Tag: Cafe Coffee Day

  • Cafe Coffee Day’s ‘Beano’ seeks to build customer conversations online

    By A Correspondent

     

    Café Coffee Day has always been at the forefront when it comes to engaging its youth followers on its social media platforms. Over time, CCD has seen success in many of its digital media activations like for World Hug Day and for the Football World Cup which  led to trending hashtags of  #LetsHugOverCoffee and #CCDFootballquiz respectively, to name a few. However, CCD’s latest social media activity is creating buzz of a different nature. For the first time, the brand has come out with a video campaign in a five part series. The first part of the series which was released last month, has already received over 1.2 million views to date.

     

    CCD’s first video campaign ‘Beano and the Bean’ is a lapse stop motion video painted with coffee itself. It revolves around a fun and endearing character called Beano, the caveman. The first part, a 2 minute video, introduces Beano and shows how he discovers the coffee bean in a fun and entertaining way. The objective behind the video was to create a deeper engagement with the audience with something that was fun and subtly revolves around coffee.

     

    CCD realized that its previous social media activities around art and doodles always received high engagement and responses from followers. The brand thus decided to go ahead with creativity led idea for its first video campaign. The brand roped in an artist who created hand drawn art using different densities of coffee decoction to narrate a story. Hence, the highlight of the video which has not only excited the creative community, but the audience at large is firstly the use of hand created coffee art in a stop motion video and the other is  the storytelling aspect. Moreover, the content is fun and the character is someone that everyone finds lovable.

     

    CCD has just released the second part of the Beano series on eve of Valentine’s Day. It is a minute long video that shows how Beano goes about meeting that someone special. With Beano, the idea was not to promote the brand or prove a point, but to create a property that the audience will embrace.

     

  • Café Coffee Day celebrates birthday with exciting offers for customers

    By A Correspondent

     

    Café Coffee Day (CCD) marks a key milestone this month – the brand celebrates its birthday as it completes 19 years of creating many moments for the young and young at heart. CCD commemorates this occasion by organizing a unique activity to create an excitement with its customers.

     

    As part of its 19th birthday celebration CCD has organized a surprise for its patrons. Consumers stand a chance to win freebies and discounts along with a mega bumper prize for one lucky winner.

     

    For a fortnight following the birthday, CCD will gift back an offer to each customer who bills at CCD which will be redeemable with their next visit to CCD. Customers will receive their offer via sms, the number which they will share with the café staff on request while placing their order. Once customers punch their bills they will receive a mCoupon of the offer. In exchange they will receive exciting treats. One lucky customer also stands a chance to win the grand prize – an all expense paid vacation to Coffee Day’s luxury resort in Karnataka, The Serai.

     

    Speaking on the occasion, Bidisha Nagaraj, Group President Marketing, Coffee Day said, “This month CCD completes 19 years of providing consumers all over the country a preferred place to hangout over a range of food & beverage offerings and we are very excited about it. Over the years, CCD has become synonymous with the coffee drinking experience in India and today has a significant following amongst the youth in the country. We wish to celebrate this milestone with our CCD fans with a special offer where we will be giving away a range of exciting treats including a free stay at one of our resorts.”

     

    CCD’s special birthday celebration will run across 700 cafés in the top seven cities of India which are Delhi, Mumbai, Bangalore, Kolkata, Chennai, Hyderabad, Pune, Chandigarh and Ahmedabad.

     

  • Saurabh Srivastava appointed CMO at MobiKwik

    By A Correspondent

     

    Saurabh Srivastava

    Leading mobile wallet firm MobiKwik has announced the appointment of Saurabh Srivastava as Chief Marketing Officer. Saurabh was previously VP – Marketing& Product Strategy at ixigo and has extensive experience in media, marketing, retail and branding.

     

    In his position as CMO, he will be a part of MobiKwik’s core leadership team.

     

    Saurabh, in his last role at ixigo was responsible for creating brand awareness, driving consumer insights and data to shape new products and building a superior marketing team. He brings with him 13 plus years of rich experience in consumer centric businesses and has worked with leading consumer and media brands like Goodyear, Maruti Suzuki, Dainik Jagran, GroupM and DDB in the past.

     

    Bipin Preet Singh, Founder and CEO, MobiKwik said, “Saurabh brings with him the experience of working with a variety of consumer brands both in the physical and online space and at different stages of their lifecycle. His experience of nurturing and growing brands, ability to understand consumer internet markets and drive data led consumer insights to achieve brand leadership are skills that will help MobiKwik reach the next level of growth. We welcome Saurabh on board and look forward to working with him to achieve our vision of creating the most preferred mobile wallet for customers and merchants.”

     

    MobiKwik is making a big offline push this year and has recently entered into a partnership with India’s leading retail chain of coffee cafés, Café Coffee Day (CCD) to enable customers make payments through the MobiKwik wallet across all outlets in India. This is the first serious push that a mobile wallet service has made to enable digital transactions with an offline merchant of the size and scale of Café Coffee Day. Saurabh’s understanding of offline retail will be useful for the company in its bid to get more and more offline retailers to adopt mobile wallets.

     

  • Coffee way to go!

     

    By Rahul Sachitanand & K R Balasubramanyam

     

    It is 5 pm on a weekday evening and the line at Starbucks in Indiabulls Finance Centre, a swish business complex in south Mumbai, is teeming with executives looking for their caffeine fix. With ties loosened and jackets casually slung over their arms, these men and women from the financial services, consumer goods and media firms housed in the towers of the complex are an ideal target audience for a range of beverages and snacks sold by Starbucks, the world’s largest coffee retailer; in 20 months of its inception in India ‘ via a 50-50 joint venture with Tata Global Beverages ‘ Starbucks has set up 46 such stores nationwide and has plans for dozens more.

