bisleri pr
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Chariman: Mr. RAMESH CHAUHAN
Duration: 37 YEARS OF UNBEATEN AND LEADING
EXPERIENCE
Background: In 1967, Bisleri an Italian company, started by Signor
Felice Bisleri, first brought the idea of selling bottled water in India. It
started a company called Bisleri India. In 1969, Ramesh Chauhan, the
Chairman of Parle Exports, bought over the brand. In those days,
Bisleri packaged drinking water was available in glass bottles.
Being a returnable package owing to various other problems such as
breakage and weight, in 1972-73, Bisleri was made available in PVC
(Poly Vinyl Chloride) bottles. After this plastic packaging was
introduced, things started to change, and sales increased rapidly.
The upsurge in the sales of Bisleri started in 1993 as Ramesh Chauhan
sold off the Parle stable of brands, including Thums Up, Limca and
Gold Spot. Recognising the potential of the packaged drinking water
market, he then went on to concentrate on making Bisleri a top selling
brand in India.
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And this is how parle bisleri began: There are 1,200 bottled water
factories all over India (of which 600 are in one state -- Tamil Nadu).
Over 100 brands are vying for the Rs 1,000-crore (Rs 10 billion)
bottled water market and are hard selling their products in every way
possible -- better margins to dealers, aggressive advertising, catchy
taglines.... In such a scenario, The Strategist takes a look at how it all
started -- with Bisleri -- and how Ramesh Chauhan, chairman, Parle
Bisleri created a market out of pure water.
[Sources: Bureau of Indian Standards]
C an I be honest? When we bought Bisleri mineral water from the
Italian company, Felice Bisleri, in 1969 -- the company had been
unable to market bottled water and wanted to exit the market -- we too
did not see any potential for the product at that time.
As a soft drinks company, we had Thums Up, Gold Spot and Limca
(cola, orange drink and lemonade) but no soft drink company was
complete without a soda. So we merely used the name and launched
Bisleri soda with two variants -- carbonated and non-carbonated
mineral water.
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But three decades ago, what could we say about a category that had no
market? We didn't know our target group. Then, since bottled water is
colourless, tasteless and odourless, it was not an easy product to
advertise. Thus, the earlier brand building efforts focused on Bisleri
being healthy with adequate minerals. The Italian name added a dash of
class to it. The first print ad campaign captured the international
essence and showed a butler with a bow tie, holding two bottles of
Bisleri.
The punchline was, "Bisleri is veri veri extraordinari" (the spelling of
the punchline was designed to capture the consumer's attention). The
campaign was successful and we were being noticed as someone who
catered to the need for safe, healthy drinking water.
However, the real boost to mineral water came in the early-to-mid-
1980s when we switched to PVC packaging and later to PET bottles.
The PET packaging did not just ensure better transparency -- we could
now show sparkling clear water to the consumers. It also meant better
life for the water.
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Meanwhile, Bisleri soda was doing well but we had to discontinue
production as we sold our soft drink brands to Coca-Cola in 1993. But
my interest was in building brands and not in bottling soft drinks.
That's when I started to concentrate on developing the Bisleri water
brand.
There was a clear opportunity of building a market for bottled water.
The quality of water available in the country was bad. It was similar to
what Europe faced before World War II. The quality of water in Europe
was extremely poor, which created the bottled water industry there. In
India, too, not only was water scarce, whatever was available was of
bad quality.
Initially, though bottled water was something only foreigners and non-
resident Indians consumed, we still had to increase the distribution,
which meant the dealer margins reduced. And because of limited sales,
the dealer margin had to be kept high to compensate low sales. Now we
had to push sales.
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But to reach out to the masses, we had to make the category more
affordable. The introduction of a comfortable-to-carry 500-ml bottle for
just Rs 5 in 1995 not only answered that need, but also meant doing
away with carrying the excess water or throwing it away if you were to
buy a one-litre bottle.
The idea was a success and gave the company a growth of 400 per cent.
