Category: NEWS

  • Shashi Sinha will be Big Boss at Ad Club Bombay

    After two terms as President of the Advertising Club Bombay, Mr Bhaskar Das of The Times of India Group will make way for Mr Shashi Sinha, CEO of Lodestar Universal India. Mr Sinha is set to assume responsibility this month. Mr Sunil Lulla, the MD and CEO of Times Television Network, will be Vice President. Mr Ajay Kakar, CMO – Financial Services, Aditya Birla Group will be the new Secretary and Pratap Bose, CEO-Mudra Max the Treasurer. The managing committee is reported to have been elected unopposed.

    Mr Sinha has been Vice President of the Club and is also an active member of various media industry forums. After running the media awards effectively, he was entrusted with responsibility of Chairman of the Awards Governing Council following disagreement between the Ad Club and the Advertising Agencies Association of India (AAAI) on the issue of the Abby Awards at GoaFest.

    After being mired in controversy for three years, thanks to Mr Sinha’s leadership, the high profile Creative Awards were held without any leaks and raging controversies.

  • UFO Moviez now holds 52% stake in Scrabble Ent

    By NANDINI RAGHAVENDRA & AMEYA CHUMBHALE

     

    UFO Moviez has picked up 26% equity stake in Scrabble Entertainment, taking its total holding in the Manmohan Shetty-promoted digital cinema systems provider to 52%.

     

    UFO, a joint venture between the Valuable Group and Apollo International, which is in the same business as Scrabble, had bought 26% stake in the company a few months ago. Both companies help exhibit movies in the digital format, which is replacing traditional film prints.

     

    Mr Shetty, a Bollywood film producer who made a killing in 2007 when he sold his production house Adlabs Films to the Anil Dhirubhai Ambani Group, had launched Scrabble with 72% ownership the same year. Following the deal with UFO, his shareholding in Scrabble has fallen to 21%.

     

    The other promoters, Mr Ranjit Thakur and mr Sunil Patil, hold 27% stake in the company. Private equity firm 3i and Providence Equity Partners have invested in UFO. Providence recently invested Rs 260 crore in the company.

     

    UFO has 2,350 digital installations across India and Nepal, while Scrabble, India’s only 2K digital cinema initiatives (DCI)-compliant entity, is expanding its footprint to Latin America, the Middle East and Eastern Europe. It plans to increase the number of its screens from 300 in India to around 2,500 by 2013.

     

    Hollywood’s big six studios – Sony, Warner, Disney, Fox, Universal and Paramount – have signed a global initiative whereby their content would only be released in DCI-compliant screens.

     

    “We are planning to invest over Rs 150 crore to expand the Scrabble DCI screens and we expect, with this infusion, to reach 800-1000 screens in one and half years,” Mr Sanjay Gaekwad, managing director of UFO Moviez, said. “This will help Scrabble Entertainment increase its global footprint. It would have struggled in isolation,” said Scrabble’s Mr Shetty.

     

     

    Source:The Economic Times

    Copyright © 2011, Bennett, Coleman & Co. Ltd. All Rights Reserved

  • Editor Pataudi/Tribute by Vivek Sengupta

    By Vivek Sengupta

    Tiger Pataudi and I were colleagues: In the sense that an editor and a junior hack working for the same publishing house could call themselves colleagues. Pataudi was for long years the Editor of Sportsworld, a publication of the ABP Group. And I worked during different times for New Delhi magazine, Sunday magazine and The Telegraph, all publications of the same publishing house.

     

    This was during the heyday of ABP in the early Eighties when each publication of the group was a highly regarded market leader. What was more remarkable was that each publication was brought out by a bunch of very bright and very young journalists and editors. Those were heady days for hacks. To paraphrase Wordsworth, bliss was it in that dawn to be a journalist, but to be young was very heaven.  There was very little compartmentalization between the publications and a lot more camaraderie between the editorial teams than can be imagined today. Which is perhaps why, even though I never worked for Pataudi, in his passing it seems to me as if I have lost a former editor.

