Tag: Colgate

  • Colgate-Palmolive relaunches Strong Teeth toothpaste

    By Our Staff

     

    Colgate-Palmolive rolls out new campaign for its Colgate Strong Teeth toothpaste. The campaign reiterates the brand’s long-standing commitment to promoting oral health and hygiene by providing teeth nourishment.

     

    Directed by the renowned filmmaker Amit Ravindernath Sharma and conceptualised by Team WPP@CP.

     

    Commenting on the relaunch, Gunjit Jain, Vice President Marketing, Colgate-Palmolive India said: “Be it eating your favourite snack lose Calcium from our teeth as they suffer wear and tear daily. With our new campaign “ Paste Hi Nahi, Daanton Ka Poshan Hai Ye”,  we aim to spotlight the need for nourishment of teeth and how  Colgate Strong Teeth , with its unique technology of Arginine + Calcium Boost, is an excellent toothpaste to nourish your teeth and hence make them 2X stronger. Our dadi in the film has amazingly portrayed that importance, leaving us with the message that everyone needs to strengthen their teeth, aiming to become the ‘cutting machine.”

     

    Added Harshad Rajadhyaksha and Kainaz Karmakarof WPP@CP: “The story of a toothless granny vouching for a toothpaste, is bound to catch attention. The film delivers on functionality and fun. Humour is such a strong tool to drive home hardcore messages that stay with the consumers. Add to that the superb casting and direction by Amit Sharma. Colgate is an iconic brand with the best benefits in its category. The trick is in picking the strongest benefit and communicating it memorably.”

     

  • Ayush needs a cure push and not the prevention perception

     

     

    With apologies to none at all

    By Vikas Mehta

     

    Vikas MehtaWith the pandemic many things changed on the health front. Suddenly health and hygiene became a very important part of our lives. In India, with a parallel narrative on health and hygiene existing in the form of ancient methods like yoga, ayurveda, unani (all abbreviated as Ayush), and homeopathy (not strictly Indian but practised widespread), health and hygiene took a very interesting turn.

     

    Whereas the goodness of turmeric and ginger was already part of our modern lifestyle, yoga and ayurveda caught on in a big way. While established companies like Dabur and Baidyanath played it safe by highlighting the benefits of raising body immunity with products like Chyawanprash, Patanjali went headlong and actually claimed to have produced a cure to Corona with Coronil but then beat a hasty retreat to claim that it also is an immunity booster. In fact, currently if you look at the product benefit of Coronil, as listed on Amazon, it says, energy management and for specific uses of product it says, immunity booster

     

    Thisa was also the time that we saw lot of talk on various media including social media on overall wellness and health. Raising body immunity became a catch phrase and anyone related to health started hyping body immunity and how to achieve the same. Green tea, ginger tea, antioxidants, turmeric milk, tulsi drink, immunity bar, were some of the products which became part of the typical middle class family eating habits.

     

    And this was not all, ayurveda doctors and clinics came into big demand. Clinics and private practice mushroomed. Under the guidance of the Ayush ministry, the pandemic saw a growth in ayurveda as a medicinal opportunity. And then there is also a chain of nine ayurveda hospitals and clinics called AyurVAID which has now been acquired by India’s largest chain of hospitals, Apollo Hospitals. Why should an allopathy chain acquire an ayurveda chain of clinics and hospitals? Though that is an intriguing topic, given that allopathy doctors have protested when Ayush doctors were given more powers, including performing minor surgeries, that’s for another day.

     

    The elephant in the room is the viability and the success of traditional concepts like Ayurveda in the post-pandemic era. I don’t have any data on sales of Chyawanprash and many such immunity boosters but I guess their sales must have come down in the past six months or so. To understand why it is difficult to sell concepts like immunity boosters or wellness let’s take the analogy of oral care.

