Flipkart
apologizes to customers for Big Billion Day sale glitches
Bangalore/New Delhi: Flipkart co-founders Sachin Bansal and Binny Bansal apologized to customers on Tuesday for pushing up prices of some
products, cancelling orders, inadequate product stock and other snafus on
Monday, when it hosted its Big Billion Day sale.
Flipkart said that it took just 10 hours to hit
its target of $100 million in gross merchandise value (GMV), or the value of
goods sold on the site, on Monday. The online retailer had been marketing its
Big Billion Day sale for more than 10 days and it offered discounts of up to
90% on gadgets such as Nokia Lumia phones and Samsung Galaxy tablets.
However, thousands of customers complained on
social media sites that products were sold out on Flipkart quicker than they
could hit “buy” and that the company intentionally took up the prices of some
products before the sale so as to make its discounts seem bigger. Flipkart’s
website also crashed at times due to heavy traffic and some customers saw their
orders being cancelled due to unavailability of products.
Many of these angry shoppers ended up shopping
at Flipkart’s rivals, Amazon or Snapdeal, both of which were also offering special promotional offers and
deep discounts.
“Yesterday was a big day for us. And we really wanted
it to be a great day for you. But at the end of the day, we know your
experience was less than pleasant. We did not live up to the promises we made
and for that we are really and truly sorry,” the Bansals, who aren’t related,
wrote in a joint email to customers on Tuesday.
Flipkart conceded its preparation was
inadequate.
“And though we saw unprecedented interest in our
products and traffic like never before, we also realized that we were not
adequately prepared for the sheer scale of the event. We didn’t source enough
products and deals in advance to cater to your requirements. To add to this,
the load on our server led to intermittent outages, further impacting your
shopping experience on our site,” the Bansals wrote.
In the race to win customers, e-commerce firms
Flipkart, Amazon and Snapdeal are battling each other in a significantly
costlier New Age version of the cola wars, using innovative tactics such as
cheeky advertising taglines and hashtags on social media to undercut one
another.
This marketing war reached its peak—both online
and offline—on Monday.
Snapdeal, promoted by Jasper Infotech Pvt. Ltd, ran a print media campaign on Monday mocking
Flipkart’s sale with the tagline: “For others it’s a big day. For us, today is
no different.” While anyone who typed BigBillionDay.com on their browsers
landed on the Amazon.in site.
To counter Flipkart’s #bigbillionday hashtag,
Snapdeal came up with #checksnapdealtoday, which was one of the top used
hashtags on the social media site Twitter on Monday. A hashtag is a common
message in comments by people on social media. Flipkart’s sale was mentioned in
more than 15,000 hashtags, a mix of favourable and critical comments, on
Twitter and Facebook on Monday, according to a person familiar with the matter.
“We only wanted to communicate to the user to
check Snapdeal, and the reason why it was trending yesterday was because of the
story that unfolded where there was a lot of backlash for some of the
competition out there and people started checking Snapdeal and started sharing
“checksnapdeal” and it went viral,” said Sandeep Komaravelly, senior vice-president of marketing at Snapdeal.
Snapdeal and Amazon also purchased key “search
words” such as the names of mobile phone brands and others, so that a user
searching for these brands would be shown ads of the e-commerce sites.
“Not surprised that Snapdeal and Amazon worked
to piggyback for free on the big Flipkart marketing campaign—it’s a great
example of guerrilla marketing,” said Ravi Gururaj, an angel investor and member of the Nasscom Product and
Executive Council. “In today’s hyper-competitive, multi-channel, noisy
marketing landscape, companies must build competitor and community
‘involvement’ or ‘interference’ into any marketing campaign they plan. It’s a
free-for-all world out there and often the company paying the big bucks for the
original campaign idea finds itself drowned out in the ensuing hullabulla.”
Rahul kumar Gupta
PGDM,3rd SEM
Source:-MINT
No comments:
Post a Comment