We also introduced the 1.2 litre bottle in 2000, which was aimed at
those who share their water. This also gave us the advantage of higher
margins that a crate (12 bottles) generated. With other brands joining
the fray, things were hotting up -- the bottled-water market was
estimated at Rs 300 crore (Rs 3 billion) and was growing at 50 per cent
a year. Bisleri had captured 40 per cent of the market.
We realised it was time to move to the next level -- the bulk segment.
Several commercial establishments had no access to piped water. We
tapped into this segment by introducing the 12-litre container, followed
by the 20-litre can. The bulk segment also helped bring down the price
per litre from Rs 10-12 a litre to about Rs 3 a litre.
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At present, the bulk segment constitutes 60 to 70 per cent of our sales
and we intend to increase it to 80 per cent in the next two years. With
water scarcity in several cities, even households are demanding bottled
water now.
The home pack was made more user-friendly by introducing pouring
spouts and jars with dispensers. At the same time, we were constantly
looking for new ways to tap the market. We noticed that during
wedding receptions, the older guests (above 50 years of age) generally
stayed away from ice cream, soft drinks and so on.
Hence, we introduced free sampling of Bisleri at the tables where the
elderly guests would sit. Soon customers were ordering bottled water
on special occasions. Currently, the consumption of bottled water is far
in excess of soft drinks on such occasions. The other major challenge
was distribution.
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I still have the mindset of a soft drink seller. Soft drink sales are in
glass bottles and the distribution model is built around picking up
empty bottles and getting them back to the factory.
That's not the case with the retail bottled water packs (below 2 litre).
But a product that's not available where it's needed, is useless.
The number of outlets where Bisleri is available has increased from
50,000 in 1995 to 2,00,000 at present. But that is not enough -- we need
to keep looking for different avenues.
Take stationery shops and chemists, for instance. They don't keep soft
drinks but sell Bisleri. That is the kind of exclusivity we look for to get
ahead of the distribution network that soft drink companies talk of.
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THE JOURNEY TILL NOW (AT A GLANCE):
1969: Buys Bisleri bottled water from an Italian company, Felice
Bisleri. It was bottled in glass bottles then.
Early-1980s: Shifts to PVC bottles. Sales surge
Mid-1980s: Switches to PET bottles, which meant more transparency
and life for water.
1993: Sells carbonated drink brands like Thums Up, Gold Spot and
Limca to Coca-Cola for Rs 400 crore.
1995: Bisleri launches a 500 ml bottle and sales shoot up by 400 per
cent.
2000: Introduces the 20-litre container to bring prices down from Rs 10
a litre to Rs 2 a litre.
1998: Introduces a tamper-proof and tamper-evident seal.
2000: BIS cancels Bisleri's licence of a water bottling in Delhi since
some of the bottles did not carry ISI label; the licence is restored one-
and-a-half months later.
2002: Kinley overtakes Bisleri. The national retail stores audit by
ORG-MARG show Kinley's marketshare at 35.1 per cent compared to
Bisleri's 34.4 per cent.
2003: Bisleri says it plans to venture out into Europe and America to
sell bottled water
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To provide the highest quality
product, keeping in mind all
aspects including freshness, purity
and safety, and making it easily
available to the consumer at a
very affordable price.
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It was around the year 1995, when Parle Exports took charge of the
brand operations and the business took off in the market. With factories
across India and a strong distribution network, Bisleri established itself
as a force to reckon with in the domestic packaged drinking water
market.
Earlier the packaged drinking water market consisted of five star hotels,
tourists and foreigners. As a marketing strategy, a conscious decision
was taken by the company that only 40% of the sales should come from
these outlets and 60% from general market. i.e. paanwallas, street
shops, general stores and even non-tourists.
This brought about a sea change in the perception in the consumer's
mind about consumption of Bisleri. Earlier, drinking bottled water was
considered to be more of a status symbol. That thinking has slowly
changed to the point where today, not drinking Bisleri is considered as
being behind the times. Such has been the presence and penetration of
the Bisleri brand in the bottled water segment.