     

    Oral care is largely preventive. Brands like Colgate have to sell a story of prevention, not cure. You do not want cavities and the pain associated with it, start using a toothpaste. You want strong teeth that do not fall away or break, use a toothpaste. Toothpastes are not about cure. They are about prevention. Prevent cavities, prevent teeth from weakening. Prevent gum sensitivity. It’s not that you have toothache and by applying it the ache will go away. It’s the constant use that will prevent any oral problem. And still there is no guarantee that you will not develop cavities or other problems. That’s why in many parts of the world toothpaste penetration is still low. People want cure, not prevention.

     

    That is exactly the issue with alternate treatments. These are not necessary cure. AyurVAID hospitals in the first line describing themselves say “Today’s chronic illnesses require a comprehensive customized and affordable approach to prevention and treatment.” Prevention takes precedence over treatment.

     

    And that is the consumer perception too. The 2015 National Sample Survey says that 90% of Indians prefer allopathy to Ayush. I suspect the reason is simple. Allopathy is about cure. You got pain take x medicine. You have hernia get an operation done. Ayush, on the other hand is about wholistic. Root of the problem. Cure may exist but it will take some time to work. Simply put, the perception is that Allopathy is cure to a problem, Ayush is just prevention. The common man has been attuned to cure. Prevention is not part of the mental make up.

     

    So, when the Pandemic struck and allopathy had no cure, Ayush and its immunity boosters, its turmeric, ginger and tulsi ingredients etc were a great story. People flocked to them as there was no cure. And then came the vaccines. The vaccines were also prevention but armed with research and data, plus government push. In our simplistic minds, a cure to Covid had been found. We no longer needed Ayush. At best, it remained a top up.

     

    For Ayush to succeed it must move into the realm of cure. And to do that it needs to copy a page from the allopathy play book. Get into research and trials in a big way. Publicise the same. And no short-cuts. No sham research. It’s one thing for Baba Ramdev to hit out at allopathy but then by making exaggerated claims without any research backing on ayurveda he is doing a great disservice not just to the practice but also to those who are painstakingly trying to establish that Ayush can be a cure. Flexing his political connections to overturn decisions against Patanjali and its products is actually a sure shot way to create bigger dissonance in the consumer minds.

     

    Ayush also makes tall and sweeping claims. Any pack of Chyawanprash talks about power, mental and physical fitness, agility, increasing resistance and metabolic activity, prevention of infections like cough and cold, effective antioxidant, improving immunity and resistance. The glut of claims make it sound ridiculous and also unbelievable. Chyawanprash may do all that but it needs to focus on its core benefit. And then use science and data to make it come alive. Jack of all trades and master of none can make Ayush a dull and uninterested concept. Not to talk about being non trustworthy.

     

    Almost a decade ago, I had checked into an ayurveda ashram in Kerala for a specific health issue. The founder, an FRCS Doctor and Surgeon, bemoaned the lack of research rigour on ayurveda. He had over decades painstakingly studied Ayurveda and was using his allopathic skills to diagnose the issue and treat it with Ayurveda. He was well aware that Ayurveda was associated with general well being and prevention. He was afraid that ayurveda may just remain a lifestyle generic treatment and may become the preserve of the rich or the foreigners for whom the exoticism of ayurveda is a draw.

     

    Will the taking over of AyurVAID by Apollo Hospitals be the gateway to allopathy playbook that Ayush needs or will it be just another offering of exoticism for the rich and the famous?

     

  • Colgate’s new campaign showcases journey of elderly singles

    By A Correspondent

     

    Colgate-Palmolive (India) Limited has written to us about a new communication under its ‘Smile karo aur shuru ho jao’ campaign.

     

    Talking about the TVC, Arvind Chintamani, Vice President, Marketing, Colgate-Palmolive (India) Limited, said: “While the pandemic has been a time of uncertainty and difficulty, it has also given people a chance to reflect and reassess their individual life journeys. One such opportunity for revaluation is the challenge of loneliness faced by elderly single people who often remain single burdened by the fear of social judgement in starting afresh and finding companionship. Our story, narrated wonderfully by Deepti Naval, encourages people to be positive and look beyond the worry of what society might say and celebrate their lives fully. We, at Colgate, strive to tell such stories to inspire hope and courage to reimagine a better future…and smile karo aur shuru ho jao.”

