Wednesday, May 30, 2007

Who is the bigger brand?

Am sure this question is haunting most of our minds. All of us who have been closely tracking the Escorts -Dr Trehan fall out are keen to know - is it the Singh's Escorts Hospital or is it Dr Trehan - the man behind the success of the hospital who is the bigger pull for the consumers (the patients). It is believed that he is likely to pull along with him a team of 70 out of the 200 doctors at Escorts to Apollo. This waits to be seen.

It could be argued that - it is Dr. Trehan, the bigger brand. For consumers (patients) who have interacted with him/ been treated by him, he symbolises "customer service" or the "product" offered by Escorts. So Escorts is only a channel and not the actual service/ product.
While on the other hand it could be argued that - it is Escorts - its facilities, infrastructure, and all staff that symbolises "customer service" and Dr. Trehan is only a component delivering that promised service.

I ask myself - is it the Dr. or the hospital that is the bigger brand, and I would think it is the Dr. He is the "brand"

Best Buy and Walmarts of the world

Despite several attempts by the Biyanis and Ambanis of the retail world to disallow big International retailers from entering the country in a big way, players like Best Buy and Walmart are still going strong in their attempts to enter the Indian market.
Although FDI is not allowed in Retail, certain loop holes have been explored by these companies and they are now considering operating in the Cash and Carry Space (ala Metro) or the Croma system (the Tata - Wellworth tie up) which allows Croma to operate with Tata as the Indian partner.
While Croma has comfortably settled in its venture with the Tatas, Best Buy is exploring a tie up with Vivek, a consumer electronic chain that operates in multiple Indian cities.
Watch out!!!

Changing face of the MR industry

The news snippet read : "Hansa Research buys Oregon based US market research Co. GCR."
That, I thought sounded quite reassuring; an Indian firm buying a Global one. So far the research space in India has been dominated largely by MNCs like ACN, TNS, Kantar (IMRB/MB). It would interesting to see the reversal of trends.
The acquisition is understood to give Hansa a toe-hold into technology research and an entry into the US market research sector (total turnover stands at USD 7.72 bn) which is believed to be 70 times larger than that of the Indian counterpart(turnover stands at a mere USD 102 mn)
GCR customer base consists largely of companies in the tecnology and IT space, and includes MS,AMD, HP.
I say reassuring because inspite of having a good talent base in the Indian market research sector, the Indian agencies have been restricted to working as KPOs for international offices of Multinationals. This acquisition should probably see some action where talent gets adequately utilised rather than being a mere back stage operation.

Tuesday, May 01, 2007

Time Crunch

Has there ever been an instance in the recent past, when you had 'time at hand' and no tasks to be accomplished? I would be surprised if you said yes.
I remember, even until my b-school days I used to wait minutes at length to get that bus to class or to the place where we had some assignments to be done. Money was at a premium and no one cared much about time. Although time was important, its importance paled against money.
Today times have reversed - I would much rather spend that additional penny on fuel rather than waste time waiting. Earlier mom often wondered why I waste money on cabs....but today she understands that "Time is scarce".
It was not long back that I wrote a proposal for instant foods - understanding habits and attitudes of housewives towards the same. The key findings of the report were - the housewife thought that she did not want to seem uncaring and lazy by opting for instant foods, when she could go through the painstaking rigmarole to create the dish from scratch, "the maa key haathon ka khana" which the family appreciated.
Haven't times changed? Today she would consider herself smarter if she spent lesser time in the kitchen and more making money or even spending some quality time with her family. Time - such a rare commodity these days!
The products in the market all emphasise on how you could save time using them. A mobile phone with features such as push mail, voice mail, blue tooth, makes it possible to be accessible round the clock. Absolutely no question of 'wasting time'. Even while travelling people are busy at work.....punching away at their lappie buttons or following up over their cellular phones.
Earlier commute meant "peace between appointments". Today it only means "work while you are on the move".
This is great for India Inc which is growing at a formidable rate. But what about us......are we robots?....dont we need time to simply relax?
I wonder!