Discount-tracking app
thrives from Russian slowdown
Send a link to a friend
[October 05, 2016]
By Olga Sichkar
MOSCOW
(Reuters) - A mobile phone application that helps Russian shoppers find
the best discount deals in supermarkets has reached more than two
million users, tapping into a new mood of thrift after the worst
economic crisis in years hit Russia.
Natalia Shagarina conceived the app while she was on maternity leave in
2012 as a niche product to allow women at home with young children to
stretch their household budgets by tracking down discounted goods.
But the economic crisis, caused by low oil prices and made worse by
Western sanctions imposed on Russia over the conflict in Ukraine,
created a market for anything that allows people to save on their
shopping bills.
"I was inventing a niche project ... but people started to use it
widely," Shagarina told Reuters.
"It turned out like with Viagra whose inventors had thought they were
developing a medicine solely for people with vascular problems," said
Shagarina, 36, who previously worked for Russia's biggest Internet group
Yandex.
The Russian economic crisis led to a slump in gross domestic product of
3.7 percent in 2015 and steep falls in real income. However, it has
thrown up opportunities for some businesses. Sales of vegetable seeds
are up as more Russians grow their own food, budget supermarkets have
expanded, and fast food chains are performing well.
Shagarina's app, launched in 2013, covers promotions at 160 retail
chains across Russia. Called Edadeal, it has been downloaded 6 million
times and has around 2.4 million active users who shop with it at least
once a month.
It has attracted investments from Yandex which bought 10 percent of its
shares in 2015, providing funds for development. Yandex keeps financing
the start-up by giving it loans which may be converted into equity.
Shagarina said she is considering international expansion, possibly in
the Netherlands.
German group Bonial.com operates similar apps in several markets,
including Germany, Brazil and the United States. The group launched a
Russian version, but it is no longer operating.
[to top of second column] |
Natalia Shagarina, inventor of Edadeal mobile phone application
tracking down discount deals in supermarkets, demonstrates the
application at a cafe in Moscow, Russia, October 4, 2016.
REUTERS/Maxim Zmeyev
A
Nielsen survey showed that 62 percent of Russian consumers pay attention to
special offers and 33 percent seek them out.
Shagarina's app allows users to search for discounts on food and household items
within selected product categories, for chosen brands or in stores near their
homes.
Shagarina said the start-up's audience has been rising by half a million people
every six months. Middle-income consumers account for 65 percent of users, and
around one quarter are men.
"I open Edadeal in the evening, do a list and go to several stores where they
have the products I need with deals," said Sergei, 37, a manager at a Russian
firm, whose monthly income dropped to 50,000 roubles ($800) from 150,000 roubles.
"I almost stopped buying goods at full price because it does not make sense."
($1 = 62.4400 roubles)
(Reporting by Olga Sichkar; Additional reporting by Anton Zverev and Anastasia
Teterevleva; Writing by Maria Kiselyova; Editing by Christian Lowe and Alexandra
Hudson)
[© 2016 Thomson Reuters. All rights
reserved.] Copyright 2016 Reuters. All rights reserved. This material may not be published,
broadcast, rewritten or redistributed.
|