A retail revolution is sweeping through India. Organised retailing has grown from just Rs 5,000 crore in 1999 to estimated Rs 30,000 crore in 2004""making it among the fastest-growing industries in the country. With the growth of malls, multiplexes, and hypermarkets, the consumer is being exposed to a new kind of shopping experience and services which is quietly and surely redefining her expectations from shopping. This will drive change in four areas: |
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Consumer durables and servicing marketers have not yet got on to the discipline of operating on fixed appointed times and this is an opportunity for differentiation. |
Retailers themselves need to use scientific linear programming to determine optimal number of checkout counters at different hours and plan for them.
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This will push the consumer's overall need for greater aesthetics in many other areas. Interestingly, in the late 80s, when Titan launched its first showrooms, it had to battle the consumer perception that "swank" means "expensive". |
Today with the growth of malls and hypermarkets, that has changed and consumers no longer think "expensive looking" means "expensive". To actually establish premium imagery through shopping environment is going to be that much more difficult!
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A couple of years ago, Shoppers Stop discovered that their Customer Care associates were an area of concern. There was high turnover and they were not motivated enough. |
Twenty thousand hours of training over four months of skill upgrade saw a 101 per cent increase in average sales of a card member""clearly showing the value of "people" in a business of bricks and mortar. McDonald's is a standing testimony to the power of human interaction. |
It may seem that in a vast country like India, this is restricted to a few urban towns. This could be myopic thinking. The revolution was brewing in South India in the 90s but seems to have taken speed in the 21st century. |
Today Big Bazaar is already present in smaller towns like Nasik, Nagpur, and Bhubaneshwar. As "retail" brands see the value of volumes (like mass marketers did in the 20th century) and with the ready availability of both technology for back-end management and real estate for front-end face, business compulsions and opportunities will make them expand faster than one can imagine. Look at mobile telephony. |
As recently as in 1999, it was a status symbol for the "puppy" with the few owners displaying it as something special. In half a decade, with new technology, it has become a "product of the masses"""innovative roadside "bhajiwallahs" (vegetable vendors) seeing it as a business tool and using it for home delivery orders! |
Are "mass retailers" allies or competitors to "mass marketers"? |
This is one big question marketers of consumer goods""FMCG or durables""need to address in the future. Historically, retailers have been conduits for deliveries of products of mass marketers. With the upgrade of their environments and services, they seem to be enhancing consumer-buying experiences. |
However, simultaneously they are building brand equity for themselves within their sphere of influence. Clearly, they are able to offer consumer experiences unlike conventional mass-market brands. |
So there is little reason to believe why strong "retail brands" may not decide to backward integrate and turn competition to mass marketers in categories where sourcing, branding, and selling have not too many barriers. This would see the emergence of store brands. |
In the US, unit sales of store brands have been growing at more than five times the rate of national brands. Wal-Mart's Ol' Roy dog food has passed Nestle's Purina as the world's top-selling dog food, and the chain's George line of apparel has replaced Liz Clairborne in its own stores. |
Close to half of the ceiling fans sold in the United States are Home Depot's own Hampton brand; an estimated 50 per cent of products sold by Target are private brands; Kroger manufactures some 4,300 food and drink items in its own plants. |
When Gap, one time the largest retailer of Levis, discovered there was more money to be made by leveraging its brand equity and offering merchandise, Levis sales stagnated and slumped! |
Proctor & Gamble grew its presence in Europe and increased its sales in the US by integrating its logistics and order management and thence its fortunes with the vast and growing chain of Wal-Mart stores. |
Clearly, retailers, once the lowly peddlers of brands that were made and marketed by big, important manufacturers, are now behaving like full-fledged marketers themselves. |
Store brand growth is stimulated by five factors:
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And the category role of reinforcing social or self-image is fairly limited. Store brands provide enough guarantee of quality through their own basic brand equity.
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Clearly, the impact of this retail revolution could be bigger than just the changing façade of the market place and enhancing consumer buying experience. It is a looming threat to "mass brand marketers" and the sooner they take cognizance of that, the better. Mass retailers may not only redefine shopping experiences, but also redefine market spaces. |
Something worth thinking about. |
(The author is with Discovery, Ogilvy and Mather India. The views are his own) |
Disclaimer: These are personal views of the writer. They do not necessarily reflect the opinion of www.business-standard.com or the Business Standard newspaper