     

    Years later, in the early Nineties, we did become direct colleagues, when we both worked for Kapil Dev’s Dev Features in Delhi. We were part of the team that brought out the video magazine Sports Channel. Tiger Pataudi was the anchor of the video magazine and I was Executive Producer of the production house, in which slot I had succeeded the legendary SP Singh, who went on to found Aaj Tak.

     

    In between these two stints, I had watched Pataudi somewhat closely in another editorial avatar: He was Editor of the Wills Book of Excellence-Cricket, a collector’s volume of text and pictures. Friends and colleagues from ABP and Orient Longman, the publishing firm, were involved in bringing out the Wills Books of Excellence series and I would get regular reports of the ups and downs of the very ambitious project sponsored by ITC.

     

    How was Pataudi as an editor? By all accounts he was an exceptional leader, who preferred to inspire rather than control or micro manage. He was a man who led with a light hand and who, by his sheer gentility and understatement, made himself unforgettable. A man of very few words, he had a terrific sense of humour and an ability to connect with people on the strength of his easygoing manner.

     

    He was the very opposite of the typical hands-on editor of today. In fact, the legendary newspaper editors of the pre-Sameer Jain era, who were interested only in the editorial page and little else in their newspaper, were perhaps more hands-on than Tiger was! It seemed as though he was content to add star value to the editor’s job.  As Editor of Sportsworld, he worked out of Delhi, while the editorial team of the magazine worked out of Calcutta. He did like to have a say in the planning of editions. But he had little interest in putting them together. In other words, he was the epitome of the hands-off editor. The Associate Editor, the No. 2, was really the editor in that sense. It was he who commissioned the articles, oversaw the subbing of copy and the production of pages, grappling in turns with the Ad Department, the PTS (Phototypesetting) Department, the Art Department and the Printing Press. Tiger did not have to bother with any of that.

     

    But it was said that he read every word of what had gone into the magazine and always gave feedback. And in one key respect, Tiger was very much the Editor. The Editorial always came from him, written in impeccable Queen’s English. Not surprising when you consider that the Nawab of Pataudi went to public school in England and thereafter to Oxford. Come to think of it, he had also captained the Oxford University cricket team!

     

    Vivek Sengupta is Founder and Chief Executive of the consulting firm Moving Finger Communications

  • ‘Film industry to see new business models, revenue streams’

    By A Correspondent

    Apex business chamber ASSOCHAM has said that the digital revolution is visibly impacting distribution and exhibition of films in India, as the industry marches towards completion of 100 years with a revenue projection of Rs 12,800 crore by 2015, up 56 percent from Rs 8,190 crore last year.

    Rising disposable incomes, growing popularity of alternate delivery mediums, digitalisation of film distribution, and value-added services like movie on demand and pay TV are set to open up new revenue streams and business models, according to a recent study by The Associated Chambers of Commerce and Industry of India.

    Digital cinema will enable worldwide release of films on the day one like television broadcast and shorten the theatrical window. From the demand side, increasing mobile and internet penetration is significantly changing consumption pattern of viewers within the country as well as in the Indian diaspora overseas, it said.

    Over 1,000 films are produced every year in more than 20 languages, with regional cinema  Tamil, Telugu, Malayalam and Kannada  constituting a large chunk. Backed by 12,000 theatre screens, 400 production houses and a huge viewership, the country’s film industry is the world’s largest in terms of number of films produced and ticket size. It employs about 60 lakh workers, and will complete 100 years in 2013.

    Nearly 14 million Indians (about 1.4 percent of the population) go to the movies every day.Box office collections currently contribute about 80 per cent of total film revenues. But technological advancements like digitalisation, onset of next generation networks and availability of sophisticated devices to access media are contributing to a growing chunk of ancillary revenues that comprise about 15 percent of film revenues.

    Indian cinema is undergoing remarkable changes from where it began. The aggressive expansion of multiplexes, access to organised funding, foray of leading corporate houses into film production and exhibition, and popularity of digital cinema prints have been some remarkable changes seen over the last decade.