     

    The campaign ad film is conceptualized by RedFuse, WPP’s integrated communications partner to Colgate India, and is directed by director Vikramaditya Motwane.

     

    Said Delna Sethna, Executive Creative Director, RedFuse: “Since the beginning, Colgate’s Smile karo aur shuru ho jao campaign has narrated stories of confidence and courage. The latest ad film touches upon the topic of remarriage, which is known to be a sensitive topic in India, especially among women. We want to encourage conversation on this often taboo subject and try to normalize the culture of women in India remarrying, for whatever reason they deem worthy. The overall aim of the film is to encourage optimism and to look beyond the fear of judgement and act with the hope of a positive future.”

     

     

  • Colgate highlights importance of oral health in new campaign for Colgate Vedshakti

    By A Correspondent

     

    Colgate-Palmolive (India) Limited has announced the “Mooh Swachh Toh Aap Healthy” campaign for its ayurvedic toothpaste Colgate Vedshakti.

     

    The campaign kickstarted with the launch of a TVC on March 4 in 10 regional languages including Hindi, Marathi, Telugu, and Tamil. It is being amplified further across mediums like print, digital and social media.

     

    Speaking about the campaign, Arvind Chintamani, Vice President, Marketing, Colgate-Palmolive (India) Limited said: “At Colgate, we are committed to enable better Oral Health for all. With the launch of this campaign with Colgate Vedshakti, for the first time we are throwing light on the inherent connection between oral & overall health. Colgate Vedshakti brings together a unique combination of Ayurvedic ingredients to provide holistic oral care to ensure better overall health.”

     

    Created by Redfuse Communications, Delna Sethna, Executive Creative Director, Red Fuse added: “How do you communicate extremely logical, science-y facts in a way that even children would understand them? You get children to disseminate them for you. Their universe of make-believe opened so many avenues for us to explore. Their sincerity in delivering our message draws you in from the second one.”

     

     

  • Colgate’s latest equity campaign highlights inspiring story

    By A Correspondent

     

    Colgate-Palmolive celebrates Divyanshu Ganatra’s inspiring story under its ‘Smile Karo Aur Shuru Ho Jao’ equity campaign. Ganatra was only 19 years in age when he lost his eyesight to glaucoma. As a child who dreamt of flying, his blindness couldn’t limit him from achieving what he wanted. He persevered to become not only India’s first visually impaired solo paragliding pilot but also a clinical psychologist, behavioral facilitator, and a self-made social entrepreneur.

     

    Commenting on the new TVC, Arvind Chintamani, Vice President, Marketing, Colgate-Palmolive (India) Limited said: “We truly believe that a Smile signifies optimism and our brand expression ‘Smile Karo Aur Shuru Ho Jao’ builds on the real-life stories of everyday people to inspire hope and start afresh. The story exemplifies Colgate’s message of overcoming adversity and life’s challenges with the positive power of a Smile. Such important stories of real people help us spread the message of conquering fears and our inhibitions with a smile.”

     

     

  • Exclusive: Prabha Parameswaran is Group President, Colgate-Palmolive

    By  A Correspondent

    Prabha Parameswaran
    Prabha Parameswaran

    There has been much reason to sport a Colgate smile this Ganesh Chaturthi with the news coming in that Prabha Parameswaran has been appointed Group President, Global Innovation Group & Africa-Eurasia. She assumed the role in August after having been President, Colgate Europe since 2016.

