Sharadamani Amma, an 87-year-old great grandmother, remembers a time
when the sight of mail runners would cause a great deal of excitement in
the small Kerala village she grew up in. The appearance of these postal
employees, who carried mail between post offices on foot, meant a
letter or money order or, god forbid, a telegram—a sure sign of ill
news.
But those days are long gone. The postmen are no longer held in high
regard in most of the country, and few in the current generation would
have even stepped into a post office, at least in urban India.
New age e-commerce companies want to change this. The likes of Amazon and Snapdeal already have pilot projects running with India Post, while newspaper reports suggest that Flipkart is set to follow suit.
But what makes India Post, seen by many as a relic of a bygone era, so attractive to these online portals?
Unbeatable network
India Post’s network of post offices in India is incomparable. None
of the private courier or logistics firms can even come close say
experts and e-commerce firms. “India Post has an unmatched
network that is critical for the growth of e-commerce in India,” says
Ashish Chitravanshi, Vice President of operations at Snapdeal. A
view echoed by Amazon.in. “Through India Post’s extensive network,
Amazon India is able to service over 19,000 pin-codes through 140,000
post-offices across all 35 states and union territories in India,” says
Samuel Thomas, Director of transportation at Amazon India.
This network covers about 25,000 pin codes, while even large private courier companies like DTDC reach only about 10,000.
Rural depth
While the pan India network is impressive, it is India Post’s rural depth that gives it an edge. “No one can reach rural areas like India Post,” says Manish Saigal, Managing Director of advisory services firm Alvarez & Marsal India.
Manish says India Post’s importance will only increase when non-metro
India’s contribution to e-commerce sales surpasses that of metro India.
“The top 20 cities contribute 60% in value terms right now. The pendulum
will shift the other way pretty soon,” adds Manish.
The pendulum has already swung the other way for some e-tailers. Over
70% of orders for Snapdeal are from smaller cities and towns, according
to Snapdeal’s VP-Operations Ashish. “The growing popularity of online
shopping in these non-metro centers presents a unique set of logistical
challenges like spread out population, high km/delivery factor and high
cost of setting up delivery infrastructure,” explains Ashish.
Advantage India Post
It is not just the e-commerce companies that stand to gain from a
partnership with India Post. The revenue potential for India Post is
quite high.
The central government agency is already handling over 1.5 lakh
e-commerce deliveries a day, according to industry estimates, making
India Post one of the largest delivery partners for the industry. The
Business Development and Marketing Directorate of India Post, which
handles delivery of parcels like those of e-commerce companies, earned
revenue of Rs 1961.76 crore between April and December last year.
“A lot of people dismiss India Post but they are doing mind-boggling work on the ground for e-commerce already,” says Manish.
An advertisement put out by India Post showed the department has
handled Rs 500 crore of cash-on-delivery (CoD) in the financial year
2014-15.
However, Alvarez & Marsal’s Manish says India Post needs to do
more in terms of technology adoption. This is especially important for
CoD. India Post does have years of experience handling and delivering
cash, in the form of money orders. However, CoD unlike money order
requires postmen and women to collect cash and not hand over cash.
E-commerce companies also expect this cash to be remitted into their
accounts daily and further expect transparent and instant system
updates.
This technology integration between India Post and e-commerce companies is beginning to happen. “We have integrated Amazon and Postal systems to electronically enable information sharing,” says Amazon India’s Samuel.
There are examples globally of national postal departments taking
advantage of the growth of online retail. Ankur Bisen, senior Vice
President at retail advisory firm Technopak, cites the examples of
Deutsche Post (Germany) and Royal Mail (UK). “Both these companies were
state sponsored mail carriers and realised the diminishing importance of
postage. Both of them have successfully re-modelled themselves to suit
the emerging e-commerce needs,” says Ankur. An AFP report in March
stated that Deutsche Post’s e-commerce parcel division saw its revenues
rise by 2.6% to reach 15.7 billion euros (Rs 1.11 lakh crore) in FY
2014.
“If they can marry India Post’s local knowledge and network with
technology, they can become unbeatable. But they need to do this fast,”
says Manish.
If this succeeds, then Sharadamani Amma’s great granddaughter Mythili
will also soon wait with bated breath for the postman to call at her
Bengaluru flat.
(Sources of data and information shown in graphics: India Post
annual report, India Post advertisement, Amazon India, DTDC website,
news reports)
Courtesy : http://yourstory.com/2015/06/india-post-ecommerce/
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