Social touch to India's buy button
Commerce is intrinsically a social activity and Social Commerce, by definition, is about buying online in an interactive, participatory manner. The plethora of options available a click away has increased the need to involve friends and family in the purchase process. Given this behavior, e-commerce companies are launching social tools to drive engagement (and consequently transactions), and social networks are experimenting with “Buy” buttons to monetize user engagement. Additionally, several new companies are being created that are trying to build networks and transactions at the same time, although currently, they seem to be restricted to specific verticals.
The first wave of ecommerce companies in the 90s (Alibaba, Amazon, Rakuten) used intent and search driven techniques including catalogs, prices and reviews for information dissemination. A decade later, a second wave arose (Wechat, Facebook etc) that created engaging communities around our real-world interests, connections, and relationships which further facilitated the discovery of products & services. Fast forward today, businesses are trying to be more social and more commerce driven.

India has over 140 million MAUs and 69 million DAUs on Facebook, and notably, over 90% of them are on mobile. WhatsApp is the most widely used messaging platform in the country, having about 200 million MAUs and an impressive 77% of the users coming back to the application daily. I strongly believe that this user base presents a vast scope for creation of valuable social commerce enterprises that can thrive on a deep understanding of the Indian user and India-specific supply chains.
During my research on the space, I discovered several exciting and promising opportunities in the social commerce ecosystem:
Fashion and Home Decor Marketplaces
Unlike categories such as electronics and mobile, fashion & home decor has a larger number of SKUs, a greater need to touch and feel the product, multiple variants with respect to the size, color, etc. and a large number of suppliers and brands.
Lost in the lattice of options, consumers prefer to seek assistance from friends, family, influencers, and celebrities to arrive at a purchase decision. Building a social curation and recommendation layer could lower customer acquisition cost and ensure higher user retention in this category.
There is a large opportunity to build a fashion and home decor commerce platform that leverages social tools, communities, lookbooks, influencers, to facilitate faster buying decisions.
The experience of Chinese companies is instructive on this front. In addition to Taobao, which is innovating with its social selling features like live streaming, influencer marketing, special interest groups, news feed etc., almost all companies ( JDLive, Pinduoduo, TMall Live etc. ) are experimenting on the social commerce piece.
Back home, Myntra gives a fashion magazine appeal to e-commerce; Limeroad has lookbooks, ‘trending’ & ‘celebrity spotting’ sections; Roposo & Wooplr are using influencer networks to power e-commerce.
Despite these attempts, I believe the offline buying behavior (a mix of curation, social recommendation, trials, and assistance) is yet to be replicated online. There is a large opportunity to build a fashion and home decor commerce platform that leverages social tools, communities, lookbooks, influencers, etc. to facilitate faster buying decisions and create a valuable e-commerce destination in the process.

Fun fact: Taobao witnesses 25 minutes of time spent per day per user vs 9 minutes per day per user on Amazon, primarily because of its social features which drive engagement.
Influencer Shopping
From Sachin Tendulkar’s “Boost is the secret of my energy” to Virat Kohli’s Manyawar, the list of celebrity-endorsed brands is endless. Then, there are companies like Tupperware which have achieved immense scale with their home sales channel. We believe that there is a huge untapped potential in replicating this offline social purchase pattern in an online platform with celebrities, influencers & salespeople.

Influencers help in reducing the marketing costs by bringing their skills and network to the e-commerce platforms. The social network thus created, drives engagement and retention.
In India, we have examples of OTAs leveraging the influencer channels to sell tour and travel packages. We believe that coupling online channels with offline ones would work in categories which require touch & feel and/or suggestions. Based on our bottoms up the calculation, there are approximately 2.3 million women resellers in India. Over time, with increasing access to consumers on various social networks, we believe that the number of resellers including students, small traders, fashion and travel bloggers will shoot up as more and more people will start selling on social networks.
But will a startup be able to differentiate and build a business for itself while Facebook and Instagram exist? I think so, primarily because –
– Influencers exist across platforms (YT, FB, Insta, Blogs etc.) which leaves a room for a third-party startup to exist
– Opportunities to build the supply side business for the influencers remains untapped
– FB may not be interested in building an explicit sell layer at the cost of social interactions
In China, Yizhibo has been able to build a live streaming app in presence of WeChat, Nutrilite promoted its products and healthy lifestyle by launching a live stream entitled “Breakfast for everybody” attracting 150 million users in 3 days. Similarly, Haier started a live stream to promote its new washing machines which attracted 1.8 million views and 0.12 million followers in just 2 hours. Also, Taobao has been able to build a vibrant community of influencers on its platform. According to an estimate, 7 out of the top 10 women’s clothing stores on Taobao were operated by influencers.