     

    Cut to Ulundurpet, far removed from the urbane chatter at Indiabulls. This town of some 400,000 people in southern Tamil Nadu is best known for being halfway between Chennai and Tiruchirappalli, an industrial and temple town some 320 km to the south. If Starbucks has embarked on its fastest-ever expansion globally in India, the homegrown leader Cafe Coffee Day (CCD) isn’t easily intimidated. India’s largest coffee retailer has launched some 150 stores in the past 12 months and plans a similar number in the next year. What’s more, it isn’t sticking to one format. In a bid to firm up its position, CCD has launched formats for malls, highways, an upscale offering called Lounge and a single-origin coffee destination called Square.

     

    The world’s largest chain and India’s No. 1 retailer are squaring up for control of the country’s coffee retailing market.

     

    VG Siddhartha, the reticent founder of CCD, is all beans when he speaks to ET Magazine. ‘Our dream is to be among the top three retail coffee brands in the world,’ he says. Already, CCD is present in some 200 towns across the country (it is often the first and only coffee retailer in many locations) and is aggressively expanding its footprint. ‘We hope to grow our retail business at about 20% in 2014-15 [and] we hope to do a revenue of Rs 1,200 crore from retail sales and another Rs 350 crore from the wholesale and export business this year.’

     

    Siddhartha is firmly stepping on the gas with CCD. ‘We want to have around 2,500 Caf’ and Express outlets in three years’we will set them up wherever there are opportunities, including at educational institutions, hospitals, expressways and high streets.’

     

    Bean There, Done That

    Siddhartha, who pioneered the bean-to-cup concept in the coffee industry ‘ his Amalgamated Bean Coffee owns the plantations where coffee is grown and processed and later served at CCD outlets ‘ is now set to take his next big step. According to reports, CCD has initiated plans for an initial public offering, which may value the chain at $1 billion and provide PE investors such as KKR an exit. CCD and its investors declined comment on the possibility of such an IPO.

     

    A war chest from such an IPO will help Siddhartha finance what is quickly evolving into a two-horse race for India’s coffee cafe mart. India’s No. 1 chain, which has spent the past two decades building up its business ‘ and has been predominately unchallenged ‘ will face up to its strongest challenge yet. The $15-billion Starbucks is preparing to raid its citadel, digging its heels in for a long, bruising brawl.

     

    Coffee, Anyone?

    India is predominately a nation of tea drinkers, with most chains struggling to keep business afloat. Siddhartha opened the first CCD in 1996 on Bangalore’s Brigade Road, initially to serve pricey cups of coffee and let customers experience internet, then a novelty. While he opened the first store based on visiting a similar store in Singapore, the internet novelty wore off and CCD gradually became a beverage and food retailer.

     

    Over the past two decades, CCD and other chains have been trying to persuade more people to visit their outlets and drink coffee. For all the coffee drinking claims, India remains a relative lightweight. Scandinavians throw back, by far, the most amounts of coffee and, across the world, several other countries such as the US and China swill vastly more coffee than India (see A Tea Country Still).

     

    Since inception, CCD (and several other chains) have scaled up the coffee drinking experience from crowded non-airconditioned cafes to far more luxurious outlets, offering clean cutlery, a refined ambience and, increasingly, a growing assortment of food. Indians have willingly signed up, with industry estimates pegging this segment’s growth at about 20% annually.

     

    The advent of CCD and later a plethora of chains targeting this free-spending consumer catalyzed coffee sales. ‘Domestic consumption of coffee, which was almost stagnant in the 1980s and 1990s, picked up an impressive pace in the past 7-8 years,’ says Jawaid Akhtar, chairman, Coffee Board. ‘We estimate the domestic consumption at about 115,000 metric tonnes a year now which is growing at about 5% a year’driven largely by consumption through branded coffee chains.’

     

    CCD and Starbucks are both wrestling for a share of this fast-growing market ‘ and elbowing out the strugglers in their slugfest.

     

    Risky Business

    CCD’s Siddhartha will be the first to admit that running a cafe chain can be a bruising business. For starters, real estate costs have hobbled and humbled many of CCD’s rivals, who’ve struggled to make costly stores in central districts viable.

     

    According to industry estimates, rentals can account for 15-25% of the cost of running a cafe chain. Then, there’s the investment in making a store appealing to customers with its interiors, finding people to run them and building a food and beverage menu that’s hip enough to keep 18-24-year-olds ‘ the target market for coffee chains ‘ coming back for more. CCD has tried to find a way around this problem by entering into a revenue-sharing deal, paying 10-20% of a unit’s proceeds as a fee. ‘Store location is a prime factor to consider for these chains,’ says Reteesh Shukla, associate director, food and agriculture, with Technopak, a business consultancy. ‘Retail space is becoming very expensive, but you need to balance the ever-increasing costs of this prime real estate by being in [relatively less expensive] areas frequented by the youth.’

     

    CCD has been successful in India because of its beanto-cup business strategy, which gives it control over bean production and processing and greater efficiency from its back-end set up. While Starbucks does have similar strengths thanks to its Tata tie-up, industry watchers say its relative lack of size in India means it’s at a disadvantage in squeezing out similar economies of scale. Opening a new store isn’t just about finding a good location and dressing it up for a brand-conscious a u d i -ence. Instead coffee chains need to figure out a tricky supply chain ‘ how to get food and beverage to these outlets quickly, while keeping quality high.

     

    The others, who don’t have this backward linkage, have predictably struggled.

     

    While the opportunity may be tempting, food and beverage outlets are dealing with a soft market, where consumers are cutting down on how often they eat out and reducing how much they order when they do. For cafes such as CCD or Starbucks, this is a blessing in disguise ‘ consumers are reducing their spend on full-scale restaurant meals and instead scaling it down to a coffee and a snack.

