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'Buka' means opening, open, and a 'lapak' is a stall.
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So Bukalapak is basically 'open your stall.'
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They might look like your typical street stalls, but behind Indonesia's family-owned kiosks is a multibillion-dollar business.
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The population is like 270 million, so are you saying that 20 to 25% of people
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set up one of these shops? I'm like exactly!
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And as it helps small businesses modernize, Bukalapak hopes to revive an iconic segment
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of the country's economy.
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Every, maybe 50 or 100 houses, there will be one of these guys who opens a shop in their house and they like sell basic goods.
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Water, soap, coffee or whatever, right. They have been like that since the beginning and,
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as the economy grew, they are like basically left behind.
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Bukalapak is an Indonesian e-commerce marketplace designed to help the country's
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millions of mom-and-pop kiosks, known as warungs, to come online.
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Today, the company boasts tens of millions of customers across the sprawling archipelago.
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But when Bukalapak was founded in 2010 by Achmad Zaky,
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it was simply as a way to help his neighbors.
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CEO Rachmat Kaimuddin told me more.
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My predecessor, Zaky, one day went back to his hometown and was looking around, and he saw all
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these small businesses, his neighbors, and he was like taken aback and realized like, okay,
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these guys have looked the same for decades.
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And now I know technology, I've learned about the internet and everything,
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and I wonder how could I use technology to help people improve, do better.
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So, Achmad, who was then a 23-year-old student,
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teamed up with his friends Fajrin Rasyid and Nugroho Herucahyono from the
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Bandung Institute of Technology to create a site to help small businesses sell online.
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The capital he used to start this company is just the registration fee to register the website,
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and it's like 80,000 rupiah or maybe about like $5 or so. That is the seed capital of Bukalapak.
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Soon, Bukalapak was live, acting as a third-party intermediary to
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support purchases between consumers and merchants.
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But the company's real breakthrough came some years later.
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In 2017, the company launched Mitra Bukalapak to help these shops compete with modern retailers
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by offering additional online services such as bill payments and phone top-ups.
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Mitra Bukalapak also connects these warungs to consumer goods distributors,
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narrowing their supply chain, lowering the cost price of their wares
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and increasing the profit margins for these micro businesses.
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In the same year, the company, which earns a commission for each transaction,
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reached a billion-dollar valuation.
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Khailee Ng, managing partner at 500 Startups, was one of Bukalapak's early backers.
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When I first met the Bukalapak founders, like I was very,
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very impressed by how not only competent they were but how local they were.
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They so deeply understand life outside of tier-one cities.
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So I think that their kind of local DNA,
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it really translated through what the business eventually became.
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In January 2020, after a decade at the helm,
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Achmad stepped down as CEO, 41-year-old Rachmat, a former banker, was selected as his successor.
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Achmad, who now runs an entrepreneurship foundation, still holds an advisory role
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with the company, while co-founders Fajrin and Nugroho have both left the firm.
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I think Zaky basically saying like, look, I've led this company from
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zero and it's probably time for me to extract myself.
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We probably need someone who can make this, the company that I built, more professional,
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bigger, and we see that you could help us do that. And I was like, okay. Really?
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For Rachmat, it was an opportunity he couldn't refuse.
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There's a lot of discussion on the values and the mission. That is my cross, right, to bear, right.
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The mission is we need to serve the underserved. We are e-commerce, we need to improve lives
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not only for profit but also for the betterment of society.
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Within Rachmat's first 100 days in the job, the pandemic struck. The resultant lockdowns hit the
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millions of warungs and small and medium-sized enterprises hard. Bukalapak was at a crossroads.
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We need to ensure that the SMEs can still transact. The only way to do that now, or
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at the time, was online, right. So, our task is to create a much more efficient onboarding process.
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Failure is not an option. We cannot just give up and say like, okay,
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Covid, maybe let's take a break for a year. People actually need us.
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E-commerce, meanwhile, has been one of the pandemic's big winners.
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In 2020, Indonesia's digital consumers surged 37% as lockdowns led more people
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to try new services online.
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In the same year, online spending rose 11% to hit $44 billion.
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By 2025, that figure is expected to almost triple to $124 billion.
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Bukalapak has ridden that wave, recording a 130% surge in transactions in 2020.
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The company now serves 13.5 million micro, small and medium enterprises and 100 million customers.
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That rapid adoption should help Rachmat with his primary task: reaching profitability.
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This is a big organization and we want to be there for a long time.
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Of course, growth is nice and we all want to have more growth, more transactions, more customers,
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but we need to see whether we can create an organization that can be self-sustaining moving forward.
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That hasn't stopped investors from piling onto the business.
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In January 2021, Standard Chartered bank became the latest corporation to
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join a $200 million funding round to fuel the company's expansion.
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The partnership will help build Bukalapak's digital banking service, while a separate deal
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with Microsoft will see the company adopt the tech giant's Azure cloud computing platform.
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Other investors include Indonesian media conglomerate Emtek,
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Alibaba-affiliate Ant Financial and Singapore's sovereign wealth fund GIC,
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pushing the company's estimated valuation to between $2.5 billion and $3 billion.
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That ranks the 11-year-old company among Indonesia's growing number of unicorns,
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whose names include fellow e-commerce player Tokopedia,
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ride-hailing giant Gojek and travel site Traveloka.
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The world's fourth most-populous country has the largest number of internet users
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in Southeast Asia, and analysts say it has potential for more growth.
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A lot of folks feel the demographic dividends are going to pay off. 270 million people,
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most of them with smartphones now.
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What is super fascinating to me is that how much of that investment
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goes into tier-one city-targeted business models versus Indonesia business models.
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While some analysts are skeptical about Bukalapak's ability to expand beyond Indonesia,
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given its hyperlocal roots,
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Rachmat says he is confident that the company's importance transcends borders.
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I'm not going to say that we just want to stay in Indonesia but Indonesia today is a big enough
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market to keep us very busy, and we still feel like we have a lot of homework to do.
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I don't think we've even scratched the surface if you talk about underserved markets in Indonesia.
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Today, 70% of Bukalapak's business is non-tier-one. I don't think a lot
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of people think about that too much as well, that,
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you know, you can actually make a lot of money by serving a population which doesn't have that
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much money, so I look forward to seeing more entrepreneurs actually build more companies
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that can serve the broader populations, not just in Indonesia but broader populations in the world.
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After experiencing tremendous growth in 2020, and with potential for more on the horizon,
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the company may have plans for an initial public offering later in 2021.
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Having access to capital markets is good to have for a growing company, and I think that
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is one of the options that we are considering. We are not to say anything until we have proof.
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But, of course, this is something that we understand to be important.
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And we are preparing ourselves to be IPO-ready.