worker by taushiqur
ndia
·
·
"Alphabet Inc. 2015 Annual Report Form (10-K)". EDGAR. United States Securities and Exchange Commission.
27 February 2016. Retrieved 21 December 2015.
·
·
"Alibaba Group Announces March Quarter 2016 and Full
Fiscal Year 2016 Results"
(PDF). MarketWatch.
·
·
"Uber, Lifting Financial Veil, Says Sales Growth
Outpaces Losses".
Bloomberg.com. 14 April 2017. Retrieved 7 May 2017.
·
·
"Here's How Much Airbnb's Management Believes the
Company's Profit Will Grow".
Fortune. Retrieved 7 May 2017.
· "Yandex Announces Fourth
Quarter and Full-Year 2014 Financial Results (NASDAQ:YNDX)". Retrieved 19 August 2016.
Sunglassesindia.com
Brandsndeals.com
Majorbrands.in
Pantaloons,
Shoppersstop.com,
Inkfruit.com,
UtsavSarees.com
Globus
Zovi.com
BagsKart.com
Fetise.com
Orosilber.com
Violetbag.com
Bags109.com
Myntra.com
Elitify.com
Myntra.com,
Zoomin.com,
Snapfish.in,
Picsquare.com
3. Footwear
Yebhi.com,
Metro Shoes
Bata Shoes
BeStylish
Goodsneakerspace.com
4. Babies, Kids,Mothercare
Hushbabies.com,
Firstcry.com,
BalGopal.com,
Kidloo.com
Babyoye.com
MyBabyCart.com
Hoopos.com
Wowkart.com
Babyproducts.co.in
5. Gifts, cakes etc.
Infibeam.com,
Fernsnpetals.com,
IndianGiftsPortal.com,
Talash.com
GlimGifts.com
Giftsandlifestyle.com
Arteecraftee.com
Onamgifts.com
fngstore.com
Ganeshchaturthigifts.com
Janmashtamigifts.com
6. Books
Flipkart.com,
Landmarkonthenet.com,
A1books.co.in
Bookchums.com
7. Chocolates, Sweets and bakery items
Mithaimate.com
Justrufs.com
8. Artwork auction
Saffronart.com
9. Movie ticket booking
Bookmyshow.com
PVRCinemas.com
10. Rent a movie
BigFlix.com,
Seventymm.com
11. Online travel ticketing and hotel booking
Irctc.co.in,
Redbus.in,
MakeMyTrip.com,
Yatra.com,
TripAdvisor.in,
ClearTrip.com,
Travelguru.com,
Expedia.co.in,
Ezeego1.co.in,
Ixigo.com,
TravelMasti.com,
Hotels.com
Via.com
Travelchacha.com
12. Airlines portals
Goindigo.in,
Indian Airlines,
Jetlite.com,
Flykingfisher.com,
Goair.in,
Spicejet.com,
Jetairways
13. B2C ( Multiple products )
Ebay.in,
IndiaTimes,
Rediff Shopping,
Bigbazar,
Homeshop18.com,
Shop.zapak.com,
Shop.in.com,
Tradeus.in,
Indiaplaza.in,
Egully.com,
20north.com
Timtara.com
YepmeShopping.com
Bigadda.com
BrandsKnot.com
Bevyshop.com
OnlineBuy99.com
FutureBazaar.com
DiscountBox.in (Discounted Offers)
Buytheprice.com
Mallxs.com
Shopclues.com
Ezmaal.com
Goodlife.com
Jabong.com
Junglee.com
Pepperfry.com
Seventymm.com
14. Deal a day
SnapDeal.com,
Dealsandyou.com,
Mydala.com,
Koovs.com,
Grabbon.com,
BindaasBargain.com,
Taggle.com,
SoSasta.com,
Dealivore.com
Grako.in
Dealsonline4u.com
Bagittoday.com
99labels.com
Fashionandyou.com
Timesdeal.com
Rediff-DealHoJaye
Dealface.com
DealYantra.com
Buzzintown Deals
DealsNow (For Corporates)
Dealbharat.in
Indiandailydeals.com
Bestdeals4u.in
BundleBaazi.com
Discountbox.in
Slickindia.com
Dealbajar.com
15. Electronics, Gadgets, Watches, Phones
Dell.co.in,
Ezone,
EDigiWorld,
BitFang.com
Letsbuy.com
LootSpot.com
Next.co.in
LetsBuyProducts.com
WatchKart.com
Gizmeup.com
Atrightprice.com
Bulbtiger.com
Theitdepot.com
16. Jewellery
Caratlane.com,
Suratdiamond.com
Ddamas.co.in
TrendySouk.com
Jewelfunk.com
Jpearls.com
17. Lingerie
Straps and Strings,
Ngal Originals,
Victoria’s Secret India
18. Sports
Playgroundonline.com
Esportsbuy.com
Sportegenie.com
19. Health, Fitness, Beauty, Wellness, Eye
Health Shoppe
Urbantouch
Snapittoday
LensKart.com
Spectglasses.com
Snapittoday.com
Tellushealth.com
20. Perfumes
Perfume2Order
Beautymart.in
PerfumesDirect
21. Groceries, Vegetables, Fruits
AaramShop.com
Mandifresh
Mygrahak.com
22. Real Estate
Groffr.com
23. Pets Commerce
Dogspot.in
24. Tools, home & garden
category
25. Cab Rental
26. Carpool Sites
26. Automobile Industryokloot.com
carkhana.com
27. Furniture, Furnishings, Home Decor
Housefull
Fabfurnish.com
UrbanLadder
Roomstory.com
IndusCraft
IndiaCircus
New do
2. Myntra.Com
3. Jabong.Com
4. Snapdeal.Com
5. ShopClues.com
New do
