Wednesday, January 21, 2009

gyanendra kashyap moves amidst the marketers this festive season and discovers that it really is the best of times and also the worst of times...


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Be it India or the US, the fun and frolic of the festive season will be far from what it used to be. Haigh offers his candid view, “This year’s festive season is most definitely going to be a less merry period for high street retailers. With consumer credit shrinking, retailers are going to feel the squeeze as consumers look to cut credit spending habits on gifts by looking for alternative, cheaper, value for money options.” However, in the case of India, experts are grasping at potential silver linings. Shushmul Maheshwari, CEO, RNCOS E -Services, spells optimism, “The recent pay hikes and arrears given to more than 5 million government employees after implementation of 6th Pay Commission report can bring back the lost momentum in the industry. Rising advertising expenditure, various promotional schemes will give further boost to industry sales.”

But while an increase in advertising and marketing spends by companies have upped sales in a majority of categories, yet the distressing fact is in the weakening rate of acceleration. Take Agro Tech Foods (Sundrop, Act II, Rath), which increased its ad spend by 70% in 2007-08. Its sales have tanked correspondingly by 2.64%. Similarly, P&G Hygiene and TTK Healthcare, which increased their ad spends by 11.44% and 5.45% respectively, saw a corresponding drop in sales by 6.14% and 6.45% and the list continues with the sorry saga.

So is advertising the pivotal point which governs sales? Maheshwari explains, “More than ad spending, consumer purchasing power plays an important role in driving sales. Although various companies have increased their ad spending by 15% to 20% in the past but high inflation, sky rocketing consumer loan rates and shrinking disposable incomes are slowing growth rates in 2008.” To overcome the tumultuous phase, Titus, Senior Creative Director, O&M, suggests, “Companies could have a meltdown budget. Keep money aside. And if there is no fall, then the money can be classified as savings.”

For more articles, Click on IIPM Article.

Source : IIPM Editorial, 2008

An Initiative of IIPM, Malay Chaudhuri and Arindam chaudhuri (Renowned Management Guru and Economist).

For More IIPM Info, Visit below mentioned IIPM articles.
IIPM Programme :- SUPERIOR COURSE CONTENTS
IIPM INTERNATIONAL - NEW DELHI, GURGAON & NOIDA
IIPM - Admission Procedure
IIPM, GURGAON
IIPM : EXECUTIVE EDUCATION
IIPM’s 36th Glorious Year of Academic Excellence
4Ps Power Brand Awards 2007
When IIPM comes to education, never compromise
Why Study Abroad When IIPM Gives You 3 global Advantages!
IIPM Ranked No. 1 B-School In Global Exposre - Zee...

Saturday, January 10, 2009

Why is HUL worried?


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Predictably, for now the categories that are attracting maximum momentum in Indian retail are low-involvement ones – food (especially staples), perishables, personal care, apparels and accessories. Let’s say a Mrs. Roy goes for her monthly shopping to a Big Bazaar outlet. She assuredly picks up HUL’s Surf Excel detergent, moves on and picks up Care Mate, an in-store personal care label of the retailer, loves a Tee she bought for her 3-year old (the brand is another in-store label called Little Devils), but when she reaches the dairy products section, she can’t see her favourite brand of butter (it’s there actually – hidden in the second row). What she sees instead is Fresh-n-Pure butter. Puzzled, she asks the in-store helper for his opinion, who assures her of the quality. Even the price is lower than the usual big brand she buys. Boasts Rakesh Biyani, CEO, Future Retail: “The price that we offer is also much lower than any other player.” Result: she happily drops Fresh-n-Pure butter into her overflowing shopping bag and makes for the cash counter.

And that, my dear reader, in a nutshell, is why big brands are feeling the heat. Hindustan Unilever, P&G, Marico and ITC to Madura Garments and Arvind Mills have begun shivering in anticipation of the brand bloodshed that awaits them. As the organised retail cart gathers more momentum, and as more retailers realise that private labels not only give them better margins (they can rake in as much as 20% higher margins as opposed to outside brands), but also put them in a position of strength to negotiate betters terms with the big outside brands, the die will unflinchingly be cast in the retailer’s favour. In the US, 20% of all store sales on an average come from private labels, and the percentage zooms up to about 30% and over 50% in Canada and Europe respectively. And while some retailers have tuned in to the Marks & Spencer model a la Tata’s Westside and Trent, others like Spencers and Nilgiri have proven that even the supermarket model (a healthy mix of private labels and outside brands) can flourish in India. Explains Thomas Varghese, CEO, Aditya Birla Retail, “That private brands are slowly beginning to capture share of market in almost every category is a fact. Sales are increasing at rates faster than the national brand counterparts.”