     

    Starbucks’ Advent

    Since he started his coffee chain, Siddhartha is facing up to perhaps his biggest challenge. Starbucks, which opened its first store in 1971 in Seattle’s Pike Market, today operates 20,519 stores globally. In the US, the chain has become a byword for a quick, upscale cuppa (not just coffee, but increasingly tea too, with Teavana Oprah Chai launched with talk show host Oprah Winfrey), with Alist celebs and executives all having their personal favourites. Starbucks has attracted thousands of loyal customers to its My Starbucks loyalty programme and has even worked with tech start-up Square to pilot cashless transactions at its stores.

     

    While Starbucks has till recently focused on its home market, it has changed tack in the past few years. For example, it announced ambitious plans to scale up its presence in China ‘ it will open 700-odd stores this year ‘ even as it looked to manage tough economic headwinds. In October 2012, the firm announced a JV with the Tata Group to launch some 50 stores in India. While Starbucks thought of initially going it alone in India (foreign direct investments in single brand retailing are kosher) it decided to lean on Tata Global Beverages’ experience in the coffee industry supply chain to give it additional leverage here.

     

    Expanding faster in China and then India is financially prudent for Starbucks. Starbucks’ operating margin for the second quarter of financial year 2014 (ended March) was 32.8% for the China Asia-Pacific segment, 21.6% for the Americas and 5.7% for Europe, the Middle East and Africa.

     

    While CCD had to build its brand from scratch in India, Starbucks hopes to leverage a globally familiar label with its target audience. When its first store opened in each city, winding queues were formed well before opening time. Familiar with its offerings in tall, grande and venti sizes, thanks to consumers who’d travelled overseas, either in real life or virtually, Starbucks’ India business got off to a rousing start.

     

    Chinese Inspiration

    Starbucks has shown some gumption going after opportunities overseas. For example, it has made a splash in the Chinese market, says Elizabeth Friend, an analyst with Euromonitor, a research and analysis firm. ‘Starbucks has done very well in a number of emerging markets’much of this has had to do with the brand’s very strong global reputation, which helped it to gain more immediate traction than other lesser-known chains,’ she says.

     

    ‘They’ve also done a really great job tailoring their brand ‘ through store design, menu innovation and even learning how local stores are operated ‘ to best suit each individual market.’ In China, this has included leaning toward larger store footprints that offer space to relax with coffee in the afternoon. The addition of beverages such as the red-bean frapuccino and a broader tea-based menu have helped Starbucks make strong inroads into the Chinese market, says Friend.

     

    Starbucks’ rise in China may provide many lessons for its India business. In a large country Starbucks has had to localize its menu to keep customers coming in ‘ something it has done quickly in India too, with dishes such as chicken tikka panini. Starbucks had cornered over two-thirds of the coffee caf’ market in China until 2010, estimates Euromonitor, even if aggressive domestic rivals have more recently cut its market share to 60%.

     

    Friend of Euromonitor says Starbucks has been able to replicate some of this success in India, too. ‘Some of India’s new outlet launches have been among Starbucks’ most successful in its history,’ she claims. ‘Starbucks has been steadily gaining on local leader Cafe Coffee Day, though the chain will continue to pose a significant threat.’
    Slow Brew

    Starting with its first store in Elphinstone Building in south Mumbai ‘ the Tata’s iconic Bombay House headquarters is just a stone’s throw away ‘ Starbucks has built its business steadily in India. In fact, the chain is behind its initial target of 50 stores ‘ it has 46 operational currently ‘ but has expanded to the National Capital Region, Bangalore and Pune as it seeks to take on CCD.

     

    According to analysts, Starbucks has firmed up its presence as a premium coffee retailer, with some malls even using it as a carrot to attract free-spending consumers to its premises. ‘Having a Starbucks outlet is a guarantee to attract upscale customers to a mall and this in turn helps convince international labels to rent space there,’ says Anand Sundaram, CEO of PPZ, a mall management firm which operates malls nationwide; RCity in Mumbai’s Ghatkopar suburb, for instance, houses a Starbucks store.

     

    A 34-year-old Tata Administrative Services graduate is piloting Starbucks’ business in India. Avani Davda went from being an executive assistant to Tata Group veteran Krishna Kumar to helming the joint venture with Starbucks for India. Having tasted her first Starbucks Coffee in Seattle in 2011 (she counts Sumatra and India Estate Blends as her favourites), Davda thinks the chain has plenty of scope for growth. ‘India is one of the most exciting markets in the world’we believe we have a unique opportunity to deliver an unparalleled coffeehouse experience to Indian consumers,’ she says.

     

    ‘We firmly believe in our ability to build and grow the Starbucks brand in India and are confident in the opportunities that the Indian market offers for it to become one of the top five markets for Starbucks globally.’

     

    Heady Growth India provides a fertile market opportunity for CCD and Starbucks. According to company executives and analysts, there is plenty of opportunity for growth. Euromonitor says the Indian coffee cafe market will grow from Rs 1,683 crore in 2012 to Rs 2,276 core in 2017.

     

    ‘Growth of cafes in India is driven by many factors, including favourable demographics, rising income levels, graduation from mid-sized towns [to large metros] and the advent of global chains,’ says Sunitha Barlota, a research analyst at Euromonitor International. ‘Cafes in India are considered a perfect place to socialize among college goers and working professionals.’

     

    Others such as Asitava Sen, head of the food, agriculture research and advisory team at Rabobank Group in India, believe there is plenty of headroom for growth in this space, with cafes just starting out on a sharp growth curve. Sen estimates that there are around 2,000 coffee cafes across India and there is room for 5,000 or more nationwide. ‘The Indian market is very different from the West ‘ here a visit to a caf’ is more a social occasion and less a quick visit’the opportunity for cafe owners is to try and get a greater share of wallet from these consumers,’ he adds.

