Showing posts with label Groupon Stores. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Groupon Stores. Show all posts

Sunday, December 19, 2010

Groupon Stores: Implications for Groupon

In my last post I discussed the weak Network Effects of Groupon Business Model. Groupon clearly understands this problem of weak (or, lack of) network effects; Group CEO Andrew Mason said Groupon is the  "N Sync of Websites", and acknowledged that Group Buying is not a winner takes all market. Groupon also has a long line merchants waiting to run their deals in the Groupon site. One way to increase the network effect is to become a deal marketplace for local businesses. Groupon will drive traffic, and merchants run deal on a pay for performance model. Not surprisingly, Groupon recently announced the launch of ‘Groupon Stores’; according to Groupon’s blog, “With Groupon Stores, businesses can now create and launch their own deals whenever they want. Think of it as the online equivalent of a merchant’s physical storefront.”. The blog also says “Today things are different – our biggest problem is that demand is so high, merchants often wait months to be featured. And while we once only had a few thousand customers per city, now we have hundreds of thousands (Chicago just added its millionth subscriber!) – making it increasingly difficult to find one deal that satisfies everyone”

Some of the implications of Groupon Stores for Groupon that come to my mind are:-

Strengthen Network Effects. Surely, introduction of Groupon Stores will significantly help several hundreds of merchants to run their own deals in Groupon. This is likely to attract even more users, and contribute to the existing weak network effects.

Scaling business without costs. Because merchants would be signing up individually, there will be limited requirement of sales force, and since merchants will run their own deals, there will be no added requirement for copywriters. Essentially, the cost of adding a new merchant under Groupon Store is not significant.

 “Freemium” Customer Acquisition model. Groupon Stores allows merchants to try the effectiveness of Groupon, at a low cost, before they sign up for the Home Page Deal with Groupon.  For Groupon, this is also an easier way to acquire new customers.

Deal discoverability and Conflict of Interest:  Users primary discover deals through the daily emails that Groupon pushes to its users. In Groupon Stores, there will be some algorithm that Groupon will run to select and feed the best deals to its users. I see a conflict of interest here: Because Groupon takes 10% of the deal value, all other things being equal, it is incentivized to push the deals that has more revenue potential.  For Groupon, merchant A offering a 50% discount off massage deal worth $250 is more likely to be worth less than merchant B offering a similar service for $100, or worth less than merchant C offering boating trip worth $300. I want to see how Groupon is going to balance the different sets of incentives, and feeds the deals.

Need for good Search and Recommendation Engines. I suspect that it might be possible for users to directly visit Groupon’s site and browse for deals.  I hope Groupon builds a powerful recommendation engine to help the user discover the products/services (s)he  may like.  Also, Groupon must have a powerful search engine to help users search for deals.

Need to Manage Merchant Entropy.  In an open for all model, Groupon is also likely to attract merchants who are less than ideal to do business with. There might be an increased requirement for customer support, and fraud prevention. What if the merchant doesn’t honor the deal? Groupon will refund the money to the user, but what systems are going to be available for the users to give ratings to merchants? Can other users base their purchases of deals, on the ratings of the merchants?  As the number of merchants grows, how can Groupon keep the climate of trust intact?

If not executed well, Groupon is likely to enter the murky waters that eBay is struggling to get out. That said, I am excited to see how the Groupon Stores changes the game for local businesses. 

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Saturday, December 18, 2010

Network Effects in Groupon Business Model

With 40 million subscribers from over 300 markets from 35 countries, and with 20 million groupons already sold as of date, Groupon is a raging success.  Groupon provides a real “Pay for Performance” marketing model for local businesses, helping them get new customers using the power of viral web marketing.  Groupon also recently started providing Deal Statistics including aggregate buyer demographics such as gender, age and Zip code, share of purchases bought as gifts, distribution of sales by time etc, to merchants running the deals. Having such data will help the merchants to better understand their customers, and make product offerings and their marketing campaigns more focused to their customers.

But how defensible is Groupon’s market position? The barriers to entry in group buying business are so low, that as per Groupon CEO Andrew Mason, there are 500 Groupon clones in the market. Unlike a true marketplace such as eBay, there are limited network efforts in the Groupon’s business model.  The network effects of Groupon is induced by

  •  40million subscribers, who attract more merchants to want run deals at Groupon, and hence more deals for the users, attracting even more users.
  •  More merchants would mean deals available in different products and services, and Groupon can run more personalized deals to cater for subsets of users.
  •  Because there are more users, the chances of any deal going through are much higher, resulting in more successful deals, which add value to both user and the merchant, attracting even more users and merchants.
  • Also more users, and more deals will give more data to mine, and will significantly improve the personalization algorithms, resulting in better personalized deals, which adds value to users.


A pictorial representation of network effects in Groupon Business model:-
Network Effects in Groupon Business Model

However, for users and merchants, there are no barriers to exit. What stops a user from signing up for a deal elsewhere? What stops a merchant from running the deal in another site offering similar access to users? I think the current business model of Groupon at best induces weak network effects, and is completely vulnerable to competitive forces. There is no stickyness in the system, and there are no switching costs for any of the stakeholders. Groupon can increase the stickyness by rapidly growing and having a large user base which will be attractive to the merchants, and vice versa. But  even a strong network effect is not a guarantee for success, and in fact network effects alone have never been enough to make users stick to a product/service for long.  The best example is Facebook, which dethroned MySpace with a better technology and product.  Users look for value, and merchants look for profits; In a free market, customers (users and merchants) will use that service that maximizes their utility. Groupon is no exception to this established principle in market economics.

Further, the network effect in Groupon business model, albeit weak, is induced by symbiotic growth of number of users and number of  merchants.While Groupon has no added cost in scaling up its user base, (in fact, it added 3million users in just one week), it is a different story when it comes to adding merchants, and running deals. Groupon has a significant number of sales persons who acquire merchants, and copywriters who write attractive ads for the deals, on behalf of the merchants. In order to scale up the number of merchants, Groupon must also increase its sales force, and copy writers; scaling comes at a cost, and it will likely reduce the slope o the hockey stick in the Groupon’s financial graphs.

It is not that Groupon is not aware of these vulnerabilities. In fact Groupon appears to be taking significant steps to defend the fertile group buying market they created from scratch. Recently, Groupon has announced their plan for introducing "Groupon Stores", which will enable any merchant to run their own deals in Groupon. I have discussed about the possible implications of Groupon Stores, for Groupon, in my next post.

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