Apples and oranges

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| What do gerberas and carnations have in common with infotech? Here's a hint: the same link exists between restaurants and footwear, batteries and mosquito coils, and fairness cream and bio-diesel. |
| Give up? These are all instances of unrelated diversifications, when companies have ventured out into a market that is not related to their core competency. |
| And if you thought forays into unconnected businesses was a strategy restricted to giants such as Bharti, Reliance, the UB Group and ITC, think again. Smaller Indian companies, too, are expanding their portfolios. |
| Consider these: edible oils company Amrit Banaspati's foray into education; switches manufacturer Anchor's successful entry into the toothpaste market; electrical cable manufacturer Nicco Corporation's Rs 15 crore investment in its bio-technology subsidiary; adhesive manufacturer Pidilite Industries launching a sweet snack under the Chikkers brand; footwear manufacturer Action's new healthcare facility.... The list is long and still growing. |
| Why are so many small companies venturing into unfamiliar territories? Is it indicative of a growing appetite for risk-taking or are they simply hedging their bets? Consultants believe the answer probably lies somewhere in between. Most of all, though, the trend is indicative of the health of the Indian economy. |
| "Market risk and chances of failure are high in developed markets where businesses are growing at 4-5 per cent," says Arvind Mahajan, executive director, KPMG Advisory Services. "Most markets in India are growing at 20-30 per cent, which makes it easier to enter a market and garner shares." |
| The companies may be small, but they have large ambitions and entering a sunrise industry may be the quickest way of fulfilling them. But is an unrelated diversification really as simple as that? |
| Gimme growth The most obvious reason for companies looking around is their natural ambition to grow. Prashant Mishra, professor of marketing at the Indian Institute of Management, Calcutta, gives a textbook definition: "A company looks at diversification when diversification opportunities promise greater profitability than expansion opportunities." |
| The Rs 732-crore Eveready Industries India is a case in point. The brand may be well-known but Eveready is certainly not lighting up the Rs 1,000-crore flashlight and battery market "" it suffered a Rs 13.42 crore net loss in 2006-07. "You can't expect an annual growth of 20 per cent in such a saturated market," defends Suvamoy Saha, director, Eveready. |
| Instead, Eveready is turning its sights to other businesses. In the next three years, it wants half its targeted Rs 2,000-crore revenues to come from non-core businesses. It made a start three years ago, launching packaged tea under the Jago, Tez and Premium Gold brands (revenues: Rs 100 crore). |
| Last year, it branched out further with Eveready Poweron mosquito repellent coil and CFL lamps. Eveready claims to have already netted 5 per cent of the Rs 430-crore mosquito coils market. |
| Growing eight-fold in three years "" and that too, across diverse segments like utility and different consumer goods "" is ambitious. |
| Eveready is counting on its extensive distribution network to bring in the required volumes "" the company claims to cover 3.5 million retail outlets across the country. "With a distribution network like that, we can sell anything," declares Saha. |
| Still, Eveready is being cautious. It has adopted a low-risk model, outsourcing the entire product manufacturing and packing functions. Product promotion is also low-key, restricted to outdoors and regional print, concentrating instead on retailer-customer interaction and point-of-sale promotions. |
| Consultants think Eveready's gameplan "" seek fresh avenues of growth, given that the main line of business is flagging "" makes sense. Says Devinder Chawla, partner, business advisory services, Ernst & Young, "Such a move gives you an opportunity to address a wider demand and eye a larger share of the consumer's pocket." |
| Shining through If some companies diversify to bring in much-needed growth, others are keen to hitch their wagons to new gravy trains. With the economy on the upswing, there are several sunrise industries offering huge potential. Which explains electrical cables manufacturer Nicco Corporation's foray into the biotechnology sector. |
| Interestingly, Nicco's entry isn't what you would call traditional. In the first phase, it has set up an education centre at Kalyani, West Bengal, which will offer a one-year post-graduate diploma in biotechnology management. The second phase, which will be implemented in the coming months, involves the manufacture and marketing of neutraceuticals, cosmoceuticals and pharmaceuticals. |
| QUICKBITE: Blossoming interests Diversifying is only for brave hearts," says Prashant Mishra, professor of marketing, Indian Institute of Management, Calcutta. "Getting into a sector that is different from your core competency requires substantially different knowledge, thinking, skills and processes." Sometimes, though, all it takes is passion. In early June, Kolkata-based hardware and network solutions provider company Micro Solus sowed the seeds of floriculture with Vikdas Green House. The Rs 9-crore company's first lot of gerberas has already bloomed and it now plans to branch out into carnations. Tissue culture and greenhouses are also planned. The gerberas greenhouse has cost the company Rs 5 crore, and the tissue culture laboratory means an additional investment of Rs 1.25 crore. The future looks rosy to Gautam Chatterjee, managing director, Micro Solus. "The current harvest means 5,40,000 gerberas "" 2,000 a day "" which we are selling at Rs 3.50-4 a stick," he says. That's about Rs 20 lakh from one harvest alone. Chatterjee plans to begin exports once output increases to 20,000 flowers a day. Next in line is the endeavour to produce disease-resistant potatoes. The link between IT and floriculture? None, admits Chatterjee, "Except that I love flowers and research showed there is money to be made from it, too." Besides, the Vikdas initiative will be managed by experts in the field, leaving Chatterjee to continue running his first business. "Once I am ready to export the flowers, I can easily trade online, thanks to my IT arm," he adds. If Chatterjee's love of flowers led him to greenhouses, Partha Roy Burman's interest in people took him away from his footwear business. The founder of the Khadims footwear retail chain has set up a separate company, Kantian Food and Hospitality India, to open a string of restaurants and take-away joints across West Bengal. "I am addressing my passion for interacting with people through this new company," he says. |
First Published: Jun 26 2007 | 12:00 AM IST