Tag: Reliance Retail

  • Mullen Lintas chosen AOR  for Reliance fashion brand Yousta

    By Our Staff

     

    Mullen Lintas Mumbai, has been chosen as the creative agency of record for Yousta, the youth-focused fashion brand under the umbrella of Reliance Retail. The account will be managed by the Mumbai office of Mullen Lintas.

     

    Said Hari Krishnan, CEO, Mullen Lintas: “We are delighted to have won the mandate for Yousta. Fast Fashion is a booming category that is seeing many disruptions and innovations in terms of products and formats. Using Mullen Lintas’ ‘Challenger Thinking’ framework we were able to craft a sharp brand strategy and a compelling narrative for Yousta, which we’re confident would make the desired impact for the brand. We look forward to partnering Yousta and making it one of the most preferred fashion destinations in the country.”

     

  • IdeateLabs campaign for Fashion Factory

    By Our Staff

     

    IdeateLabs, one of the early digital-first marketing solutions providers in the country, has conceptualised and created a digital campaign for the ‘Unbranded to Branded’ Exchange Festival for Fashion Factory, a division of Reliance Retail.

     

    Said Raman R.S. Minhas, CCO, IdeateLabs: “We are excited to partner with Fashion Factory in this fun campaign. The U2B campaign is a great property that powers Fashion Factory to reach a wide audience and drive sales. We needed that balance of engaging content and offer push, which happened when the team hit upon the creative device of “ex”. We believe the campaign will resonate with the audience and further establish Fashion Factory as India’s leading value fashion retailer.”

     

  • Lee Cooper launches summer campaign

    By Our Staff

     

    Lee Cooper fashion brand has launched its Summer Campaign for 2023, with the theme “Life Is Out There”. To promote the campaign, Lee Cooper has launched a series of digital and social media activities, including a video campaign, influencer collaborations, and hashtag campaign #LifeIsOutThere.

     

    The campaign encourages people to step out of their comfort zones, embrace new experiences, and live their lives to the fullest.

     

    Conceptualised by Makani Creatives Executive Creative Director Copy – Anant Medepalli said:  “Lee Cooper was the go to denim brand for rockstars. Rebellion and experimentation are woven into the brand. We have given rebellion a fresh spin. With a vibrant campaign and film that exude energy. There are no directions in life. As the song goes, live for the flow and your heart shows the way. Life’s out there. It’s about exploring new places. It’s also about leaving your comfort zone and embracing all that life offers.”

     

    Jayesh Sali, Head of Marketing, Fashion & Lifestyle, Reliance Retail, added: “We want to inspire people to embrace the spirit of adventure and explore all the exciting things the world has to offer. This Film also talks about how a group of friends are going on a road trip, hitting the beach, or just enjoying a day out with friends, we want to help you look and feel your best.”

     

  • Lee Cooper launches campaign with influencers

    By our Staff

     

    Lee Copper in collaboration with top influencers launched a new campaign “Masters of Denims”. Conceptualized by Makani Creatives, this campaign aims to highlight Lee Cooper’s supremacy in the denim industry by showcasing interviews with celebrities and influencers in a candid chat about denims, fashion and everything in between.

     

    Jayesh Sali, Head Of Marketing, Fashion & Lifestyle, Reliance Retail said: “Being a global fashion brand with a British legacy, Lee Cooper wants to showcase its products to a broad audience, and what better way than to make use of the digital space where things are constantly evolving and good content is the key to driving numbers.”

     

    Aejaz Khan, CEO, Makani Creatives added: “At Makani, we always strive to be ambitious with our campaigns, authentic with our execution, and audacious with our goals.”

     

    Link and glimpse of the campaign below: https://www.instagram.com/p/CocFAEDIRi_/

     

  • Bisleri and the Chimera of the Tata Group

     

     

    With apologies to none at all

    By Vikas Mehta

     

    Vikas MehtaChimera is a fire-breathing female monster with a lion’s head, a goat’s body and a serpent’s tail. A thing which is hoped for but is illusory.

     

    One of the big news of the week was Bisleri being up for sale and for all practical purposes Tata Consumer Product seemed to be the obvious suitor. The reasoning for Tata being the best suitor for Bisleri is the story of Chimera.

