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That piece, Flipkart, Focus and Free Advice, appeared in DNA on June 27th, 2015.
My earlier pieces on the same topic:
- Flipkart vs Amazon: Beware the Whispering Death - 20th April '15 (blog, dna)
- Mobile Apps: There’s Something (Profitable) About Your Privacy - 18th April '15 (blog, dna)
- Mobile advertising and how the numbers game can be misleading - 14th April '15 (blog, dna)
- Is Flipkart losing focus - 12th April '15 (blog, dna)
Flipkart, Focus, and Free Advice – Shipping Charges Also Waived!
What is one to make of a statement like this - “India is not mobile-first, but mobile-only country[1]”? Especially so if it is from the co-founder of the largest ecommerce company in India, and it turns out the company does not even have an app for the Apple iPad?
I have written at length on the distractions that seem to have been plaguing Flipkart and why it cannot afford to drop its guard in this fiercely contested space[2] - especially in light of all the noise surrounding its mobile ambitions. Somewhat paradoxically, this post is about offering advice to Flipkart that calls for some diversification!
As a logical next step, I wanted to take a look at Flipkart’s mobile apps – both on the iOS and Android platforms – to see how well they were executing on their very bold ambitions. As an aside, I also wanted to see if these (and competitive) mobile apps were leveraging all the computing power now available on tap inside these tiny devices. After all, apart from the recent – and amazing – advances Google has made in its voice-based search capabilities[3], there was this stunning demo from Hound[4] that gave a glimpse into the huge advances that voice-recognition, search, and machine-learning technologies have made in the last decade.
#MustRead - what next, e-tailing ? @flipkart Flipkart, Focus and Free Advice http://t.co/zincR6LS9D via @dna @AbhinavAgarwal
— Harini Calamur (@calamur) June 28, 2015