     

    Starbucks has discovered over the past few months how different it is doing business in India. According to Manmeet Vohra, the Indian operation’s marketing and category chief, they discovered that peak hours in India were 2 pm to 6 pm (compared to 5 am to 11 am in the US, for example) and takeout orders accounted for barely a fifth of their business in India (compared to 80% in the US).

     

    What’s more, as customers spend time in the cafes, they needed to design them differently. So the cookie cutter design gave way to customized spaces in each city ‘ for example its store in Pune uses copper elements, in a nod to the heritage of the city. ‘After office and home, we want to be the firm favourite as a third place to hang out,’ Vohra adds.

     

    According to brand consultant Harish Bijoor, consumers have made their preferences clear ‘ Starbucks is the more upscale hangout, while CCD is a budget option. ‘Both these brands have strongly defined identities and consumers identify with them,’ says Bijoor, who worked for eight years at Tata Coffee (a subsidiary of Tata Global) between 1993 and 2001. By his estimates there are currently 2,350 cafes, while the potential is for as many as 6,440 such outlets.

     

    Success Potion

    According to analysts such as Euromonitor’s Barlota, there are three or four key ingredients that determine the success of a coffee cafe. Other than location ‘ CCD’s success to date is determined by being located close to colleges, business complexes, high streets and malls ‘ pricing can be a make or break factor. This is particularly crucial at the lower end of the market where budget-conscious buyers are wary of shifting from cheap restaurants (sometimes called Darshinis) to a CCD or Starbucks. Those that do make the shift and pay the premium can be demanding on quality of service and product.

     

    As consumers make their choices known, there seem to be strong indications that India’s coffee cafe market is going to consolidate. According to analysts, while CCD may be the mass market leader, Starbucks has occupied a strong position in the premium space, with plans to slowly but surely expand its presence. This means others in the market, including Costa Coffee, Baritsa and Gloria Jean’s, will struggle to attract and retain loyal custo mers. As the market gets polarized, CCD and Starbucks are expected to soon dominate the coffee cafe sweepstakes.

     

    Some of these signs of strife are already visible. For example, Barista, the second organized retail chain in India after CCD, is on the market for a third time . While Ravi Deol, the chain’s first CEO, was tipped as a leading takeover candidate, his interest has faded in the past few weeks. Deol couldn’t be reached for comment. Italian owner Lavazza also declined comment.

     

    Then, Costa Coffee, brought into India by Devyani International, is the subject of much wrangling between partners. Devyani, which runs the India business for the likes of KFC and Pizza Hut, has struggled for years with the Costa Coffee business. Virag Joshi, the CEO of Devyani, wasn’t available on the phone and didn’t respond to an email seeking comment.

     

    Costa Coffee, however, doesn’t seem to have given up on India. ‘Costa is the world’s second largest coffee shop brand and is growing rapidly in its domestic UK market and globally adding over 300 stores a year,’ says Kate Manning, a spokesperson for the chain. ‘We are very much committed to growing our presence in India.’ While Costa has some 120 stores in India, she declined to enumerate the firm’s future plans. Costa’s India head, Santhosh Unni, has recently quit.

     

    Third, Gloria Jean’s is also dealing with its own dose of bitter beans, with its joint venture with The Landmark Group on the rocks. Both sides didn’t respond to emails seeking comments, but real estate analysts said the chain was scaling back its presence in costly high-street locations to salvage the business.

     

    However, CCD’s Siddhartha isn’t getting distracted by the woes of the competition. ‘All foreign coffee brands are looking at the top 5% of the Indian market ‘ i.e. high income group consumers,’ he says. ‘But we are focusing on the dynamic youth population. Roughly 70% of Indians today are below 35, and our goal is to reach out to them.’

     

    Focus Matters

    Experts argue that as a scale player, CCD has been able to escape much of the tumult in the sector because it has focused on its core proposition of affordable coffee, with comfortable surroundings, and steered clear of trying to tinker too much with a winning formula.

     

    This is not to say that it has stood still in an evolving market. CCD, for example, gets around 35% of its business from food ‘ an area it only focused on in the past 12-18 months.

     

    ‘What stands out about Siddh artha and CCD is their ability to make strategic changes in response to customer demand and competition ‘ expanding the food offerings or rationalizing store count to sustain growth and profitability are great examples,’ says Sanjay Nayar, MD and CEO of KKR India.

     

    ‘There is a great opportunity for CCD to leverage its large network to drive growth in a new direction,’ he adds. In March 2010, KKR invested $210 million in Coffee Day Resorts, the holding firm which includes the coffee retailing business.

     

    Venu Madhav, who has been with CCD since day one and got promoted as chief executive over a month ago, says the coffee retailer is streets ahead of the competition in understanding the Indian consumers’ needs.

     

    ‘Cafes are social hubs, where coffee and conversation play a key role in the success of an outlet,’ he says. ‘India is a value-conscious market and we see ourselves in the affordable luxury category of coffee retail.’

     

    Madhav is keen to expand the reasons consumers stroll into a CCD ‘ not just for a relaxed cuppa but for breakfast, lunch and dinner, too. It’s no surprise that CCDs on many highways are popular rest stops and the chain is focused on expanding its presence in the space.

     

    Brand Battles

    CCD is acutely aware that it takes little for consumers to switch loyalties ‘ however good the coffee may be. To try to keep pace, CCD’s interiors are periodically updated to prevent its ambience from looking dated and jaded. ‘The look of our stores changes completely every couple of years,’ avers Madhav.

     

    While CCD continues on its rapid expansion path, Starbucks isn’t rushing to keep pace. According to industry sources, Starbucks could add a dozen or more outlets in the next year in India and is looking to expand its presence in the cities it is present in and consider going to second-tier metros, too.

