Marketing To Rural India: Making The Ends Meet: India Knowledge@Wharton
Marketing To Rural India: Making The Ends Meet: India Knowledge@Wharton
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Marketing to Rural India: Making the Ends Meet Published : March 08, 2007 in India
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On one side are the fast-moving consumer goods (FMCG) and the consumer durables companies.
On the other are consumers in rural India, potentially the largest segment of the market. Finally,
the two are coming together.
The fact that this has not happened in the past is not for want of trying. In Mumbai and New
Delhi corner offices, executives have long recognized that to build real sales volumes they will
have to reach outside the big cities. In several categories, rural India already accounts for the
lion's share. According to MART, a New Delhi-based research organization that offers rural
solutions to the corporate world, rural India buys 46% of all soft drinks sold, 49% of motorcycles
and 59% of cigarettes. This trend is not limited just to utilitarian products: 11% of rural women
use lipstick.
Other numbers are equally revealing. According to the National Council of Applied Economic
Research (NCAER), an independent, non-profit research institution, rural households form
71.7% of the total households in the country. Spending in this segment is growing rapidly and
consumption patterns are closing in on those of urban India. Jagmohan Singh Raju, a professor of
marketing at Wharton, says: "No consumer goods company today can afford to forget that the
rural market is a very big part of the Indian consumer market. You can't build a presence for a
brand in India unless you have a strategy for reaching the villages."
Several European multinational firms -- and a few U.S. firms -- have been making inroads into
rural India for years. Companies such as Unilever, Phillips and Nestle have long been known to
India's rustic dukaandaars, or merchants. Among U.S. firms, companies such as Colgate and
Gillette have made considerable headway. According to Raju, marketing to rural customers often
involves building categories by persuading them to try and adopt products they may not have
used before. "A company like Colgate has to build toothpaste as a category, which means
convincing people to change to toothpaste instead of using neem twigs to clean their teeth, which
was the traditional practice," he says. "This is difficult to do and requires patience and investment
by companies. It's not like getting someone to switch brands."
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network now in place, other companies want to hop on to the Shakti bandwagon. One service that
is likely to be added soon is insurance.
ITC's eChoupal Initiative
Another innovator in rural distribution -- the $3.6 billion, Calcutta-based tobacco-to-hotels
conglomerate ITC -- has also been trying to build a platform that others can use. At a recent
seminar on rural marketing, ITC chairman Y.C. Deveshwar outlined plans to create a trust that
could work as an agency through which companies -- both private and public -- could market
goods and services to Indian farmers. The trust route would hopefully make other companies
more willing to sign up with their offerings. ITC has the right credentials to launch this trust. Like
Hindustan Lever's project Shakti, its eChoupal venture has been the subject of several case
studies.
ITC's foray into an enhanced distribution network came from the recognition that the existing
agri-produce distribution channels were inefficient. The company exports various agricultural
products -- soybean, rice and wheat, to name a few. It needs to source them from farmers.
"In 2000, ITC embarked on an initiative to deploy technology to reengineer the procurement of
soybeans from rural India," says S. Sivakumar, CEO of ITC's agri-business division. "Kiosks --
called eChoupals -- consisting of a personal computer with Internet access were set up at the
villages." He explains that soybean farmers could access this kiosk for information on prices, but
had the choice to sell their produce either at the local market or directly to ITC at their hub
locations. A hub location services a cluster of eChoupals. By purchasing directly from the farmer,
ITC significantly improved the efficiency of the channel and created value for both the farmer and
itself.
"While the eChoupal network was initiated to facilitate more efficient and effective procurement,
the connectivity -- both physical and informational -- between the farmer and the market that it
facilitated has allowed ITC to use it for distribution of goods and services from the market to the
farmer," says Sivakumar. It has thus evolved into a business platform.
The eChoupal infrastructure consists of:
A kiosk with Internet access in the house of a trained farmer, called a Sanchalak. This kiosk
is within walking distance of target farmers.
A warehousing hub managed by the former middleman, called a Samyojak. This is within a
tractor-driveable distance of target farmers. (The former middlemen were given a role to
avoid resistance to the project. They joined because they could see that their traditional
business was in jeopardy.)