    The ASSOCHAM study said there is requirement of more than 20,000 screens, and multiplex penetration is expected to improve further with the government allowing 100 per cent foreign direct investments through the automatic approval route.

    Though the number of multiplexes is rising, the average number of screens is extremely low in India at 12 screens per million compared to 117 in the United States. The film industry loses Rs 300 crore to 400 crore a year due to piracy and there is a shortage of world-class institutions to provide training in film and media.

    With growing viewer expectations in terms of content’s quality and variety, filmmakers need to gear up and leverage global audiences as well, besides making efforts to gain mindshare at international film festivals, said the study.

     

  • Don’t poach our employees, JWT tells McCann

    By Ratna Bhushan & Rajiv Banerjee

    India’s largest ad agency, JWT, has asked its fast-growing rival, McCann Erickson, to refrain from poaching its employees. The move comes after JWT lost a dozen staff to an expanding McCann over the past few months.

    JWT has written to McCann more than once, two top executives familiar with the development told ET. McCann has not responded to this communication. Industry insiders characterise these letters as rare and unusual.

    JWT India CEO Mr Colvyn Harris said, in response to an email query, that the agency had merely cautioned its former employees. “We have a clause in our employee contracts which prevents ex-employees soliciting staff for a stipulated period, and as a process we remind them of their contractual obligation,” he said.

    Mr Prasoon Joshi, executive chairman at McCann Worldgroup and Mr Jitender Dabas, the agency’s senior VP and head of strategic planning, declined comment.

    McCann is on a hiring spree as it has bagged plum contracts, including those of telecom services provider Aircel, carmaker General Motors and paints company ICI Dulux. The agency has recruited at least 50 people over the past two months, with 30 in senior positions.

    JWT, on the other hand, has been struggling to fill 20-25 vacancies, an executive with a search firm told ET. The agency has recently lost half a dozen senior employees. “It is clear that JWT is trying its best to retain talent, particularly the people who have been working on the Airtel account,” another executive said.

    Mr Harris, however, disputed these claims. “This is the figment of someone’s imagination,” he said, “Factually, should we require people we have enough people applying to us.”

    JWT has been under pressure from some of its key clients who have entrusted independent agency Taproot with one-off plum assignments this year. These include beverage and snacks firm PepsiCo, which did not assign its biggest commercial of the year – the world cup campaign – to JWT, its creative agency for two decades. Bharti Airtel, too, turned to Taproot for a one-off campaign two months ago. Taproot is similarly working on a creative pitch for Mountain Dew, another brand handled by JWT.

    At the same time, McCann has been scouting for advertising professionals to service the two big accounts it has bagged recently – the Aircel contract, which is estimated at 200 crore, and the General Motors contract estimated at 150 crore.

    Source:The Economic Times

    Copyright © 2011, Bennett, Coleman & Co. Ltd. All Rights Reserved

  • Ashish Bagga all set to be INS president today

    Mr Ashish Bagga, Chief Executive Officer of the India Today group, is all set to take charge as president of the Indian Newspaper Society for the year 2011-12. The 72nd annual general meeting of the apex association of newspapers is scheduled to take place in Bengaluru today.

    Mr Bagga will succeed Mr Kundan Vyas of Mumbai’s Janmabhoomit Group. As is the custom, Mr K N Tilak Kumar of Prajavani who is currently vice-president is likely to be deputy president, a position that Mr Bagga occupied in 2010-11.

    A little about Mr Bagga (information culled from AdAsia 2011 website)

    Mr Bagga has been associated with the Indian media business for over 25 years. Other than the India Today group, he has also worked Hindustan Times as Director (Marketing). Immediately before re-joining India Today in 2001, Mr Bagga did a short stint as President & CEO with Business Standard for the paper’s e-initiative in association with Financial Times, London. Bagga has forged strong partnerships with several leading international media brands for the India Today group. He has been awarded a publishing scholarship by the Publisher’s Association of the United Kingdom through which he also worked with The Daily Telegraph in London in London.