     

    ‘Each market comes with its own set of opportunities and challenges and our guiding principle across all markets continues to remain the same: to inspire and nurture the human spirit ‘ one person, one cup and one neighbourhood at a time,’ says Davda. And in the process she’d be hoping Starbucks coffee becomes most Indians’ cup of tea.

     

    Source:The Economic Times

    Copyright © 2014, Bennett, Coleman & Co. Ltd. All Rights Reserved

    Licensed to republish

     

  • Experian Marketing Services bags Cafe Coffee Day, Apnapaisa and Yepme

    By A Correspondent

     

    Experian CheetahMail, the world’s largest permission-based email marketing platform, has expanded its portfolio of clients by signing up with Cafe Coffee Day, Apnapaisa and Yepme.com. Experian Marketing Services will partner with these prestigious brands to help them engage with their audience through advanced email marketing strategies. These new clients join an existing roster of brands such as Makemytrip, Lemon Tree Hotels and Flipkart, helping Experian CheetahMail strengthen its position in the Indian market.

     

    On securing these new signups Naveen Bachwani, Head of Experian Marketing Services, said, “Experian CheetahMail is pleased to partner with Cafe Coffee Day, Apnapaisa and Yepme.com, to help improve the RoI on their digital marketing programs by deploying sophisticated Email Marketing strategies on the foundation of an industry-leading permission-based platform.” “Every marketer’s need is to get the right message delivered to the right consumer at the right time. The Experian CheetahMail platform and its team of highly experienced professionals, enables customers to tailor their marketing strategies to suit their consumer preferences, define an appropriate segmentation approach and maximize Inbox deliverability with measurable results.”

     

    K Ramakrishnan, President, Cafe Coffee Day, said, “CheetahMail is an email marketing platform that has helped us communicate effectively with our customers. With a robust reporting platform and hands-on help from the team, I’m confident we will be able to tailor our communication much better.”

     

    Hemang Desai, COO of Apnapaisa, said, “CheetahMail brings to ApnaPaisa a product that delivers great flexibility, combined with some of the best practices of contemporary email marketing. Today, subscriber engagement not only impacts performance but also future deliverability. Hence, working with a partner who can track and report up-to-the-minute metrics, as also advise you with real, implementable solutions to improve these metrics, is invaluable. We are delighted with our partnership with Cheetahmail.”

     

    Sandeep Sharma, Co-Founder, COO & CTO of Yepme, added, “Experian is a very dynamic company and has put in efforts to understand our business. The solution is designed to better understand our customers and help in ROI improvement through targeted marketing. The team understands the challenges of our business model, and tries to provide help in operational aspects. I think Experian’s greatest strength is their people – they are not just trying to sell you a product, but are also able to look beyond to forge a long-term partnership.”

     

  • There’s a lot brewing at CCD, Madison wins Media AOR, Creativeland creates TVC

    By A Correspondent

     

    Gautam Kiyawat

    Madison Media has been appointed as the media AoR (Agency on Record) Cafe Coffee Day. The account size is estimated to be approx Rs. 40 crores and will be handled by Madison Media Omega in Bangalore. Said Gautam Kiyawat, Group CEO, Madison Media,”We are delighted to have India’s premier and leading Cafe chain, Cafe Coffee Day, to our roster of clients and are confident of helping it grow and gain further market share in the country.”

     

    CCD today has over 1,450 Cafes across over 185 cities and as a brand has never advertised in mass media in the last 16 years of its existence. It has been built solely through marketing initiatives, coffee category building activities, public relations, social media, engaging the ever-aspirational Indian consumer.

     

    K. Ramakrishnan, President Marketing, Cafe Coffee Day said, “Cafe Coffee Day being a brand for the young and the young at heart, we needed a partner who would be passionate about the brand, to be able to understand the category in depth and the varying dynamics to enable us to move along at a fast pace. We are confident of Madison Media’s thought leadership and competence in executing the campaigns. We are delighted to have them on board.”

     

    However, with brand presence expanding over 185 cities into newer, emerging towns and markets, it’s time for the brand to introduce their first ever television commercial campaign ‘Sit Down’ aiming to reinforce itself into every single household in India, as they make inroads into several newer and unconventional markets.

     

    The ‘Sit Down’ TVC, conceptualized and created by Creativeland Asia, is part of a 360-degree-campaign. This is CCD’s first-ever TVC in its 16 years of existence.

     

    The TVC captures CCD-goers across Cafes in India, telling, actually singing about what they are sitting down for. From sitting down for love and peace, to sitting down to make friends and to tweet, to sitting down to read and to dream, the film showcases plenty of ‘sit downs’ that happen at over 1450 CCDs every single day. The film ends with the line, “Sit Down. A lot can happen over coffee”.

     

    Sajan Raj Kurup

    Sajan Raj Kurup, Founder and Creative Chairman, Creativeland Asia, said, “This is the first ever TVC for CCD. I feel extremely fortunate to have had this unique historic opportunity. We have given it our most honest shot at it. And I hope CCD regulars like it. Personally, as someone who goes to CCD and someone who has been working on the brand for five years now, I feel extremely happy when I see this piece of work. We wanted CCD’s first ever TVC to be a little more than an Advert. Something that CCD goers identify with. Something that is effortless and not trying to hard. Something that is neither too heavy nor too frivolous. In the whole idea of Sit-down, we eventually found all these and more. A powerful thought which is socially relevant in India at this juncture.”

     

    He added, “While the hype initially may be on the TVC, the campaign will be integrated across media. Digital and social playing a very poignant role. Many campaign specific acts have been planned over the last year and will be executed phase-wise.”