    Parameswaran joined Colgate-Palmolive in 1995 in India and progressed through a series of marketing positions in India, the global oral care and toothbrush divisions in Asia and Mexico. She next led Colgate’s business in India as Vice President & General Manager starting in 2012 and, in 2014, became President, Colgate Africa/Eurasia. Parameswaran has worked in advertising in India at HTA (later J Walter Thompson and now Wunderman Thompson) and Lintas India (now Lowe Lintas).

     

  • MS Dhoni, wife Sakshi in Colgate’s latest

    By A Correspondent

     

    Colgate has launched a new TVC featuring cricketer MS Dhoni and his wife Sakshi, as part of Colgate Strong Teeth’s ‘Andar Se Strong’ campaign. While sharing screen space with his wife, Dhoni talks about his inner strength that helped him in both his personal and professional journey.

     

    Said Issam Bachaalani, Managing Director, Colgate-Palmolive (India) Limited: “The ‘Colgate Andar Se Strong’ campaign reinforces our commitment to providing the most advanced oral care solutions to meet the everyday needs of Indian consumers. MS Dhoni is an exemplary personality and we are proud of his association with Colgate. We launched the ‘Colgate Andar Se Strong’ campaign on our flagship brand Colgate Strong Teeth, with Deepika Padukone and MS Dhoni as the ambassadors, who speak of how their smile reflects their inner strength… and how it helps them go forth in challenging times.”

     

    Added Sanjay Sipahimalani, Creative Director, RedFuse Communication: “Our ‘Andar Se Strong’ campaign highlights the role that your inner strength plays in helping you face tough situations with a smile. In this spot, Dhoni speaks from his heart to show how inner strength enabled him to choose responsibility over personal happiness during the 2015 World Cup.”

     

     

  • Colgate offers dental solutions at Kumbh Mela

    By A Correspondent

     

    Colgate-Palmolive has launched the ‘Kumbh Se Sampoorna Shuddhi, Colgate Vedshakti Se Sampoorna Suraksha‘ campaign at the ongoing Kumbh Mela in Allahabad.

     

    Said Issam Bachaalani, Managing Director, Colgate-Palmolive (India) Limited said: “At Colgate, we consistently work towards providing superior oral care and protection to all Indians, and towards caring for our communities. The Kumbh Mela gives us an opportunity to achieve both these objectives with our key target segments at an unprecedented scale.  Our theme at the Kumbh is Complete Protection or Sampoorna Suraksha, as part of which we are offering millions of visitors free samples of Colgate Vedshakti toothpaste that provides sampoorna suraksha to the mouth. But that’s not all – we are also extending to our consumers ways and means to ensure complete safety of their families, as they wade their way through the Kumbh Mela by handing out  suraksha ropes – for families to walk together, and suraksha wristbands – for children to have an emergency contact number on their wrist.”

     

     

  • Colgate retains #1 spot as ‘Most Chosen Consumer Brand’ in India

    By a correspondent

     

    Colgate has retained the No. 1 spot as the ‘most chosen consumer brand’ in India, in the 2014 Brand Footprint report by consumer knowledge and insights firm, Kantar Worldpanel. This is the third consecutive time that Colgate has been ranked No 1, across the FMCG and Personal Care category.

     

    The study highlights that in addition to leading the category in India, Colgate also outshined in global rankings. Colgate retained its position as the second most chosen brand globally in a list of the top 50 brands.

     

    The brand that revolutionized Oral Care with innovative products such as Colgate Maximum Cavity Protection plus Sugar Acid NeutralizerTM and Colgate Visible White, earned the top spot in the health and beauty categories, globally. An analysis in the report stated, “In the country rankings, Colgate remains the most-chosen health and beauty brand in a total of 16 countries.”