About two years ago, in 1998, a strategy was adopted to concentrate
aggressively on the home market. The habit of boiling water or using
electronic gadgets was not adequate, since the source of water itself
was unreliable. The bulk packages like the 2, 5 and 20 litre bottles were
introduced to meet this market need. The price per litre went down as a
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result, making bottled water very economical for the consumer.
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A National Sample Survey conducted by the Central Statistical
Organisation in 1988, showed that 72.1 per cent of urban households
had access to piped water; by 1998, this proportion had reduced to 70.1
per cent. And with most urban 'consuming class' customers aware of
the importance of pure drinking water, the future looks promising for
companies vending the commodity.
Bisleri was the first to market bottled water in a totally virgin market
and naturally people associate the brand with bottled water. Now
Bisleri is perhaps already ten steps ahead of its competitors and will
endeavour to widen its gap in the times to come.
Bisleri's brand positioning stresses on pure, clean and safe drinking
water.
Some of the future plans to maintain the top spot that Bisleri commands
in the Indian market are:
New pack sizes in bottles and cups
Increase the distribution network with an investment of over 200
crores
Strengthen presence in traditionally weak areas by setting up 12
new bottling facilities at a cost of Rs. 150 crores
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PARLE BISLERI LIMITED: EXPANSION PLANS: Parle Bisleri
Limited is undertaking a major expansion to increase its manufacturing
facility as also to widen the distribution network. The total project cost
is estimated around Rs 260 crore.
Of this, Rs 60 crore will be utilised to expand the existing
manufacturing facilities wherein the bottling capacity would be
doubled to 200 million cases per day.
Around Rs 200 crore will be spent on increasing its distribution
network five-fold over the next two years. As a result, the company
will have 10-lakh retail outlets backed by a fleet over 5,000 vehicles.
Parle Bisleri also plans to procure recycling plants from Japan, for its
PET bottles, and set up at least two such plants in Chennai and Delhi at
a cost of Rs five crore each by this year-end.
Crushed and compacted bottles from other parts of the country will be
transported to the two plants and a better part of the compacted PET
will go into manufacturing polyester yarn. Though the company plans
to come out with an IPO, two years down the line, the present capital
expenditure plan will be financed entirely through internal accruals.
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Bisleri water is available in a range of sizes viz 500 ml bottle, 1 litre
bottle, 1.2litre bottle, 2 litre bottle, 5 litre jar, 20litre jar and 50 litre
jars.
500ml bottles to 2 litre bottles have been segmented for individual
consumer and nearly 80% of the manufactured bottles consumed during
the transit sphere such as in and near Bus stations, Railway Stations
and Air ports. People prefer to carry the purified mineral water along
with them as they least prefer the water at locales.
Whereas 5litre jar, 20 litre jars and 50 litre jars are segmented for
industrial clientele where purified water is required in bulk quantities.
Also found in marriage, parties halls, restaurants and hotels, serving in
the hexagonal 20 litre shaped jars with easy to carry lifter gives a
significant impact of branded loyalty.
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BISLERI LAUNCHES 20 LITRE PACK : The Rs. 400-crore Parle
Bisleri Ltd, pioneer of the packaged drinking water industry since
1967, has introduced the first of its kind home delivery facility for its
20 litre pack (Rs. 70 MRP) which will be delivered by a specially
designed fleet. This is a part of the Rs. 260-crore expansion plan to
reach 2,500 Indian cities/towns.
According to the Company's Chairman, Mr. Ramesh Chauhan, Bisleri
is targeting a turnover of Rs. 50-crore from its 20 litre pack segment in
the first year. "The home delivery concept of Bisleri is an unparalleled
marketing exercise for an FMCG product in India," he added.
Flagging off the first leg of this consumer-friendly concept in Mumbai,
he further stated that Bisleri sales would cross the Rs. 1,000-crore
target by the year 2002. "In the last two years, the company has grown
at a wonderful pace of 150 per cent (annual) and this year's sales would
witness a 200 per cent jump," according to the Chairman.
