These are my notes from Oliver Rippel‘s talk at NetProphet 2011. Oliver is the CEO of MIH, a group company overseeing African and Middle East online properties like Mocality and kalahari.net.
The state of e-commerce in Africa
- As soon as e-commerce becomes more than 1% of retail sales, that’s when it becomes mainstream
- US not the most successful e-commerce market – Korea is, with 9% of retail sales online. US is at 4%
- E-commerce in Africa is still nascent:
- Egypt – 22% Internet penetration, less than 0.01% online retail penetration
- Nigeria – 29% Internet penetration, less than 0.01% online retail penetration
- South Africa
- 6 million Internet users, 12% penetration
- 0.4% online retail penetration
- 16.7% credit card penetration
- 14 e-commerce sites in Top 100 SA sites
Positive e-commerce macro-indicators in Africa
- Big average projected real GDP growth
- There is a growing middle class of 320m Africans
- High mobile penetration (World average: 60%; South Africa: 92%)
- The promise of accessible and affordable broadband Internet is there
Lessons for building a winning e-commerce business in Africa
MIH’s focus is on the full e-commerce value chain
The brands cover the whole purchase cycle: awareness, interest, decision, action, post sale, resale
- Embrace mobile
- Leverage offline
- Go where the users are – online marketing on its own simply won’t work
- Go to shopping malls and put up posters – whatever works
- Cash is king
- 50m million banks accounts in Africa, 95% of transactions are cash-based
- The only mobile payment system that is scaling is M-Pesa in Kenya: P2P payments
- They are converting a cash economy into a digital economy, so that can now also be used for e-commerce
- Build trust
- Open marketplace model is inadequate in low trust early stage environment – unlike eBay
- Instead, MIH uses controlled marketplaces that reduce barriers for buyers by building a trusted brand