     

    Prabha Parameswaran, Managing Director, Colgate-Palmolive (India) Limited said, “We are delighted that Colgate continues to lead consumer preferences not just in Oral Care but across all FMCG. This reaffirms our commitment to deliver irresistible consumer propositions backed by latest technologies across the price spectrum. At Colgate, it’s our constant endeavor to ensure that we offer consumers in India the best Oral Care solutions for their needs and make that available to them at arm’s reach. Millions of consumers repose their trust in Colgate and that serves as a beacon for everything we do”

     

    The ranking in this study is based on a metric created by Kantar World panel called Consumer Reach Points, which measures each time a shopper chooses a brand. The report states that Consumer Reach Points are up 2.4 per cent in the emerging markets, with Asia being the fastest growing region. According to the report, “The 2014 Brand Footprint ranking reveals that the last year has presented a challenging environment for global consumers and brands. Food price inflation has been stubbornly high and levels of unemployment remained constant around the world. Yet in the face of these challenges consumer confidence has been stable.”

     

  • Red Fuse delivers ‘Visible White Selfie’ for Colgate

    By a correspondent

     

    Red Fuse Communications, WPP’s full-service integrated global agency has designed and implemented an engaging digital campaign for Colgate Visible White. Through this campaign, very aptly titled ‘Visibly White Selfie’, it aims at communicating that white teeth can enhance one’s smile and hence one’s selfie.

    Shubha George

    Shubha George, CEO, Red Fuse Communications, said “We realized that consumers spend a great deal of time on their looks but not on their teeth. Often a beautiful picture with a charming smile is marred by discolored teeth. We wanted to communicate that it is important to make sure that one’s teeth also look their best to complete the beauty regimen.”

     

    To build awareness around health and beauty, the agency known for providing customized and innovative solutions, designed the Visible White Selfie campaign. Through this campaign the agency will engage with audiences on digital platforms to emphasize how Colgate Visible White enhances their Selfie, by making their teeth one shade whiter in just 1 week.

     

    The campaign will pose the question Your selfie is incomplete without a picture perfect smile. Are you ready for your best Selfie?” In response to this question, users are encouraged to click selfies and upload their best pictures on Colgate India’s Facebook page or through the mobile app. The perfect selfie uploaded will be autographed by Sonam Kapoor.

     

    Users can then enhance their smile and whiten their teeth with Colgate Visible White regimen.

     

    The campaign will conclude on 30th June, 2014.

     

  • Colgate launches offensive to take on P&G’s Oral B toothpaste

    By Kala VijayaRaghavan & Sagar Malviya

     

    Last week, when Procter & Gamble launched Oral B, its first toothpaste in India, perhaps no one else was watching it more closely than Prabha Parameswaran, the MD of rival Colgate, also the market leader in the Rs 5,000-crore oral care market.

     

    Ms Parameswaran’s swift and no-holds-barred retort to the P&G threat has by all accounts left the latter overwhelmed in the market.

     

    A heap of 250-odd Colgate toothpaste packs greets customers at a leading supermarket in the suburbs of Mumbai. Almost each of the neatly stacked packs forming a mini-pyramid has either BOGO (buy one get one) printed on it or carries reduced price tags. Here and across 4.5 million retail outlets, Colgate is being a shameless bully, elbowing P&G out of any shelf space. It is throwing toothbrushes, pastes, and brand events and promotions with trade partners, and discounts, all to deny or delay giving P&G even a toehold. Such promotional intensity wasn’t there even two weeks ago.

     

    “Several large retailers haven’t even stocked P&G’s new toothpaste as the margins offered were lower than Colgate and GSK,” said two officials at leading supermarkets.

     

    This is already turning out to be a costly battle – Colgate has hiked its advertising and promotion spends by 31% during the first half of this calendar year.

     

    Devendra Chawla

    “There has been a new-found aggression in Colgate during the past year,” says Devendra Chawla, president-Food Bazaar at the Future Group.

     

    P&G India is hardly a wimp when it comes to a scrap for market share. The Cincinnati-headquartered company has had dozens of such brawls with arch rival Unilever in segments such as detergents, shampoo and skin creams. But this is the first time P&G is wrestling with Colgate.

