How TikTok saved its e-commerce business in Indonesia
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Ms Agata Pinastika Kenastuti (centre), who runs a children’s clothing shop, and her sister, Priscila, during a live stream.
PHOTO: NYTIMES
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JAKARTA – A year ago, TikTok’s e-commerce business in Indonesia was thriving. With its viral videos, TikTok had become a worldwide phenomenon and it was translating its influence into a powerful new revenue stream by letting users buy and sell things while its videos played.
Indonesia was a critical market and the first place where TikTok rolled out this feature. The app, owned by the Chinese tech giant ByteDance, had about 130 million users, nearly as many as it had in the US. Since its launch here in 2021, TikTok Shop had become one of the most popular places for Indonesians to buy things online.
Then one day, TikTok said it was removing Shop from its app in Indonesia. The government had declared that social media platforms would no longer be allowed to process online payments. TikTok was thus forced to abruptly halt its e-commerce operations.
Some Indonesian officials argued that TikTok was so popular it threatened to monopolise online shopping, while others said it did not have the right licence. TikTok’s defenders in the industry said the government was acting on behalf of TikTok’s competitors in Indonesia.
The government’s edict did not name TikTok. It did not need to. No other app blended social media and e-commerce the way TikTok did.
Dealing with official scrutiny is familiar terrain for TikTok. The government in India, once home to the app’s largest audience, banned TikTok in 2020 as payback for a violent border dispute with China. In the US, TikTok is facing a possible ban that could begin as soon as January after spending years fielding concerns about its influence and security.
But the threat in Indonesia had the potential to deal an especially devastating blow to ByteDance’s ambitions to make a lot of money with e-commerce. ByteDance wanted TikTok to repeat the success of its sister app, Douyin, whose live-video shopping business in China topped US$200 billion (S$265 billion) in transaction value in 2022.
New restrictions in Indonesia could inspire neighbouring countries to take similar action, said Mr Jianggan Li, the chief executive of Momentum Works, a consultancy in Singapore. “This is a market they can’t afford to lose,” Mr Li said.
TikTok executives scrambled for a way to continue to offer e-commerce. Word spread through the Indonesian tech community that TikTok was looking for a local company to team up with. And within weeks, it was ready to buy a stake in Tokopedia, a former start-up that had become one of Indonesia’s main e-commerce platforms.
TikTok wanted Shop back online by Dec 12, according to two people familiar with the discussions who were not authorised to speak publicly.
That date had been one of the biggest days for deals on e-commerce platforms in China for years, and the trend had caught on in Indonesia. In recent years, the government promoted it as a day for buying from small businesses.
TikTok Shop restarted as a pilot programme under government supervision on Dec 11. As it had before, Shop appeared as a tab within the TikTok app. But now it was decked out with Tokopedia’s logo and signature green branding.
In 2023, TikTok Shop had about six million merchants using the service to sell their products. Now there are 23 million across TikTok Shop and Tokopedia.
PHOTO: NYTIMES
The deeper change was on the back end. When a shopper clicked “Buy”, the checkout process ran on Tokopedia’s system. TikTok Shop was still part of a social media platform but to satisfy the government, the transaction took place on infrastructure built by an Indonesian e-commerce company.
Tokopedia was a key player in Indonesia, one half of the Indonesian tech conglomerate GoTo. The companies behind GoTo spent years developing payment and delivery technology that made it possible, in a country of 270 million people and 17,000 islands, to buy things online and receive them in a day or two. The deal integrated these systems with TikTok Shop.
“Combined with the content and experience on TikTok, that’s unique,” said Mr Farras Farhan, a senior analyst at Samuel Sekuritas, an investment firm in Jakarta.
TikTok received majority ownership of Tokopedia, which paid TikTok for the right to operate TikTok Shop in Indonesia. GoTo kept just under a quarter of Tokopedia’s shares, and was promised a cut of profits from future TikTok Shop sales. TikTok paid US$840 million and said it would invest further, up to a total of US$1.5 billion, in the combined entity.
The episode was a jolt to everyone involved. ByteDance has cut a significant portion of the people working on its e-commerce operations in Indonesia.
The government said its new rules for e-commerce were intended to protect small businesses. But the businesses that sold goods on TikTok Shop were caught off guard by the sudden interruption. Some struggled to get by without income they relied on.
Ms Agata Pinastika Kenastuti runs a children’s clothing shop in a Jakarta suburb. She had stocked up on new inventory days before TikTok announced that Shop would shut down. “When I found out, I cried for three days,” she said.
Sellers reopened their stores on TikTok Shop to find a more competitive marketplace. In 2023, TikTok Shop had about six million merchants. Now there are 23 million merchants who are able to work easily across TikTok Shop and Tokopedia.
In Indonesia, ByteDance is hoping to repeat the Chinese success of TikTok’s sister app, Douyin.
PHOTO: NYTIMES
In interviews, six sellers said it had been difficult to regain the number of viewers, and therefore paying customers, that they had before TikTok Shop shut down.
Mr Edri, who like many Indonesians goes by only one name, has a stall on the fifth floor of Jakarta’s Pasar Tanah Abang, the largest textile market in South-east Asia. He said he sells about 30 pairs of jeans a day on TikTok Shop these days – down from about 100 before the shutdown in October 2023.
He said it has become harder to attract viewers to his live streaming, which he recorded among neatly folded piles of denim while his assistant smoked clove cigarettes off-camera.
TikTok’s experience with the Indonesian government over Shop is probably not the last time its e-commerce business will come under scrutiny.
Mr Edri live-streams from his shop in Pasar Tanah Abang, a famous textile market.
PHOTO: NYTIMES
In Malaysia, where TikTok Shop held nearly 20 per cent of the e-commerce market in 2023, officials say they are mulling over rules for the platform. And the Indonesian government is not done regulating the e-commerce industry, Dr Rifan Ardianto, a director at the Ministry of Trade, said in an interview.
In October, Indonesian officials said they had asked Apple and Google to block the Chinese fast-fashion platforms Temu and Shein from app stores in the country.
TikTok Shop is available in eight countries. These include the US and Britain, but the rest are in South-east Asia, where its transaction value topped US$16 billion in 2023.
If the app is banned in the US, TikTok will depend even more on South-east Asia to keep its e-commerce ambitions alive, said Mr Li of Momentum Works.
“They’ll have to evaluate what they have, and South-east Asia is something they already built,” he said. NYTIMES

