Tag: Aditya Birla Retail

  • Reliance Retail to turn hypermarkets into wholesale stores, to court kirana shops

    By Rasul Bailay

     

    Mukesh Ambani’s Reliance Retail is converting some of its big hypermarkets into wholesale cash-and-carry stores, in an apparent sign of modern retail’s inability to effectively take on neighbourhood stores in India.

     

    The Reliance Mart hypermarket in Bhopal’s Aashima Mall is currently under renovation and getting refitted to be reopened in February in a new avatar, as a cash-and-carry store.

     

    This 44,000-sq-ft hypermarket is among Reliance’s big-box stores, including one in Ludhiana and another in Aurangabad, that are being converted into cash-and-carry formats.

     

    The company has realised that in some locations, low-frills wholesale stores have better prospects of making money sooner than consumer-centric hypermarkets, which have wide margins but also are more expensive to operate, two people with knowledge of the development said on condition of anonymity

     

    So, in order to convert the adversaries – the mom-and-pop stores in this case – into allies, Reliance is adopting a simple strategy: It is courting them.

     

    In the cash-and-carry format, companies sell to bulk buyers, such as neighbourhood or kirana stores, who are their members. Reliance is setting up its wholesale stores in places where the concentration of kiranas is high as it is easier to make them customers than competing with them. The business also offers huge potential.

     

    Industry experts estimate cash and carry in India to become a $22-billion (about Rs 1.4-lakh crore) annual opportunity by 2017, and the market leader in the segment is expected to corner $4 billion to $5 billion of this. The main rival for modern cash-andcarry stores in India is “wholesale retailers” – thousands of small retailers crowded into large markets, such as the Sadar Bazar in Delhi.

     

    “Reliance Retail continues to evaluate its offerings and realign them in specific locations in order to establish sustainable relevance of the business with the consumer ecosystem,” a Reliance Retail spokesman said in an e-mailed reply to queries on the company’s plans on its cashand-carry business. In the traditional retail segment, the going hasn’t been smooth for organised players.

     

    Over the past five years, Reliance Retail, Aditya Birla Retail, Spencer’s Retail and others shuttered hundreds of smaller convenience stores to focus on expanding big boxes as the smaller stores faced direct competition from kirana stores.

     

    But hypermarkets, generally spread over 40,000 sqft to 60,000 sqft, come with their own set of challenges, such as high cost structure associated with a large number of staff, look and feel of the store as well as logistical cost that ultimately eat into overall profitability On the other hand, cash-and-carry business generates much higher volumes – as customers buy in bulk, albeit at low margins – with smaller operational cost. Cash-and-carry stores can be low-frills in terms of look and feel and ambience, and they save on logistical costs as companies and distributors would supply merchandizes directly to these stores.

     

    Generally, Reliance Markets, as Reliance’s wholesale stores are called, allows only bulk buyers through memberships.

     

    But the store at Bhopal’s Aashima Mall is also likely to sell to consumers apart from traditional kirana stores even after it is turned into a Reliance Market, according to Ashish Jain, marketing manager of the company that owns and runs the mall. “Since it is in a mall with a heavy consumer footfall, it will also cater to consumers,” he said.

     

    Reliance, in fact, is undertaking an aggressive plan to expand its cashand-carry chain. It entered this business with a store in Ahmedabad in 2011 and the pilot was tested for the next one-and-a-half years before opening another one in Bangalore. In the past nine months, however, Reliance has opened about a dozen cashand-carry stores. Plans are also afoot to make an upcoming store at Mohali in Punjab, which was originally planned to be a Reliance Mart, into a wholesale store as well, one of the persons cited earlier said. In comparison, Germany-based Metro AG, a pure cash-and-carry player that has so far opened 17 stores in India since its entry into the country a decade ago.

     

    An industry analyst said converting a hypermarket into the cash-and-carry format may not work in some cases. Hypermarkets and cash-and-carry stores are two entirely different formats with different demands and economies, Amitabh Mall, partner at Boston Consulting Group, said.

     

    “Converting any hypermarkets into cash-and-carry has to negate the disadvantages of lower margin at the cash-and-carry with the high rentals (of the existing hypermarkets),” Mr Mall said. “That is the equation someone needs to solve. It could work in some cases and may not in others. So it’s a mixed answer.”
    One of the anonymous persons cited above said Reliance has plans to convert many more hypermarkets into cash-and-carry in the coming months. However, Reliance denied this and said the conversion is limited and selective.

     

    Further, as a conscious approach, locations and stores are identified as opportunities for the entire retail business and the precise format or offering is finalised after due consideration of the consumer demography,” the company spokesman said.

     

    Source:The Economic Times

    Copyright © 2013, Bennett, Coleman & Co. Ltd. All Rights Reserved

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  • Everest wins Borosil’s creative mandate

    By A Correspondent

     

    Hot on the heels of bagging the Aditya Birla Retail “More” business, Everest has won the strategic and creative duties for Borosil in a multi-agency pitch. The agency’s Mumbai office will handle the business, initially working on the microwavables range.

     

    Commenting on the reasons for choosing Everest, Priyanka Kheruka, Director, Borosil Glass Works commented: “We, at Borosil, are very passionate about our brand and wanted a partner who shares our passion and vision for Borosil. Everest has demonstrated this passion and have created a strategy aligned with our vision.”