E-commerce in India
From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
India had an
internet users base of about 354 million as of June 2015[1]
and is expected to cross 500 million in 2016.[2]
Despite being the second-largest userbase in world, only behind China (650
million, 48% of population), the penetration of e-commerce
is low compared to markets like the United
States (266 million, 84%), or France (54 M, 81%), but is growing at an unprecedented rate,
adding around 6 million new entrants every month.[3]
The industry consensus is that growth is at an inflection point.[4]In India, cash on delivery is the most preferred payment method, accumulating 75% of the e-retail activities.[5] Demand for international consumer products (including long-tail items) is growing much faster than in-country supply from authorised distributors and e-commerce offerings.
In 2015, the largest e-commerce companies in India were Flipkart, Snapdeal, Amazon India, and Paytm.[6]
Contents
- 1 Market size and growth
- 2 Closures
- 3 Infrastructure
- 4 Funding
- 5 Niche retailers
- 6 See also
- 7 References
Market size and growth
India's e-commerce market was worth about $3.9 billion in 2009, it went up
to $12.6 billion in 2013. In 2013, the e-retail segment was worth US$2.3
billion. About 70% of India's e-commerce market is travel related.[7]
According to Google India, there were 35 million online shoppers in India in
2014 Q1 and is expected to cross 100 million mark by end of year 2016.[8]
CAGR vis-à-vis a global growth rate of 8–10%. Electronics and Apparel are the
biggest categories in terms of sales.According to a study conducted by the Internet and Mobile Association of India, the e-commerce sector is estimated to reach Rs. 211,005 crore by December 2016. The study also stated that online travel accounts for 61% of the e-commerce market.[9]
According to a study done by Indian Institute of eCommerce, by 2020 India is expected to generate $100 billion online retail revenue out of which $35 billion will be through fashion e-commerce. Online apparel sales are set to grow four times in coming years.[10]
India's retail market is estimated at $470 billion in 2011 and is expected to grow to $675 Bn by 2016 and $850 billion by 2020, – estimated CAGR of 10%..[11] According to Forrester, the e-commerce market in India is set to grow the fastest within the Asia-Pacific Region at a CAGR of over 57% between 2012–16.[12]
As per "India Goes Digital",[13] a report by Avendus Capital, the Indian e-commerce market is estimated at Rs 28,500 Crore ($6.3 billion) for the year 2011. Online travel constitutes a sizable portion (87%) of this market today. Online travel market in India had a growth rate of 22% over the next 4 years and reach Rs 54,800 crore ($12.2 billion) in size by 2015. Indian e-tailing industry is estimated at Rs 3,600 crore (US$800 million) in 2011 and estimated to grow to Rs 53,000 crore ($11.8 billion) in 2015.
Overall e-commerce market had reached Rs 1,07,800 crores (US$24 billion) by the year 2015 with both online travel and e-tailing contributing equally. Another big segment in e-commerce is mobile/DTH recharge with nearly 1 million transactions daily by operator websites.[citation needed]
A new sector in e-commerce is online medicine, selling complementary and alternative medicine or prescription medicine online. There are no dedicated online pharmacy laws in India and it is permissible to sell prescription medicine online with a legitimate license.[citation needed]
Online sales of luxury products like jewellery also increased over the years. Most of the retail brands have also started entering into the market and they expect at least 20% sales through online in next 2–3 years.[14]
Closures
Though the sector has witnessed tremendous growth and is expected to grow,
many e-commerce ventures have faced tremendous pressure to ensure cash flows.