    Mr Bagga is a Physics Honours graduate and an MBA and was also awarded the prestigious British Chevening Scholarship in 2003. He is exceedingly active in various industry bodies.

    Watch this space for more on the elections…

     

  • TN announces state-run cable TV channel

    Tamil Nadu Chief Minister J Jayalalithaa has announced in the state legislative assembly that the state-run Arasu Cable TV Corporation will start functioning from September 2.

     

    The corporation is launching a total of 90 channels, including pay channels, for a monthly fee of Rs 70, Ms Jayalalithaa said.

     

    The service had been started by the previous DMK government following the split in the DMK  first family  involving the Marans, but, Ms Jayalalithaa said, it had become dormant after DMK chief M Karunanidhi and the Marans resolved their differences.

     

    In a suo moto statement to the Assembly, Ms Jayalalithaa said, The corporation provided 50,000 cable connections when it was started in 2007 but due to selfishness of rulers, it shrank to 432 as on March 31, 2011.

     

    Efforts made to restructure the corporation included the appointment of a chairperson and a managing director. Digital heads were also restructured, and more than 34,000 Multi-System Operators) and cable operators who 1.45 crore connections have joined the network, which covers Chennai as well as other areas.

     

    While consumers will be charged Rs 70 per month, operators will have to pay Rs 20 per connection, Ms Jayalalithaa said, adding that her government’s latest initiative would ensure delivery of cable services at nominal rates.

  • Ashish Bagga is INS president

    By A Correspondent

    Mr Ashish Bagga, Chief Executive Officer of the India Today group, is the new president of the Indian Newspaper Society for the year 2011-12. This was announced at the 72nd annual general meeting of the apex association of newspapers took place in Bengaluru today.

    Mr Bagga succeeded Mr Kundan Vyas of Mumbai’s Janmabhoomi Group. Meanwhile Mr K N Tilak Kumar of Prajavani is the new deputy president, a position that Mr Bagga occupied in 2010-11. Mr Ravindra Kumar of Aj Samaj is Vice President.

    A little about Mr Bagga (information culled from AdAsia 2011 website)

    Mr Bagga has been associated with the Indian media business for over 25 years. Other than the India Today group, he has also worked Hindustan Times as Director (Marketing). Immediately before re-joining India Today in 2001, Mr Bagga did a short stint as President & CEO with Business Standard for the paper’s e-initiative in association with Financial Times, London. Bagga has forged strong partnerships with several leading international media brands for the India Today group. He has been awarded a publishing scholarship by the Publisher’s Association of the United Kingdom through which he also worked with The Daily Telegraph in London in London.

    Mr Bagga is a Physics Honours graduate and an MBA and was also awarded the prestigious British Chevening Scholarship in 2003. He is exceedingly active in various industry bodies.

  • IRS 2011 Q2: Top 10 Magazines

    Top 10 Hindi Magazines

    Only Grehalakshmi and Grihshobha have seen a loss of readership from Q1 to Q2 in the Hindi magazine space.

    (All figues in 000s)

    Publication Periodicity 2011 Q1 2011 Q2
    Pratiyogita Darpan M 2027 2154
    Saras Salil F 1945 2039
    Cricket Samrat M 984 1213
    Meri Saheli M 1100 1174
    India Today W 1137 1144
    Grehlakshmi M 1031 1010
    Grihshobha F 1061 1008
    Champak F 843 873
    Vanitha M 707 764
    Nirogdham Q 711 763

     

    Top 10 English Magazines

    Ooops! General Knowledge Today and Competition Success Review have seen a degrowth as have Filmfare and Stardust. It appears interest in current affairs is waning.

    (All figues in 000s)

    Publication Periodicity 2011 Q1 2011 Q2
    India Today W 1650 1724
    Readers Digest M 960 998
    General Knowledge Today M 1002 977
    Competition Success Review M 684 654
    Outlook W 438 456
    The Week W 325 396
    Filmfare F 382 366
    Stardust M 352 342
    Femina F 337 339
    Business Today F 309 333

     

    Top 10 Language Magazines

    Malayala Manorama, Mathrubhum iArogya Masika, Ananda Vikatan, Mathrubhumi Thozil Vartha and Kungumam have seen some degrowth from Q1 to Q2.

