Cross-border e-commerce considered a growth rocket for Sub Saharan Africa retailers
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CAPE TOWN, South Africa, February 27, 2017/ --
DHL Express (www.dpDHL.com),
the world’s leading international express services provider, has
published research highlighting the significant growth opportunity for
retailers and manufacturers with an international online product
offering. The report – The 21st Century Spice Trade: A Guide to the Cross-Border E-Commerce Opportunity
– looks in detail at the markets and products that offer the highest
growth potential, the motivations and preferences of customers making
international online purchases and the success factors for online
retailers that wish to expand overseas. It focuses in particular on the
opportunity for premium products and service offerings, with higher
basket values accounting for a significantly higher proportion of orders
in cross-border transactions.
The
report reveals that cross-border e-commerce offers aggregate growth
rates not available in most other retail markets: cross-border retail
volumes are predicted to increase at an annual average rate of 25%
between 2015 and 2020 (from USD 300 Billion to USD 900 Billion) – twice
the pace of domestic e-commerce growth. Online retailers are also
boosting sales by 10-15% on average simply by extending their offering
to international customers. An additional boost comes from including a
premium service offering: retailers and manufacturers that incorporated a
faster shipping option into their online stores grew 1.6 times faster
on average than other players.
“Contrary
to what many retailers think, cross-border shipping is actually simple
and retailers in Sub Saharan Africa are perfectly positioned to take
advantage of international opportunities. ‘Brand Africa’ is something
that has increased exponentially in popularity in recent years and it’s
time for retailers to remove the boundaries and open up their business
to seamless international trade. Often, retailers choose not to promote
their businesses internationally, and worse yet, will turn down
international sales interests due to the misconception that it’s too
difficult to manage and deliver,” says Hennie Heymans, CEO for DHL
Express Sub Saharan Africa.
“Globally,
our experience is that virtually every product category has the
potential to upgrade to become premium, both by developing higher
quality luxury editions and by offering superior levels of service
quality to meet the demands of less price-sensitive customers. The
opportunity to ‘go global’ and ‘go premium’ is available to retailers in
all markets and our global door-to-door time definite network is
well-positioned to support retailers looking to develop a premium
service offering or directly reach new international markets without
the need to invest in distribution or warehousing. In Sub Saharan
Africa, the opportunity for Intra Africa trade should not be ignored.
‘Going global’ does not only mean trading outside of the African
continent, Africa is home to one of the world’s fastest growing middle
class, with an appetite for quality products and services. There are
also a number of trade blocs in place to support Intra Africa trade
growth and retailers should take advantage of this captive market.”
The
report is based primarily on research and in-depth interviews conducted
by a leading global management consultancy, as well as more than 1,800
responses to a proprietary exporter survey of retailers and
manufacturers in six countries. It casts a light on the evolving face of
e-commerce, with both supply and demand becoming more sophisticated
Manufacturers are increasingly taking advantage of e-commerce to move to
direct retail models – bypassing the ‘middleman’ and offering their
products online to the end customer – and expect to grow 30% faster in
cross-border e-commerce than other retailer groups. Customers in many
markets are also becoming more discerning, citing product availability
and trust, as well as attractive offers, as the motivating factors for
shopping with overseas online retailers.
The
main challenges highlighted by consumers to cross-border purchases
relate to logistics, trust, price and customer experience. At the same
time, online retailers can take a number of relatively easy steps to
identify, cultivate and service demand from abroad. The report noted
that the e-commerce trend has given birth to a new eco-system of
facilitators and off-the-shelf solutions (such as payment providers and
programs that localize a website’s check-out experience for the
visitor), helping retailers to adapt their offering to the digital world
and to transact with customers in foreign markets. Global logistics
partners can provide support in identifying the right trade-off between
centralized and local warehousing and fulfillment, while fast, reliable
and flexible delivery options can be an important tool in turning
speculative interest into long-term customer loyalty.
Distributed by APO on behalf of Deutsche Post DHL.
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Monday, February 27, 2017
Africa: Cross-border e-commerce considered a growth rocket for Sub Saharan Africa retailers
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