As for the consumer, he is lured by the promise of similar quality and a cheaper price tag. A big reason why private labels are priced competitively is because they have virtually non-existent marketing and distribution budgets. Marketing is done for the store rather than for in-store brands. While this may be a point of frustration for many private label managers, yet absence of such costs enables retailers to pass on the benefit to consumers and also improve overall product quality. Walk into a Westside store, and you’ll see sneakers that look similar to a pair of shoes from Nike, just at much lower prices. Nike refuses to comment and when we asked Smeeta Neogi, Head-Marketing, Westside, she simply said: “We don’t see a reason for a brand to be threatened by another.”

But the fact is that in-store brands are winning the price war. There is also the underlying factor that the point of purchase (the retail store) is under the retailer’s control and he can choose to display his brands more favourably than outside brands. Adds R. Subramanian of Subhiksha: “We focus on in-store advertising for our brands as it influences the buying behaviour of consumers.”

However, organised retail has only just penetrated 5% of India’s total retail environment. So, clearly these private labels are missing out on a large untapped market segment. Besides, low prices cannot entice the really brand conscious consumer. Analysts feel that this is where branding comes in and global retailers like Wal-Mart and Tesco have set a classic example of positioning their private labels by deeper penetration, and by tying up with other retailers across segments. This ‘multiple availability’ format ensured that global retailer Carrefour could create successful brands in the personal care segment. Has the same begun to happen in India? “You can’t tie up with rivals to promote your private label, but you can always do that with players who are not into typical retailing business,” replies Damodar Mall, CEO, Innovation & Incubation, Future Group. Sources reveal that Future Retail is already mulling a tie-up with BPCL’s In & Out Stores. Such multiple availability of these private brands will send the signal that a new brand has arrived in the market. But that’s not enough to create brand value. Retailers are now resorting to channel blurring, and in some instances, even advertising their respective brands (Remember John Miller from Future Brands). “If food services companies bring their products on retailers’ shelves, then retailers can also sell their products through food service outlets. Such co-branding is common in Europe,” explains Jonathan Banks, Business Insight Director, The Nielsen Company, UK.

For more articles, Click on IIPM Article.

Source : IIPM Editorial, 2008

An Initiative of IIPM, Malay Chaudhuri and Arindam chaudhuri (Renowned Management Guru and Economist).

For More IIPM Info, Visit below mentioned IIPM articles.
IIPM Programme :- SUPERIOR COURSE CONTENTS
Now IIPM's World-Class Education... for everybody!!
IIPM INTERNATIONAL - NEW DELHI, GURGAON & NOIDA
IIPM - Admission Procedure
IIPM : EXECUTIVE EDUCATION
IIPM’s 36th Glorious Year of Academic Excellence
4Ps Power Brand Awards 2007
When IIPM comes to education, never compromise
Why Study Abroad When IIPM Gives You 3 global Advantages!
IIPM Ranked No. 1 B-School In Global Exposre - Zee...

Wednesday, January 07, 2009

Are the heydays for American legacy brands over? Steven Philip warner wonders...


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Another arrogant American brand Tommy Hilfiger is undergoing a similar trauma. Where ‘European’ brands like Gucci, Louis Vuitton, Chanel, Cartier, Christian Dior, Fendi, H&M, Zara et al find a mention in the 2008 Milward-Brown rankings of the world’s top 100 brands, the American Tommy is nowhere in the list! Legacy, right? Tommy unlike its European counterparts refused to allow its garments’ production units to move to low-cost nations, advertised to the bare minimum, and all we have today is a shadow of what Tommy Hilfiger was! It has been plagued by what Beth Higgins of Euromonitor International states as, “Yesterday, it was a company-oriented marketplace. Today it is focused on the customer. The companies should keep innovation up.” Lack of innovation and pricing faults got better of Tommy!

Then there are other American brands which have just failed to give up the addiction to ‘I am legend’ tag; GM being one. Its glorified Hummer and other fuel-guzzling machines and its unwillingness to move towards making fuel-efficient cars have brought the brand close to the hangman’s noose. Ford is another example. Having been the supplier of vehicles to the US army, the ‘big-car-big-engine’ maker forgot that the consumer market is more elastic than the armed forces. Result: despite having made efforts at revamping its product mix, the company has not been able to make any ‘brand revival’ impact on consumers. Both Detroit giants were too proud about the economies of scale they had achieved. The result: Ford and GM reported the highest loss ever in their histories during 2006 & 2007 respectively; both being the global highest for those years!