     

    The TVC was shot over seven days across various CCDs across the country with a cast of over 75 youngsters. The unique craft of the TVC intelligently combines two contrarian culture. One, the Cafe and the other, the social media space. The storyline of the TVC shows how a bunch of youngsters started a movement call sit-down by self-recording videos across various CCDs across the country to the self anthem and then posting it via various avenues on social media. The central message of the TVC being to stop creating morchas or standing up against things, and instead Sit-down talk  over a cup of coffee and find a way forward. Over 130 social-media profiles were used. Live posts were diligently crafted and created to become the frame-work of the TVC.

     

    The TVC is produced by Equinox Films and directed by Ram Madhvani. “Great effort has gone into crafting every detail in the TVC by Ram, myself and our respective teams who have relentlessly worked over months to design each and every frame in the TVC,” added Mr Raj Kurup.

     

    Speaking on the launch of its first TVC, Mr Ramakrishnan said, “CCD as a brand has never advertised in mass media in the last 16 years of its existence. It has been built solely through unique and pioneering marketing initiatives, coffee category building activities, public relations and more recently through social media. We believe it is the right time to get deeper into our customers lives, possible only through television.”

     

  • Make mine a Mocha Frappuccino!

     

    By A Correspondent

     

    For all the coffee enthusiasts, the good news is that Starbucks is finally in India and opening its first store in Mumbai today. One doesn’t have to head to another land for your shot of Mocha Frappuccino. Or the signature hot chocolate. Yes, Starbucks enters India in a 50:50 joint venture with Tata Global Beverages and looks like the coffee retail chain business will only get more competitive with the entry of global behemoth.

     

    On the launch, John Culver, President, Starbucks China and Asia Pacific, said, “We are delighted to be able to announce our progress toward opening our first store in India and to introduce locally sourced espresso. Being able to use the highest quality espresso, sourced and roasted in India, is an important part of delivering a locally relevant experience to our customers in the market. This is the first step Starbucks and Tata Coffee Limited are taking toward developing and improving the profile of Indian-grown arabica coffees around the world by elevating the stature of Indian coffee, as well as improving the quality of coffee through sustainable practices.”

     

    Cafe Coffee Day or CCD as popularly known from Amalgamated Bean Coffee Trading Co Ltd (ABCTCL) is the leading coffee retail chain and has been rapidly growing in India. Barista, Costa Coffee, Mocha, The Coffee Bean and Tea Leaf and Gloria Jean’s are some other leading coffee chains India.

     

    Euromonitor International, October 2012 in its study for Cafes/Bars in India points that specialist coffee shops continue to grow at the fastest rate of nearly 25% in current value terms in 2011. It also reports that Amalgamated Bean Coffee Trading Co Ltd (Cafe Coffee Day brand) continues to lead value sales, with a share of 1.1% in 2011. In terms of growth it offers that the Cafes/bars is likely to grow at a constant value CAGR of 3% to reach Rs725.6 billion by 2016.

     

    The report also states that “Urban consumers, including professionals and youngsters, increasingly started to prefer Cafes as places to hang out in 2011. Cafes such as CCD and Barista emerged as the favourite destinations for casual business meetings. Further, the Cafe trend also started to gain huge popularity even in Tier II cities such as Ghaziabad and Hubli, where young consumers were the dominant consumers.”

     

    The encouraging bit is that Cafes/bars value sales grew at a faster rate compared to the review period. The faster growth in 2011 was mainly due to the growing popularity of Cafes/bars as hang out zones for young consumers. Further, chained Cafe’s such as CCD started to include food on their menus to cater to the snacking needs of consumers. Such expansion of menus helped to increase the average spend and value sales even further in 2011. Specialist coffee shops continued to grow at the fastest rate of nearly 25% in current value terms in 2011. To cater to the growing consumer base, Cafe operators such as Cafe Coffee Day expanded the number of outlets drastically in 2011.

     

    K.S Narayanan, CEO, Pan India Food Solutions (The Coffee Bean & Tea Leaf), “The coffee market, by all parameters, is set to grow further in India. While it’s a complex business to manage, given our division over choice of beverage in different parts of the country, the entry of these many brands means more choice for consumers, in addition to segmentation of the market. The growth story for CBTL has been encouraging since we started out in 2008. We’re focused on the premium coffee and tea consumer and strive to deliver the most premium Cafe experience to the customer in terms of product, ambience, and service. Our CBTL business continues to grow at a steady pace and we have added six outlets this fiscal year.”

     

    Another important trend that Euromonitor quotes is that Coffee shops continued to have drinks as their major offering, accounting for nearly 60% of the value sales in 2011. However, most of the coffee shops started to expand their food offering to attract consumers to their outlets.

     

    Independent Cafes accounted for nearly 96% of the total value sales of Cafes/bars in 2011. Independent Cafes continued to enjoy huge popularity amongst older consumers who prefer to have evening and morning hot beverages in traditional independent Cafes, such as Indian Coffee House and Airlines. However, independent Cafes continued to lose share to chained Cafes, which witnessed strong growth in 2011.

     

    India’s Cafes/bars category is highly fragmented with no player constituting a double-digit share in 2011. Amalgamated Bean Coffee Trading Co Ltd (ABCTCL) continued to lead Cafes/bars with a value share of 1.1% in 2011. The company continued to enjoy an established presence across the country under the brands, Cafe Coffee Day and Coffee Day Xpress. Other Cafes/bars, such as Barista, Java Green, and Costa Coffee, also enjoyed huge popularity amongst consumers. It should be noted Amalgamated Bean Coffee Trading Co witnessed the fastest growth, mainly due to rapid expansion in the number of Cafe Coffee Day outlets in 2011.

