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    Has Biscuit Manufacturer BritanniaIndustries Found a Fresh Recipe

    for Growth?

    Published: January 09, 2009 in India Knowledge@WhartonFor more than a decade, biscuit manufacturer Britannia Industries has called on

    consumers to "Eat Healthy, Think Better." Now, emerging from a period of internal

    crisis and preparing to address a larger slice of India's growing food space, the 90-

    year-old Bangalore-based company is taking on a new slogan: Zindagi mein Life.

    Translated literally from Hindi, the new slogan means "adding life to life" -- or, as

    managing director Vinita Bali puts it, "adding enjoyable vitality to life."

    According to Bali, who has been at Britannia's helm since 2005, "Over the past few

    years, as we looked at what we stand for and what we could stand for, we felt that if

    our promise to consumers [is to] make products that are not just enjoyable but also

    good for them, then we need to make that promise come alive through our

    products."

    This is perhaps best exemplified by Britannia's decision to remove 8,500 tons of

    trans fat from its biscuits in the last year, making them completely trans fat-free.

    The company was under no regulatory compulsion to do so; in fact, it is the onlybiscuit manufacturer in India to have taken such a step. Over the last few years,

    Britannia has also fortified many of its products with vitamins and micronutrients

    such as iron. Currently, 50% of its products are fortified.

    Positioning the Britannia brand as both enjoyable and healthy is core to Bali's growth

    strategy. She stresses that Britannia is not in the "health food" business, but rather

    "in the business of delight and enjoyment," competing not only with other biscuits

    but also with savories, chocolates and other snacks.

    By marketing itself as a healthier alternative, however, Britannia seeks to sharply

    differentiate itself from other brands -- and that move has paid off. Last September,

    Microsoft founder and philanthropist Bill Gates included Britannia's fortified snacks in

    a list of eight examples of 'creative capitalism' published in Time magazine. The

    company was also recently recruited to participate in former U.S. President Bill

    Clinton's campaign against childhood malnutrition through the high-profile Clinton

    Global Initiative.

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    Hungry for More

    The new positioning is also intended to strengthen the mother brand itself. With the

    introduction of the "Eat Healthy, Think Better" campaign in 1997, Britannia focused

    on building its individual brands, such as Tiger glucose biscuits, Good Day cookies

    and Treat cream biscuits. That was fine, as biscuits accounted for the bulk of thecompany's revenues. (For the year ended March 2008, biscuits brought in about

    90% of Britannia's net sales of $650 million.)

    But now Britannia wants to broaden its menu. In addition to growing its core biscuit

    business, it wants to significantly expand its small businesses including dairy, bread,

    cake and rusk (known as zwieback in the U.S.). The dairy business, which Britannia

    entered in 1997 and spun off as a joint venture with New Zealand's Fonterra Group

    in 2002, has revenues of barely $36 million and has yet to become profitable.

    Britannia has dabbled with bread and cake for more than two decades and entered

    the rusk market a few years ago. These three businesses together take in just $68million.

    More important, Britannia looks to explore other opportunities within the growing

    food space. According to a November 2008 report by the Federation of Indian

    Chambers of Commerce and Industry and management consulting firm Technopak

    Advisors, the Indian food industry is estimated to have been at $200 billion in 2006-

    07 and is expected to grow to $300 billion by 2015. The report considers the food

    industry to include fruits and vegetables, dairy products, marine and fish, meat and

    poultry, breads and bakery, confectionary and packaged foods, and alcoholic and

    non-alcoholic beverages.

    "Our vision is to become a larger player in the food space, and as we get into newer

    products and newer categories, their strength will be derived from the Britannia

    mother brand," says Durgesh Mehta, who was Britannia's chief financial officer when

    he was interviewed for this article. He has since moved on to become CFO of

    Bombay Dyeing, which, like Britannia, is a Wadia Group company.

    What new areas might Britannia enter? Company officials aren't saying, though

    speculation includes breakfast items and ready-to-cook and ready-to-eat products.

    Bali says that Britannia will not look at staples such as rice, wheat flour and sugar.

    "We will pursue profitable growth opportunities where we can create propositions

    that are relevant and differentiated from a consumer point of view," she notes.

    Adds Neeraj Chandra, Britannia's vice president and chief operating officer: "We are

    looking at categories that gel with our principles of enjoyable and healthy food. We

    want to participate in as many consumption moments as possible in the food space

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    through both leveraging our current products better and through different kinds of

    products."

    Industry players and analysts see Britannia's move as both smart and inevitable.

    "Britannia certainly has the capability to be a larger player in food," says Harish

    Bijoor, chief executive officer of Harish Bijoor Consults and a visiting professor at theHyderabad-based Indian School of Business. "The brand equity of Britannia can be as

    elastic or as inelastic as its vision is for the Indian market."

    Nikhil Sen, who was with Britannia for more than 25 years, including a brief stint as

    chief operating officer, adds: "Redefining its boundaries to become a larger player in

    food is a great strategy for Britannia, and it certainly has the capability to do so."

    Sen is currently managing director of Unibic Biscuits India, the Indian arm of the

    Australian biscuit company.

    Both Sen and Bijoor add a note of caution. "Britannia has been very good atdeveloping its current business, but it has not come out with any innovations in

    recent years," Sen says. "There has not been a single new product in the past few

    years which has been pioneering for the category. There has been no new energy, no

    'wow' factor. Britannia needs to innovate."

    Adds Bijoor: "Dairy and biscuits is still a wide-open arena, and there is [a lot of

    growth] in this space itself. Britannia is in an enviable position to leverage [these]

    opportunities, but it needs to be far more aggressive." Bijoor is also not convinced

    about Britannia's positioning as health-cum-enjoyment: According to his research,

    taste and health are mutually exclusive in the Indian context.

