That may look like a startling claim coming from an e-commerce company, but Flipkart chief executive officer and co-founder Sachin Bansal believes that is true.
The company, which recently hit the run rate of $1 billion in gross merchandise value ahead of the target date, is the largest mobile phone retailer in the country, counting online and offline stores, estimates show.
Flipkart has confirmed that.
In books, too, e-commerce companies are clocking better numbers than offline stores, Bansal told Business Standard in an interaction. In fact, the latest Nielsen Book Scan Report pegs Flipkart’s book sales share at 45-50 per cent of the organised retail market.
“No player, online or offline, can have a larger share of the market than that,” an industry expert pointed out.
“We should soon do the same in electronics,” said Bansal, without sharing the numbers.
While Flipkart is a leading outlet for consumer electronics, other e-commerce players such as Snapdeal, Amazon and eBay have significant share of the electronics market, too.
The growing popularity of electronics online had recently prompted companies such as Lenovo, Nikon and Toshiba to come out with advisories for buyers, warning them against purchases made through online retailers, who may not be authorised dealers.
While electronics is the largest category for Flipkart, it is betting big on apparel and fashion.
“We are going to be leaders in the apparel space by the middle or end of the year,” said Flipkart’s Bansal.
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