Tuesday, February 12, 2008

Chennai Photos


Chennai – Traffic + Construction


http://picasaweb.google.co.in/krishnashrinivas/ChennaiTrafficConstruction



Two things apparent in chennai are the traffic congestions & the construction activity. Traffic has increased manifold - the city is reacting to it by constructing over passes to aid the flow of traffic in key junctions. There are a whole bunch of high rises coming up - both commercial as well as residential.




Koyambedu flower bazaar + the flower supply chain


http://picasaweb.google.co.in/krishnashrinivas/KoyambeduFlowerBazaarTheFlowerSupplyChain



The flower business in South India is especially unique. Flowers are used for a couple major purposes –




  1. To adorn the hair of women in the form of different flower decorations &

  2. As offerings to God - the deities in the temples as well as homes are decorated with a variety of flowers –


The supply chain is unique – the Koyambedu flower bazaar is at the heart of this unique supply chain and is a sight worth seeing in Chennai




Glimpses of Chennai's Retail


http://picasaweb.google.co.in/krishnashrinivas/GlimpsesOfChennaiSRetail



It’s commonly said that 98% of India's retail is unorganized - this set of photos attempts to show what that statement means – things used on a daily basis, from FMCG to high end CE is retailed by a variety of small to medium unorganized retail stores. Often, the businesses portrayed are the only vocation of the families behind it – the lack of formal education denying the ability to obtain a job and/ or the need to eke a living is the driver behind the business. Despite the unorganized nature & the mind boggling inefficiencies underneath it, the small retailer still seems to fare well with his/ her venture and is able to sustain a living – granted the lifestyles of such entrepreneurs may be considered below par with respect to western standards.



Other adhoc photos from around Chennai


http://picasaweb.google.co.in/krishnashrinivas/ChennaiPhotos




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Monday, February 11, 2008

How to wear a Pancha Kachcham

My article, that I wrote a couple years ago - has been featured on wikihow.com and viewed more than 60K times .. 

How to Wear a Pancha Kachcham


The pancha kachcham (panja kacham or kacham) is a form of wearing the dhoti, typically worn by grihasthas (men who are married) on special occassions such as poojas or festivals. It is typically a 8 or 9 yard dhoti worn in a specific woven way.

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Sunday, February 10, 2008

Chennai - under construction





After 10 days in Chennai, there are a couple things that are apparent. Chennai is under construction - several flyovers (bridges between roads - for free flow of traffic) have already been constructed. I remember the days when some of these projects were criticized as money making schemes for the politicians - but these have come in handy when there are more cars & much more cars on the road.

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There are automobiles of every kind Toyota, Hyundai, Honda, Tata, Maruti and ofcourse the inimitable India's own Ambassadors. The traffic is unruly in a typical India cum Chennai way. Travelling in the past 10 days has required considerable planning for delays due to traffic jams - a jam feels inevitable .. even on a Sunday..

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Sundays are even worse with the hard working folk out with their families.

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Monday, January 14, 2008

In India, giving the customers what they want means offering the art of chaos



Great article: (as appeared in the times, UK):

http://business.timesonline.co.uk/tol/business/markets/india/article3181925.ece

Kishore Biyani knows the Indian consumer. “You see that lady,” he says, pointing to a young woman with a shopping trolley laden with goods from channa to Colgate toothpaste. “She is a domestic help. She’s wearing her best sari and gold jewellery because this is a social outing and she may see people she knows. Her boss must be somewhere.”

Sure enough, a woman with an authoritative air returns with more shopping and marches to the checkout counter. Pushing the trolley in her wake, the servant smiles at another girl in a mirror-image scenario.

“They’re friends, you see,” Mr Biyani, 46, says knowingly. The shopping magnate’s smile soon fades, though, and he rushes off to berate the store manager in Food Bazaar, an extension of his successful discount hypermarket brand Big Bazaar.

It is one of several admonishments dished out to panicky staff for poor display arrangements, checkout delays and wayward trolleys. “It is so stressful coming in to my stores. All I see are mistakes.”

It quickly becomes clear that conducting an interview in one of Mr Biyani’s flagship malls, to put into context his extraordinary rise from textile merchant to India’s largest listed retailer, was a bad idea. He cannot stay still for a minute. Between outbursts of micro-management, conversations on one of two mobile phones and random approaches from wide-eyed fans, it is difficult to sneak in a question.

The place is absolute chaos - deliberately so. Whereas Mr Biyani thinks that Western retailers such as Tesco have turned supermarket shopping into a science, he believes that he has made it an art form.

His canvas is India and its many sub-identities, which he aims to recreate in his 76 stores across 50 cities. In one corner, the grain seller is yelling out prices as customers jostle to weigh their spoils. It is like the local market without the haggling.

Elsewhere, a man pushes a 2,000 rupee (£26) washing machine around in a trolley while announcing its bargain price over a megaphone. It is like the village mela (fair) without the elephants and magicians.

It is a format that has proved a success and exposed the underlying characteristic of the average Indian consumer: they prefer goods stocked in piles rather than neat rows, want to dig around in buckets to feel as if they are getting a bargain and won’t set foot in a place that is quiet and pristine because that equals expensive.

Curiously for a man who is selling to the Indian masses (his stores attracted 200 million shoppers last year), one of the retailers that Mr Biyani admires most is Abercrombie & Fitch, the all-American clothing brand that employs beautiful people as shop assistants. “They have models, I have megaphones. It’s all theatre, in a sense.”

For any international multibrand retailer looking to crack India, once the Government drops obstacles that limit foreign investors to wholesale, his business provides clues about the diversity of this market. By realising that one size does not fit all in India, Pantaloon Retail, the flagship component of Mr Biyani’s Future Group, has achieved sales of £476 million and now operates about seven million sq ft of retail space. Its target is revenues of £3.8 billion and a presence in 90 cities within four years.

Even now, 20 years after he left the family textiles business to sell stone- washed denim, Mr Biyani can get it wrong. A high-end coffee house in the Orchid City Centre Mall in Bombay, which Future Group operates, failed because it was too upmarket. The shopping centre, which is in a largely Muslim area and was a cowshed only two years ago, is Mr Biyani’s testing ground. Shops selling burkas, specialist saris, tailor-made suits and fashionto the college crowd, the latter with the backdrop of deafening DJs, are all new, own-brand concepts that seem to be taking off. If they work, they will be rolled out around the country. If not, they will be closed. The pace of the consumer revolution in India is why Mr Biyani, whose retail infrastructure fund has attracted investment from George Soros, the billionaire financial speculator, visits one of his stores every weekend. “I am a little scared the market is changing,” he says. “Nobody understands all categories of the business today, so we are building up expertise.”

He admits to borrowing ideas from foreign retailers – a new loyalty scheme, offering instore credit and loans, is much like the Tesco Clubcard – but he constantly returns to the fact that everything must be distinctly Indian. “India is not an individualistic society. I never thought the Western way would work,” he says.

Still, he is leaving nothing to chance. It may be that he merely has first-mover advantage, so he has hired McKinsey to advise on his next move. He is also considering joining forces with a foreign retailer for a cash-and-carry venture to rival Wal-Mart’s alliance with Bharti Retail. “We need more scale and efficiency before the competition comes in,” he says – and then he is gone, peeling away to tell staff how to improve the flow of customers around the shop.

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