Tag Archive for Grabbon

Acquisition candidate in Group discount space?

Immense hectic activity going on in the group discount space in India. Some new group discount portals like lootmore.com have sprung up with sole intention of getting acquired, portals like Taggle and Snapdeal have able to raise Venture Capital and some players like Grabbon have merged themselves with bigger player Snapdeal.

Coming days you may witness further consolidation is this space. There is a strong buzz in the market that one of the prominent player from NCR in group discount space going to be acquired by bigger player or it could be an internet company interested in getting a pie in this group discount space.

Lets look at their monthly traction wrt unique visitors -

Mydala_snapdeal_koovs

In my view Mydala and koovs are doing extremely well in terms of cracking number of deals and also the size of deal. I had a word with Anisha Singh CEO of mydala and as per her most of their deals are above 500 bucks and sells well which implies more margin for mydala. I had chat with Manish Tewari of Koovs and as per him most of Koovs deal are below 300 bucks and they offer maximum discount on the original value, clearly they are targeting the lower base of pyramid.

Lets wait and watch this space.

-Hitesh, vcBytes.com

Potential Indian buy for Groupon

Immense mind boggling  activity in the social buying segment taking place in India. Groupon, the American giant is valued close to a billion dollars. A couple of smaller Indian players have sold out. A few have grown bigger and better. Their margins have grown stronger, touching the 30’s, than what I earlier predicted. Funding has come to a few and others are on the negotiating table. This sector is up for a lot of action in the next 6 months.

Recently, I dug deeper and found some interesting facts.

It all started in Oct – Nov 2009 when enthusiastic copy cats holed in dimly lit rooms in Bangalore and New Delhi were burning mid night oil to find a suitable name for the Indianized version of the portal in a hush hush manner. Some are as funny as Mydala, (who came up with that) the others found it convenient to even phonetically copy the name; Grabbon (restricted to Bangalore, sold out to Snapdeal), let alone the site design.  Koovs.com (I don’t even know what it means), started out in Bangalore and now in Delhi, Kolkata, tried to be different but not by much, copied the background image, changed the color and the layout. Snap though came up with an up market name forgot that the word is usually associated with breaking rather than “executed quickly”.

The race today is to have presence in maximum cities before a global player sets its eye on India. The strategy then could most certainly be of a sell out and hence we see an increased flow of money in this segment. So when Koovs.com partners with Myntra.com and sells FIFA jerseys in cities, in and beyond its operating boundaries, Snapdeal gets “inspired” and displays 14 more cities only to sell customizable mugs. Mydala on the other hand slipped into selling products by displaying a deal to sell Olive Oil.

According to the industry insiders, there is an ongoing hectic consolidation amongst the players, again to appear bigger and improve upon the quality of deals which went missing with size. Koovs it seems has been the only player, refusing to sell off and firmly on its “national” quest. With money flowing in, Koovs will be interesting to watch. Unconfirmed news suggests some big tieups on the cards for this player which has improved its quality and range of deals.

Dala starting out of Delhi with deep pockets struggles to sell and is not doing well out of Delhi. Snap prefers tie-ups with merchants having national presence and hasn’t focused on local execution much. Result, quality of deals has suffered and hence the acquisition of Grabbon. This site doesn’t even display the number of coupons sold, so you can’t know their selling potential but if the quality of discounts is anything to go buy, they could not be doing very well. Koovs from Bangalore is a self funded venture started by few IITians shows some promise for quality of deals although they are restricted by their lack of financial muscle and merchant contract implementation. Recently starting out in Delhi, they can only find it tough as the city space is already crowded. Kolkata, abandoned by all the other players, could be a smart move, time will tell. Grabbon, another Bangalore based venture started out decent, has now been acquired by Snapdeal.

Taggle, the latest entrant with funding; will have an uphill task to justify their execution model and to go by the quality of deals featured and numbers sold. Taggle is not for the masses its for the classes and average deal price is Rs. 750. Panic will set in, if revenues don’t justify the investments, soon.