    (All figues in 000s)

    Publication Language Periodicity 2011 Q1 2011 Q2
    Vanitha Mal F 2653 2671
    Malayala Manorama Mal W 1413 1393
    Kumudam Tam W 1066 1066
    Karmakshetra Ben W 894 916
    Mathrubhum iArogya Masika Mal M 929 914
    AnandaVikatan Tam W 879 847
    Balarama Mal W 812 818
    MathrubhumiThozhilVartha Mal W 816 790
    Karmasangsthaan Ben W 686 738
    Kungumam Tam W 725 722

    All figures are in Average Issue Readership. Like media buyers, MxMIndia only endorses Average Issue Readership as the currency for readership measurement. Please note that these are only topline figures which have officially been supplied to the media. Sensible buying and planning happens when more data is available.

  • IRS 2011 Q2: Top 10 Dailiies

    Top 10 Hindi Dailies

    There is no change in the pecking order here. Dainik Jagran rules, Bhaskar is second and Hindustan is #3. Amar Ujala, Rajasthan Patrika, Punjab Kesari occupy the fourth, fifth and sixth slot respectively. Navbharat Times, Prabhat Khabar, Nai Dunia and Hari Bhoomi are #s 7-10. Rajasthan Patrika, Punjab Kesari and Nai Dunia have degrown from Q1 to Q2 as per the topline figures posted by Hansa Research.

    (All figues in 000s)

    Publication 2011 Q1 2011 Q2
    Dainik Jagran 15910 16393
    Dainik Bhaskar 14016 14174
    Hindustan 11810 11985
    Amar Ujala 8747 8891
    Rajasthan Patrika 7033 6941
    Punjab Kesari 3479 3414
    Navbharat Times 2589 2650
    Prabhat Khabar 1812 1893
    NaiDunia 1762 1714
    HariBhoomi 1418 1437

     

    Top 10 English Dailies

    Mount Road MahaVishnu ‘The Hindu’ has degrown and so have Mumbai Mirror and The Tribune, albeit insignicantly.

    (All figues in 000s)

    Publication 2011 Q1 2011 Q2
    The Times Of India 7442 7471
    Hindustan Times 3692 3737
    The Hindu 2095 2077
    The Telegraph 1203 1209
    DeccanChronicle 1035 1088
    DNA 822 824
    The Economic Times 769 785
    Mumbai Mirror 780 758
    The Tribune 569 567
    The New Indian Express 550 559

     

    Top 10 Language Dailies

    As per the topline figures put  by Hansa Research and MRUC, Matrubhumi, ABP, Gujarat Samachar and Daily Sakal have all lost out in Q2 vis-a-vis Q1.

    (All figues in 000s)

    Publication Language 2011Q1 2011Q2
    Malayala Manorama Mal 9938 9962
    Lokmat Mar 7486 7595
    Daily Thanthi Tam 7187 7290
    Mathrubhumi Mal 6800 6690
    Ananda Bazar Patrika Ben 6118 6063
    Eenadu Tel 5991 6032
    Gujarat Samachar Guj 5276 5220
    Dinakaran Tam 5123 5167
    Sakshi Tel 5042 5106
    Daily Sakal Mar 4568 4448

    All figures are in Average Issue Readership. Like media buyers, MxMIndia only endorses Average Issue Readership as the currency for readership measurement. Please note that these are only topline figures which have officially been supplied to the media. Sensible buying and planning happens when more data is available.

  • FMCGs tread new paths for higher profits

    By Ratna Bhushan

     

    Consumer product makers such as Heinz India, Perfetti Van Melle and Glaxo SmithKline Consumer are entering product segments that offer higher profitability to offset pressure on margins due to volatile commodity prices.

     

    Heinz India, known for its ketchup and Complan milk drink, plans to foray into cornflakes. Rival GlaxoSmithkline Consumer Healthcare, maker of Horlicks milk food drink, too may target the breakfast table.