     

    Commenting on the win, Dhunji S. Wadia, President, Everest said: “We were given a very detailed and specific brief. This helped the team in working on interesting creative solutions. We are delighted to be their agency of choice. We look forward to take the brand to greater heights.”

     

    Rahul Jauhari, NCD, Everest said: “It’s great to welcome clients who appreciate totally unconventional thinking and work. We look forward to a wonderful relationship.”

     

    Borosil Glass Works is a producer of laboratory glassware and microwavable kitchenware in India. It was established in 1962 in collaboration with Corning Glass Works, USA. In 1988, Corningdivested its share holding to the current Indian promoters.

     

    Everest is a creatively led, full-service agency with a reputation for delivering fresh, original thing that helps clients succeed. The agency has offices in Mumbai and Delhi and representations in Chennai, Bengaluru and Kolkata.

     

  • Private labels of retailers Bharti Retail, Future Group outsell national brands in own stores

    By Sagar Malviya

     

    Private labels owned by retailers such as Bharti Retail, Future Group and Aditya Birla Retail outsold several national brands in home care and packaged food categories at their retail stores as value conscious consumers opted for best bargain in an uncertain economic condition and soaring headline inflation despite consumer goods companies aggressively betting on modern retail to drive future growth rate.

     

    For instance, Bharti Walmart’s private brand ‘Great Value’ tops the floor cleaner segment with 50 per cent share and are in the top three selling spot in terms of market share in categories such as tea, wheat flour, rice and branded snacks according to Nielsen latest retail index service during July-September 2011 period for the India FMCG Private Label market.

     

    Customers prefer private labels due to better quality, high food safety standards, international look and feel of products feels William Savage, chief merchandising officer, Bharti Walmart, which has private labels owned by retailers such as Bharti Retail, Future Group and Aditya Birla Retail outsell several national brands in certain home care and food categories at their retail stores even as big brands push more sales through modern retail.

     

    Coming at a time when national brands increasingly bet on modern retail to drive their future growth, analysts say even large manufacturers such as Hindustan Unilever and Reckitt Benckiser are impacted.

     

    “In short term, national companies will have to either go for promotions or discounting to fight back market share,” says Gautam Duggad, an analyst at brokerage Prabhudas Lilladhar. “But it also means losing margins and that’s a trade-off call the companies will have to take,” he adds.

     

    While retailers attribute the success of their own brands to value offers, good packaging and their increasing credibility, consumer product makers say private labels are gaining mostly in low-involvement categories.

     

    QUALITY AT LOW PRICE

    “Customers have begun to like private labels due to better quality, high food safety standards, international look and feel of products, customized packaging created after customer feedback and the credibility of the retailer,” said William Savage, chief merchandising officer, Bharti Walmart, which has over 35 per cent market share in wheat flour segment, close to 22 per cent in tea and 20 per cent in salty snacks, or namkeen.

     

    Private labels are mostly priced much lower that branded products because of substantial marketing and distribution savings. Retailers make up for lack of media marketing through in-store promotions and prominent display.

     

    In Big Bazaar stores, which started selling own brands four years ago, private labels are among the best sellers in at least a dozen product segments. Future Group Chairman Kishore Biyani believes its brands such as Tasty Treat and Clean Mate are now established. “Three years ago, our private label sales grew mainly because of experimentation and trials by consumers. But now, sales are driven by repeat purchases,” says Biyani.

     

    “We have quality products packed innovatively, priced attractively and placed strategically at our retail stores. So the success of private brands is a combination of all four Ps,” he adds.

     

    Aditya Birla Retail CEO Thomas Varghese says its More Value and More Choice brands have got good traction after the firm repositioned its private labels two years ago. Its private label pickles, with the widest range of regional variants, outsell the likes of Mother’s Recipe and Priya Pickles in More outlets. Hand wash, toilet and floor cleaners and disposable tissues are among the other segments More brands are among the best sellers.

     

    MARKETERS UNFAZED

    While companies such as Dabur, Emami and Parle acknowledge that private labels are gaining ground, they say it’s on segments where product differentiation is low and have relatively lower shopper involvement in purchase decisions, and that it will be tough for retailers to challenge national brands in high-involvement segments.

     

    “When it comes to foods or personal and beauty care products, consumers have been loyal to branded items and will continue to remain so,” said George Angelo, Dabur India Ltd Executive Director-Sales. He expects retailers to reduce product launches and rationalise range in this space.

     

    Emami CEO Krishna Mohan said it will be difficult to make strong private labels in personal care and over-the-counter health care segments because they require stronger consumer understanding and brands will need to innovate to provide extra benefit to consumers. But he expects retailers to eventually get there. “We are sure they are working on the same and eventually will venture into these categories which are huge.”

     

    Private brands already account for close to 7 per cent of modern trade sales in India, compared to 1 per cent in China, according to a Nielsen survey that covered more than 50 countries last year.

     

    And the scope is huge. Private brands account for more than 40 per cent of the total sales of the world’s largest retailer Walmart. The rise of private labels comes at a time when modern retail is increasing its contribution to the top line of most consumer goods firms.

     

    For instance, the country’s largest consumer goods company HUL gets around 12 per cent of its Rs20,000-crore annual sales by selling goods at modern retail stores compared with just 5 per cent four years ago.

     

    Source:The Economic Times

    Copyright © 2012, Bennett, Coleman & Co. Ltd. All Rights Reserved