture: India]]
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[[Internet, the worldwide web and India]]
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[[Category:Culture & Learning|T
 +
TWITTER AND INDIA]]
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[[Category:Economy-Industry-Resources|T
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TWITTER AND INDIA]]
 +
[[Category:India|T
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TWITTER AND INDIA]]

Revision as of 21:13, 7 March 2021

This is a collection of articles archived for the excellence of their content.
Additional information may please be sent as messages to the Facebook
community, Indpaedia.com. All information used will be gratefully
acknowledged in your name.




Contents

Government requests

2012-17: Content removal

Kim Arora, Rise in India's requests to Twitter to drop content, September 22, 2017: The Times of India


India has shown a steady increase in the number of account information and content removal requests sent to Twitter from the government since 2012, with the maximum number of requests made between January and June 2017.

India made 104 requests for content removal and another 261 requests for account information. It was the sixth largest number of requests for account information after the US, Japan, the UK, Turkey and France. Twitter released these numbers in its half-yearly transparency report.

Twitter fulfilled 21% of the 261 account information requ ests India made. These requests covered 659 accounts. This number was up from 168 requests made in July-December 2016, where 427 accounts were specified. Although the number of requests has been lower in previous years, the number of accounts has been significantly higher before.

“These fluctuations and rise in numbers is tough to ascribe to any one factor. It could be because of more people using the service, or because of the government starting to recognise Twitter and social media as places where a law and order problem can occur, or it could be censorship,“ says Parminder Jeet Singh, executive director for Bengaluru-based NGO IT for Change.

2015-18: requests for user data

Digbijay Mishra, Govt requests for info from Twitter surge, December 15, 2018: The Times of India

Requests made by the Government of India to Twitter for user data, 2015-18
From: Digbijay Mishra, Govt requests for info from Twitter surge, December 15, 2018: The Times of India

The Indian government wants to know more about what you do on Twitter and its curiosity is only growing. The Centre’s requests from Twitter for user data has risen by over 100% in the last two years, as per the latest transparency report released by the social media major. Between January and June 2018, India sought information on 355 accounts, up from 261 and 139 in the first six months of 2017 and 2016 respectively. Twitter’s transparency data shows that the numbers every six months have been rising.

However, Twitter provided information in the case of only 11% of the requests made by the government in the first six months of 2018. It got 246 requests for removal of accounts in this period and obliged to only about 5% of them. Twitter’s rate of acceptance of government requests has fallen sharply, from 31% in the first half of 2016, to 11% in the latest period. Indian authorities (government, police, court orders) sought to remove 144 accounts in the second half of 2017, and 104 in the first half of that year.

The data showed Twitter withheld (prevented access to) two accounts and 23 tweets in response to a legal demand from the IT ministry for propagating objectionable content. Following legal requests, a total of 19 accounts and 498 tweets were withheld.

The past few years have seen increasingly harsh, often incendiary, posts on social media. More Indians have also flocked to Twitter to air their views. The rising requests from the government is partly a reflection of its attempt to control the more inflammatory posts. When demands are made legally, based on the laws of the land, social media companies are obliged to respect the demand. In other cases, they need to take into account whether accepting the government request would amount to violating the freedom of expression of the user.

In India, between 2012 and 2014, the government sent less than 100 requests for information. But in the first six months of 2015 alone, over 100 requests were made.

India is said to have about 30 million Twitter users, as per estimates by market research firm Statista.

Globally too, government requests have been rising. Twitter said that in the first half of the year, it received 10% more government information requests worldwide, compared to the preceding six-month period — the largest percentage increase since 2015. There was also an 80% rise in global legal demands for removal of accounts in the first six months, compared to the preceding sixmonth period. Close to 90% of these requests came from Russia and Turkey.

2021: Twitter blocks 97% handles on govt list

Pankaj Doval, February 12, 2021: The Times of India

In Feb 2021: Twitter blocked 97% handles on the govt list
From: Pankaj Doval, February 12, 2021: The Times of India


There were signs of a thaw in Twitter’s tussle with the government after the social media giant took down over 97% of the handles that the IT ministry had sought to be censured for carrying “inflammatory content” related to ‘farmers’ genocide’ hashtag and accounts backed by Khalistan sympathisers and Pakistan.

Of the 1,435 handles flagged by the government through two separate requests, 1,398 have been taken down, top sources said.

The breakthrough in the deadlock came after IT secretary Ajay Prakash Sawhney’s meeting with Twitter executives Monique Meche and Jim Baker late Wednesday evening, following which the American social media giant started to act against the users.

“The compliance has come in for almost the entire list of accounts that we had asked to be taken down. For the remaining, Twitter has said that it is following the due process, which includes sending notice to the users and other such steps,” a government source told TOI.


‘A positive step by Twitter’

All the 1,178 handles that the government had flagged for possible links with Khalistani and Pakistani elements have been blocked.

Of the 257 handles that were sought to be blocked over the controversial hashtag, 220 have been taken down. “Some of the accounts could be duplicates,” the source said. However, some accounts such as that of CPM leader Mohammed Salim (@salimdotcomrade) and Caravan magazine (@thecaravanindia) remain functional. “We view this as a positive step that Twitter has taken. It does follow from the meaningful and healthy conversations that we had with the global executives of the company,” the government source said.

A spokesperson for Twitter in India did not respond to a questionnaire from TOI.

While the social media platform had earlier refused to comply with the government’s requests, on Wednesday, the IT secretary expressed displeasure over “differential treatment”.