But it has not worked out for all the e-commerce websites. Many of them like
Dhingana, IndiaPlaza.in, Rock.in, Seventy MM amongst others had to close down [15]
or change their business models to survive.[16]
Infrastructure
There are many hosting companies working in India but most[citation needed]
of them are not suitable for eCommerce hosting purpose, because they are
providing much less secure and threat protected shared hosting. eCommerce
demand highly secure, stable and protected hosting.[citation needed]
Trends are changing with some of eCommerce companies starting to offer SaaS for hosting web
stores with minimal one time costs.India has got its own version of Cyber Monday known as Great Online Shopping Festival which started in December 2012, when Google India partnered with e-commerce companies including Flipkart, HomeShop18, Snapdeal, Indiatimes shopping and Makemytrip. "Cyber Monday" is a term coined in the USA for the Monday coming after Black Friday, which is the Friday after Thanksgiving Day.[17] Most recent GOSF Great Online Shopping Festival was held during Dec 10 to 12, 2014.
In early June 2013, Amazon.com launched their Amazon India marketplace without any marketing campaigns. In July 2014, Amazon had said it will invest $2 billion (Rs 12,000 crore) in India to expand business, after its largest Indian rival Flipkart announced $1 billion in funding. In June 2016, Amazon agreed to invest another $3 billion to further pressure rivals Flipkart & Snapdeal[18] Amazon has also entered grocery segment with its Kirana now in bangalore and is also planning to enter in various other cities like Delhi, Mumbai and Chennai and faces stiff competition with Indian startups.[19] A large proportion of traffic towards e-commerce sites is driven by coupon sites. In July 2014, CouponChaska.com, a coupon and offers site partnered with some of the largest Indian e-commerce sites including Amazon and Flipkart. It provides a listing of deals from various Indian online stores for free. Alternatively, the site offers mobile recharges to users on each purchase.[20][21]
Funding
Examples of venture capital firms having invested in e-commerce companies in
India are as follows: Flipkart.com raised about USD 2.3 billion.[22]
On 10 July 2013, Flipkart announced it had received $200 million from existing
investors Tiger Global, Naspers, Accel
Partners, and ICONIQ Capital, and an additional $160 million from Dragoneer
Investment Group, Morgan Stanley Wealth Management, Sofina, Vulcan
Inc. and more from Tiger Global.[23]In February 2014, online fashion retailer Myntra.com raised $50 million from a group of investors led by Premji Invest, the investment company floated by Azim Premji, Chairman of Wipro. May 2014 also witnessed an acquisition of Myntra by Flipkart reportedly for ₹2,000 crores.[24]
In September 2015, PepperTap raised $36 million from Snapdeal and others.[25]
Niche retailers
The spread of e-commerce has led to the rise of several niche players who
largely specialize their products around a specific theme. As many as 1,06,086
websites are registered daily and more than 25% are for niche businesses.[26]During 2014, Royal Enfield sold 200 bikes of special series Online.[27]
Online apparel is one of the more popular verticals, which along with computers and consumer electronics make up 42% of the total retail e-commerce sales.[28] Niche online merchandising brands like Headbanger's Merch, Redwolf and No Nasties partner with and even help sustain independent musicians.[29] Some established brands like Arvind are now creating clothing lines just for the e-commerce markets.[30] Some of the bigger online retailer like VoxPop Clothing have secured multiple rounds of funding, the last round raising $1 million from Blume Ventures in 2014.[31]
As these niche businesses get popular, they are slowly getting acquired by the big players. BabyOye was acquired by Mahindra Retail, part of the $17 billion Mahindra Group.[32] Ekstop was acquired by the Godrej Group to complement their offline chain of Nature's Basket stores.[33]
See also
References
· "India’s
internet user base 354 million, registers 17% growth in first 6 months of 2015:
IAMAI report". timesofindia-economictimes. Retrieved 4 May 2016.
·
·
"Internet
users in India to cross 500 mn in 2016: Prasad". Business
Standard. 5 May 2016. Retrieved 23 May 2016.
·
·
"Etail
giants like Snapdeal, Amazon lose market share in 2015; small etailers emerge
as real winners". The Economic Times. Retrieved 4 May 2016.