     

    “Though it is still very early, our launch of Oral B toothpaste and initial plans are very much on track,” a P&G spokesperson said, responding to an email about the battle with Colgate. “We are very pleased with the response and support we are receiving from both our customers as well as the professional community.” Ms Parameswaran, 51, too is quite familiar with the exertions of such battles. Before she was elevated to the top job in India, she had fought P&G for over a decade at their home turf – the US – and more recently Mexico, where she was the marketing head until 2012. Colgate controls more than half the market and Ms Parameswaran is fiercely guarding every inch. In the months preceding P&G’s first toothpaste launch, she was hitting the roads, meeting dealers, distributors and trade partners, say sources in direct know of things. A media-shy Colgate declined comment. “Ms Parameswaran has fired up the organisation,” says a highly placed official privy to recent happenings within Colgate.

     

    Since she took charge in February 2012, Colgate’s market share has increased from 53.1% to 55%, its highest since 1998, and a rare instance of a market leader gaining new ground. In the same period, its stock has risen 41%, even as the BSE Sensex has gone up just 14%. “Colgate is like a well-oiled machine. What a very good leader can do with such a welloiled machine is what is happening now at Colgate,” says Abneesh Roy, associate director at Edelweiss Securities. “Usually, the market leader tends to protect share rather than drive further growth. Colgate has managed growth under Ms Parameswaran,” he adds. Roy, who had met Ms Parameswaran recently, says she comes across as an extremely savvy marketer with a curiosity to know what is happening in other categories.

     

    “Colgate has usually tended to do well under attack, earlier from Pepsodent and later from low-cost brands such as Anchor,” says Vikram Kaushik, ex-MD of Tata Sky. He was executive vice-president (marketing) at Colgate-Palmolive (India) in 2004. Ms Parameswaran has worked with Colgate for two decades. She started off with experiences across verticals including initiatives to revitalise its personal care business that included the launch of Palmolive Naturals soap, Palmolive Optims and the male toiletries and skin care equities. She moved to New York as associate director (global business development), oral care, in 1997, and was later the vice-president (marketing) for Colgate India between 2007 and 2009.

     

    Ms Parameswaran worked with Lintas India (now Lowe Lintas) before joining Colgate and had handled HUL campaigns, including ‘Zara sa Rin!’, ‘Dur ho ja meri nazron se!’ (for Wheel) and ‘Dhoondte reh jaoge!’ (for Surf Ultra). “I remember her then for her team leadership skills as well as witty sense of humour. She was extremely insightful,” says Pranesh Misra, chairman & MD, Brandscapes Worldwide. He had worked along with Ms Parameswaran in Lowe Lintas on HUL brands. “After years at Colgate in different geographies and roles, she has further sharpened her skills in marketing and business leadership,” he adds.

     

    (With inputs from Amit Bapna)

     

    Source:The Economic Times

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

    Licensed to republish

     

  • FMCG biggies HUL, Godrej, Dabur report higher sales growth numbers than estimated by Nielsen

    By Sagar Malviya & Ratna Bhushan

     

    Market research firm Nielsen and India’s consumer goods companies are in sharp disagreement over growth rates in the sector. In the April-June quarter of 2012, sales growth in value terms of some of India’s biggest fast-moving consumer goods companies is higher than Nielsen’s growth estimate for the overall FMCG market, raising concerns over the world’s largest research firm’s accuracy in India.

     

    Seven listed domestic companies, which control over 70 per cent of the FMCG market, have posted an average value sales growth of 19.28 per cent in the first quarter of fiscal 2013. A Nielsen spokesperson says their figure for this period is 17.6 per cent. Even in categories such as soaps, juices, oral care and hair oils, leading players, which contribute between 60 per cent and 75 per cent to each segment, have posted much higher volume growth than what Nielsen’s data suggests. When contacted, Nielsen did not validate the numbers that ET has obtained from the research firm’s FMCG clients.

