Corporate India’s Rural Strategies
Posted : March 21, 2007 at 2:59 pm [IST]
Many bigger business houses in India are taking rural initiatives for getting into enormously large market of CK Prahalad’s ‘the bottom of the pyramid’ as well as to carry out their social responsibility.
Rural India is having more than 742 million people (or about 65 per cent of India) with rising incomes and aspirations. According to IRS data, over half of the 145 million rural homes in India earn between Rs 1,000-Rs 5,000 per month. Estimates put the rural market in India at Rs 80,000 crore.
It will be interesting to know about some of the Corporate India endeavours for rural India.
New Delhi-based DCM Shriram started the Shriram Krishi Vikas Centres in 1997 to do some value-additions to its primary business of selling urea, fertilisers and sugar manufacturing - all dealing with farmers. The centres offer the services of agronomists to local farmers across 100 villages in India. These centres are hooked to a regional centre in Alwar (Rajasthan), which, in turn, can plug into Delhi and several rural research institutes. The average number of queries the centre gets could run into thousands. For instance, in Punjab, farmers were not using potash as a fertiliser because of a three-year-old government advisory that stated that there was enough potash in the soil. Tests showed that this was not true any longer, and, therefore, productivity was dropping.
The first Hariyali Kisan Bazaar was born in July 2003. That meant stocking all brands of urea and fertiliser (besides its own) and tying up with fuel companies such as BPCL. As consumers started demanding more, the whole product range kept expanding to several non-agri products. These could be anything from apparel to schoolbags, Tata-Sky’s DTH service or insurance (ICICI-Lombard for weather and ICICI-Prudential for life insurance). There is currently a huge demand for banking services, but licensing issues hold the group back. Soon it will be rolling out the National Commodities Exchange (NCDEX) services to make future trading available to farmers. It has today a 54-outlet strong chain of rural supermarkets that offer everything the people there may need on a farm, and more. By the end of two years, the target is to have 250 Hariyali Kissan Bazaars nationally - each servicing an area within a radius of 15-20 km.
Godrej Aadhar oulets are also working on the same line. Farmers can get their soil tested for Rs 50 or pick up fertilizers or soil nutrients, in addition to buying groceries. Today some 31 Aadhar centers in India service 15-25 villages each. The plan is to take the numbers of the outlets to 1,000 in five years to service 20,000 villages. ITC’s Choupal Sagar outlets are extension of the same idea. Almost all these corporate houses are trying to eliminate the intermediaries to provide the best value to the farmers directly and avoid risk of cheating the rural illiterate lot. I wish they didn’t become too greedy soon.
As reported, Hindustan Petroleum has set up 589 common community kitchens (rasoighars) in 30 villages across India over the past two years to bring clean fuel and save time in gathering firewood. Now the girls go to school in many of these villages instead of going to collect firewood. HPCL makes losses on the rural rasoighars in addition to a loss of Rs 150 on every cylinder sold, but sustains for a cause.
Along with the Department of IT and Microsoft (and in some places, Hughes), the Indian government is setting up 100,000 (CSCs) common service centers across India. The kiosk is a computer center. A trained local runs it. These e-kiosks will offer everything from crop prices and insurance to tele-medicine and education. It will give the villagers daily inputs about the weather, prices, etc. The idea is to have one centre for six villages, so the government plans to reach all of India’s 600,000 villages by March 2008. Microsoft is working at tying in banks, financial institutions and other companies that might want to offer their products and services through these kiosks.Kisan Call Centres are another similar initiative.
The FMCG majors HLL with Shakti, and ITC with e-Choupal have already made its presence felt in rural India. Kodak, Shell, Reliance Industries, Microsoft, Dhanuka Sugars, Hughes, HDFC, ICICI, HPCL, Nokia and Tata Teleservices are plugging into rural India in their quest for growth.
Nokia has commissioned the Bangalore-based Centre for Knowledge Societies to look at how their new mobility could be used by villagers to jump over the social and digital divide between rural and urban India. As the 60 per cent of all growth in subscribers is now going to come from rural areas, almost every major operator - Reliance, Airtel, BSNL - has adopted a village to revolutionise communication. Tata Teleservices (TTSL) has started training programmes for teachers from villages to help them teach locals about telecommunication in UP. A few months back, TTSL launched the parivar offer (family plan), in Punjab. It allows one family, of 3-10 people, to connect to each other through a common network at a minimum cost of 10 paise per minute.
