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Many US online companies are banking on international sites to help drive their growth

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Business Standard Mumbai
America's online giants have been busy abroad in recent weeks. EBay has acquired Baazee.com, an online auctions firm in India. Yahoo has launched Yisou, a speedy search engine in China.
Google has acquired a minority stake in Baidu, another Chinese search engine that had been viewed as China's Google. Wait a few weeks, and it's a safe bet that more international expansion plans will be rolled out amid the PR-driven sounding of trumpets and crashing of cymbals (metaphorically speaking, of course).
What's driving these international expansion plans? Even more important, what are the chances that they will succeed? Do the business models of U.S. internet firms lend themselves to being exported and transplanted overseas?
Experts at Wharton and elsewhere say that these world conquests are no sure thing. The ability to localise a global business can be a major challenge, they add, but if done right, over time such ventures can help offset slowdowns in the U.S. market.
Wharton management professor Raphael Amit points out that sometimes companies enter an international market only to retreat later. What works in the US may not apply internationally.
Although internet-based companies, with their lack of physical assets, might in theory be expected to have an easier time overseas, success is hardly guaranteed.
Take eBay's acquisition of Baazee, for instance. In June, the U.S. auctions behemoth announced that it would take over Baazee, which describes itself as India's biggest online marketplace, for a reported $50 million. Amit believes that the biggest hurdle eBay will face in making the deal work is dealing with the fact that most Indian consumers don't use credit cards.
Meanwhile, though the numbers are growing, at present internet penetration is fairly low. Eventually India is likely to be the second biggest market in the world behind China, but now the country has 17 million internet users, according to research firm IDC. That figure is expected to increase to 30 million in 2006, but still remains paltry for a country with a population topping 1 billion.
Amit isn't necessarily sceptical of eBay's forays abroad, but notes the company will have to overcome cultural norms. The ability to localise a global business is one of the biggest challenges, say experts.
"When you have a business model that works at home, the challenge is to find out what's critical for success and then look for ways to localise," says Adrian Tschoegl, an adjunct professor of management at Wharton. "You have to be cautious with the changes "� you just can't start fiddling around."
That's why companies like eBay, which also in 2003 acquired EachNet, an e-commerce company in China, increasingly buy a local player to enter a market.
Baazee, the largest private online marketplace in India with more than one million users, knows the local customs and payment systems and should therefore be able to show eBay how to operate.
According to Avnish Bajaj, chairman and co-CEO of Baazee, his company's "local expertise combined with eBay's global perspective" will fuel e-commerce in India.
Eric K Clemons, a Wharton professor of operations and information management, says that eBay's strategy is to "get speed fast and do anything it has to" in order to build scale.
According to Clemons, eBay's international strategy is to buy critical mass in global markets so it has a foothold to gather buyers and sellers.
So how will eBay's Baazee acquisition play out? Odds are that the move to India will work, but analysts such as Christa Sober at brokerage firm Thomas Weisel don't see any meaningful boost to eBay's international business until 2005, at the earliest.
CEO Meg Whitman noted in a statement that it's the "early days for e-commerce in India," but she sees a "great opportunity over the long term."
Tschoegl says eBay's buy-its-way-in strategy makes sense because it's a safer way to learn the local business. It's also the most popular way for internet giants to test overseas waters. Earlier this year, Yahoo bought Kelkoo, Europe's largest shopping-comparison site, and Expedia bought French travel site Anyway.com.
A recipe for failure would be a blind entry and seeking to rebuild US operations overseas. It's unlikely that eBay could enter India by pushing its PayPal payment system, charging listing fees and urging credit card use.
In contrast, Baazee doesn't charge a listing fee, but it does take a percentage of a final sale. Baazee users can pay in more ways "� check, credit card, bank transfer, its PayPal-like PaisaPay system and even in person with cash.
Google acknowledges the disadvantage young companies face in expanding abroad in its prospectus for its initial public offering. "Expansion into international markets is important to our long-term success, and our inexperience in the operation of our business outside the US increases the risk that our international expansion efforts will not be successful," says the document.
For its part, Amazon has had strong success in the United Kingdom, but it has struggled in France. The company recently laid off workers in that country as it consolidated operations with its U.K. business. Amazon faces stiff competition in France from local firms Cdiscount.com and FNAC.com.
Tschoegl says it is not surprising Amazon has had difficulties. Retailing and courting consumers is the toughest business to replicate abroad. Among the issues: advertising laws, consumer restrictions, local competition with closer supplier relationships and different means of payment.
Aside from local consumer tastes, Amazon must have credit card payments for its model to work, adds Amit. Amazon's international sites include Canada, the United Kingdom, Germany, Japan and France "� all countries where credit card usage is common.
"You probably won't see Amazon in China or India immediately," says Amit. "Credit cards are a big hurdle and a constraint on business."
Clemons says e-commerce players can minimise a lot of missteps if they simply keep in mind business basics and remember what flopped in the US. Before going overseas, e-commerce companies should examine whether they can fulfil a real need and know the population's similarities and differences compared to their U.S. customers.
In addition, a close study of how online markets function in the new locale is necessary. "If you're serious about e-commerce, you need to know the territory," says Clemons.
Global internet companies are upfront about the risks revolving around international expansion. Among some of the common risk factors noted in regulatory filings: cultural differences; longer payment cycles; laws favouring local competitors; credit risk and higher levels of payment fraud; legal and regulatory restrictions; currency exchange rate fluctuations; higher costs; diverting management attention.
Such risks are formidable, but for many high-fliers the biggest risk may be to stay home. EBay, for instance, is banking on its international sites to help drive the growth of the company, which Wall Street expects to be close to 50 per cent every year.
In the first quarter, international revenues accounted for 35 per cent of eBay's revenues, up from 30 per cent the previous year. "Slightly less than 50 per cent of eBay's total registered users are outside the US," says CIBC analyst Paul Keung in a research note.
As growth in the U.S. inevitably slows, companies like eBay, Yahoo and Amazon increasingly have to expand internationally to support their stock valuations. Each company, however, will face unique hurdles.
For eBay, it may be local laws restricting ties to banks and other financial institutions. Yahoo may have to restrict certain types of advertising deemed unacceptable to a local government. Amazon needs local ties to suppliers and facilities with customised systems.
Clemons says every e-commerce player will have a different reason for going overseas, but fundamentally it should earn more than it invests. "Not every company has to go international," says Clemons. "Not all of these markets are ones where if you don't go global, you die."
Reprinted with permission from Knowledge@Wharton (http://knowledge.wharton.upenn.edu), the online journal of research and business analysis of the Wharton School of the University of Pennsylvania)


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First Published: Jul 28 2004 | 12:00 AM IST

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