Attributing the sharp rise in turnover to company's innovative
marketing measures and growing consumer awareness of safe drinking
water, Mr. Chauhan stated that Bisleri has varied packs to cater to all
segments. Bisleri has a unique break away seal which is patented and
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cannot be duplicated or tampered with. This ensures that the consumer
gets a highly safe product.
He further remarked that the Bisleri brand currently holds a 60 per cent
market share in India's Rs.700-crore branded packaged drinking water
industry, which is growing at a pace of 70 per cent per annum.
Highlighting the company's expansion plans, Mr. Chauhan stated that
the company will be investing Rs. 60-crore for expanding the existing
facilities whereby the bottling capacity will be doubled to 200 million
cases a day and an additional Rs. 200-crore on expansion plans, which
will provide a five-fold jump in Bisleri's distribution network.
The newly launched 20 litre pack will provide further impetus to the
growth rate and currently 20-litre jar comprises about 40 per cent of
overall Bisleri sales.
Recent packaging firsts for Bisleri have been the breakaway seal,
hexagonal 20-litre jars, pouring spouts and jars with dispensers which
do away with the need to lift the jars while pouring out water.
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Purity and taste are two major factors taken care in sourcing of Bisleri
water. Underground spring is carefully selected based on its purity and
pathogen free water. Great care goes in tapping this source. Only water
below 25 metres is tapped, to avoid any surface contamination to
percolate and mix with underground water source. Area surrounding
the water collection tube at the surface is protected,So that it remains
clear.
Processing and Quality Assurance
1. The casing tube itself is protected with stainless steel mesh to give
a preliminary filtration to the water.
2. Ultra filtration gives water reduction in turbidity and adds sparkle
3. Activated carbon purifier to remove colour and odour in water
4. Reverse osmosis membrane has porosity of less than 0.01 micron
the process renders water free o micro-organisms.
To ensure Bisleri is held safe free from contaminations, ultraviolet
treatment and ozonisation process is carried out. Ozone a very powerful
bactericide with no side effect, as it disintegrates into oxygen within
couple of hours.
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Sterilization effect of ozonised water continues even after water is
packaged, thereby ensuring safety of Bisleri upto its final packing. To
ensure high quality of packing materials, components like caps and
bottles are manufactured in-house.
Good Manufacturing Practices are stringently followed at all times.
Processing is religiously monitored at every stage. Testing source
water, processing parameters, microbial quality, packaging material
integrity and finally, shelf life studies, forms an integral part of quality
and safety assurance plan.
Facts regarding Water:
Why is water important?
Water constitutes more than 75 % of our body weight. Human
beings cannot survive without water. Our body needs minimum 2
Litres of water every day. Inadequate intake of water leads to
dehydration. Water plays crucial role in almost all the metabolic
functions like blood circulation , digestion , excretion , temperature
regulation etc.
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Water is a good source of minerals such as Calcium , Magnesium etc.
which are essential for normal functioning of our body systems.
Impure water contains toxic substances as well as disease causing
microorganisms. Such water can cause illness and health hazards. So
daily intake of pure and safe BISLERI water is vital for us.
How much is enough?
We must consume a minimum of 2 litres ( 10 glasses ) of water every
day.
Why bottled water?
Bottled water is purified through multi – stage process. It is processed
and packed under hygienic conditions. No other source of drinking
water can give 100 % guarantee of safe and pure water. Bottled water
is most convenient source of pure and safe water.
What harm can impure water do?
Impure water leads to various diseases and health hazards. It can cause
Cholera, Typhoid , Gastro – intestinal disorders , Kidney damage and
skin disorders. Most of the diseases are water borne. BISLERI provides
you safe , clean and tasty water.
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Why Bisleri is pure?
At BISLERI plants , water undergoes multi – stage purification process
to ensure proper blend of minerals and complete removal of
microorganisms and toxic substances. So a habit of drinking PURE and
SAFE BISLERI will ensure a healthy life.
WHAT ADVANTAGES BISLERI PURIFICATION PROCESS
HAS OVER PURIFICATION DONE BY OTHER METHODS?
