Rediff.com« Back to articlePrint this article

How e-commerce sites track and trick you

December 26, 2018 08:40 IST

If a website is selling Apple airpods (normally costing over INR 12,000) for say only INR 1,500, or a Bose Speaker normally costing INR 40,000 for INR 2,000 only, you should smell a dead rat.

How e-commerce sites track and trick you

Photographs: Courtesy apple.com

The Indian e-commerce industry is expected to leave the US behind by 2034 to become the second largest e-commerce market in the world.

The market is expected to grow to US$200 billion by 2026, up from US$38.5 billion in 2017.

Led by giants such as Flipkart, Amazon India and Paytm Mall, online retail sales in India are expected to grow by 31% to touch over US$33 billion in 2018.

Google has just entered the e-commerce space in mid- December 2018 in India, which is its first market, by starting a service called “Google Shopping”.

The impressive growth targets mean that a lot of reputed e-commerce giants want you to spend more on their websites.

Many reputed e-commerce portals have secured marketing tie-ups with different credit card companies to offer special discounts, subvention schemes and cashback linked to spends.

Rich data-mining tools allow these portals to come up with segmented offers for their customers.

Smart Analytics have started yielding their consumers' established and likely behaviour patterns, allowing players to take some calculated risk to entice customers.

Some portals have even tied up with a few digital lenders to offer a spot credit limit, so their customer can buy now and pay later in easy EMIs.

How companies track you

How they trick you

Earning it and burning it

Beware of nasty portals

Although card schemes have robust dispute management and chargeback redressal mechanisms that will give relief most of the times, proving your side to your card issuing bank is often a time consuming and frustrating exercise.

The adage to remember always is: If it's too good to be true, it usually is!

The author Niranjankumar Upadhye is general manager, Fraud Risk Management, Worldline India.

 Lead image published only for representational purposes.

Niranjankumar Upadhye