·
·
"Online
shoppers in India to cross 100 million by 2016: Study". The Times of India. Retrieved 4 May 2016.
·
·
"Online
travel accounts for 61% of Indian ecommerce: IAMAI-IMRB study". MediaNama. 8 June 2016. Retrieved 18 June 2016.
·
·
PTI. "India’s
fashion e-retail market to touch $35 bn by 2020: Google". Mint.
Retrieved 2016-03-13.
·
·
"Asia Pacific Online Retail Forecast,
2011 To 2016," Forrester Research Inc. Zia Daniell Wigder, with Steven
Noble, Vikram Sehgal and Lily Varon.
·
·
"CaratLane
in talks with US-based online stores for acquisition". timesofindia-economictimes. Retrieved 2016-04-05.
·
·
"Discounts
backfire; many e-com ventures shut shop". Business Standard. 26 February 2014. Retrieved 9
December 2014.
·
·
"Latest
e-commerce shut downs and acquisitions in India". 17 May 2014. Retrieved 4
January 2015.
·
·
"Google
partners e-commerce sites for 'Cyber Monday' on December 12". Economic Times. 4 December 2012. Retrieved 31
December 2012.
·
·
"Amazon
plans $3 billion investment in India to challenge Flipkart, Snapdeal". CNBC. 25 Jun 2016.
·
·
"About Us:
CouponChaska". CouponChaska. Futinno
Internet Pvt Ltd. (India).
Retrieved 8 March 2017.
·
·
Gore, Dipti. "Coupon,
offers and deal listing website CouponChaska.com promises to get you the best
deal!". TechStory. TechStory Media
Pvt. Ltd. (India). Retrieved 8 March 2017.
·
·
"Flipkart
raises $160M more from Morgan Stanley, Vulcan Capital, Tiger Global,
others". VCCIRCLE.
·
·
"PepperTap
raises $36 million in fresh round of funding, led by Snapdeal". The Economic Times. Retrieved 4 May 2016.
·
·
"E-commerce:
Niche online ventures going where biggies of Amazon, Flipkart can’t". The Financial Express. 28 April 2015. Retrieved 4 May 2016.
·
·
"Royal
Enfield’s ‘Despatch’ sold out in 26 minutes". The Hindu. 2015-07-15. ISSN 0971-751X. Retrieved 2016-04-27.
·
·
"Sahil
Makhija: “At some point, a T-shirt will always outweigh a CD”". Rolling Stone India. Retrieved 4 May 2016.
·
·
"VoxPop
Clothing raises $1 million to expand portfolio with higher margins". timesofindia-economictimes. Retrieved 4 May 2016.
·
·
"Mahindra
Retail to integrate e-commerce business to single platform". timesofindia-economictimes. Retrieved 4 May 2016.
·
Sapna Agarwal. "Godrej
Nature’s Basket buys online grocer Ekstop.com". Mint.
Retrieved 4 May 2016.
New do
E-commerce in India
From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
India had an
internet users base of about 354 million as of June 2015[1]
and is expected to cross 500 million in 2016.[2]
Despite being the second-largest userbase in world, only behind China (650
million, 48% of population), the penetration of e-commerce
is low compared to markets like the United
States (266 million, 84%), or France (54 M, 81%), but is growing at an unprecedented rate,
adding around 6 million new entrants every month.[3]
The industry consensus is that growth is at an inflection point.[4]In India, cash on delivery is the most preferred payment method, accumulating 75% of the e-retail activities.[5] Demand for international consumer products (including long-tail items) is growing much faster than in-country supply from authorised distributors and e-commerce offerings.