Traditional process of boiling water for purification has its
limitations.It is time consuming. For boiling , water has to be heated to
100 deg.Celsius. Also , to kill microbes water should be boiled
continuously for a minimum of 20 minutes.
Boiling may kill the microbes but can not remove other physical
impurities and toxic substances. Many home appliances are available in
market for water purification. These gadgets use either filtration
technique or Ultra Violet rays or a combination of the two techniques.
These techniques do not guarantee 100 % purity of water.
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Filtration removes only the visible suspended particles and not the
minute , invisible particles , toxic substances or microorganisms. The
filters are cleaned rarely and all the muck accumulates inside leading to
more contamination.
Ideally such filters need to be cleaned every day which is cumbersome.
Ultra Violate rays kill the microbes but cannot ensure removal of toxic
substances and physical impurities.
These purification equipment are incomplete and need continuous
monitoring and maintenance. At BISLERI , through our multi – stage
purification process we ensure removal of toxic substances as well as
physical and microbiological impurities.
In our state-of-the-art processing plants we follow rigorous Good
Manufacturing Practices and strict Quality Assurance norms so each
and every bottle of BISLERI is made tasty, pure and safe for the
consumer.
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To make sure that the product that reaches the consumer is always of
highest standard and also meets international standards, Bisleri has
always been involved in improving its product packaging.
One such recent development is the tamper proof break away seal.
Bisleri also recognises the need to produce environment friendly
products and is working on the PET project.
The break away seal:
Keeping in mind the consumer's need to recognise a genuine product
that cannot be tampered with, Bisleri developed the break away seal.
The unique cap has been patented and cannot be duplicated or tampered
with.
This technology development in the product ensures that the consumer
will only get a highly safe product when they consume Bisleri
packaged drinking water.
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Product packaging:
To ensure purity of the bottled water, the bottles that are used are
blown and filled at the factory itself, to avoid contamination.
The PET recycling project:
Bisleri is extremely conscious of environmental issues, since PET
bottles are not biodegradable and not easy to dispose. The company is
currently working on the PET recycling project, where they will collect
bottles from various places, crush and shred them.
This shredded material will then be made into ropes , PET containers
for the non-food industry and other PET items like polyester fibre,
flower vase, gift items etc.
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BISLERI has a wide distributional network of area in the following
cities herein mentioned:
Delhi, Ludhiana, Jaipur, Noida, Ahmedabad, Mumbai, Goa,
Bangalore, Chennai, Hyderabad, Kolkata (earlier Calcutta),
Kathmandu (Nepal) where it outsells every other brands and
from these network areas (cities), Bisleri distributed out in
wholesale to all other parts of the country.
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The best beverage for India in the new millennium seems to be water.
In recent years, the bottled drinking water market has been witnessing
high-decibel levels of activity, with a host of new entrants swelling the
clutter.
With over 200 players jostling to be the thirst quenching favourite of
the Indian consumer, the business is growing at a rate of over 50 per
cent annually. The country's bottled water business is estimated to be
around Rs. 1,100 crore, of which the branded market accounts for Rs.
700 crore and about 700 million litres in volume.
In India, the core proposition of bottled drinking water lies in hygiene,
as the quality of tap water is bad and is rapidly deteriorating. This is in
stark contrast with the West where ‘mineral water’ indicates the
attendant minerals present in the water.
Mineral water in Western countries is obtained from natural springs
and is, generally, named after those springs. Most of the bottled water
passed off as mineral water in India, however, is filtered, boiled or
purified by other means such as reverse osmosis.
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A better description of bottled drinking water sold in India therefore,
would be ‘purified bottled water.’
The growth of the category indicates the need for this ‘mineral water’
and the fact that heavyweights are eyeing the segment points to the
potential that is seen in this market. Coke, Pepsi, Brittania, Nestle,
Auswater -- are keen on raising their stakes in the Rs 700 crore, 700
million litre market.
The entry of Danone's brand, Evian, the high-priced mineral water from
the French Alps, shows the perceived potential India presents in this
product category. Clearly targeted at the premium segment of
consumers, the brand is being distributed in the country by Britannia
Industries. Currently, Evian has more of an institutional presence (five
star hotels) than on the retail shelves, with a 1-litre bottle being priced a
hefty Rs 80.