     

    Whitbread Plc’s flagship brand Costa Coffee witnessed strong regional and national growth across India’s chained Cafes category in 2011. The company enjoyed a value share of 5% of chained specialist coffee shops in 2011. Costa Coffee focuses on business professionals (i.e. expatriates) and affluent households in cosmopolitan cities such as Bangalore and Delhi.

     

    Chained Cafes such as Barista and Cafe Coffee Day are likely to expand the number of outlets and also extend reach to Tier II cities during the forecast period. The expansion plans would allow Cafe chains to leverage on the growing preferences of Tier II consumers to go to Cafes to socialise. Additionally, chained Cafes are also likely to focus on expanding their food menus, including the introduction of value for money food items in their menus over the forecast period.

     

    Increasing real estate rentals, overheads and food price inflation are likely to threaten the profitability of Cafe operators during the forecast period. Such an increase in costs is expected to force Cafe operators to pass on the costs to consumers who might choose to cut side orders.

     

    On the space changing with the entry of Starbucks,  Mr Narayanan said, “With the coming of international brands, the consumer will now get a wider choice of product offerings in the market place which would in turn enable the market to be more sharply segmented and grow at an accelerated pace.

     

    Specific to CBTL he added, “Coffee Bean and Tea Leaf prides itself on the quality of teas and coffees it has on offer for its patrons. Our beverages (coffees and teas) are sourced from the world’s best plantations which comprises about 1% of the world’s produce. That quality experience that we offer to our consumers will continue as we have set out to do.”

     

    Technopak Advisors, a management consulting firm noted that the café brands are moving closer to consumers for easy accessibility. Therefore, they are moving beyond traditional locations (high streets, markets, shopping malls) to other promising and high catchment venues such as offices, hospitals, educational institutions/campuses, airport etc. Besides new formats are being introduced beyond traditional dine such as kiosks, premium lounges among others.

     

    They also outline the challenges in this business and real estate is the biggest one. More brands are now vying for the same space – consequently rentals are high and often a big part of operating expense. There is the issue of supply chain for new brands due to small scale of operations to start with; existing brands need to streamline operations for operational profitability as they grow in store numbers. There is a need for increased investment in resources, kitchen, quality audits, greater financial investment and technology. The challenge is also menu where bands need to standardise the production process in growth phase to provide quality food and beverages across cities. At Store Level, the challenges include that with the growth of the sector, managing store level operations will become increasingly important in terms of staff training, retention, quality of service and standardisation of café design among others.

    Starbucks spokespersons were not available for comment on the eve of the launch to reveal their pricing.

     

    Images from www.Starbucks.in

     

  • Starbucks for festive season flag off in Mumbai

    By Arun Kumar & Rasul Bailay

     

    Starbucks Coffee Co and its Indian joint venture partner Tata Group have plans to open around 40 stores by December, half of those in hotels and the rest in high-street malls, a person with the direct knowledge of the plans said.

     

    The person said the 50:50 joint venture, Tata Starbucks, has so far lined up 14 properties in malls and high streets in the New Delhi capital region, Mumbai, Bangalore and Chennai and will make its India debut in September or October from the commercial capital, Mumbai.

     

    The firm will adopt a cluster approach to simultaneously open three to four outlets in each city they initially go to. Mumbai will be followed by the National Capital Region, Bangalore and Chennai. The properties finalised in hotels include the Ambassador and President hotels under the Vivanta by Taj label, a contemporary luxury chain just notch below the super luxury Taj brand of the Tata group.

     

    “We are looking at both Tata properties as well as non-Tata properties and will focus on how we can become part of the local community where we do business,” a Starbucks spokesperson said in an e-mail reply. The alliance is also in talks with non-Tata hotel chains such as Marriott Hotels to open their outlets.

     

    The joint venture will invest Rs100-150 crore this year alone and has a total budget of $100 million (around Rs 550 crore) to invest in India in the next two to three years, the person familiar with the plan said.

     

    He added that the Seattle-based coffee chain – the largest in the world – will manage the business and source many of its staff from the Tata-owned Taj Hotels. All the stores in the initial stage will have a combination of the lounge as well as takeaway facilities, he said.

     

    Starbucks operates more than 17,000 stores in almost 60 countries. The coffee titan has been exploring possibilities to enter India for many years. Earlier it had made an abortive attempt to foray into India before it called off a joint venture involving its Indonesian franchise and Kishore Biyani of the Future Group. In 2007, the joint venture withdrew its foreign investment proposal with the Indian government without citing any reason.

     

    Now, Starbucks is back with a new partner and is bullish on India, a country with one of the lowest rate of coffee per capita consumption in the world.

     

    Local chain Cafe Coffee Day and global chains such as Barista Lavazza, Costa Coffee and Gloria Jeans are among others currently operating around 2,000 outlets in the country.

     

    Industry estimates that the Rs 1,000 crore coffee-through branded outlets sector is growing at an annual rate of 20 per cent. “I don’t see Starbucks as a competition… I see them as a player who will make drinking coffee through outlets a routine business,” said Virag Joshi, chief executive of Devyani International, which operates more than 100 Costa Coffee stores in India.

     

    The company plans to invest Rs400 crore to add 400 more outlets in the next five years. “The market will keep evolving and will keep growing over the years,” he added.

     

    Source: The Economic Times

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

     

  • Five years of Creativeland Asia

    Sajan Raj Kurup

    By Tuhina Anand

     

    As Creativeland Asia (CLA) completes five years of existence, one cannot ignore the fact that the agency has managed to find a foothold in this industry and not just that but has managed to do very well for itself. At its birth in 2007, CLA was just another name started by an awardwinning ex-creative head with a few others but slowly and steadily it has managed to find a place for itself and this has only happened because of its cutting edge and consistently good work on accounts like Frooti or for German luxury automobile manufacturer Audi which won a GrandPrix at both Spikes Asia and Goafest. And of course the much acclaimed work for Hippo.

