Thursday, July 12, 2012

The Importance of Daily Deals to E-commerce in Asia

It's funny the reactions I've gotten when I've told people in the tech community that I'm in the Daily Deals (aka Group Buying) industry...generally I get a disinterested reply of "oh, I see" or some times even a very blunt "why?"  Sure Groupon's stock price is flailing at $10 USD and the tech press is now seemingly "over" Daily Deals since it has stopped publishing stories bashing it (a tell all on the model and economics of Daily Deals I'll leave for an upcoming post).

It's true that Daily Deal sites are the epitome of copy catting gone wild which has plagued the Asian start up scene, however I think the tech community will look back at 2012 as a watershed year for E-commerce in Asia.  So where have global e-commerce stalwarts like Amazon, eBay and others fallen short in Asia and how has Daily Deals filled this void...?

1. Daily Deals has changed consumer's attitudes towards shopping by giving them a reason to go online.
Many consumers in countries (or territories) like Hong Kong, Singapore and even Thailand look at bricks and mortar shopping and mall walking as "shoppertainment" (very convenient to do given public transport and a great way to stay cool in the heat).  Hong Kong has always been a head scratcher for e-commerce having high smart phone penetration (third highest globally per capita), a large segment with available spending income and high broadband penetration.  However it greatly lags China in e-commerce growth with a projection of a paltry 7% annual rate according to a Boston Consulting Group study done in 2011.

Daily Deals sites have brought Asian consumers online simply because of the great discounts...period.  Consumers go through the "inconvenience" of going online and have gotten over their distrust of buying a virtual good in the form of a deals voucher.  What's more they're taking the risk of prepaying for a product or service from mostly unknown merchants without even seeing it!  Daily Deals is only two years old and already the Hong Kong and Singapore Daily Deals markets are estimated to be between $60 to $70 million USD annually while Thailand, Malaysia, and the Philippines are in the $25 to $40 million USD range. (Estimates based on several sources including internal, All Deals Leaks, and  press)

2.  Daily Deals sites instituted "no questions asked" risk free shopping.
One of the challenges of curating deals from merchants and brands is simply quality control.  It's the hazard of acting as a channel for sometimes unknown merchants to peddle their wares to your customers.  As painful as it sometimes was, deal sites provided refunds to customers who complained about anything from a restaurant running out of a lunch set deal the day they patronized the establishment to the merchant them self going bankrupt and skipping town.  This was the case for Groupon Hong Kong and BeeCrazy who were left holding the bag when Macao Dragon Ferry went under. (over 150k vouchers sold).  Deal sites quickly recognized the power of word of mouth and the importance of preventing churn of a customer to a competitor with a seemingly identical smorgasbord of deals.

3. A pathway for E-commerce to reach "the masses".
Daily deals democratized e-commerce by making a multitude of payment options available so that the non credit card demographics could shop online.  For example, in the Philippines there are only roughly 7 million credit cards and 3 or so million credit card holders.  The numbers are even less for Thailand and Indonesia.  In fact only 5% of online Indonesians engaged in e-commerce or online banking, with credit cards being one of the main roadblocks (Source: The Boston Consulting Group 2010).  Over the Counter Payment, ATM and online bank transfers are much more the norm for SEA. Deal sites also offer Cash on Delivery for the most cautious of consumers.

4.  A new direct marketing channel for SMBs....the introduction of Hyper Local Commerce.
So far I've focused on the consumer side of the equation.  Daily deals has given local merchants a relatively risk free, pay for performance marketing channel.  I say "relatively" because in the early days some merchants were not coached properly on how to manage capacity for deals and were swamped by a flood of redemptions for loss leader deals.  Since then, they (and the deal sites) have become much more savvy at pricing and structuring deals so that there is an opportunity for up-selling for a profitable customer acquisition as well as converting a new customer to a returning one.

So where does the industry go next?  Lack of congruent payment infrastructures and economical delivery and fulfillment solutions will continue to be a challenge for E-commerce in the near term.  Mobile is the obvious next step but it's one that requires getting a few very important things right....
  • Utilizing the context of mobile (location, phone type, time of day etc.) to drive discovery of deals and effective re-marketing.
  • Utilizing the phone as the vehicle for payment. Much has been prophesized about this (think PayPal, Square, carrier billing, NFC, mobile wallets) but the key is to get the App and M-site experiences right first.  This means a super convenient and secure process involving single sign on, mobile optimized payment page flows that are UX tested and re-tested.  Shopping cart abandonment recognition and re-marketing tactics will be key because god knows 3G is not reliable in SEA and consumers' attention spans on mobile vary depending on where they are.
  • Utilizing the phone as the tool for redemption.  The first step is getting consumers and merchants to adopt a simple system to scan and validate a voucher that's brought into the store on a phone.
Yes, the press has prophesized about more and more consolidation to come for the daily deals biz.  Ultimately daily deals will take a different form.  Sites are already trying morph themselves into full fledged e-commerce storefronts.  The next inflection point will come as large entrants like credit cards as well as web Goliaths like Google and Facebook come to market with a deals/offers experiences integrated into their primary use cases.

In any case, daily deals is not a "1 trick" pony....look for more to come!


Friday, May 4, 2012

"Shop & Pay": A first attempt at QR codes & Daily Deals

iMob, the adverising arm of SMRT created a partnership with Paypal and Nokia to launch Shop & Pay, a Deals campaign comprising of billboards featuring QR codes in high traffic areas of subway.  The billboard had several product deals and prominent QR codes along with basic instructions.  The campaign lasted for a couple of months, and based on my daily observations (in my home MRT station) only a mediocre success.  


I think the challenge was in the name “Shop and Pay” which sounds pretty generic.  iMob has since changed the program to “Scan and Pay”, which makes more sense.  The other issue with the campaign was that the billboard did did little to explain what a QR code was and where to find a scanner.  In a new campaign with EpiLife in Somerset station, they’ve included instructions for iOS, BB and Android, a major upgrade. 


The QR code URL takes the user directly to the Paypal buy page for the product.  Of course the Paypal branding helps with legitimizing but there is no intermediate landing page experience which is a distraction since this is the flow that daily deal users come to expect.  Of the passers by that I observed, no one stood around long enough to complete the purchase on the spot (because of the time it takes to enter in credit card or paypal info) which is a key challenge to a "prepayment" experience.....hence the need call for NFC...perhaps!

So a good first attempt with immediate refinements to the program!






The BK Coupon Generator...a great excuse for me to go to Burger King!

I've observed that the use of more and more QR code initiated marketing campaigns.  Not a surprise given SG's smartphone penetration.  However some are done better than others... I feel that it's worth highlighting the use of QR codes to support the launch of the BK Chicken Sandwich line in Singapore.

http://bkcoupongenerator.com.sg

BK used a subway campaign with QR codes to drive discovery of their Coupon Generator mobile site for promotion of their Chicken sandwiches.  It was a good use of a free to claim offer whereby the customer could choose a chicken sandwich meal, pick a freebie (BK fusion ice cream, Mexican drum lets) and then create a virtual coupon on their handset.

Why I liked the campaign
- Simple and easy call to action with easy to understand benefits
- 2 part benefits – coupon for a freebie and entry in lucky draw (to collect info) for stays at Resorts World
- 20k coupons downloaded so far

By focusing on coupons, BK took pre-payment out of the equation (frankly a stumbling block for daily deals) making the experience much simpler for the consumer and at point of sale.