     

    I say obvious as the reaction and reasoning of the deal was more from the heart than sound business logic. A leading business daily which actually carried an interview with Ramesh Chauhan, the promoter of the brand (who incidentally, never confirmed the deal but just said that it’s in the works and Tata’s could be the destination for Bisleri), spoke about how the brand has had many suitors in the past but the promoter was holding off as he wanted someone who can nurture and grow the brand and Tata therefore is a natural fit.

     

    Does that mean that other suitors like Reliance Retail, Nestle and Danone which were mentioned, will not nurture and grow the brand? Or it meant that others will acquire the brand to kill it so that their small brands will thrive and grow? Or maybe reading between the lines meant that given the Tata’s reputation to be a business house with a heart of gold and who care about their employees they will translate the same empathy on to the brand?

     

    Frankly, I find this sort of conjecture and reasoning defying all logic. Business is about bottom line, financials, growth, shareholder value and return on investment. Sure, the social side of business is important but at the end of the day a business has to justify its investment in terms of returns. And growing a brand, making it more profitable will be the objective of most businesses.

     

    Both Danone and Nestle have a presence in the premium segment of bottled water. Exactly like Tata Consumer Product which has Himalayan and Tata Copper Plus as premium offerings. So, for any one of them, Bisleri can be a great acquisition with a presence in the economy segment. And the legacy plus the momentum of the brand will ensure that any suitor amongst the three, be it Tata or Danone or Nestle will hit the ground running with this acquisition. More so, as the current management team will continue to oversee the brand in the near future. So, I cannot figure out why only Tata can nurture and grow it. It is obvious that Tatas reputation of being a fair, just company is colouring the assessment of the suitors.

     

    Let’s also look at Reliance Retail. With Jiomart operational in more than 200 cities in India and Reliance Fresh retail presence being equally strong along with the much-touted acquisition of about 800 Future Group stores, RR is a great bet for Bisleri. RR is looking at private labels and has already nurtured Good Life in groceries, Snactac in snacks, Trikaya in fresh farm produce amongst others, while shopping for likes of Campa to add to its inhouse portfolio. Bisleri would seem to be an ideal addition to the same. And RR can make the brand much more visible in its own stores, websites and apps. Private labels give retaliers more margin and a brand like Bisleri would be a huge asset for RR. Why would the company not want to grow and nurture it? Seems its reputation of being sharply business oriented and its absence in the public mind for its charity work or its social side has made it unsuitable.

     

    Tata also has Big Basket and given the success of Fresho and BB Royal, Tatas would also be raring to acquire Bisleri. But BB is a standalone and is not a part of Tata Consumer Products. And Tatas track record in integration has not been too good in the past. The superapp Tata Neu is struggling. The consumer feedback and the app performance has been bumpy. So, the recent track record of Tata is not at all encouraging. Therefore, it seems illogical in assuming that Tata can nurture and grow the brand and others cannot.

     

    It is also not a coincidence that many marketing experts and gurus have suddenly started talking about sustainable packaging format for Bisleri. That is the Tata effect. Tata is a good, kind-hearted, responsible company. So, if it acquires Bisleri it must look at sustainable package. I find it strange, nay amusing, that suddenly with Tata in the news people have started worrying about Bisleri packaging. More than Tata, shouldn’t it be the responsibility of long time players like Nestle and Danone to be made more accountable for finding a sustainable packaging solution for bottled water? And shouldn’t the issue be more specific than just pinning category responsibility? For example, with the government already banning the use of one-time plastic should the marketing community not be asking for bottled water players like Bisleri to stop producing one time use 200 ml bottles? That’s a more practical approach than starting to expect Tata to wave a magic wand once they buy the brand.

     

    Getting back to growing and nurturing, let’s look at the track record of Bisleri. For a brand which has been in the Indian market, with the current promoter for more than five decades, the brand has hardly innovated, remaining more or less a one product brand. It could have for example, entered adjacent categories like fruit juices or health drinks. It therefore sounds downright hypocritical to hear the promoter wanting to sell the brand to a company which is a good fit because it will grow and nurture a brand.