     

    “With the huge pressure on margins, the attempt is to diversify into areas where profitability can be improved, besides reducing dependence on volatile commodity fluctuations,” says GSK Consumer MD Mr Zubair Ahmed.

     

    It’s for the same reason that Dabur, maker of Real juice and Chyawanprash, plans to launch car fresheners and aromatic candles under the Odonil brand, and Parachute hair oil maker Marico will foray into body lotions.

     

    That’s not all. Sugar confectionery maker Perfetti Van Melle is piloting packaged potato chips and salty snacks under its Stop Not brand, and biscuits maker Britannia is giving final touches to a multi-city rollout of its baked snacks brand Time Pass after test-marketing it in Bangalore.

     

    Everyone wants to hedge risks and reduce reliance on a few mainstay products that depend heavily on certain commodities. Most consumer products companies have taken a hit on their margins due to rising raw material costs over the past 10-12 months. Crude oil prices too went up over 30% in the first six months of the year. Companies have raised prices by 5%-10% and initiated several measures to cut costs to deal with rising costs. While some input costs have started softening, companies say it is too little and that pressure on margins continues.

     

    Analysts say the firms have no option but to diversify – because they can’t risk increasing prices of their bread-and-butter products beyond a point, particularly in mass-market categories where competition is intense. “Competitive intensity has gone up significantly in the past 12-18 months; companies are looking at ways of getting a foothold in emerging categories,” says Mr Gautam Duggad, research analyst at financial services firm Prabhudas Liladher.

     

    So companies are adopting a flanking strategy and stepping into more profitable and fast-growing categories even if they are unfamiliar.  “Some of the categories could be small but the idea is to develop and nurture them for 5-10 years so they can add to topline in the long-term,” says Mr Duggad.

     

    India’s largest retailer Future Group President – Food & FMCG Mr Devendra Chawla expects emerging categories such as beauty, anti-ageing, health, nutrition foods and wellness to attract big investments. Brands are also offering differentiated products with functional benefits because they can be sold at a premium, he adds.

     

    “Highly penetrated categories like soaps and detergents will also witness margin expansion by upgrading consumers, for example, from plain detergent to machine wash; dish-wash powders and cakes to liquid; and shaving cream to foams and gels,” Mr Chawla says.

     

    Companies say brand extensions help increase brands’ popularity, shelf space and marketing efficiency.  “Brand extensions not only help increase rate of acceptance and trials by consumers but also maintain efficiencies on advertising and promotion expenditures,” says Dabur India CEO Mr Sunil Duggal.

     

    GSK Consumer seems the most aggressive. In the past six-eight months, the British firm-synonymous with Horlicks for decades-has added Sensodyne toothpaste and Lucozade sports drink to its portfolio.  Last year, it extended Horlicks to instant noodles called Horlicks Foodles. GSK Consumer’s Ahmed says the move helped increase the brand presence on the shelf.

     

    Perfetti Van Melle is testing packaged snacks in parts of Punjab, Karnataka and Andhra Pradesh. Unlike confectionery where margins are wafer-thin and price points are restricted largely to Rs 1, 2 and 5, the company would have more leeway to experiment with different price points within snacks.

     

    Hair oil and edible oil maker Marico will extend its two-decade-old coconut hair oil brand Parachute to body lotion and other skincare products subsequently, riding on the brand’s purity and value-for-money attributes.  Marico’s bottom line depends to a large extent on coconut oil costs, while biscuit maker Britannia’s margins rely heavily on costs of atta and sugar. Heinz, on the other hand, which has also forayed in breakfast mixes, has been dependent on Complan.

     

    All of them would want to reduce over dependence on a single product or commodity. Analysts, meanwhile, warn that while some category extensions are logical, others may fizzle out. “Companies have to look at avenues of growth but the investments need to be sustained,” says Baring Private Equity Partners’ Head (Investments), FMCG, Mr Keshav Misra. “And not all experiments succeed; some work, some don’t.”

