Can TikTok’s GoTo strategy rescue its Indonesian operations?

Can TikTok’s GoTo strategy rescue its Indonesian operations?



Will TikTok’s GoTo gambit save its Indonesian business?

The more ‌the world’s youngsters love⁣ TikTok’s viral videos, the more their elected ‍elders hate the app. They decry ‌it for ‍supposedly corroding young minds and, worse, ‍for⁣ its links to ⁣China, home⁢ to its parent company, ⁤ByteDance. Many in America want to ban it. India already has. In October Indonesia, another big and promising market, shut down TikTok’s fledgling but lucrative ⁤sideline of selling ‌goods via its videos, by requiring social-media firms‍ to ‌obtain an e-commerce licence—with no guarantee​ of success.

Such obstacles have forced TikTok to act strategically, for instance by moving its global headquarters to ​Singapore and hiring a Singaporean chief executive, which has put distance between⁤ it and its Chinese parent. In ⁢another canny move, on December 11th it announced that‌ it⁤ was paying $840m for a 75% stake in​ Tokopedia, the⁤ e-commerce arm of GoTo, an Indonesian ⁢tech conglomerate. It has also pledged ​to invest $1.5bn​ in the⁢ tie-up.

The deal is something of a shotgun marriage, but it benefits both sides. GoTo, which ⁣has⁤ struggled to turn a ⁣profit in ​recent years, will no longer need to subsidise ⁤its loss-making⁤ retail arm. TikTok, ‍for its part, will be allowed to restart its‌ e-commerce operations. Sales on ⁢TikTok’s app will be fulfilled by Tokopedia’s logistics network (though, like all e-merchants in Indonesia, it must now charge minimum prices for products made abroad).

2023-12-14 09:06:18
Article from www.economist.com
rnrn

Exit mobile version