     

    In my opinion, Tatas being a good fit for Bisleri is a very tenuous link. At best it is an attempt to appropriate the halo of the Tata name to raise the brand value of Bisleri so that the promoters can get a better valuation and in a worst case scenario it is desperately hoping that the deal with Tata will go through at the current estimated valuation as the others may not be willing to pay the asking price. The deal may well go through but the chimera that has been raised will obscure the real reason of the deal having gone through.

     

    Vikas Mehta is a Dehradun-based business strategy consultant and educator. He writes on MxMIndia every other Monday. His views here are personal

     

  • Global Creator Network wins digital media mandate of Ajio

    By Our Staff

     

    Ajio, the online fashion e-retailer and Reliance Retail’s digital commerce initiative, has recently given its social and content mandate to OML Entertainment’s branded content arm – Global Creator Network (GCN). As a part of the mandate, GCN will build a brand strategy, creative first social campaigns with IPs, creator activations and enable the brand to build a community of like-minded people across various social media platforms such as Facebook, YouTube, Twitter, and Instagram..

     

    Commenting on the win, Devarshi Shah, Senior Vice President – branded content,GCN, said, “As a team, we are excited to be associated with a popular and loved brand like Ajio. It would be interesting to build a fresh line of digital communication strategies that is futuristic yet relevant in today’s time. Our focus will be to create meaningful, innovative and fresh content strategies. The aim is to keep the brand ahead of the competition with campaigns that click.”

     

  • Why (& How) Reliance Retail is expanding in a slow market

     

    By Kala Vijayraghavan

     

    From a quarterly basis, the brass of Reliance Retail, led by Mukesh Ambani’s lieutenant Manoj Modi, now assembles for review meetings on a monthly basis. The frequency of meetings might have changed, the modesty hasn’t: the presentations still make no mention of how competitors are faring.

     

    Judging by what Reliance Retail did in the last quarter, the numbers for which it announced on January 17, and what others retailers did, it need not have. For now at least. The retail landscape in India is strewn with the remains of expansions gone awry (Future Group), or a victim of anxiety (Walmart) or put on hold (Croma, from the Tata stable). Amid all this, in the September to December quarter, Reliance Retail found a new gear.

     

    Giving into religious sentiment, it shut down all its Delight stores, which stocked non-vegetarian food products. But, across other formats, it averaged five new stores every six days. The expansion helped it increase revenues 38 per cent, which though is below the 50 per cent target it has set for itself for the next three to four years to grow to a $6.5-8 billion (Rs 40,000-60,000 crore) entity.

     

    The Rs 10,800 crore Reliance Retail, which is currently a subsidiary of Reliance Industries, is also inching closer to profitability. At the results announcement, Reliance Group CFO Alok Agarwal said that the company had reported its first quarterly profit at an operating level, of Rs 106 crore. It’s still a long haul to turn profitable at the net level, and sustain it from quarter to quarter, but Reliance has its tail up.

     

    Among the Indian groups in this business, Reliance was among the last to enter, about seven to eight years on, in 2006, backed with a deep war chest from its rich parent.

     

    BS Nagesh, vice-chairman of Shoppers Stop, one of the early entrants, says that evolutionary difference is showing up. “Everybody is consolidating their learnings and getting into cautious growth,” he says.

     

    Adds Kishore Biyani, CEO of Future Group: “It is a tough, mature market, and retailers will have to work out ways to find new growth opportunities.” Mr Nagesh, whose company competes with Reliance in several formats, adds that store addition is not the only metric of expansion. “I do not see an unusual aggression in Reliance Retail,” he says.

     

    “Addition of one store a day may not be significant in comparison. For instance, Reliance adding one store a day of 3,000 sq ft and a HyperCity (the hypermarket arm of Shoppers Stop) setting up a 100,000 sq ft store in a couple of months.”

     

    Harminder Sahni, founder of Wazir Advisors, a retail consultancy, points out that most retailers have had to deal with distractions—of retiring debt, of raising funding, of rules and propriety, of profitability, of online competition. “It (Reliance) is not a distracted player,” he says. “It has just focused on doing retail. It has been going rock steady, it hasn’t dropped formats frequently and it is focused on supply chain the way no other player has done in India.”