A collaborative network of companies orchestrated by ITC with a pan-India presence.
This is, of course, a simplified structure. And there has been a stream of new initiatives. For
instance, in August 2004, ITC introduced the Choupal Sagar, a rural retail outlet at the hub. The
first was set up at Sehore in Madhya Pradesh. "This 7,000 sq. ft. mall sells consumer goods as
well as agri-products," says Sivakumar.
The benefits to the farmer are obvious. And ITC itself gains. Apart from the more efficient
channel, there is money to be made from the reverse flow. In 2005-06, ITC generated $23 million
selling chemicals and fertilisers. That may not sound like much, but it's early yet. In a recent
move, ITC has set up its first urban outlet, the other end of the eChoupal chain, to retail fresh fruit
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and vegetables.
What about other companies? Does it make sense for them to climb on the bandwagon?
Sivakumar gives the example of PI Industries, which has increased its market share in Madhya
Pradesh from 12.3% in 2003 to 33% in 2005 after partnering with ITC to sell through the
eChoupal. "The eChoupal project is already benefiting more than 3.5 million farmers," says
Sivakumar. "Over the next decade, the eChoupal network will cover more than 100,000 villages,
representing one-sixth of rural India, and create more than 10 million e-farmers."
Room for All
Both Project Shakti and eChoupal have been around for less than a decade. Which is likely to
succeed? Observers say there is place for both; the Indian rural market is huge. According to
Wharton's Raju, while Shakti and eChoupal are different in orientation -- one focuses on
individuals while the other is corporate-based -- each has been very successful in its own way.
"You can't think of success just in financial terms," he says. "Both projects have created
tremendous goodwill for Hindustan Lever and ITC." That is no small asset, especially for ITC,
whose initials once stood for Indian Tobacco Company.
Sivakumar claims the ITC model is superior because it involves two-way traffic. "We are starting
with raising rural incomes," he says. "The level of affordability in rural India is low. For
consumers to buy products, you have to first put more money in their pockets. We are creating a
virtuous circle of higher income, higher productivity and higher consumption." He adds that there
is a distinction between the commission paid to Shakti entrepreneurs and the micro-credit
arranged for them, and the eChoupals' efforts to raise rural incomes by improving agricultural
efficiency for the whole community. At Hindustan Lever, company officials are equally confident
about Project Shakti. They say they are in the business of creating entrepreneurs and arranging
micro-credit for them. This, too, has a catalyzing effect on the whole community.
Raju believes that the drive to gain access to rural retailers is, in some ways, as critical as the one
to reach consumers. "If you look at rural retail in India, the outlet size is very small. Merchants
will often stock just one brand in a category; they do not have the resources to stock multiple
brands. They will stock the brand that sells the most."
This lesson has hardly been lost on Indian-owned companies. Over the coming months, the battle
for rural wallets will include not just European and U.S. multinationals but also fast-growing
Indian companies. A retail initiative by the $22.6 billion Reliance Industries is a case in point.
The Mukesh Ambani-led group plans to pump in $5.5 billion over the next few years to create a
farm-to-storefront infrastructure for a pan-India retail network. (Only part of this money is for the
rural component.)
Mukesh Ambani has company. Brother Anil Ambani, who parted ways with him in 2005, is
connecting rural India through Reliance Infocomm, a mobile services provider. Its network now
encompasses 240,000 towns and villages, accounting for 42% of the rural population. It plans to
double the rural coverage to 400,000 villages, making up 50% of the rural population.
There are many others. The rural initiative of the Mumbai-based $1.3 billion House of Godrej --
Godrej Aadhaar -- plans to set up 1,000 stores across India in the next five years. Delhi-based
telecom major Bharti Airtel chairman Sunil Mittal has tied up with Wal-Mart, which will need its
supply chain. From the Goenkas to the Gulabchands, from the Tatas to the Thapars, every major
Indian business group has plans to move into the hinterland.
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Like Thoreau and Tolstoy, Gandhi, revered as the father of modern India, believed that the
country's future lay in her villages. These days, every marketer would agree.
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