Interview : S Sivakumar, Chief
Executive-agri Business, ITC
A topper in his 1983 batch from the
rural management school IRMA, Sivakumar worked in a farmers'cooperative GROFED in the
oilseeds sector for six years before joining ITC in 1989. Now he is the chief executive of
ITCs Rs. 750 Crore International Business Division (IBD) headquartered in Hyderabad.
A leading exporter of agricultural products the IBD is behind the acclaimed e-choupal
network and is expanding into retail with its Choupal Saagar malls. Shijith PK spoke to
Sivakumar on ITCs plans for the rural retail sector.
What was the rationale behind
setting up the Choupal Saagar stores? What are your plans for the Choupal Saagar in the
future?
The Choupal Saagars are an integral part of
the ITC eChoupal initiative. One Choupal Saagar is set up for a cluster of 40 eChoupals in
a hub & spoke format. While eChoupals facilitate information and knowledge transfer
digitally within walking distance of farmers / rural consumers, Choupal Saagars are the
points of physical transactions within a tractorable distance from the same villages.
These physical transactions are not just in retail, but warehousing of agri produce, fuel
station, health services, soil testing, farm management training, food court, banking,
tractor servicing and so on. We are working towards our vision of the eChoupal services
reaching 100,000 villages by 2010. This geographical spread will be complemented by 700
Choupal Saagars.
What is the business opportunity in
rural retail for ITC? It is said that there are low margins present in retailing. Why does
ITC think retailing in rural India will work?
If all that one is targeting is to gain a
larger share of the same small rural wallet, the margins are certainly low. ITC eChoupal
actually increases the size of that wallet by ensuring that farmers earn more through
better farm productivity and higher prices through value addition to the agricultural
products.
What is the kind of product mix
sold at the Choupal Saagar? Is it directed more at meeting the day-to-day needs of the
rural consumer or longer-term ones, like consumer durables?
The product mix at Choupal Saagar covers a
wide range of categories like Agri-inputs, Apparel & Footwear, Grocery, Consumer
Durables, For-the home, Toys & Games, Music, etc. to ensure that Choupal Saagar is the
one-stop shop for both rural & small town consumers.
Who are the consumers the Choupal
Saagars target? Is it the higher income farmers or other population segments as well? Will
this change in the short term?
The wide range of products and multiple
price points in every category ensure that we are not forced into such a trade-off. The
Hypermarket format serves consumers from multiple income segments simultaneously.
What is the kind of
catchment area are you looking at for customers? Or do the Choupal Saagars
subscribe to an outshopping model where consumers travel from distant villages
to shop at the store?
The typical Choupal Saagar catchment is 30
km radius. For categories like durables, apparel and certain agri inputs it is an
outshopping model. For categories like FMCG rural consumers do buy in bulk at
Choupal Saagar when they sell their harvest. On the other hand, eChoupals facilitate
distribution of the FMCG products right into the micro rural outlets in villages with a
thousand population also.
Will technology play a role in the
Choupal Saagars as they do in the e-choupal network?
Although very different from the technology
used in eChoupals, any organised retail is a high-tech business, whether it is to do with
data warehousing & mining, or supply chain & inventory management, or POS &
CRM systems, or planograms & merchandising management. Choupal Saagar does have
cutting edge technology support in all these areas.
What are the challenges you expect
the Choupal Saagars to face in operating in rural India?
Most critical challenge is recruitment and
retention of retail talent in rural areas, especially when the opportunities in this
sector in urban India are also huge. But the larger ITC eChoupal mission of
improving quality of life in rural India excites many of our retail team
members.
What has been the level of
acceptance of the Choupal Saagar? What issues do you typically face when introducing the
format to new consumers? For example, was the format seen as too alien and not
approachable?
The combination of buying farmers
produce and retail helped overcome the possible intimidation of a typical large format
retail. Different elements of Choupal Saagars interior design and the profile of
customer support team also ensured that the format is not seen as alien.
Is there any change in rural
consumer habits required? What is the kind of consumer education involved? For example,
how have they accustomed to fixed prices and the absence of bargaining?
Self service was one shopping habit that
required change. Our customer support teams facilitated this transition.
What is the image or identity you
are looking to build for the Choupal Saagars? What kinds of advertising or promotions are
done for the stores?
The brand name Choupal Saagar
brings in an immediate association with eChoupal and transfers the values of trust
and transparency from that relationship.Choupal Saagar is positioned as a One
stop shop(Jarooratein Anek. Jagah Ek. i.e. Many needs. One
Destination.) and offers the value proposition-Uttam Quality, Sahi Jaankaari,
Kam Daam. Each Choupal Saagar is launched with an extensive marketing campaign using
local media like hoardings, local cable TV scrolls etc.In addition to this there is a
calendar of other promotions that are occasion-based like Diwali, New Year or specific
ones like Mangal Bandhan for the wedding season.