     

    According to a Reliance spokesperson, there’s a momentum building. This, he adds, is essentially the outcome of the company, after a period of trial and error and on reaching some scale, being surer of what it wants to become and how it wants to reach there.

     

    While Reliance has not dropped too many formats, it has shifted from big stores only to include small stores, from fresh-food only to overall foods. The format portfolio of Reliance shows that, since March 2013, the big store expansions have come in gadgets and consumer durables (Reliance Digital, up from 139 stores to 212) and in garments (Reliance Trends, 448 to 508).

     

    Now, says the Reliance spokesperson, the stickiness is more than ever. “Today, everybody inside knows what the business is about,” he says. “It is now a more anchored strategy.” “It has worked out an interesting mix of diversified categories,” says Kumar Rajgopalan president of Retail Association of India, a grouping of Indian retailers of which Reliance is not a member. “It is learning lessons fast and is able to create scale at a more rapid pace.”

     

    Reliance’s mainstay remains its value offerings. These include Reliance Fresh (neighbourhood stores) and Reliance Market (wholesale stores). Unlike some retailers, Reliance is not vacating the neighbourhood supermarket space, especially in the top 15 cities. “At least 25-30 per cent of the grocery business in top metros comes from hypermarkets,” says Abneesh Roy, associate director, Edelweiss Securities, a brokerage.

     

    The long term in mind, Reliance is challenging this narrative. “As markets mature, customers will opt for grocery shopping in neighbourhood supermarkets, which ties in with our cluster strategy of catering to middle-class and upper middle class consumers in the top 15 cities,” says Damodar Mall, chief strategy officer, value retail, Reliance.

     

    “Supermarkets in a catchment area ups the customer service quotient in the neighbourhood and everybody upgrades accordingly.” Reliance Market, its wholesale stores catering to smaller retailers and business establishments, is emerging as a useful hedge to its neighbourhood stores. It opened its first wholesale store in Ahmedabad, in September 2011. Now, it has 15 such stores, including six in the last three months: in Anand, Bengaluruangalore, Chennai, Faridabad, Guntur and Mumbai. “These are cash guzzlers and only the Reliance Group has the ability to stay put,” says Mr Roy of Edelweiss.

     

    Bijou Kurien, former chief executive and president (lifestyle), Reliance Retail, feels the challenge for the company will be to create new markets beyond the top 80-90 cities. “All the good markets and stores have been covered in the first phase,” he says. “In smaller potential markets or smaller towns, it is not easy to change deeprooted habits of consumers easily.”

     

    According to Mr Kurien, one challenge before Reliance is to create a pipeline of differentiated offerings, which it is trying to do. At Reliance Digital, for example, Reliance is trying to take responsibility of installation and after-sales service from manufacturers.

     

    So, it is training about thousands of electricians to handle televisions, refrigerators, mobiles and washing machines, among other things. “We have committed huge investments there,” says the Reliance spokesperson. “Will it get us immediate returns? It will not, but it will secure our future customer.”

     

    As Reliance gets surer of more pieces in the business, the kind of people it wants is also changing: from those who will build the business to those who will run the business. In the kind of people it has sought, Reliance has gone through three phases.

     

    The first phase, between 2006 and 2009, comprised retail veterans who had proven themselves in building businesses: late Raghu Pillai came from Pantaloons, Bijou Kurien from Titan Industries, Rajeev Karwal from Electrolux, Sanjeev Asthana from Cargill, Gunendar Kapur from Unilever Nigeria. The second phase, from 2009, revolved around expats with rich operating experience in global retailers.

     

    Leading them was Gwyn Sundhagul, who came from Tesco Thailand. In 2011, Sundhagul was replaced by two senior officials from Walmart China: Rob Cissell and Shawn Gray. The third phase is currently underway. In this, the focus is on neither high-profile stars nor expats. It’s on people who build processes. “We don’t want stars,” says the Reliance spokesperson. “We want experts who can build sound systems and processes that don’t hinge on one person.”

     

    The very nature of the retail business, says Sahni, does not allow for a fancy rank and file. “It is all about trading in somebody’s brands, not about creating networks and building brands,” he adds. “After power, utilities and ACs, not much can be done on an 8 per cent margin. I, therefore, discourage MBAs with high expectations from retail.”

