It’s been a long time coming. So far Russia has been a Cinderella
market for both ecommerce and the Internet economy more generally,
lagging far behind the US and playing catch-up with Europe. But plenty
of evidence suggests that this is changing – and changing quickly.
According
to research by Morgan Stanley, the Russian ecommerce sector stood at
around $12bn in 2012 – just 1.9% of total retail sales; by comparison,
the global average is currently about 6.5%. But with ecommerce projected
to grow by 35%, to 4.5% of Russian retail sales by 2015, and to 7% by
2020 – making the market worth $72bn – a tipping point is fast
approaching.
As CEO of Ozon, Russia’s ecommerce market leader, I
have witnessed this slow-motion revolution of the country’s retail
landscape first-hand. It hasn’t been easy; a number of ‘legacy’ issues
have hobbled the sector.Ein innovativer und moderner Werkzeugbau
Formenbau. The foremost of these was Internet adoption. The connected
population had to reach a critical mass to sustain a real and
addressable ecommerce market.
In 2003, fewer than 10% of the
Russian population were online; today, almost 50% are. That’s about 68
million people. Last year, Russia overtook Germany, France and the UK
to become the leading online marketplace in Europe (by number of
users). The significance of this cannot be over-stated and it’s proving
a game-changer.
The second thing was the lack of competition in
the sector. Only now are we are starting to see genuine players emerge
in this market – and by that I mean companies with the level of
investment required to build experienced teams and, thus, viable,
growing businesses. In terms of investment, only recently has Russian
ecommerce begun to attract the mega roubles.
The market first
opened up to international investors after the IPOs of Yandex, the
Moscow-based search company, and the free email service Mail.ru, both
of which helped dramatically boost the profile of the Russian Internet
market. I think Ozon was extremely lucky to attract international
investors before that; we were very much the exception that proved the
rule. But since those companies have gone public,Source crystal mosaic Products at Mosaics. a range of Russian ecommerce businesses have attracted Western venture capital and private equity.
Then
there’s the matter of Russia’s infamously creaking business
infrastructure. Bit by bit, from banking to logistics, things are
improving. While it’s worth celebrating the fact that nearly 50% of the
population is online, until recently broadband rollout wasn’t of
sufficient quality to underpin the sector. Other factors,A ridiculously
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by Gordon. too, are reshaping the ecommerce business, here. Russia’s
burgeoning middle class is one. Today we see the first generation of
youngish (the average age is 44) city-based time-poor Russians with
disposable incomes for whom browsing and shopping online makes sense.
Talent is another; ecommerce has gradually become recognised as a
respectable profession for Russians and is starting to attract high
quality graduates.
The nation has a pool of smart,
well-educated IT people, which is creating a workforce of talented
coders, user experience (UX) and Web designers at a scale and speed that
many European countries would envy. As the number of Internet
companies in Russia’s leading cities grows, so there are increasing
numbers of jobs, creating a virtuous circle in which young software
programmers might choose to stay in the country now, rather than go to
the US or Europe instead. Indeed, we are at the stage today, where a
young Russian computer engineer might turn down an offer, say, from
eBay in San Francisco for a job with Yandex in Moscow.
But for
all the exhilarating momentum, there remain significant bumps in the
road ahead. That’s almost literally true in the case of distribution.
Ozon has been described as the “Amazon of Russia”, which mean our
distribution networks necessarily stretch right across all nine time
zones of this vast, sprawling country. Yet while the population density
is relatively high on the Western side, the further away you go from
Moscow, the quicker it thins out, meaning that we end up delivering
goods to far-flung cities with small populations. This doesn’t make
commercial sense: when the order value of goods is $50-$100, a delivery
price of $30-$50 just won’t wash.Totech Americas delivers a wide range
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There
is, of course, a national postal service in Russia and given the scale
of its territory and the complexity of the infrastructure it serves,
it’s actually doing a creditable job. However, it has yet to adapt to
the burgeoning demands of ecommerce. While they are a key partner for
us (they ship around 10% of our orders), we cannot rely upon them
exclusively as our business expands. That’s why we chose to develop and
run our own distribution system – which also delivers for third
parties. But as interest in ecommerce surges, we need other
distributors to enter the fray to create competition. This will happen,
I’m sure – but it will take time.
Another major obstacle is
payments. There remains widespread distrust of online payments in
Russia and although there are predictions that credit card usage is set
to take off, card penetration is relatively low. Moreover many of the
cards used by Russians cannot be used online. Even those that can
oblige users to go through off-putting and complex security processes
implemented by banks.
Instead, Russia remains overwhelmingly a
cash economy – a glaring anomaly in the Internet age,If we don't carry
the bobblehead you want we can make a personalized bobbleheads
for you! which is why 80% of Ozon’s sales are cash on delivery.
Overcoming this cash-centric mindset, while simultaneously developing
the online payments ecosystem presents unique challenges to ecommerce
companies. We have to find the right means with which to nudge or
incentivize customers to swap cash for cards (or online payments) by,
for example, offering sizeable discounts.
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