For years, the world's biggest condom maker Reckitt Benckiser designed products and marketing to lure Indian men to its Durex brand.
Now, it is pushing a growth strategy by betting on women and rural consumers. India last year surpassed China to become the world's most populous nation, but still fares poorly on the use of contraceptives. India's government estimates only around 10 per cent of men use condoms and for women, sterilization remains the popular form of contraception.
Social stigma surrounding sex - which some say stems from Victorian social norms established during British colonization - has for decades marginalised female pleasure in the Indian society. But attitudes are changing and Reckitt is shifting marketing gears to take advantage of an upswing in condom use among Indian women - now a key target audience for Durex.
Around 9.5 per cent of married Indian women cited using condoms during sex by 2021, almost double the use five years earlier, according to latest available government statistics. Among unmarried women, such use more than doubled to 27 per cent.
Reckitt is reformulating products such as lubricants aimed at attracting women consumers, and has new marketing campaigns, Pankaj Duhan, Reckitt's senior vice president of intimate wellness, told Reuters in an interview.
The Durex lubricants in India will use improved formulations to appeal to women and have been created after performing clinical studies to address concerns females face -- 30 per cent of Indian women experience some discomfort when having sex with their partner.
"We want to change this ... That is why we are relaunching our lubes portfolio," said Duhan. "The women tend to become a little bit more underserved consumer groups." The India condoms market is currently dominated by Mankind Pharma, which makes Manforce, followed by Reckitt and TTK Healthcare.
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Challenges
The British consumer goods firm faces some stiff challenges in its quest to carve out a lucrative slice of the female condom market and rural consumers, primarily with distribution and pricing - two areas industry watchers believe are key to success - but also in coaxing a still-largely conservative rural population to buy its products.
Moreover, competitors are making a pitch to women too, with Durex's main rival and market leader Manforce tweaking its marketing -- a recent ad stars a Bollywood actress talking about benefits of condoms and asking women to "go buy your own."
"One challenge Reckitt may face is consistency of messaging," said Devangshu Dutta, head of retail consultancy Third Eyesight, adding the company needs to figure out if it is targeting condoms for health, family planning, or pleasure as there could be different messaging for each type of shopper.
"One challenge Reckitt may face is consistency of messaging," said Devangshu Dutta, head of retail consultancy Third Eyesight, adding the company needs to figure out if it is targeting condoms for health, family planning, or pleasure as there could be different messaging for each type of shopper.
The growth opportunity is compelling - India's condom market size is merely worth $210 million, compared to China's $4.1 billion, but is forecast to grow at 7.4 per cent compound annual rate between 2024 and 2030, according to Indian consulting firm 6Wresearch. The global market is worth $11.3 billion.
Growing the market will take some doing though, not least because of India's vast size and millions of mom-and-pop stores require a widespread distributor network.
Currently, only about 10-15 per cent of Durex's sales in India come from rural areas, which is far more price sensitive than urban cities. "Distribution is the big challenge simply because even though most consumer goods companies have made their way to all pincodes in the country, the question is maintaining availability at retail points," said Dutta of Third Eyesight.
Chipping away at taboos
Sex education in the conservative country is also lagging, and there is a vast gulf between awareness and actual use of contraceptives.
Matt Godfrey, executive vice president for Asia Pacific at Monks ad agency, part of S4Capital, said marketing tweaks by the likes of Durex are a welcome change but condom use and sex education need to improve in India.
"There are significant societal and cultural aspects that need to be rapidly shifted to reverse the status quo," he said. In the eastern state of Odisha, for example, a small medical store of Sudam Padhan does not prominently display condoms as "people frown upon them."
In India, it's men who mostly buy condoms, but some like Pooja, a marketer in Mumbai, are trying to drive change. She made an "awkward" decision to buy condoms herself for the first time this year, saying "when I'm asking for a condom over the counter I am basically putting my health first." Still, in a telling sign of the somewhat taboo nature of the topic, the 31-year-old declined to share her last name as she is unmarried and feared societal admonition.
An open conversation encouraging safe and responsible sex in India has been steadily progressing but needs to be continually supported" by brands including Durex, S4Capital's Godfrey said.
Like many of its rivals, Reckitt has over the years largely focussed on Indian men, with many ads featuring women wearing skimpy clothes.
Rival Manforce Condoms features former pornstar Sunny Leone in videos, some labelled "EXCLUSIVE UNCENSORED". Duhan said many of the condom ads "objectified women."
But that's changing. Durex earlier this year launched "Explorers Wanted" lubricants campaign in India which featured sensual shots of nude male body parts.
Pricing pains
Pricing is another big challenge, especially in stores in smaller towns and villages which are reluctant to stock condoms and lubes. Duhan said products have to be "extremely cheap" to sell in some rural areas, where many use free government-provided condoms.
Padhan, from the medical store in Odisha, doesn't stock Durex "because they are costly and there's no demand for them in rural areas," and says most sales are of Ustad "Deluxe Condoms" made by a state-run firm.
Ustaad costs just 10 rupees (11 US cents) for a pack of six. A pack of 10 Durex condoms starts retailing at around 250 rupees, with some priced above $6, and a similar pack of Manforce starts at $1.
But the smaller three-condom Durex pack starts retailing around 99 rupees, and Reckitt believes they will sell better in rural India. "We are starting at the top (and) planning to get down to the rural areas," Duhan said. "It's a massive undertaking".