     

    The new mindset is empowering officials at the middle and lower levels, and creating interesting possibilities for them. “Shop-floor attendants are today store managers or cluster managers,” says the Reliance spokesperson. “The focus is on decentralising the operating side and consolidating at the category level.” One part of Reliance Retail that draws even the competition’s envy is its supply chain. It’s the most expansive among retailers in India, commanding clout, for example, while sourcing fruits and vegetables directly from farmers.

     

    Industry officials say any retailer, Indian or foreign, will need at least three years to build something of this scale and intricacy in diary products and fresh foods. “We have invested in systems and processes ahead of its time,” claims the Reliance spokesperson. “When the market is ready, we will be is prepared to do that well.” At the moment, it is gaining at the expense of others. “The competitive intensity is lessening,” says Roy of Edelweiss.

     

    “Other players are cutting down expansion plans.” Mark Ashman, CEO of HyperCity, which is taking a gradual expansion path, feels different models work for different groups. “Some try to achieve it through scale and therefore push expansions,” he says. “We have been focused on refining the model in our big-box retail strategy by driving higher-margin categories. We may have fewer stores, but those would be more profitable.”

     

    At Reliance, the diktat from the group at the top that does the monthly review is: all formats have to be profitable by mid-2014. Parent Reliance Industries has so far invested about Rs 6,000 crore in the retail business. After a period of hesitancy and doubt, followed by a period of rebuilding and consolidation, the retail business appears to be beginning to look more like how Reliance businesses have been known to look.

     

    Source:The Economic Times

     

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

     

    Licensed to republish

     

     

  • 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

    Licensed to republish

     

     

  • Arvind eyes Debenhams, Next’s businesses; to take over brand rights, stores from Planet Retail

    By Boby Kurian & Reeba Zachariah

     

    Arvind’s Sanjay Lalbhai may acquire the operating stores and rights of British fashion retailers Next and Debenhams from Planet Retail, triggering another retail industry consolidation , said two sources directly familiar with the developments.

     

    Arvind’s wholly owned subsidiary Arvind Lifestyle Brands is holding advanced talks to buy a large portfolio of retail assets, including Nautica stores, from Planet Retail. “Arvind is doing due diligence to takeover operations of Next, Debenhams and Nautica, and a deal could be clinched shortly,” said one of the sources mentioned earlier.

     

    Mr Lalbhai’s move follows Aditya Birla’s decision to buy department store chain Pantaloons and Reliance Retail’s continuing strategy of striking partnerships with a slew of international fashion brands. Arvind would gain control over high-street brands providing fresh impetus to its fashion and retailing business, which brought in more than Rs1,200-crore revenue in FY12.

     

    Arvind Lifestyle Brands owns value retail chain Megamart and a slew of international and local brands, such as Gant, Arrow , US Polo, Elle and Flying Machine. It also holds a 50 per cent stake in Tommy Hilfiger’s India unit.

     

    Arvind declined to comment on speculation, while Planet Retail chairman Ramesh Tainwala could not be reached for immediate comments.

     

    Mr Tainwala, who controls Samsonite’s Asia-Pacific and West Asia business, and NRI entrepreneur V P Sharma equally own 97 per cent in Planet Retail. Kishore Biyani’s Future Group holds the remaining 3 per cent. Planet Retail controlled several international retail brands through licensing deals, but the potential sale to Arvind would leave it with fewer brands like The Body Shop and Accessorize. The Mumbai-based lifestyle retailer had earlier sold the operations of another UK retailer Marks & Spencer to Reliance Retail.

     

    While Debenhams plays in the department store segment , Next, which retails home products and accessories globally, have been a pure-play clothing retailer in India. Both brands have underperformed with very few stores, even after five-six years in the country. Sources said Arvind would acquire stores with revenue topping Rs130 crore once the takeover of the three brands was finalized.

     

    The transaction will be multi-pronged with Arvind acquiring existing operations – stores and some staff – from Planet Retail. Arvind would simultaneously enter into fresh agreements with Next, Debenhams and Nautica (owned by US-based VF Corp) to strike a fresh licensing agreement and business development plan for India.

     

    Business valuations in fashion retailing are 1-1 .6 times topline revenue, according to industry experts.