I think either Koovs or Snapdeal are most likely to surge ahead as the leader. Since Koovs is the only Indian player to have International presence in Singapore and if rumors hold any water, there are two more countries ready for launch. Koovs will need a shot of green backs to be able any significant impact at a national scale or will share the fate of wanamo or grabbon. Koovs, already the biggest site in Bangalore in terms of numbers of transactions on the site, will be a force to reckon, if their initial success in Bangalore is anything to go by. Bangalore is significant by the presence of all major players and is interesting to watch since the winner here sure must have the team and the conviction to take on the country and replicate their operational supremacy. Snap, sure has financial muscle but is behind Mydala in terms of number of quality of deals. But the ground level execution of Mydala’s deals has been shaky.

I wouldn’t stick my head out any further by guessing how this battle of startups enfolds but sure do know, that the eventual daddy of the Indian market will be bought out by the mother of it all, Groupon. What else do you think a company worth $ 1.2 billion would do if not buy out its best imitator in the soon to be the hottest ecommerce market; India.

Guest Post by Arun; Arun is a senior director at a consumer research firm.

Snapdeal snaps Grabbon

SnapdealSome amount of consolidation taking place in group discount space after emerging in mushroom fashion 7-8 months back. Snapdeal, a group discount site promoted by Delhi based Jasper Infotech has acquired Bangalore based Grabbon, deal value has not been disclosed and it is termed as strategic acquisition by both Snapdeal and Grabbon.

Interestingly Grabbon is the 1st Groupon clone to hit the Indian market and founded by Tony Navin, Jackson Fernandez and Balamurugan all XLRI graduates. Few weeks back i interviewed Jackson, you may check here.

Benefit for Snapdeal from this acquisition- :

  • Seasoned management guys who know the nitty gritty of discount space and have executed this model quite diligently.
  • Getting Bangalore as a market where Snapdeal has no presence and being tech savvy metro, this model brings lot of value and readymade market for them by acquiring Grabbon.
Whats up for Grabbon in this deal -
  • Getting an umbrella company in Snapdeal which is financially well off and it can steer them well.
  • Can able to address and access the Snapdeal market through this acquisition
Group discount space is really heating up with merger and acquisitions, Taggle has secured a mammoth funding of above $8M from Greylock partners and Battery Ventures. Prominent players who remains in this space are Mydala and Koovs.

-Hitesh, vcBytes.com

Grabbon founder: on their entrepreneurial journey

I met Jackson Fernandez one of the founders of Grabbon last weekend, the first startup to introduce group discount model in India. In a candid interview he answers my volley of Questions, here you go:

Q. Why did you pick group discount model, is it just driven by Groupon success and valuation. Why do you think Groupon model will work in India.

About a year back one of us wanted to buy a new phone, we did our research and found that the best rates were available at the large retail chains. Obviously it was a volume game, since the large retailer could promise volumes they could warrant the best rates. This was the genesis of the idea. If a group of people could get together for bulk purchase then they could get the best discounts. Soon we realized that the discounts possible in services could be larger compared to products. While we were trying to shape up an offering on the collective buying concept, we chanced upon the Groupon model.

In the Indian context, we think the need for discount is ingrained in the consumer mentality, but having said that the couponing business in India is far from mature. The key will be to figure out what works best in the Indian milieu.

Q. Grabbon is the first grouping portal in india and many sites emerged within few weeks of your launch, how you are maintaining edge over your competitors, any differentiating factor exists now.

Yes you are right; there have been many sites that have emerged in this space within a short duration. For an observer it might seem that the barriers to entry into this space would be fairly low, but frankly that’s not the case. There is immense amount of work that goes behind ensuring that the engine keeps chugging.

Many of the new entrants are jumping into the bandwagon hoping to make quick bucks by rapidly expanding to other cities and blatantly replicating the deals (and in some case the creative content too) of the incumbents. I think need of the hour is to innovate and find the right mix that works in the Indian context.

Grabbon was the first to test out the token amount and multiple deal concepts and it has quickly been adopted by the rest of the pack.