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SWELLING THE CLUTTER:
For starters, his own brother, Mr. Prakash Chauhan through brand
Bailley, has been trying to emulate the Bisleri success through the
franchisee route. And is catching up pretty fast!
Then there is Pepsi with its Aquafina brand and backing of a good
distribution channel of 60,000 outlets. Pepsi banks on its refrigerators
at retail outlets, which stock its cold drinks, for Aquafina as well.
Another soft-drink major, Coca Cola, with an equally pedigreed
distribution network, is using the same for its brand of water, Kinley.
A player with technical expertise is Thermax, through a joint venture
with US-based Culligan Water Technologies. Largely into industrial
water purification,
Thermax Culligan recently announced its entry into the household
segment with the launch of 20-litre packs of drinking water, branded
Good Water, at Rs 60 a pack.
The company has set up a plant at Taloja, Maharashtra, and is in the
process of expanding its business into markets within a radius of 180
kms of this plant. Through this expansion, the company plans to enter
the markets of Nashik, Ahmednagar, Lonavala and Mahabaleshwar.
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The company is planning to set up more plants at New Delhi and
Gujarat. With a customer base of 2,400 in Pune and Mumbai,
amounting to 32,000 bottles of 20 litres a month,
Thermax Culligan is planning to set up access points for drinking water
at various outlets in Maharashtra. The company has no immediate plans
to introduce smaller packages for its product.
Then there are a number of FMCG giants waiting in the wings and
firming up plans. Multinational Nestle is also said to be keen on
entering this market. Nestle is a big player in the mineral water market
internationally, with brands like Perrier and San Pellegrino in its stable.
It sells water drawn from local springs in Europe and its brands are
named after the springs. Sources in the company say that Nestle is in
the process of setting up two bottling plants for the venture, one at
Taloja, near Mumbai, and the other in New Delhi, to service the
markets in those regions.
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Plans are initially to tap only the huge market for bottled water in large
cities and towns, the sources said. The product would be launched
simultaneously in the Mumbai and Delhi markets.
For Nestle, India will be the next major stop after Pakistan, where it
launched the Pure Life brand first. The company plans to ride
piggyback on its distribution network for chocolates, which are hawked
through a large chain of retail outlets.
Then there is Godrej with Aquapure. Britannia at presents distributes
Evian and will launch its own branded water very soon. The National
Dairy Development Board also plans to launch Dhara through its
distribution chain, new entrant Atco with Brilliant water and DS Foods
with Catch spring water positioned on the mineral water plank. Even
Hindustan Lever is said to be firming up plans to enter the market.
Apart from these are the small players, which, according to some
estimates, cater to nearly as big a market as the big players. Among
these the important ones are: Godrej’s Golden Valley in the south,
Amrit Agro’s Amrit Aqua, Kothari Foods’ Yes and T-Series’ Ganga in
the north and SM Dyechem’s Peppy in the west.
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DIFFERENTIATION
A clear differentiation is happening among the medley of water brands
in terms of both pricing and positioning. While Bisleri is touting itself
as ''pure and safe,'' brands like Bailey, Yes, and Hello are trying to ride
the mineral water wave.
And Evian, launched by French transnational Danone sells itself as
''water from the French Alps'' competing with premium soft drinks.
The fact however remains that almost all players in this category are
positioning themselves on the purity and hygiene platforms since the
very raison d'être of bottled drinking water is the bad quality of tap
water in the country.
In this scenario how will Mr. Chauhan differentiate Bisleri from the
others and, more importantly, for how long?
Mr. Chauhan has been trying to differentiate Bisleri by its breakaway
seal as an assurance of purity. As he says almost 76 per cent of
consumption of bottled drinking water happens in transit.
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Market research conducted by Bisleri revealed that the other overriding
concern for this set of buyers is the tampering of the seal and the reuse
of bottles.