Several agri-product companies such as Mahindra & Mahindra or Dhanuka Sugars - previously content to sell just urea, fertilisers or tractors - are working on the same line in different forms. Reliance was forced to look at rural markets because its license for petrol retail was granted on those grounds. Reliance has specially designed small sized fuel pumps costing about Rs 4 lakh-7 lakh against the usual Rs 40 lakh-1.5 crore in cities. Each was designed to service an area within the radius of 10 km. The first of 60 pumps, covering 720 villages, was set up in 2005 in Tanna (Gujarat).
In a significant move to help the farmers of Uttar Pradesh, the State Bank of India and Nabard have joined hands to establish a “Farmers’ Club”. The club aims at enhancing the bargaining power of the farmers and artisans besides reaching out to the rural masses.
As everything from self-help groups to banks and the government get together, a network of physical and other services is beginning to find its way into rural India. If the initiatives of all these agencies are coordinated properly, the rural India will transform in next five years.
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Category: Rural development |
6 Comments »
Dear Sir,
Tata’s are pioneers in rural initiative with their 500 plus franchised retail and service outlets for details please visit our website at tatachemicals.com
Regards,
Sanjay
Posted by: Sanjay Naithani at March 21, 2007 @ 11:34 am
Dear Sir,Venturing in Rural India has been phenomenal in last decades.Mainly Agriinput companies like Indogulf Fertilisers and Shriram Fertilisers came for strenthing their relationship with their channles but from the perspective of the farmers Tata Kisan Sansar(TKS) old name Tata Kisan Kendra (TKK) ventured with slight modification in the concept of indogulf and shrirams.Some unsucessful ventures from Mahindras as Mahindra Shublabh started to operate in north india but cant get benefit of unexperienced corporate farming people .Finally turns came to Godrej Aadhar ,pan india presence of this agriinput group Godrej Agrovet helping them to proliferate the business in rural india.I would like to say the corpoarates were very conservative to go ahead with this service oriented agriindustry .Eearlier foray of Shriram Haryali (But till now only in Rajsthan ,UP ),Triveni Sugars(Khushali Bazar),ITC.-Chaupal Sagar and than Finally Bharti venture ,Relaince but till now restricted to out put has given some life to the industry but for the farmers will be benefited in Long Run. These thing have given a boost to durables,telecom and all other service and non service provider companies to look inside the rural as they have the launhcing pad of the no.of big retailers.Recent venture of TATA in line with Reliance and Bharti with European measure is fighting for race in Agrioutput while Godrej Nature Fresh is telling the big story of Sucess of Fresh Retailing in posh of Mumbai.With regards.Mukund Kumar
Posted by: Mukund at March 22, 2007 @ 9:56 am
Dear Sir,
These initiatives from the corporate giants are commendable as they are mutually beneficial for these companies as well as the rural underprivileged section of our society who are actually the foundation of the Indian economy. Such initiatives will definitely be very effective in improving the standard of living of the rural India.
Regards,
Vivek
Posted by: Vivek Wandhile at March 22, 2007 @ 12:04 pm
I find the pressure of Regulator are also giving a strong boost for the inclination of corporates towards rural india.
I agree that there is vast untapped potential in rural areas keeping in mind 742 Mn bottom of the pyramid people, but still given the chance no corporate will be willing to go in the remotest places unless there is some forward / backward integration in the product line that they operate in.
Today we talk about the growing indian economy and soaring sensex , but all the benefits of these has been restricted to urban places only barring few spill overs in rural.
Rural people are contining in their isolated environment. The imminent example is the no stopage of farmers suicides in vidharbha region of Maharastra.
What we require is stiff policy and regulation from govt on private participation in rural develpoment.
Posted by: Amit Kumar at March 24, 2007 @ 3:22 pm
bakwaas
Posted by: wee at April 10, 2007 @ 10:01 pm
Its a good write up, certain info about HUghes is not correct. Govt of India has started CSC project of establishing 100000 info Kiosks across India. State governments are appointing agencies through tendring process for appointment, Hughes is part of consotium which has bagged for a region in Haryan for establishing around 300 kioks. Hughes also has a chain of 280 Kiosks called HughesNet Fusion Centers, also with Comat Technologies Hughes has established 700 info kiosks in karnatka giving out G2C and B2C services.
Microsoft and Hughes have tied up for establsihing 5000 rural kiosks which would provide info services , Training and Eduction, and Value added services like rail, air ticket booking, Mobile recharge etc. these kiosks would be called “Saksham Net Kendra”
Posted by: Pankaj Singh at April 25, 2007 @ 12:06 pm
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