Crokodeals: A Moroccan E-Auction Monster Heads to the UAE
A new way of tackling e-commerce and e-auction is coming to
the Middle East from the heart of Morocco, through Crokodeals, the first
entertainment shopping and auction website in MENA. Originally
named Clicoo and launched almost a year ago in April 2011, the
website is rebranding and relaunching in the Gulf in May 2012.
Crokodeals started as an e-auction website where users place bids
on retail items, but unlike traditional auction sites like eBay,
the brand-new inventory is offered only by Crokodeals. The bidding
system itself is different as well- users who place the lowest
unique bid (meaning no one else bids the same amount) above a
certain minimum, win the auction. Therefore bidding becomes less
about swooping in at the last minute, and more about the art of
guessing an unpopular number.
The revenue stream then comes from a cost-per-bid system not on the
actual auctions placed, since the margins. "The main objective is
for users to have fun while bidding, an experience they can
remember", says Karim Dakki, Managing Director at Crokodeals, who
joined the team a year after Clicoo launched and focuses on the
site's GCC expansion strate.
The logo of the platform and the overall spirit of the design,
featuring a crocodile dressed up in a suit, gives it a bit of a
game-like look and feel, which is maybe one of the reasons why the
majority of the revenues come from university students. In fact, 5%
of Crokodeal subscribers (almost all of which are university
students) generate 80% of its revenues. Dakki explains that these
subscribers developed bidding skills after getting to know the
concept, and are now managing to consistently buy items at 20%
of their original value and then resell them afterwards for 80% of
their original value, an easy way to make a decent amount of pocket
money while in school!
In addition to paying through credit cards, the platform has
implemented mobile payment through SMS packages, which was a good
solution for their customer based, since not all university
students own a credit card, and the MENA region still loves to pay
via cash. Bids increased thanks to this service, but since
operators take a 50% commission on the SMS revenues, and need up to
3-4 months to wire the money to Crokodeals, the site plans to
expand soon to more credit card-friendly markets, like the UAE.
"Operators need to implement micro-payment solutions to make it
easier for people to buy online," says Dakki.
The Crokodeals team combines experience from both the Moroccan and
Emirati e-commerce ecosystems and investing them to set higher the
success chances. "Because the online market in the UAE is much more
developed, we have been testing the beta version here. That process
has taught us many things that we have then applied in the Moroccan
market", says Dakki. "The members of our team in Morocco also bring
to the table extensive experience in customer service and customer
behavior, which applies in this market and throughout the
region."
Clicoo was initially launched with the savings of the company
founders, and the company broke even one year after its launch,
once it reached 22 thousand subscribers. The company itself
transitioned as well, becoming the parent company to trademarked
brand Crokodeals.
Desipte the unique model, the site is not without competitors-
similar platform uniqueauction.ae recently launched in the UAE,
and competition is rising in Morocco. In order to differentiate
themselves, the Crokodeals team is preparing to go regional,
suggesting competition auctions between countries to make it more
fun, and looking into funding to launch a broader marketing
campaign.
Since the concept of lowest unique auction is relatively new to the
region, one main challenge of the team has been educating their
customers about exactly how the system works, so that they feel
encouraged to come back and bid more (and they've created the below
video to reveal the process). Nevertheless, funding and payment
gateway solutions are still a challenge that Crokodeals (and many
an e-commerce company in the region) is struggling with at the
moment.