Many have witnessed used bottles being refilled at railway stations. So
when a consumer buys mineral water, he would like to be assured that
the water has not been tampered with.
At the same time Bisleri is promoted by an aggressive print-and-TV
backed by hoardings and point-of-sale material. Every interface with
the consumer is being used as an opportunity to reinforce the message.
For instance, all vehicles used for supply have been painted in bright
blue, bear the Bisleri logo and sport catchy baselines like ‘drink and
drive’.
Apart from creating consumer pull with an advertising campaign, Mr.
Chauhan is boosting the retail push as well. Says a local marketer of a
brand, strong in the institutional segment, toying with the idea of going
retail, "Distribution is the key.
The consumer will pick up whatever is conveniently available and is
pushed by the retailer.
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Mr. Chauhan says that from his vast experience of marketing Gold Spot
and Thums Up, he learnt that distribution plays a crucial role in the
successful marketing of bottled drinks. He says, "Just about anybody
can invest money into a bottling plant or other facilities. The really
dirty work is distribution. Making fresh water available within a
particular period of time is crucial for its success."
His strategy is to build a direct distribution system at an all-India level.
According to him, distribution in the Indian context requires
experience. Bisleri’s retail distribution muscle is indeed great.
With 16 bottling plants to churn out the product, Bisleri has around
80,000 outlets in the country with about 12,000 each in the metros of
New Delhi and Mumbai. Mr. Chauhan intends to increase that to 10
lakh outlets and use around 2,000 trucks to criss-cross the nation, up
from the current 1000.
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With little belief in the distributor system, the company leverages its
large fleet of trucks to supply bottled water directly to retailers through
a system called ‘route selling’ where the driver of the truck is trained to
be a service person.
A critical component, this system, according to him, ensures that the
water supplied is fresh and bottles are in good shape. Though route
selling is more expensive than the more commonly followed method of
appointing distributors in different towns, he says, it is more effective.
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In the country, the cost of production of treated and purified water is
very low, the industry is spending much more on packaging and
marketing of its products.
But it is good time for the water bottled industry which is cashing in on
the need for the clean drinking water and the ability of the urban elite to
pay for this very basic human need.
The fortune of the more than 100 billion industry is directly related to
human apathy towards the environment. The more we pollute the water
bodies, the more urge will be for the purified mineral water, the more
will be the sale of the water bottles.
Some considerable facts:
a) In India, per capita bottled water consumption is as low of 5 litres
per year in comparison to the global consumption of 24 litres per
year.
b) From the 1999 – 2004, the consumption of water bottles have raise
from 1.5 billion litres to 5 billion litres.
c) India is 10 (tenth) largest bottled water consumption in the world.
d) In 2002, the industry had an estimated turnover of 1000 crores.
Today it is one of the India’s fastest growing industrial sectors. As
Indian bottled market grew at a Compounded Annual Growth Rate
(CAGR) of 25%
e) There are more than 200 brands, out of which 80% are local small
scale producers.
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f) The rise in the Indian bottled market began with Indian
liberalization process in 1991.
g) Indian bottled water industry growing at the highest rate in the
world. It can inferred from the following graph:
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Mr. Ramesh Chauhan, chairman, Parle Bisleri, the pioneer of bottled
water as a product in India, says his focus is now entirely on his Bisleri
brand, which reportedly enjoys a 60-65 per cent share of the bottled-
water market.
From Rs. 400 crore turnover, at present, he plans to increase it to (hold
your breath!!) Rs 1,000 crore by year 2002.
According to him, the drinking water market at the moment presents a
huge potential, valued between Rs 700-800 crore and growing at the
rate of nearly 50-80 per cent per annum.
He asserts that Bisleri itself is growing at more than a 150 per cent
growth rate.
Mr. Chauhan has aggressive plans for Bisleri with investments up to Rs
200 crore in the product during the next two years. Fuelling this growth
would be the new 5-litre water jar, priced at Rs 25, targeted at the
household segment and the 500 ml pack priced at Rs 5.
