Great Indian Festival created 750 crorepati sellers, 40,000 sellers had largest single day sales: Amazon India
The e-commerce giant says it has learnt from its previous sales and understands the customer needs better now. It has also made things easier for sellers to help them meet customer needs. These things catapulted this year’s sale.

“I have been here [in Amazon] for nine years plus and this has been one of the smoothest Diwali that we have had,” says Amit Nanda, Director-Selling Partner Services at Amazon India. “And it has been the largest Diwali for us over all these years, across multiple dimensions. I think what we set out to do, as part of the Diwali, we have been able to tick most of the boxes and achieved most of what we wanted to.”
Amazon says one big aim was to get more sellers to succeed in the Diwali sale, and the first step was to get them to participate in it. “We did that by giving new sellers a fee waiver, and we had a 50% fee waiver campaign. We also wanted the sellers to get their friends and family to take part in it and extend the festive season. So we had set up a member-get-member kind of referral system,” says Nanda.
Amazon says over 30% more small and medium businesses (SMBs) participated in the Great Indian Festival this year than last year.
Close to 40,000 sellers had their largest single day sale at the event, says the marketplace. It sees this as a significant achievement.
“Around 20% of these, which is around 6,500, got a spike of more than 5x in sales over last Diwali. To get a five times spike during Diwali sales makes a big difference to a lot of businesses because they rely on the scale that they achieved in Diwali to get their costs down for the next full year,” says Nanda.
Other initiatives involved handholding the sellers, helping them with inventory management, demand forecasting, planning for the sale and establishing multi-channel fulfilment centres.

Amazon says it also measures absolute size as a marker for success. One of these is the number of sellers who got Rs 1 crore in sales on the marketplace during the sale. “We had close to 750 sellers who crossed Rs 1-crore sales in this period. Close to 32,000 sellers reached Rs 1 lakh during this period. And I think it’s important to see that this is business on one marketplace. A lot of them would work across different marketplaces and they would also have an offline business. So, this gives them a big fillip in terms of the scale that they have been able to get,” says Nanda.
The director at Amazon India says certain specific seller cohorts tasted success. “For example, we found 38% to 40% of the startups who were selling in the segment called ‘Launchpad’, which are brands with innovative products, have doubled their sales.”
Top product categories under its “Saheli Program” included apparel, home and kitchen items, shoes and bags. Bengal handloom sarees, wooden craft items and block printed products were the most purchased products under the “Amazon Karigar” scheme.
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