     

    Wholly owned subsidiary Arvind Lifestyle Brands are already in talks to acquire some staff and retail assets, including Nautica stores, Arvind will also ink fresh deals with Debenhams, Next & Nautica for India business.

     

     

    Source: The Economic Times

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

     

  • Tihar Jail in talks with Reliance Retail, Spencer’s & Vishal Retail to sell products

    By Rasul Bailay

     

    TJ’s, a brand of FMCG products made exclusively in Tihar Jail, Asia’s largest prison complex, will soon be available in the outlets of Reliance Retail, one of the largest retailers in the country.

     

    “Over the months, every Reliance Retail food and grocery store in Delhi will display TJ’s products,” said Neeraj Kumar, former director-general of Tihar Jail, who earlier this month assumed office as the commissioner of Delhi Police.

     

    TJ’s branded products, including spices and bakery products, are being sold in Reliance Retail outlets in Gurgaon for the past two months.

     

    “We are already an official vendor to Reliance Retail and have a vendor code,” a jail spokesman said. He said jail officials are also in talks with other retail chains such as Spencer’s Retail and Vishal Retail to sell TJ’s products through their outlets.

     

    Behind the walls and iron gates of the Central Jail of Tihar, more than 600 inmates are working in two shifts in a factory within jail No. 2, making a range of products, including bakery items, spices, stationery, furniture, garments and detergents.

     

    Police Commissioner Kumar said jail authorities plan three shifts as TJ’s products find their way into the lucrative modern retail market. These products were earlier sold only through government offices, Khadi outlets and Kendriya Bhandar stores.

     

    Mr Kumar said jail authorities are in the process of fulfilling requirements such as adding barcodes to products and mentioning the nutritional value of food products before taking them to all Reliance Retail stores in the National Capital Region. “All these formalities are done,” he said.

     

    Reliance Retail did not respond to an emailed questionnaire till late on Tuesday.

     

    TJ’s brand was born in 1995 with bakery products. Over the years, the portfolio has expanded to include handloom and textile, apparel, furniture, mustard oil, stationery paper products and even phenyl for household uses.

     

    In recent months, it has started making soaps, detergent powders and blankets, among other items. In the pipeline are cosmetic items such as face wash and henna. TJ’s products comply with global food safety norms and are certified under various ISO norms. Tihar’s backing school is certified by London-based global technical agency Moody International.

     

    TJ’s revenues have risen from Rs2.36 crore in 2004-2005 to about Rs18 crore in the last fiscal year. TJ’s products’ first brush with the organised retail happened late last year when jail authorities showcased products at Select Citywalk Mall in the city, and got overwhelming response from shoppers. This prompted the jail to open a kiosk in the mall to sell TJ’s products.

     

    Mr Kumar credits brand consultant Suhel Seth, who visited the jail in April, for initiating talks with retail chains. Mr Seth said that after visiting the jail in April he wrote to a host of corporate honchos, calling for promoting TJ’s. “This is a great branding opportunity,” he said.

     

    He expects TJ’s to become a Rs300-crore business, with net profit of Rs30 crore, in the next one year mainly by retailing through branded stores. This would help the jail ramp up capacity and supply products to other cities, Mr Seth said.

     

    Source: The Economic Times

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

     

  • Kiranas dump big brands for high margin Bharti Walmart wares

    By Sagar Malviya

     

    A few months ago, Dhananjay Jain, a grocery owner at Vidisha Road in Bhopal, decided to stock two alien brands – Right Buy and Members Mark – because they offered much higher margins than national brands and had lower price tags. Today, these floor cleaners, tea and cornflakes brands contribute nearly 20 per cent to his monthly sales.

     

    Many of his consumers may still have no idea where these brands priced 10-30 per cent less than those of Hindustan Unilever, Dabur and PepsiCo are sourced from. Well, they come from the world’s largest retailer, Walmart.

     

    Mr Jain gets these brands from a Best Price Modern Wholesale outlet – run by Walmart’s joint venture with Bharti Enterprises – just two kilometres from his store.

     

    Walmart is not allowed to sell directly to Indian consumers yet, but its brands across some three dozen categories have started sliding into Indian homes, as its cash-and-carry venture becomes a hit among grocery shop owners.