     

    For instance, Godrej Consumer Products Ltd saw a 24 per cent spurt in soap volumes even as Nielsen estimates growth for the overall segment at a sombre 5 per cent in the April-June quarter. “There is a bit of under-reporting by Nielsen. The issue lies with its statistical method,” said Adi Godrej, chairman of Godrej Group.

     

    “We generally use Nielsen’s data for market share as there isn’t any other option for us. However, for category growth, we rely on our sales numbers and listed companies’ performance,” said Vineet Agrawal, president at Wipro Consumer Care & Lighting, which saw a 15 per cent jump in volume growth in soaps in the first quarter of the fiscal year.

     

    It’s a similar story in toothpastes, a category that grew 9 per cent in volumes according to Nielsen; however, this doesn’t tally with internal sales data of Colgate and Hindustan Unilever Ltd (HUL), which together command roughly 80 per cent of the market. Colgate saw a 13 per cent rise in volume growth. For HUL also it was higher, said CFO R Sridhar at a recent financial results’ presentation.

     

    In packaged juices, Nielsen says the category grew 18-19 per cent in the April-June quarter in value terms and that Dabur grew 24 per cent. But Dabur’s quarterly sales numbers show its juice business grew 34 per cent. Dabur leads the packaged juices market with the Real brand, which accounts for more than half of all juices sold.

     

    Dabur CEO Sunil Duggal said: “Our quarterly growth numbers are generally ahead of what Nielsen reports. So we prefer to study Nielsen numbers as a longer-term trend – over a 12-month period – because that evens out errors.”

     

    Nielsen counters that the retail audit cannot be compared with sales numbers that companies report. A Nielsen spokesperson said: “The retail audit is focused on sales offtake through a sample of retail stores that tracks sales to the end consumer. It is technically incorrect to compare it to the financial results of companies, which report sales to distribution channels.” The research firm also said sales reported by companies may include those beyond retail stores from institutions such as army canteens, restaurants and transport hubs, which are outside the scope of its retail audit.

     

    An FMCG analyst points out on condition of anonymity that ignoring the Canteen Services Department (CSD), which caters to the Indian defence services, may be one explanation for the discrepancies.

     

    After all, CSD can easily qualify as India’s largest retailer with some 3,500 outlets across the country. Nielsen is no stranger to controversy on the market share front. In May 2009, HUL disputed the researcher’s data that showed a steady fall in the company’s market share across segments, saying it contradicted internal estimates as well as data from household research firm IMRB. The issue snowballed into a crisis when Dabur, Godrej and Marico echoed similar doubts over Nielsen data. Dabur and Perfetti Van Melle even went so far as to cancel Nielsen’s subscriptions in categories such as hair oils, juices, candies and confectionery.

     

    A year ago, Unilever CEO Paul Polman questioned the accuracy of Nielsen’s data for India, underlining that the country’s largest consumer product maker was still unhappy with the market researcher two years after first raising the issue. “I know you all like to write about it. But they (Nielsen) are not very accurate with what their numbers are,” Mr Polman had said while commenting on the performance of Unilever’s Indian arm.

     

    Nielsen has increased its sampling size to 22,000 outlets from 16,000 over the past three years, included more modern trade outlets and uncovered channels in rural markets, prompting some companies to be optimistic about the research firm’s data. “We are worried, but the fact remains that at least it is not deteriorating. They have been changing panels and we have to pick up points where there are issues and work with them on it,” said Saugata Gupta, CEO of Marico, which saw its hair oil business grow over 15 per cent in volumes while Nielsen’s data shows a growth of 4.7 per cent for the category.

     

    Also, companies are now slightly at ease after Nielsen decided not to share data with market analysts and investors who depend on the data to track the performance of consumer product companies and rate the stock accordingly. “While we are glad that analysts can’t access the data easily, even we have stopped taking the research seriously and rely on it just for trends. Nielsen’s numbers is not a bible to us,” said a CEO of a leading homegrown consumer firm who didn’t wish to be identified.

     

    Source: The Economic Times

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