If social networking is synonymous with Facebook, online shopping with Amazon, then show tickets and entertainment are definitely instantly associated with Bookmyshow, at least in India. In just over a decade, the e-ticketing company has stolen the show with its innovative digital business model, providing moviegoers a hassle-free ticketing option and arming multiplex theatres with higher revenue and footfalls. And all this despite huge external troubles such as the dotcom bust and global sub-prime crisis. From nothing, Bookmyshow has gone on to become a ₹100-crore player with a decisive 80% share in the online movie ticket booking space. Growing at 100% and having turned profitable two years ago, the company has around 400 employees working across major cities such as Mumbai, Delhi, Bengaluru, Chennai and Hyderabad.
Hemrajani was struck by the idea of virtual ticketing. After he returned, he quit his job, persuaded his friends Rajesh Balpande and Parikshit Dar to quit their jobs as well and started a movie ticket selling business through telephone and the internet. The name of their company — Bigtree Entertainment — pays tribute to the site of Hemrajani’s epiphany.![###They [Bookmyshow] are a grounded lot who have seen failures but still managed to stay focused — <b> Sarbvir Singh, managing director, Capital 18 </b>](/public/uploads/editor/2015-04-03/1428044979.jpg)
The fresh investment aside, the external environment was also much more promising now. Mobile telephony had exploded across India and internet banking was gaining ground. Accordingly, Bigtree changed its business model. Rechristened Bookmyshow, now the service involved entering into a convenience fee arrangement with multiplexes and standalone cinema houses; buying bulk inventory and COD came to an end and all customer transactions moved online.
While the convenience fee arrangement seems to be a big part of revenue, the arrangement does not necessarily mean Bookmyshow’s business model is risk-free. For instance, after the Maharashtra government chose to scrap the convenience fee in 2013, in the last one year, Bigtree suffered a revenue loss of ₹10 crore. That number will get reflected in the FY14 numbers, which the company has not yet revealed. The Bombay high court has since stayed the ban, but the fact remains that regulation changes can easily impact Bookmyshow’s core business. However, Hemrajani is not unduly worried. “I believe consumers pay money if they see value in the service being provided and had that not been the case, Bookmyshow would not be in business.”