“They must be obeyed immediately. If they are executed days later, it becomes meaningless,” IT Sawhney said. He also made it clear that the use of the controversial hashtag was neither journalistic freedom nor freedom of expression as such “irresponsible content could provoke and inflame” the situation.

Sources said that during the meeting, Baker, Twitter’s VP for legal matters, assured government representatives that the company would be mindful of the concerns. “Baker said that the global management of Twitter can be approached directly in case of violations that are sensitive in nature. This is seen as a massive reassurance to tackle hate, inflammatory and irresponsible messaging,” the source said.

The misuse of Twitter

2014

2014: The misuse of Twitter in India and the world, and action taken


See graphic :

2014:The misuse of Twitter in India and the world, and action taken

The usage of Twitter

2016: The emoji tweeted most often

India and the world, the emoji tweeted most often, 2016
The Times of India

See graphic :

The emoji tweeted most often, India and the world, 2016

2019: politicians, their parties and their gender

Mohammad Ibrar, Get a handle on this: Women calling poll shots on Twitter, March 21, 2019: The Times of India


It is politically prudent perhaps to give women their place in politics. After all, as research with Twitter data shows, handles of women on the platform have more followers on average than men and these handles also generate more content than men do. And even if the handles of women produce less original content, their retweets and engagement are high on Twitter, making them an asset for political parties especially in the coming general elections.

Admittedly, of the 1,252 verified political handles analysed, only 133 belonged to female political activists, the rest being those of male politicians or party handles. Analysed and studied at Indraprastha Institute of Information Technology (IIIT) Delhi and International Institute of Information Technology, Hyderabad, by a team of eight students as part of the focus on the 2019 Lok Sabha polls, these were culled after going through “over 21 million posts by roughly a million handles collected from the 2014 general elections”.

Ponnurangam Kumaraguru, associate professor at both IIITs, said he and his team of researchers covered data of over 2,585 Twitter handles which showed some sort of affiliation to an Indian political party. “This list was manually curated and we have been collecting data for these handles from late 2018 through the Twitter Application Programming Interface (API).”

On March 12, Trinamool Congress announced a list of candidates for West Bengal that had over 40% women. Similarly, Biju Janata Dal has said 33% of its candidates in Odisha will be women. A push of this nature is reflective of the increasing female participation on social media. On Twitter, for instance, the study showed that on average, women’s handles had 36,85,000 followers, with the minimum at 422 and the maximum of 12.2 million for external affairs minister Sushma Swaraj.

On average, the feminine handles generated 9,834 tweets each. Compare that with the 7,432 by their male counterparts. This is despite handles belong to men numbering 865, or 69.1%, of the 1,252 verified political handles. A majority of the female tweeters showed their origin to be in Maharashtra, Delhi and UP, the hotbed of political activism.

Social media will be a distinct factor in this election, felt Kumaraguru, and women politicians appeared to have a lot of clout on social media. “Gender diversity is a universal topic, and we find interesting patterns like female handles re-tweeting more,” said Kumaraguru. “Tweets by females on average get retweeted more than those by men — 550 times compared with 530 times for tweets by males.”

2021: What Indian women tweeted about

Shobita Dhar, Passions & pursuits: What Indian women tweet about, March 7, 2021: The Times of India

What do Indian women talk about on twitter? “Passions and pursuits” is the most discussed topic of conversation, with 25% of all women users coming on to Twitter to seek and consume this content. Out of this 25%, the majority (30%) seek content on fashion, 28% on books, 25% on beauty, 21% on movies and TV and 14% on sports. Over 40% of women said they discovered a new interest on Twitter.

‘Current affairs’ is the second most searched and consumed content, with 21% of all women users using Twitter to know what’s going on around them. Women from Delhi and Guwahati led this segment. About 21% use Twitter to stay informed on local and international news. Tweets about #StudentExams, #COVID19 related updates and #DelhiElections2020 dominated the conversation in this category.

These are findings from a research commissioned by Twitter India ahead of International Women’s Day. For the report, a qualitative curation and analysis of 5,22,992 tweets sent from Twitter accounts of women between January 2019 and February 2021 in 10 Indian cities was done. The majority of women, 33%, use Twitter while commuting; 29% catch up on the latest tweets during breakfast and 22% don’t go to bed without looking it up. Although Twitter doesn’t have data on how many women users it has in India, their research found that almost 9% use it to create and participate in social movements like #MeToo and #TimesUp.

While Twitter can often be a toxic place for women with many journalists, celebrities and politicians often receiving abuse and even rape threats on it, this doesn’t deter women from using the platform. About 40% said it provides them with freedom of expression.

About 12% used the platform to connect and network with others in their communities, like #WomenInScience and #GirlGamers. Women from Chennai, Bengaluru and Hyderabad were especially found to be active in this category. Nearly 7% women used Twitter to share and talk about everyday hardships like #Parenting, #WorkingFromHome.

“We commissioned this research to build our understanding about women on Twitter. Access to a free and open internet has made it possible for everyone to express themselves freely without barriers,” said Manish Maheshwari, managing director, Twitter India. While 41% of women have sought advice/tips/recommendations on the service, 37% have given advice/tips/recommendations.

The most followed Indians

As in 2020

The Indians most followed on Twitter, presumably as in 2020 Feb
From: March 3, 2020: The Times of India

See graphic:

The Indians most followed on Twitter, presumably as in 2020 Feb

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