     

    Of course, there have been several failures in the past. Kellogg’s foray in biscuits had bombed many years ago, and in the late-1990s GSK’s Aquafresh toothpaste and fruit drink called Ribena did not work.

     

    Source:The Economic Times

    Copyright © 2011, Bennett, Coleman & Co. Ltd. All Rights Reserved

  • M&M start toy store-y with Beanstalk

    By Sagar Malviya & Sarah Jacob

     

    Utility vehicle maker Mahindra & Mahindra has launched a toy store and driven into a new market that pits it directly against the Mukesh Ambani-led Reliance Retail. The store, Beanstalk, which opened at Brookefields in Bangalore’s IT suburb Whitefield, will target children up to their late teens. “We have been piloting a toy store for the last two weeks in Bangalore,” said Mr K Venkataraman, MD of Mahindra Retail, without sharing further details.

     

    With its first toy store, Mahindra Retail has forayed into the highly unorganised and fragmented 1,500 crore domestic toy market which is growing at 15%-20% according to industry estimates.

     

    This is the company’s second venture in the retail sector, after it launched the mother and baby care brand Mom & Me more than two years ago. Mahindra & Mahindra has, however, been distributing toy brands such as Lego, Disney and Mattel, among other products, through group subsidiary Mahindra Intertrade unit.

     

    For Mahindra Retail, toy retail is likely to be an extension of catering to children, expecting and new mothers across categories such as baby food, strollers, toys and apparel. Its 49 Mom & Me stores are spread across metros and smaller cities such as Amritsar, Aurangabad and Coimbatore. It has also launched Mom’s Lounge, a wellness studio for new and expecting mothers, at two stores.

     

    Mahindra’s toy store has opened less than a year and a half after Reliance Retail entered the domestic toy market. Reliance Retail, which stitched a franchise agreement with British toy maker Hamleys, opened its first flagship outlet in April 2010. It plans to invest around 125 crore in five years and open 20 Hamleys outlets, two of which are the large-format stores that have opened in Mumbai and Chennai.

     

    Besides Mera Toy Shop, which has 19 stores across the country, most toy retailers are either regional players such as Sapphire in Karnataka or owner-managed standalone stores.

     

    A relatively late entrant into the $20-billion organised retail segment in India, Mahindra & Mahindra has focused on specialty formats to benefit from non-crowded retail segments.

     

    But selling toys is no child’s play.

     

    “Children are much clued into not just games but also the brands today. And pester power works,” said Mr Sudhir Pai, senior VP & head of Hamleys. With both parents working in many nuclear families, toy retailers stand to benefit. “Parents are unable to spend enough quality time with their children and the guilt factor is prompting buying,” he said, adding that infant and play school categories are growing faster.

     

    Mr R Jeswant, VP sales & marketing at toy maker Funskool India, said higher purchasing power of young parents, better merchandising of products and awareness of the role of toys in aiding child’s development are boosting growth in the industry. Funskool India, a joint venture between American firm Hasbro and MRF, expects to report a 35% growth in revenue at 100 crore this fiscal.

     

    “The average selling prices of toys have been moving up as higher-priced toys are being sold in much large numbers. Customers are willing to spend upwards of 20,000 on toys,” Mr Jeswant said. Besides traditional toys, video games are expected to be a high-growth segment.

     

    The industry is, however, plagued by duplicates.

     

    “There are probably three dozen versions of Scrabble and two dozen versions of board game Monopoly in the market. But only one each of that is authentic,” said Mr Amit Bagaria, chairman of retail consultancy Asipac Projects.

     

    The consultancy estimates that toy retail within leisure megastores typically generate sales per sq ft of around 450, a little more than half of what children’s apparel stores do because consumers prefer lower-cost options.

     

    “The challenge will be for companies to convince consumers to switch from purchasing non-branded counterparts to the branded types,” said Ms Parita Chitakasem, research manager-India at market research firm Euromonitor International.

     

    Source:The Economic Times

    Copyright © 2011, Bennett, Coleman & Co. Ltd. All Rights Reserved