     

    “The idea is that the reseller should make more profits by selling our brands than he does by selling national brands,” said Arvind Mediratta, chief operating officer of Bharti Walmart. He said the firm’s private labels adhere to all the quality norms despite their lower price tags.

     

    Bharti Walmart operates 17 cashand-carry format Best Price Wholesale outlets, selling products to licensed neighbourhood stores, schools, offices and large enterprises. It has more than 3 lakh members, who own grocery stores.

     

    The firm launched Right Buy and Members Mark after phasing out its earlier brand Great Value, which is now restricted to Bharti’s Easy Day supermarket chain.

     

    So far, Walmart has developed a network of 100 suppliers to make private label products ranging from groceries, home care and personal care products to apparel and stationery. And it may soon get into categories such as soaps, shampoos and detergent. “We are planning to add several more categories in coming months and open over 10 outlets by next year,” Mr Mediratta said.

     

    Company officials say its brands already control 20-22 per cent share in most categories at its members’ outlets. Some shop owners even say they have stopped stocking national brands. “In categories such as floor cleaners and dish washing, we have stopped stocking national brands as consumers just want the lowest priced products in these segments,” said Mohammed Fayaz, a storeowner at Guntur in Andhra Pradesh, where Walmart has opened two wholesale outlets.

     

    What excites kiranawallahs is the huge margin they get. For instance, a 500ml bottle of Walmart’s toilet cleaner brand sports a price tag of Rs55 but is available to a kirana owner at Rs37. That makes the retailer’s margin a whopping 48 per cent. National rivals such as Reckitt Benckiser’s Harpic and HUL’s Domex are sold at Rs58, with the grocer earning 12-15 per cent margin on an average. Bharti Walmart also provides 10-30 per cent higher margins than national brands on tea, colas and juices that allow shopkeepers earn 10-30 per cent higher margins than national brands. Consumer products companies have been increasingly fighting private labels of modern retailers.

     

    In fact, private labels outsell several national brands in home care and packaged food categories at the outlets of retailers such as Future Group, Reliance Retail and Aditya Birla Group.

     

    FMCG companies didn’t feel too threatened because modern trade accounts for just 7-10 per cent of their total sales. But now, with Walmart’s private labels finding place in consumer companies’ largest sales channel – the country’s ubiquitous neighbourhood stores – this trend could become a headache for them.

     

    “As Walmart and other similar players scale up their cash-and-carry operations, given the price consciousness of the Indian consumer and the fact that kirana stores are here to stay, it is likely that this trend will start to worry large consumer goods companies,” said Siddharth Bafna, partner at advisory firm Lodha & Co.

     

    Not everybody agrees. The chief executive of a leading consumer products firm, however, said such private labels would not challenge big brands in evolved categories such as personal care. “There are always some categories, especially commodities, that are more prone to losing out to private labels because of pricing. However, several brands in the personal care segment that keep innovating aren’t threatened by private labels even in markets where modern trade is evolved,” the person said, requesting anonymity because Walmart is one of its partners.

     

    Some shopkeepers say it’s not easy to make people try new brands. “We are able to convince some consumers to opt for lower priced Walmart brands. But there are still many consumers who want to buy popular brands from national companies even if the price is higher,” said Jas Karan Singh, a store owner in Amritsar, where Walmart opened its first cash-and-carry outlet four years ago. Private labels accounted for around 7 per cent of Bharti Walmart’s annual sales of Rs 1,876 crore last calendar at over Rs 130 crore.

     

    Worldwide, the US retail giant is performing well despite the slowdown. For the fiscal year ended January 2012, it increased net sales by 5.9 per cent to $443.9 billion and ranked first on the 2011 Fortune 500 list of the world’s largest companies by revenues.

     

    Source: The Economic Times

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

     

  • Kishore Biyani not to sell stake in Big Bazaar & Food Bazaar chains

    By Chaitali Chakravarty

     

    Retail magnate Kishore Biyani said that he is not in talks with anybody to sell stake in Big Bazaar and Food Bazaar chains because his Future Group has sorted out its debt crisis after three back-to-back deals in the past one month.

