The first task has been accomplished: When Saregama introduced Carvaan in end 2017, the recording industry, hit by rampant music piracy and falling music sales, was going through a terrible time. Music cards and paid online downloads were still very small and couldn’t do much to lift the mood. In came Carvaan, an easy-to-operate alternative, and the prerecorded music boxes started flying off the shelves. Last December, Carvaan sales breached the 1 million mark and the company has been aggressively adding new retail touch points since then.
But now comes the more difficult part: Keeping the momentum going by improving the device’s desirability and increasing the footprint and availability. Saregama India says sales in the towns beyond the Top 10 cities will now hold the key. From adding product features based on feedback from these centres to pushing the distribution through innovative channels, the company is trying all the permutations and combinations to build on the early gains.
The product itself has been tweaked. Mehra says the addition of FM and medium wave radio in the device was also done keeping the listener in the smaller towns in mind. “Bigger cities never asked for it. There, people mostly focused on the convenience of the device, but in smaller towns, we first went with the FM feature and then added the medium wave because we realised that there were people who wanted their device to double up as their transistor,” he adds.
Similarly, he adds, the USB slot feature — which allowed the same device to play music other than the preloaded ones — was also added as it was seen as a small-town requirement. “And we improved the bass of our Carvaan Mini because the feedback from the smaller towns was that the people there wanted it to be used as a Bluetooth speaker as well.”
What has encouraged the company to move to a higher gear is the potential of the Indian market. The average internet user in the country spends 21.5 hours every week listening to music. However, veteran radio presenter Yunus Khan from Vividh Bharti, who has decades of experience catering to audience requests on music-based programmes, says Bollywood songs from the yesteryears (the “software” of the Carvaan device) have seen some decline in popularity in recent years. “That said, they reflect different moods an individual can connect with which extends their appeal beyond pure nostalgia,” he adds.
Mehra acknowledges diverse content is important in India. The company started with Hindi and as it moved beyond the metros, it launched the Tamil, Punjabi, Marathi and Bangla Carvaan; the Carvaan Mini later added Kannada and Telugu to the mix.
Last week, it also launched a Bhagwad Gita Carvaan, a Gurbani Carvaan and a Hindu devotional Carvaan. “So if someone is looking for a specific kind of music for the kitchen or the pooja room, we have an offering there too,” he says, hinting the company is looking to sell more than one device per household, if possible.