In 2015, the largest e-commerce companies in India were Flipkart, Snapdeal, Amazon India, and Paytm.[6]
Contents
- 1 Market size and growth
- 2 Closures
- 3 Infrastructure
- 4 Funding
- 5 Niche retailers
- 6 See also
- 7 References
Market size and growth
India's e-commerce market was worth about $3.9 billion in 2009, it went up
to $12.6 billion in 2013. In 2013, the e-retail segment was worth US$2.3
billion. About 70% of India's e-commerce market is travel related.[7]
According to Google India, there were 35 million online shoppers in India in
2014 Q1 and is expected to cross 100 million mark by end of year 2016.[8]
CAGR vis-à-vis a global growth rate of 8–10%. Electronics and Apparel are the
biggest categories in terms of sales.According to a study conducted by the Internet and Mobile Association of India, the e-commerce sector is estimated to reach Rs. 211,005 crore by December 2016. The study also stated that online travel accounts for 61% of the e-commerce market.[9]
According to a study done by Indian Institute of eCommerce, by 2020 India is expected to generate $100 billion online retail revenue out of which $35 billion will be through fashion e-commerce. Online apparel sales are set to grow four times in coming years.[10]
India's retail market is estimated at $470 billion in 2011 and is expected to grow to $675 Bn by 2016 and $850 billion by 2020, – estimated CAGR of 10%..[11] According to Forrester, the e-commerce market in India is set to grow the fastest within the Asia-Pacific Region at a CAGR of over 57% between 2012–16.[12]
As per "India Goes Digital",[13] a report by Avendus Capital, the Indian e-commerce market is estimated at Rs 28,500 Crore ($6.3 billion) for the year 2011. Online travel constitutes a sizable portion (87%) of this market today. Online travel market in India had a growth rate of 22% over the next 4 years and reach Rs 54,800 crore ($12.2 billion) in size by 2015. Indian e-tailing industry is estimated at Rs 3,600 crore (US$800 million) in 2011 and estimated to grow to Rs 53,000 crore ($11.8 billion) in 2015.
Overall e-commerce market had reached Rs 1,07,800 crores (US$24 billion) by the year 2015 with both online travel and e-tailing contributing equally. Another big segment in e-commerce is mobile/DTH recharge with nearly 1 million transactions daily by operator websites.[citation needed]
A new sector in e-commerce is online medicine, selling complementary and alternative medicine or prescription medicine online. There are no dedicated online pharmacy laws in India and it is permissible to sell prescription medicine online with a legitimate license.[citation needed]
Online sales of luxury products like jewellery also increased over the years. Most of the retail brands have also started entering into the market and they expect at least 20% sales through online in next 2–3 years.[14]
Closures
Though the sector has witnessed tremendous growth and is expected to grow,
many e-commerce ventures have faced tremendous pressure to ensure cash flows.
But it has not worked out for all the e-commerce websites. Many of them like
Dhingana, IndiaPlaza.in, Rock.in, Seventy MM amongst others had to close down [15]
or change their business models to survive.[16]
Infrastructure
There are many hosting companies working in India but most[citation needed]
of them are not suitable for eCommerce hosting purpose, because they are
providing much less secure and threat protected shared hosting. eCommerce
demand highly secure, stable and protected hosting.[citation needed]
Trends are changing with some of eCommerce companies starting to offer SaaS for hosting web
stores with minimal one time costs.India has got its own version of Cyber Monday known as Great Online Shopping Festival which started in December 2012, when Google India partnered with e-commerce companies including Flipkart, HomeShop18, Snapdeal, Indiatimes shopping and Makemytrip. "Cyber Monday" is a term coined in the USA for the Monday coming after Black Friday, which is the Friday after Thanksgiving Day.[17] Most recent GOSF Great Online Shopping Festival was held during Dec 10 to 12, 2014.
In early June 2013, Amazon.com launched their Amazon India marketplace without any marketing campaigns. In July 2014, Amazon had said it will invest $2 billion (Rs 12,000 crore) in India to expand business, after its largest Indian rival Flipkart announced $1 billion in funding. In June 2016, Amazon agreed to invest another $3 billion to further pressure rivals Flipkart & Snapdeal[18] Amazon has also entered grocery segment with its Kirana now in bangalore and is also planning to enter in various other cities like Delhi, Mumbai and Chennai and faces stiff competition with Indian startups.[19] A large proportion of traffic towards e-commerce sites is driven by coupon sites. In July 2014, CouponChaska.com, a coupon and offers site partnered with some of the largest Indian e-commerce sites including Amazon and Flipkart. It provides a listing of deals from various Indian online stores for free. Alternatively, the site offers mobile recharges to users on each purchase.[20][21]
Funding
Examples of venture capital firms having invested in e-commerce companies in
India are as follows: Flipkart.com raised about USD 2.3 billion.[22]
On 10 July 2013, Flipkart announced it had received $200 million from existing
investors Tiger Global, Naspers, Accel
Partners, and ICONIQ Capital, and an additional $160 million from Dragoneer
Investment Group, Morgan Stanley Wealth Management, Sofina, Vulcan
Inc. and more from Tiger Global.[23]In February 2014, online fashion retailer Myntra.com raised $50 million from a group of investors led by Premji Invest, the investment company floated by Azim Premji, Chairman of Wipro. May 2014 also witnessed an acquisition of Myntra by Flipkart reportedly for ₹2,000 crores.[24]
In September 2015, PepperTap raised $36 million from Snapdeal and others.[25]
Niche retailers
The spread of e-commerce has led to the rise of several niche players who
largely specialize their products around a specific theme. As many as 1,06,086
websites are registered daily and more than 25% are for niche businesses.[26]During 2014, Royal Enfield sold 200 bikes of special series Online.[27]
Online apparel is one of the more popular verticals, which along with computers and consumer electronics make up 42% of the total retail e-commerce sales.[28] Niche online merchandising brands like Headbanger's Merch, Redwolf and No Nasties partner with and even help sustain independent musicians.[29] Some established brands like Arvind are now creating clothing lines just for the e-commerce markets.[30] Some of the bigger online retailer like VoxPop Clothing have secured multiple rounds of funding, the last round raising $1 million from Blume Ventures in 2014.[31]
As these niche businesses get popular, they are slowly getting acquired by the big players. BabyOye was acquired by Mahindra Retail, part of the $17 billion Mahindra Group.[32] Ekstop was acquired by the Godrej Group to complement their offline chain of Nature's Basket stores.[33]
See also
References
· "India’s
internet user base 354 million, registers 17% growth in first 6 months of 2015:
IAMAI report". timesofindia-economictimes. Retrieved 4 May 2016.
