Inside Jeff Bezos’ first investment in Indonesian e-commerce


Billionaire Amazon founder Jeff Bezos made his first investment in a Southeast Asian e-commerce start-up last month.

But it’s in not one of the region’s billion-dollar unicorns. It’s in a mom-and-pop shop start-up that’s been around for less than two years.

And its founders? Some of Bezos’ former employees.

“It was incredibly fortunate and a huge fan boy moment for me,” Ula CEO Nipun Mehra, 40, told CNBC Make It.

Business inspired by Bezos

Indonesian e-commerce start-up Ula is a wholesale marketplace aiming to modernize the country’s millions of mom-and-pop kiosks, or warungs, by providing inventory and delivery services as well as financing.

Founded in January 2020 by CEO Mehra, the company has thrived under a pandemic-induced shift to digital, so far raising over $117 million in funding from big names like Tencent and Lightspeed Venture Partners.

One among them is Bezos, whose family office Bezos Expeditions invested an undisclosed sum after one of the start-up’s early backers told him about Ula.

The traditional way of doing e-commerce doesn’t work … So you have to find other ways of doing it.

Nipun Mehra

co-founder and CEO, Ula

Though Mehra has never met the billionaire founder, he worked under him as a software engineer at Amazon’s Seattle headquarters before joining e-commerce giant Flipkart in his native India.

Like Bezos, Mehra yearned to be an entrepreneur. But it wasn’t until years later, while working as an investor at Sequoia India, that he saw an opportunity to adapt the traditional e-commerce model for a new market: small food kiosks in Indonesia. 

Nipun Mehra, co-founder and CEO of Indonesian e-commerce marketplace Ula.

Ula

“The typical Amazon, Flipkart — or here in Southeast Asia we have Shopee, Lazada, Tokopedia and so on — has been more on the non-food side. Food is a very different way of running things,” said Mehra.

“Usually in emerging economies, their income profile is such that they have to buy frequently and in small baskets. The moment you get into that dynamic, the traditional way of doing e-commerce doesn’t work. You can’t deliver a three-, four-, five-dollar basket to somebody’s home and do it profitably … so you have to find other ways of doing it.”

Adapting e-commerce for Indonesia

Indonesia, with its vast population and fast-growing economy, is seen as a huge opportunity for entrepreneurs and investors. 

Central to that are the country’s millions of neighborhood kiosks, which sell fast moving consumer goods, like drinks and packaged food, as well as household items.

Indonesia is home to millions of street stalls, known as warungs, selling daily essentials such as food and household items.

Ula

They’re an integral part of society, especially in the smaller cities and provinces outside the capital Jakarta, accounting for almost three-quarters (72%) of the country’s $47 billion consumer goods sales.

Yet many still rely on traditional means of replenishing their supplies by shuttering their…



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