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He has 16 plants located all over the country of which over a dozen are
owned by him and the balance is run by franchisees. Mr. Chauhan
plans to have his own distribution network in places where his plants
are located while franchisees would manage the distribution in their
respective areas of operation.
"In another three years' time, water will overtake soft drinks in terms of
volume sales, and then Coke and Pepsi will be no match.'' he asserts.
His confidence probably stems from the fact that the soft drinks market
is currently not doing too well with both Coke and Pepsi having
reported flat sales for two years in a row.
Both players are currently engaged trying various measures like the
recently introduced small packs of 200 ml, to increase sales.
The bottled drinks market in India is estimated at Rs 5,100 crore, with
soft drinks accounting for nearly Rs 4,000 crore while fruit juices and
other drinks make up the rest.
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He clarifies his stance by saying that, "In all the major markets, water
outsells soft drinks in terms of, what Coca-Cola now terms as, share of
the consumer’s throat. For instance, in the Middle East, water
dominates over soft drinks.
Also bottled drinking water has graduated from being an elitist product
a couple of years ago to being an article of common use now. Also
simple economics dictates that a 500 ml of safe drinking water costing
Rs 5 is a better buy than a 300 ml of soft drink costing Rs 10."
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Water, an incomparable substance, ever our body consist of 70% water,
our earth consist of 68% water, and every living being is dependent
upon water for its life continuity. Water is said to be the only essence in
the earth to live and survive.
Every time we needs water for several purposes namely few:
a) Utmost Essential for drinking use.
b) Necessary for washing purposes.
c) Needful in manufacture of various food packages and drinks.
d) Required in industries for their manufacturing products.
e) Need for producing electricity.
f) In watering, outsourcing as well as for several other uses.
Taking in to consideration all the usages and fact files with references
to Indian people and economy, following analysis pertaining to SWOT
(Strengths, Weaknesses, Opportunities, Threats) have been made as
follows:
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STRENGTHS:
i) As Bottled water industry is the fastest growing sector, serving
millions of people with the purified mineral water to prevent them
from vulnerable diseases.
ii) People are getting more conscious about the purification of water
due to constant rise in water pollution, dirt and impurities in water
over a period of years.
iii)Several Multinational are eyeing on to this prospective market to
explore their market potentialities.
iv) Purified mineral water bottles may lead to discard of soft drinks.
v) More Environment savvy.
vi) Low Manufacture cost per bottle/jar with increasing returns.
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WEAKNESSES:
i) Consumption of lot of water may lead the local people to deprive of
the ground water.
ii) Ground water is getting more scarce as a result people have to mive
far places to fetch out the water.
iii)More water pollution as more bottled water industry are being
planted in the areas near river or lakes.
iv) People are boycotting the use of bottled water as it lead to high cost
of usage of water which is basic necessity of life.
v) Much dependencies on the Water Lord to shower the water.
THREATS:
i) Water is getting scarce, industries need to spend tremendous cost on
borrowing from a channel, dam or nearby state with government
permission.
ii) Use of Plastics bottles is again the degradation of environmental
greenery leading to deforestation, flood and many other natural fatal
calamities.
iii) Local people may put an end to an industry performance of
manufacturing the water bottles by their collective force.
iv) In resident, people are using water purifiers at their home.
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v) Being hazardous to the human life by spreading diseases for the
toxic substances that are being dumped in to the water.
vi) Soft drink manufactures again posing a bif problem as they are is
using a big portion of the water for the manufacture of cold drinks.
OPPORTUNITIES:
i) India is a biggest market, presently less competition is the biggest
opportunity to grow as a market leader.
ii) Best Sales services, more outlets, and new brands to be launched in
to the market to capture the share.
iii) Reap the benefit of leading organization goodwill to foresee the
future profits by nationwide campaigning and spreading the
awareness with respect to usefulness of purities, essence of
utilization of water to the Indian customer.
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Following sources were undertaken in completing project report:
WEB:
1. www.bisleri.com
2. www.rediff.com
3. www.projectsmonitor.com
4. www.india-today.com
PUBLICATIONS:
1. Business Standard
2. The Hindu
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