Salaries of Indian CEOs were disproportionately high, warned international brand expert and thinker, Erich Joachimsthaler, founder and CEO, Vivaldi Partners. |
He said the CEOs should be given incentives according to their achievements. |
"The incentives should be in proportion to the risk they undertake for growth. They should not just be stewards of growth," he said. |
Advising Indian companies not to imitate China's brand development model, Joachimsthaler said, "India should not be like China, populating the world with low-cost products." |
Instead, he advised brand managers to use global and local symbols in harmony to build a powerful identify for brands in domestic and overseas markets. |
For example, Coca-Cola conveyed the image of a thirst-quencher powerfully, yet used completely local imagery, he pointed out. |
Speaking at seminar organised by the Confederation of Indian Industry (CII), Joachimsthaler said India should adopt a demand-first-innovation-growth model, whereby companies along with designing products according to local needs, should look forward to tap the global market. |
Further, currently the country was in a pivotal position in the world market with advantages like strong business process outsourcing (BPO) base and membership of Brazil, Russia, India, China (BRIC) transnational group. |
Also, India should explore its own treasures and assets as the country had a strong intangible knowledge base and adopt a "outside-in" rather than "inside-out" view. |
"If you do not position yourself right now, you might be taken over by some one else. You need to be pro-active in global arena" he said. |
"India is not positioning itself, but being positioned by people with little knowledge of brand-building and economics," he warned. |
Giving examples of brand like Nike and Starbucks, he said the two brands exemplified that even with low advertising budgets, brands could be firmly established. |