Q. How did you manage to convince merchants to display deals in Grabbon since group discount was relatively new concept, what are the challenges you faced.

We do face resistance from some quarters of the vendor base, but to a large extent they are receptive to new ideas, especially when it is relatively risk free.

Q. How big is the market size, have you done any market research. How you going to increase the market size. Any plans of reaching out to offline customers since you are just targeting online customer.

We don’t want to quote a figure to the market size is this relatively nascent and high potential category, wouldn’t want to be held against that figure J (remember Thomas Watson’s famous prediction that there is a world market for maybe 5 computers). In a way the entry of multiple players could be a blessing in disguise as this could accelerate the rate at which the market size grows.

Our immediate focus is to reach out to the online mass that we haven’t connected yet.

Q. How Grabbon makes money, is it only when deal is ON and transaction is done. What are your future monetizing plans.

We make money for every campaign that we successfully run through our site. Can’t reveal it here now, we have some exciting plans and surely will keep you updated.

Q. What are the steps you have taken for fraud detection and prevention.

A robust website and a reliable payment gateway take care of most of the issues; we also have a mechanism between the vendor and us to ratify every voucher sold.

Q. Restaurants/lounge/Weekend packages, what next in the product offering, any plans to get into the electronics/housing segment.

Well not immediately, the approach for products has to be well thought of as the liberty to play around with margins is limited.

Q.  Who are the founders of Grabbon, briefly state their individual role.

The people behind Grabbon are Tony, Bala, Sandeep and I. Bala and his team handle the IT bit and everything related to technology, Tony pretty much handles the vendor on boarding, Sandeep is responsible for Marketing function, while I handle business development and other special initiatives. Tony, Sandy and I were classmates during our MBA days at XLRI Jamshedpur. We were working with leading management consulting firms before we decided to quit and take the plunge.

Q. Are you looking out to venture capital to carry out your expansion plan.

We believe that funds at the right time are a critical component of any successful venture, so yes we are looking to raise funds in the near term. We have more than a couple of options worked out, so depending on how the landscape shapes up the direction and size would vary.

Q. Any advise you would like to share with wannabe entrepreneurs.

Frankly we are still in the early learning stages so the only advice we could give is just follow your heart and enjoy what you do. You will never know what you have unless you test it out.

-Hitesh, vcBytes.com

Will Indian clones of Groupon able to raise fund?

BBmydalaKoovsGrabbon

Groupon raising close to $30M triggered its clones to emerge globally, there is a groupon clone in every continent barring Antartica. Groupon clones in UK, Russia and Germany have successfully raised capital from VC firms, question arises here will Indian clones can also taste the success like their european counterparts.

Lets look at the grouping portals in India - Grabbon, Koovs, Mydala, Snapdeal, Wanamo, Mobstreet, BindaasBargain.

In my view Groupon clone should feel highly fortunate if they able to raise funds and bring in VC to their board.

a) No clear differentiating factor - There is no stand out and clear differentiator, every clone works in same way, only differentiating factor i see is location/city they are serving and some clones are justifying the distinction on the basis of numbers of fans in their respective facebook page.

b) No entry barrier - One really don’t need any extra skill sets to come out with one more version of clone, with the help of 2-3 developers and 1lac of investment one can up and run the clone. Absolutely no entry barrier.

c) Deals aren’t lucrative - None of the clones are focussing on a particular vertical, most of the deals are related to restaurants, weekend package, spa etc. Interestingly none of them are focussing on the lines of Nimblebuy, its also a groupon clone founded by my ex CTO at Andale Prashant Nendungadi , it deals only in electronic items.

d) Lean Profit margin - how much margin grouping site makes on each deal? my view is somewhere around 10-15% and additionally they would be taking a flat fee as advertising charges from the merchant. So if a grouping site sells close to 500 deals then they are doing some business which may attract a VC, but unfortunately they tend to sell on an avg 25 deals/day.

so what do you think about Indian grouping sites, share your views.

-Hitesh, vcBytes.com