     

    Talking about CLA, Sajan Raj Kurup, Founder and Creative Chairman at CLA said, “Completing five years is a landmark especially in a market like India but what makes this even more special is that we have made it on our own terms. I believe that India is one of the most creative countries and I have wanted to show that creativity to the world. While on the downside, making it on your own in India also becomes difficult because of various reasons and that’s the challenge we took. We managed to reach this point only because of the unconditional support that we have received from our friends who have been with us through thick and thin and our clients who became our biggest investors by believing in us.”

     

    He added, “At CLA we have created a culture that is quite ingenious to our way of working. We have created a culture of excellence and most importantly we have stayed away from the muck. This has helped us in focusing on real work that has worked for the clients. We may have won awards but I can vouch that none of them were scams as we steer clear of them. There is no work for awards sake but only work that works, that’s been our motto and I can say that today people outside of CLA recognize this culture and there are many young people who want to join us only because they know of our culture and our commitment to creativity. I don’t know if we have created a perfect place but we have created a place we are proud to be part of.”

     

    Work@CLAVikram Gaikwad, Partner and Executive Creative Director, Creativeland Asia

    I realise that if you are doing what you really want to do, five years can go by before you know it. I am happy and proud that we have managed to live up to the plan we discussed the very first day of Creativeland’s inception, and we have stood by our principles from the very first day. We have consistently worked towards excelling in whatever we wanted to do. We also have our clients to thank who believe in us without whose partnership this achievement would not have been possible.

     

    Anu Joseph, Executive Creative Director, Creativeland Asia

    Sitting at Raj’s dining table five years ago, I knew we could be where we are today, if we stuck to Raj’s vision for Creativeland. There was clarity about how we were going to go about things. There have been ups and downs, heartbreaks and pressures, but it has been a pleasure walking into work every single day. And of course, there is so much we owe to our client partners who have invested their faith in us. They have been the force behind every piece of work we have done.

    These words clearly show that Mr Kurup is happy with the way CLA has shaped up. In fact, CLA is the first and the only agency from India that has made to the World’s Leading Independent agencies list in 2010. He points five events that made CLA in the last five years for the agency: CLA creating benchmark in creativity with every category it has worked on, from being a 4-5 member team to being 90-member team and creating a strong agency culture without any compromise, recognized as a leading independent agency and getting Grand Prix for real works, lasting relationship and innovative thinking and lastly being able to consistently deliver good work.

     

    Giving his take on working with CLA, Michael Perschke, Head, Audi India said, “I find Creativeland to be a good creative melting pot, one that is not restricted to typical media avenues. As an owner-driven agency, Creativeland is capable of doing things their own way and coming up with solutions, while keeping the core brand messages in mind. Their ideas have worked very well for us. Some of the work has been exposed to our colleagues in Germany, and has been appreciated.”

     

    Another of CLA clients is Cafe Coffee Day (CCD) where the agency has been working for long. K Ramakrishnan, President, Marketing, CCD, said, “Our journey with CLA is over five years old now. There is huge similarity between the organisational ethos of CCD and CLA in the sense that both started out as small organisations with a huge determination to make it big and to a large extent are on our way there. Another, is the spirit of youthfulness. Notwithstanding the growth that both the organizations have had, our relationship continues to be one to one.”

     

    “CLA’s focus on turnaround time where they have been able to churn out relentless number of creative outputs, on time each and every time, the youthfulness in their thought process and the spirit of a small agency in terms of ownership of brands and hunger for growth, contribute to their success in a short span of time, added Mr Ramakrishnan.

     

    As for the future of CLA, Mr Kurup is categorical as he says that while they are open to partnering provided it’s on their own terms however there is no plan to sell CLA to any bigger network. He said, “I have started CLA with the prime motive of building it up, selling it definitely not in the plan.” He added, “We have been growing on our own terms and have been saying no to businesses that we don’t feel comfortable working with. What CLA delivers is a personal touch to the clients and we don’t want to settle for anything less but only high quality ideas that delivers.”

     

    As for scaling up, CLA plans to open an office in London and is working on it. It has two offices in India and one regional office in Singapore. Also, the future for CLA is in getting on the content in a big way and it has taken a step towards this by getting into the movie business and more will follow in the future.

     


  • Soon you’ll be able to get your favourite Starbucks Espresso in India

    Starbucks Corp, the world’s largest coffee shop company, will open its first cafe in India in August through an equal joint venture with Tata Global Beverages, the two partners said on Monday.

     

    The venture, Tata Starbucks Ltd, will spend 400 crore initially and open 50 Starbucks cafe across the country by the end of the calendar year. The initial stores planned in Delhi and Mumbai in August. The move is part of the $10-billion-plus US firm’s strategy to focus on emerging markets such as India and China to drive future growth rates.

     

    “India is a unique market and we have gone through big transformation since the last four years,” said Mr John Culver, president at Starbucks China and Asia Pacific.

     

    While the core deal would be between Starbucks and Tata Global Beverages, it will work with other Tata Group firms such as Tata Coffee and Taj Catering. For instance, Tata plans to sell its mineral water brand Himalayan at Starbucks outlets in markets outside India. And the venture will leverage group firms’ properties for setting up Starbucks outlets.

    The deal comes a year after the Seattle-based firm signed an deal to buy green coffee beans from Tata Coffee’s Coorg facility and explore opening retail shops in the country. Starbucks manages over 17,000 stores in more than 57 countries and sells a wide variety of coffee and tea products along with food items, primarily through retail stores.

    The coffee cafe industry is on an expansion spree, led by market leader Cafe Coffee Day, to cash in on their increasing popularity among young consumers who have more disposable income than their previous generations.

     

    Source:The Economic Times

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