A war of attrition has
broken out between Jumia and Konga with both retailers now set for a
showdown, Both are barely two years old in Nigeria, but the cold war
brewing between the nation's foremost online retailers, Jumia and Konga,
is threatening to hit the court room.
Owned
by Berlin-based Rocket Internet, Jumia Nigeria opened its e-commerce
operations in 2012. It has since risen to become a major player in online retail shopping in Nigeria.
The company says it now controls
70 per cent of the Nigerian online retail market and has dealt with
close to a million customers since it began operations. One month after
Jumia Nigeria launched, Konga.com began its operations to tap into the
largely untapped Nigerian online retail shopping. The company currently describes itself as "Nigeria's largest online mall."
Disputed domain names
After commencing its Nigeria operations in June 2012 and just before
Konga launched, Rocket Internet proceeded to register about 10 domain
names related to Konga outside Nigeria, a move the Konga management said
was designed to "stifle" its growth outside Nigeria.
The domain names, registered by
one Arnt Jeschke on behalf of Rocket Internet, include konga.cd (Cote
d'Ivoire); konga.cm (Cameroun); konga.ly(Libya); konga.ma (Mauritius);
konga.mu (Morocco); konga.mw (Malawi); konga.sc (Seychelles); konga.sh (Saint Helena); konga.co.ke (Kenya); and konga.co.za (South Africa).
Ifeanyi Abraham, Public Relations Strategist
at Konga.com, described Rocket Internet's registration of the domain
names as "destructive competition." "This company (Rocket Internet) has
proceeded to buy and sit on the domain names of Konga across the
continent," Mr. Abraham said.
"These domain names were taken
even before Konga had even had the chance to breathe, and we can see
them trying to do the same by establishing businesses in different other
areas where Nigerians/Africans are trying to innovate.
"They have registered 11 domain
names related to Konga outside Nigeria and are taking other steps to
stifle the growth of Nigerian businesses in the sectors they want to
dominate," Mr. Abraham added. With 56 million internet subscribers
and 120 million active cell phone lines as at September 2013, according
to the Nigerian Communication Commission, e-commerce has continued to
witness an impressive growth over the past few years. "Since it was
first noticed and it got reported on TechLoy (a technology news website) and we have gone ahead to request for these domain names without getting them returned," said Mr. Abraham.
"We are going ahead with legal actions
in the different jurisdictions where these domain names were
registered," he added. Stiff competition Both online vendors report over
100,000 unique daily visitors, thus helping to grow Nigeria's online
shopping value by 25 per cent; from N49.9 billion in 2010 to N62.4
billion in 2011, according to Ngozi Okonjo-Iweala, Nigeria's Finance
Minister, while presenting President Goodluck Jonathan's mid-term report
last year.
On a recent visit to Jumia
Nigeria's office at Ikeja, Lagos, dozens of staff worked from their
computers inside an open, air-conditioned office that doubles as a
warehouse.
Two smartly dressed young
graduates, who had arrived for a scheduled job interview, filled the
visitors' register at the security post outside the building. In the
space for 'Purpose of Visit' in the book, one of them spelt 'Jumai'
instead of 'Jumia.' Such mistakes are common for prospective customers
searching for Jumia online for the first time, Afam Anyika, Jumia's Head
of Offline Marketing, told PREMIUM TIMES.
Last year, as the cold war over
the domain was gathering momentum, a Google search for 'Jumai'
redirected to konga.com, a move perceived as retaliatory from the
latter, Jumia officials said. Mr. Anyika said that they didn't raise
dust over the act, as with numerous other acts from other business
competitors. Jumia wouldn't comment on why it registered domain names
bearing Konga's name.
"There's no comment from Jumia on
this. We are constantly are focused on the customers and our operations
and staying number one in this market," Mr. Anyika said. Alexa, an
internet data provider, ranks both companies neck and neck in its Top
500 websites in Nigeria. Jumia, at an 18th position, is followed closely
by Konga at Number 19. Mr. Anyika said they are yet to receive any
notice of legal action as threatened by Konga. "This year we are
focusing on customer appreciation.
We will be two in June. We've had
series of similar complaints in the past but we've chosen to ignore all
of them. We don't want to be distracted," Mr. Anyika added.
The U.S. Anticybersquatting
Consumer Protection Act of 1999 states that people who register domain
names that are trademarks with the sole aim of selling the rights of the
domain name to the trademark owner is liable to civil action. In Italy,
the registration of a domain name which is identical to a trademark
infringes unfair competition rules and trademark law.
Although the incident did not
happen in Nigeria, the country does not appear to have a Registration
Authority for the assignment and management of domain names within the
country, according to Paul Usoro, a Communications lawyer.
"In Nigeria, we do have Copyright
and trademark laws (no competition law yet) but there has been no
instance of adjudication thereon in regard to domain name registration
mainly because no attention has been paid to this yet in Nigeria," Mr.
Usoro said.
Monday, 17 February 2014
Subscribe to:
Post Comments (Atom)
0 comments:
Post a Comment