·
·
"Internet
users in India to cross 500 mn in 2016: Prasad". Business
Standard. 5 May 2016. Retrieved 23 May 2016.
·
·
"Etail
giants like Snapdeal, Amazon lose market share in 2015; small etailers emerge
as real winners". The Economic Times. Retrieved 4 May 2016.
·
·
"Online
shoppers in India to cross 100 million by 2016: Study". The Times of India. Retrieved 4 May 2016.
·
·
"Online
travel accounts for 61% of Indian ecommerce: IAMAI-IMRB study". MediaNama. 8 June 2016. Retrieved 18 June 2016.
·
·
PTI. "India’s
fashion e-retail market to touch $35 bn by 2020: Google". Mint.
Retrieved 2016-03-13.
·
·
"Asia Pacific Online Retail Forecast,
2011 To 2016," Forrester Research Inc. Zia Daniell Wigder, with Steven
Noble, Vikram Sehgal and Lily Varon.
·
·
"CaratLane
in talks with US-based online stores for acquisition". timesofindia-economictimes. Retrieved 2016-04-05.
·
·
"Discounts
backfire; many e-com ventures shut shop". Business Standard. 26 February 2014. Retrieved 9
December 2014.
·
·
"Latest
e-commerce shut downs and acquisitions in India". 17 May 2014. Retrieved 4
January 2015.
·
·
"Google
partners e-commerce sites for 'Cyber Monday' on December 12". Economic Times. 4 December 2012. Retrieved 31
December 2012.
·
·
"Amazon
plans $3 billion investment in India to challenge Flipkart, Snapdeal". CNBC. 25 Jun 2016.
·
·
"About Us:
CouponChaska". CouponChaska. Futinno
Internet Pvt Ltd. (India).
Retrieved 8 March 2017.
·
·
Gore, Dipti. "Coupon,
offers and deal listing website CouponChaska.com promises to get you the best
deal!". TechStory. TechStory Media
Pvt. Ltd. (India). Retrieved 8 March 2017.
·
·
"Flipkart
raises $160M more from Morgan Stanley, Vulcan Capital, Tiger Global,
others". VCCIRCLE.
·
·
"PepperTap
raises $36 million in fresh round of funding, led by Snapdeal". The Economic Times. Retrieved 4 May 2016.
·
·
"E-commerce:
Niche online ventures going where biggies of Amazon, Flipkart can’t". The Financial Express. 28 April 2015. Retrieved 4 May 2016.
·
·
"Royal
Enfield’s ‘Despatch’ sold out in 26 minutes". The Hindu. 2015-07-15. ISSN 0971-751X. Retrieved 2016-04-27.
·
·
"Sahil
Makhija: “At some point, a T-shirt will always outweigh a CD”". Rolling Stone India. Retrieved 4 May 2016.
·
·
"VoxPop
Clothing raises $1 million to expand portfolio with higher margins". timesofindia-economictimes. Retrieved 4 May 2016.
·
·
"Mahindra
Retail to integrate e-commerce business to single platform". timesofindia-economictimes. Retrieved 4 May 2016.
·
Sapna Agarwal. "Godrej
Nature’s Basket buys online grocer Ekstop.com". Mint.
Retrieved 4 May 2016.
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