Then there are instances of big business for banks becoming bad business for brands. Think about it, Citi, the world’s largest banking giant has lost value on both globally recognised branding rankings – Interbrand’s Survey 2008 and Millward Brown’s 2008 Survey. New CEO Vikram Pandit is taking bold steps, hiving off unprofitable assets and taking bolder job-cut decisions. But will it revive the once glorified and legendary Citi? Ask a broker on Wall Street, and he’d bet more on a sub-Saharan bank! But then, Citi isn’t the only one close to the grave; names like Merrill Lynch, Lehman Brothers, Bear Sterns, Freddie Mac and Fannie Mae have already kissed the dust. Guess why? Unlike their competitors, the brands had no representation in retail banking and had grown to what they were by taking huge risks! One day, the bet didn’t pay off and it was over for them. Realising this, Goldman Sachs and Morgan Stanley have even denounced their investment banking dreams having received a nod from the Fed to start off a retail banking arm on September 22, 2008. Guess you’ll soon have a Goldman Sachs bank branch opening right near your home… Would you trust your savings with it?! There are also experts who doubt the very fact that the American financial giants had strong brands, ever! One Brent Scarcliff, Creative Director, Scarcliff-Salvador Inc. feels that, “Companies like Merrill Lynch, Lehmann Brothers and Citi never had strong brands; they are commodity companies who are highly vulnerable...” Their model of existence had clearly become unsustainable, but they gave a blind eye to the warnings; they were too proud to! Experts, weren’t they? Now, encomiums would be written about them whose brands crashed faster than even the twin-towers!

For more articles, Click on IIPM Article.

Source : IIPM Editorial, 2008

An Initiative of IIPM, Malay Chaudhuri and Arindam chaudhuri (Renowned Management Guru and Economist).

For More IIPM Info, Visit below mentioned IIPM articles.
IIPM Programme :- SUPERIOR COURSE CONTENTS
Now IIPM's World-Class Education... for everybody!!
IIPM INTERNATIONAL - NEW DELHI, GURGAON & NOIDA
IIPM - Admission Procedure
IIPM, GURGAON
IIPM : EXECUTIVE EDUCATION
IIPM’s 36th Glorious Year of Academic Excellence
When IIPM comes to education, never compromise
Why Study Abroad When IIPM Gives You 3 global Advantages!
IIPM Ranked No. 1 B-School In Global Exposre - Zee...

Friday, January 02, 2009

Korean and Japanese clients treat agencies like ‘agents’ or ‘suppliers’


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Sprint across from telecom to consumer durables and the story is no different. In a sector dominated by just 5-8 major advertisers, the year 2007 saw 11 accounts coming under review. Insinuating at the frequent agency changes in the segment, a top-notch veteran of the ad-world, under condition of anonymity, fires: “Korean and Japanese clients treat agencies like ‘agents’ or ‘suppliers’. They believe that suppliers have to be changed every now and then... Worse, agencies are putting up with this rubbish.” Clearly, ad agencies have cause to worry. Their very raison-de-taire is under threat?

Besides, competition and media fragmentation is forcing advertisers to acknowledge that it’s really not easy to reach out to the masses with frugal budgets. If ad spends in 2007 totaled Rs.22,721 crore; estimates suggest that the sum will rise to a mind baffling Rs.36,731 crore by 2010. Rising ad spend is accompanied by an even greater weightage on accountability from the clients side. Every paisa spent on communication needs to count, be justified and superimposed with insane media costs, life is not getting any easier for marketers. “Margins are coming down. Competition is heating up. The business is getting cut-throat with cost-benefit ratio and value-for-money aspect taking on scary dimensions. Market dynamics have changed and most categories are swirling in turbulent markets,” offers Dentsu’s Gulu Sen, suggesting that the scenario is prompting (forcing?) clients to get sharper, clued-in and informed.

The perform or perish scene is adding to the already high churn-rate of CMOs in companies – average tenure of a marketing chief nowadays is at best 18-24 months in the high drama, high competition environment. Small surprise that a new CMO prefers to bring in an agency that he/ she is comfy with, so that he rakes in results quickly to please his new bosses. And here’s the biggest proof of the diminishing role of agencies. In the good old days, when agency was partner, creative hotshots had access to even the CEO, MD and Promoter of the company; now his area of influence has been reduced to just the brand’s marketing team, so the call for changing the ad agency can actually be taken at the CMO level. So while CMOs are lamenting the seeming lack of adrenalin-pumping enthusiasm from their agencies, the flustered agency guys are almost taking it as a personal insult.

For more articles, Click on IIPM Article.

Source : IIPM Editorial, 2008

An Initiative of IIPM, Malay Chaudhuri and Arindam chaudhuri (Renowned Management Guru and Economist).

For More IIPM Info, Visit below mentioned IIPM articles.
IIPM Programme :- SUPERIOR COURSE CONTENTS
Now IIPM's World-Class Education... for everybody!!
IIPM INTERNATIONAL - NEW DELHI, GURGAON & NOIDA
IIPM - Admission Procedure
IIPM, GURGAON
IIPM : EXECUTIVE EDUCATION
4Ps Power Brand Awards 2007
When IIPM comes to education, never compromise
Why Study Abroad When IIPM Gives You 3 global Advantages!
IIPM Ranked No. 1 B-School In Global Exposre - Zee...