Coolpad, which forayed into India last year, is also looking at setting up its research and development (R&D) operations here to cater to the SAARC region.
"We have partnered Videocon to assemble our handsets in India. This will help us bring our products faster to our consumers... The plant in Aurangabad has a monthly capacity of 3 lakh units," Coolpad India CEO Syed Tajuddin told PTI.
He added that it will at least be another 1-2 years before full-fledged manufacturing will be done in India.
Interestingly, Videocon also has its own line of smartphones selling in the Indian market.
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"However, the costs of manufacturing in China are going up and people are looking at India as the next big destination... Manufacturing in India is giving us about 5-6 per cent benefit which we will pass on to the consumers," he said.
According to research firm IDC, shipments in India grew 21.4 per cent year-on-year to 28.3 million units in the July- September 2015 quarter.
Samsung led the tally with 24 per cent share, followed by Micromax (16.7 per cent), Intex (10.8 per cent), Lenovo Group - Lenovo and Motorola (9.5 per cent) and Lava (4.7 per cent).
Tajuddin said the company is eyeing five per cent share of the smartphone market in India.
"The discussions are on (within the company). India will cater to the entire SAARC region, this is a very important market for us. The centre would provide employment to 200-300 people at least," he said.
Coolpad today launched 'Note 3 Lite', which is being assembled in India.
Priced at Rs 6,999, the handset will be available on e-commerce portal, Amazon.In through a flash model from January 28.
Equipped with a fingerprint sensor, the 4G-enabled Note 3 Lite has a 5-inch screen, 3GB RAM, 16GB storage (expandable up to 64 GB), 13MP rear and 5MP front cameras and 2,500 mAh battery.