Vietnamese e-commerce scene under
(re)construction
The closing of yet another e-commerce site in Vietnam shows that the
market is undergoing a process of restructuring.
Online retailer Lingo.vn
suspended its operations last week. The news gave rise to quick rumours about
the company running out of money and the investor refusing to put more in.
Lingo.vn, established in 2014, is a subsidiary of digital content creator VMG
Media JSC. According to from the parent company’s financial statements, the
operation incurred a loss of VND150 billion ($6.7 million) until the end of
June 2016.
Since 2015, e-commerce in
Vietnam has seen thinning competition, as many businesses closed shop and
backed out of the market, including online retailer Deca.vn and IDG
Ventures-backed Project Lana’s three e-commerce sites Lamdieu, Beyeu, and
Foreva, which sold fashion items and cosmetics, maternity and newborn goods,
and underwear, consecutively.
Meanwhile, all of Rocket
Internet’s e-commerce ventures in Vietnam changed hands. Food ordering
service Foodpanda was taken over by local start-up Vietnammm, online clothing
and accessories retailer Zalora was sold to Central Group, and Lazada was
taken over by Alibaba.
Contrary to the market
trend, a number of new companies have recently entered the e-commerce fair.
Examples include VNG's $17 billion investment into tiki.vn, a purchase of 38
per cent in May, or real estate tycoon Vingroup's launch of e-commerce site
adayroi.com last August.
Of all the Vietnamese
start-ups that secured funding from investors since the beginning of the
year, there is only one from the field of e-commerce. Flash sales platform
Topmot.vn last week announced that it had secured $1 million funding from a
consortium of individual investors, a member ofwhich is a cofounder of US
flash sales site Gilt Groupe. Topmot, launched in June, is the only flash
sales site in Vietnam at the moment. It currently runs about 40 campaigns a week,
each starting at 10 AM every day with a maximum time span of five days.
According to Nguyen Dac
Viet Dung, chairman of online marketplace sendo.vn, the Vietnamese e-commerce
market is reordering itself.
“Big companies, such as
Lazada, Sendo, and Tiki are receiving heavy investments, while smaller
companies are closing or focusing on niche markets. This is normal and has
happened in other markets,” he elaborated.
The remark was somewhat
echoed by Erik Jonsson, founder of Topmot and former CEO of Zalora Vietnam.
“E-commerce in Vietnam is not easy,” said Jonsson in a recent interview with
news site dealstreetasia.com. “There is less and less room for “me too”
models—as the market grows, more players are added and competition increases.
Unless you solve a specific problem or bring unique value to your customers,
it will be hard to grow and thrive in the long-run against competitors that
may have deeper pockets than you do.”
Data from the Vietnam
E-commerce and Information Technology Agency (VECITA) showed that in 2015 the
total revenue from B2C e-commerce in Vietnam was $4.07 billion, up 37 per
cent on-year, and accounted for 2.8 per cent of the total retail of goods and
services in the country.
By Ha Duy, VIR
|
Thứ Tư, 10 tháng 8, 2016
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