Strengthening market linkage through digital innovation and community support: SEWA Saamarth’s entry into e-commerce.

Strengthening market linkage through digital innovation and community support: SEWA Saamarth’s entry into e-commerce.

Access to markets is crucial for small and growing businesses to effectively meet consumer demand for their products and services. However, India’s 13.5 million women-led businesses face challenges due to lack of experience, smaller sizes, and discriminatory social norms. MSC’s partner, the SEWA Cooperative Federation, addresses these obstacles through its digital platform, Saamarth, which helps women-led collective enterprises sell their products online. Learn more about SEWA’s support for women entrepreneurs on our blog. More than 91% of women in India’s labor force work exclusively in the informal economy. They lack access to regular work, steady income, social security benefits, and bargaining power. Female small manufacturers and artisans must deal with intermediaries to ensure their products reach end consumers. These intermediaries often charge high commissions and prevent these women entrepreneurs from being able to access suppliers, retailers, and networks of other producers in the industry transparently. This hinders their ability to build their skills and expertise. Access to markets is critical to ensure small and growing businesses meet the customer demand for their goods and services effectively. However, India’s 13.5 million women-led enterprises face unique challenges in access to markets. We have outlined a few such challenges below: Figure 1: Challenges women-led enterprises face Women-led businesses (WLBs) across different sectors and geographies experience these challenges. We have outlined a few such examples from MSC’s extensive work in this space below: Figure 2: Case study: Challenges in access to the market Many WLBs in India struggle to identify buyers, adapt to new markets, and expand their businesses. Digital solutions can act as a catalyst to enable women entrepreneurs and women’s collective enterprises to get a head start in access to local markets, communicate with suppliers and service providers, and connect their products and services with potential buyers. Information and communication technology (ICT) can also facilitate new entrepreneur networks countrywide. This can help women support each other through shared advice, opportunities, and business development strategies. Many programs have adopted ICT-driven solutions to bridge the global south’s market access gap for women entrepreneurs. We supported our partner, the SEWA Cooperative Federation, in our women-led business program, funded by the MetLife Foundation. We supported their women’s cooperatives and collective enterprises through the development of a platform that they could use to gain wider market access. SEWA Cooperative Federation initially supported its collectives to sell their products on existing private and government-supported e-commerce platforms. However, the collectives faced challenges, such as lack of discovery, high cost of marketing, long turnaround time to fulfill orders for handmade products, complicated backend systems, need for laborious documentation, and high commissions. The collectives learned from this setback and built their proprietary e-commerce platform, SEWA Saamarth, to bridge the gap between women’s collective enterprises and the digital market. This platform seeks to solve the challenges that women’s collectives face in India. SEWA Saamarth The SEWA Cooperative Federation organizes female workers from various sectors into cooperatives. These include the farming, crafts, and services sector. This federation promotes women’s economic empowerment and independence through businesses owned and operated by women. Its main goal is to offer a consistent support system for these enterprises, within the country and globally, to ensure their sustainability in finance and decision-making. The federation supports more than 100 cooperatives owned and led by women in six key areas—agriculture, dairy, crafts, services, savings and credit, and labor. It seeks to achieve complete employment and self-sufficiency for women in informal sectors. Additionally, it serves as a crucial network that enables cooperatives to help each other create value chains, market and sell their products, and access financial services. SEWA Saamarth is a platform developed by the SEWA Cooperative Federation. It seeks to help women’s collective businesses reach online and offline markets easily. This platform is for cooperatives initiated by SEWA and women’s enterprises across India that operate on cooperative principles. It allows them to sell their products online. SEWA Saamarth currently offers a variety of goods, such as handicrafts, traditional snacks, and natural beauty products for hair and skin. It ensures that these women’s collectives are paid fairly for their products. Under this model, Saamarth does not charge any commissions or marketing fees to women-led businesses. At present, six women’s collectives sell their products through the Saamarth platform. These also include three SEWA-promoted cooperatives. The Saamarth platform is structured around five core values: Saamarth currently sells handicrafts, snacks, and haircare products. It seeks to expand to different product categories to provide other women-led cooperatives and enterprises with a platform to sell their products online. The way forward MSC has been supporting Saamarth across various areas. These include a multichannel marketing strategy, development of a UI and UX that provides easy navigation and functionality, and ways to bring customer insights to refine its product, channel, pricing, and promotion strategy. MSC envisions that Saamarth will become a go-to-market access platform and launchpad for emerging and growing WLBs across India. Saamarth demonstrates three key strategies to bridge the market access gap for women’s enterprises: Digital platforms, supportive ecosystems, and community networks level the playing field to forge a future where women’s enterprises flourish. Additionally, they create a new playing field where women’s businesses can grow, innovate, and lead. We pave the way for a more inclusive economy where women’s entrepreneurship is supported and celebrated as a cornerstone of global development when we harness these strategies. SEWA Saamarth has been striving to become better, efficient, and market-led with each passing day to become an established e-commerce platform.