     

    “We are not in discussions with anybody. I don’t want to divest my core retail business now. I want to run it,” Mr Biyani told ET. “Our debt levels are very comfortable and divestment, if any, will only be in non-core assets,” the Future Group chief said.

     

    In recent weeks, the retail industry has been abuzz with speculation that the Future Group was in talks with India’s richest man Mukesh Ambani to sell stake in its flagship Big Bazaar hypermarket network, which contributes almost 65 per cent of revenues of Pantaloon Retail (India) Ltd, the listed entity of Future Group.

     

    Reliance Industries operates a nationwide network of retail chains under Reliance Retail and Mr Ambani sees this segment as one of the engines of future growth for the conglomerate.

     

    A Reliance Industries spokesman denied any negotiations with Biyani. “We deny that Reliance Industries has ever been in talks with Future Group or Mr Kishore Biyani for any stake sale,” he said.

     

    A person aware of developments in Future Group, however, said Reliance Retail and Future Group had explored the possibility of a partnership about three months ago. But the talks did not proceed because the AV Birla Group moved faster and agreed to buy Pantaloons department chain, helping Future Group improve its precarious financial situation.

     

    “At that time the priority was to bring money into the company and the Pantaloons deal addressed that issue,” the person said.

     

    The Future Group, which has been in an aggressive expansion mode, ran into a crisis with consolidated debt of Rs7,800 crore that weighed on its profitability. Pantaloon Retail has been spending more than Rs100 crore in interest over each of the past three quarters. This started to pinch as consumer spending slowed. That was when Mr Biyani started looking to sell assets to pare debt.

     

    Last month, the Future Group sold a majority stake in Pantaloons department chain to AV Birla Group’s Aditya Birla Nuvo for Rs1,600 crore that included Rs800 crore of debt transfer.

     

    Then, last week, the Future Group announced sale of its 53.67per cent stake in Future Capital Holdings to US-based private equity firm Warburg Pincus for Rs4,250 crore, which included Rs450 crore of cash payout and Rs3,800 crore of debt transfer. Pantaloon Retail also raised Rs 200 crore through a preferential share allotment last week.

     

    “In the past one month, Biyani has managed to reduce his debt by Rs 6,000 crore. Now, he is in no hurry to sell any of his core businesses,” the person close to Future Group said. A senior official of a rival retailer, however, said Mr Biyani will ultimately get a partner for his value chain. “The only question is if he will tie up with an Indian company or wait for foreign direct investment to be allowed in the sector so he can find an international partner,” the person said.

     

    Meanwhile, Mr Biyani plans to sell more non-core assets in a bid to make the Bombay Stock Exchange-listed Pantaloon Retail debt-free by March 2013.

     

    He plans to raise Rs1,650 crore by October by offloading shares in his insurance and stationery joint ventures, the consumer electronics chain and home furnishing network. This would include raising Rs1,000 crore by divesting stake in Future Generali insurance. This will help prune Pantaloon Retail’s standalone debt, which stood at about Rs5,500 crore at the end of March.

     

    The group also plans to shed 40 per cent stake in the electronics retailing business eZone when it merges it with Noida-based InTarvo Technologies, which specialises in providing technical support to large corporations and retailers. InTarvo could not be contacted for comment despite repeated attempts.

     

    Mr Biyani also plans to sell a minority stake in home furnishing and do-it-yourself chain Home Town network for about Rs 300 crore in the next two months.

     

    He said his group’s May deal to cede controlling stake in Pantaloons chain to AV Birla Group was a one-off transaction. The company will only sell minority stakes in any future deals in its core retailing business and will maintain majority stake in such ventures, he said.

     

    Mr Biyani added that he doesn’t want to touch Future Value Retail, which operates Big Bazaar and Food Bazaar, as the group’s debt situation can be controlled.

     

    The only way he wants to touch Big Bazaar is by undertaking some tweaking in the profitable 150-strong chain by introducing improved services and consumer-centric approaches, underscoring with a new tagline ‘Aapki Sewa Mein’ (or, ‘At Your Service’). Big Bazaar is changing its tagline months after it adopted ‘New India’s New Bazaar’.

     

    Source: The Economic Times
    Copyright © 2012, Bennett, Coleman & Co. Ltd. All Rights Reserved