    B. P. Agarwal, managing director of Surya Food & Agro, which makes the Priya Gold

    regional brand of biscuits, says that while Britannia undoubtedly remains a market

    leader, much of its strength is derived from past glory and its strong consumer

    equity. "The new products that Britannia has been introducing in recent times have

    been more by way of tweaking the existing portfolio. It has been launching variants

    with new packaging, but there is nothing dramatically new," Agarwal says. Recent

    launches including Chutkule, a snack product, and Fruit Rollz -- both of which

    Britannia has discontinued -- failed to excite consumers, he says.

    A Period of Turmoil

    Any lack of innovation -- and Britannia insists that it is constantly innovating -- can

    be traced to the company's internal turmoil a few years ago. Sunil Alagh, who led

    Britannia as managing director and chief executive officer for more than 10 years,

    was fired in 2003 amid allegations of financial mismanagement. A number of senior

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    executives also left. Sen was given the reins, and then in January 2005 Bali was

    brought in. She put an almost entirely new management team in place.

    The last few years have also been marked by battles between Britannia's two major

    stakeholders, the Wadia Group and French Group Danone, over issues including

    alleged infringement by Danone of Britannia's Tiger brand. With Danone having soldits biscuits business to U.S.-based Kraft Foods last year, it is expected to exit from

    Britannia.

    Even as Britannia was caught up in its internal crisis, the external landscape was fast

    changing. For a long time, only Parle Products was a strong competitor to Britannia

    in the national biscuit market. Other competitors were small regional players. While

    Parle focused primarily on the low-end glucose biscuit segment -- its Parle G brand is

    one of the world's best-selling biscuits -- Britannia focused on the premium segment.

    With nearly equal shares of a total greater than 80% of market value, they coexisted

    peacefully.

    In 2003, however, tobacco giant ITC entered their turf as part of its diversification

    strategy. Using its financial muscle -- ITC's 2007-08 revenues were $5.5 billion --

    and massive distribution network, it quickly succeeded in emerging as a strong third

    player. While privately held Parle claims that it has a 40% market share, market

    research firm ACNielsen says Britannia and Parle both have around 33% of the

    market, while ITC has close to 9%.

    "Britannia's story is one of change of management and change of management

    styles," says Bijoor. "In the bargain, what suffered was the back-end research and

    development and the potential for massive growth at a time when India's economy

    was booming. Britannia was also completely unprepared internally for the irrational

    competition from ITC." Bijoor adds that it is only now, with Bali at the helm for the

    last four years, that a certain amount of stability has taken hold and that Britannia's

    momentum is building again.

    Praveen Kulkarni, general manager of marketing for Parle Products, agrees.

    "Britannia is definitely getting more aggressive in the market and seems to be

    getting back into the game now."

    Britannia's financials bear this out. In the last two years, Britannia has been among

    the three fastest-growing fast-moving consumable goods (FMCG) companies in

    India. In the second quarter of this fiscal year, Britannia topped the list with 27.3%

    growth.

    Ingredients for Growth

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    So what are Bali's main ingredients for growth? Investments in people, brands and

    infrastructure, improved efficiencies and cost reduction, and new choices for

    consumers.

    For instance, the company has been investing significantly in higher and better

    quality of human resources both at the front end and at the back end. It has sharplysegmented its go-to-market strategy and, unlike an earlier focus on simply

    increasing the number of outlets it covered, Britannia now has separate teams for

    general sales, modern trade, institutions, and semi-urban and rural markets. It is

    building strong capabilities in each of these segments.

    Britannia has also been working with an international consulting agency for building

    capabilities in shopperunderstanding as opposed to consumerunderstanding. Says

    Chandra: "These are some finer distinctions we would not even have thought of

    three years ago."

    In 2008, Britannia divided its product portfolio into two distinct categories: "health

    and wellness" and "delight and lifestyle." Products such as Tiger glucose and

    NutriChoice biscuits fall under the former category, while Good Day and Treat fall

    under the latter. Each category is headed by a senior executive responsible for

    outlining distinct growth strategies.

    Other initiatives include introducing personal consumption packs to attract youth and

    people on the move, adding transit points such as bus stops and small roadside

    shops to its distribution network, and addressing workers in the business process

    outsourcing industry as a potential new market.

    Meanwhile, Britannia has doubled its ad spending in the last three years. It is also

    working to increase trade marketing visibility and, for the first time ever, has signed

    on with a trade marketing agency. According to Mehta, Britannia plans to increase

    advertising and marketing spending to 10% to 12% of sales over the next few years

    from a current 7%.

    On the infrastructure front, Britannia has added 200,000 tons of annual capacity, an

    increase of about 60%. It has also devised a long-term distributed manufacturing

    strategy, put in place a continuous replenishment supply efficiency system, and

    strengthened its supply chain management significantly. According to Rajesh Lal,

    vice president and chief technology officer: "The stocks at our distributors are now

    replenished within 24 hours, and in the past three years we have increased the

    availability of our [stock-keeping units] from 60% to 90% across the country." Lal

    adds that cost reductions over the last three years have saved the company $30

    million.

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    Bali is looking to leverage all these new pieces for maximum competitive advantage.

    Sources inside Britannia say revenue targets are $1.25 billion by 2010 and $3 billion

    by 2015. While Bali won't commit to any numbers, her hunger clearly is to be the

    best. "There is a huge opportunity out there in the market and it is up for grabs,"

    she says. "What we make of it depends on our ability to commercialize the

    opportunity. We want to be among the three fastest-growing FMCG companies in the

    country and to grow profitably."