Case Study
Case Study
Case Study
"Our markets are poised for exciting times. As a successful organisation, we must not only keep pace with consumer expectation, but also anticipate them. Our new identity is to lay the base to project our future as a successful 'food' company, a company that provides high quality and tasty, yet healthy foods and beverages"
also seemed to have struck the right chord with its customers. Said Sunil Alagh (Alagh) "Our brand today represents family trust, quality with a contemporary, youthful image."
The fact that the existing brand was too closely associated with the bakery business, could have been a hindrance to BIL's diversification efforts. Therefore, Britannia needed a more dynamic expression. So there was a need to restage the logo, with the twin objectives of communicating modernity and dynamism. While developing the new logo and brand statement, the existing red and white shield like unit was retained with a modern rendition. The new corporate identity had three colours red (symbolising energy and vitality), green (nutrition and freshness) and white (purity) which collectively represented what consumers looked for in foods and beverage. Research had shown that the brand statement, Eat Healthy, Think Better, captured the essence of the Indian concept of the unity of body and mind.
During the developmental process, care had to be taken to ensure that there was adequate representation of all social economic strata in urban and rural India, for 'Britannia' as a brand, cut across a cross-section of consumers. The red wave communicated the dynamic and energetic movement of BIL. Analysts felt that the redesigned shield made BIL powerful and was the identifying stroke that communicated the innovation and futuristic power of BIL and that the redesigned typography made BIL very contemporary and less industrial. The roundness communicated the value of nature Eat Healthy, Think Better. The concept communicated perfectly BIL's potential value from physical to mental benefits. Said Alagh, " The new corporate identity will testify to the implicit (good) quality of all our products and all our products and colours stand for things we look for in all foods and beverages..."
With this in view, BIL revamped its biscuit business. At the low-end price-point, was the 'Tiger' brand, a "calcium-enriched" glucose biscuit launched in 1997, which acted as the umbrella brand for the mass market. Until then, BIL had focussed on the middle and premium segments of the biscuit market, leaving Parle's Parle G to rule the mass market. With the mass segment accounting for half of the unorganised market, it seemed strategically important for BIL to make inroads into the same. Therefore, as a part of its new plan to attack the mass market, BIL launched the 'Tiger' brand and positioned it as a 'healthforce biscuit' as consumer research showed that good health was the overwhelming consideration when mothers chose snacks for their children. Analysts felt that since Glucose had become a generic brand, BIL by establishing a new brand was clearly differentiating its Glucose biscuits from others. The 'Tiger' brand eventually seemed to have been a huge success with its products, Tiger Glucose (Rs 5 for a 100-gm pack) and Tiger Cashew Badam (Rs 6 for 75 gm) together, achieving within a year of their launch a turnover of Rs 100 crore and a marketshare of, 30% in the glucose biscuits segment. BIL then focused on its core biscuit brands- Marie, Thin Arrowroot, and Milk Bikis-which faced competition from similarly branded alternatives like Bakeman's English Marie, Milka Biscuits, and Priya Marie. In order to overcome the competition, BIL differentiated its brands by bringing them under the 'Eat Healthy, Think Better' banner and giving them clearly-defined positioning. For Milk Bikis, targeted at children, BIL launched variants like Milk Bikis Funland, which were animalshaped biscuits. Marie was renamed Marie Gold, and positioned as a tea-time biscuit. Thin Arrowroot was renamed Jacob's Thin, with its position as the low-calorie health biscuit reinstated. In 1999, BIL relaunched its low-calorie, high-nutrition brands-Thinlite, Cream Cracker, and Digestive under the Nutrichoice umbrella, targeting the fast-growing health-conscious segment. BIL seemed to be quick in gauging the rising demand for products in the impulse category of snacks (e.g. chips and chocolates). Accordingly, BIL came up with trendier products like Little Hearts, Pure Magic, and Chekkers, targeting the under-24 urban consumer, positioning them with statements they identified with. For example 'Direct Dil Se' for Little Hearts, 'Full Of Taste And Fun' for Pure Magic, and 'For The Ups And Downs In Life' for Chekkers. In 1999, BIL had launched Snax, a line of ethnic snackfoods using low-fat oils and hygienic processes, in 3 variants: Calcutta Ka Chana Choor, Bikaner Ka Bhujiya, and Rajasthan Ka Aloo Bhujiya, with an eye on the almost Rs 1800 crore snack market in India. In the segment of 'breads' which contributed about 6% of the company's total revenues, BIL's presence was restricted to a few cities. In the face of increasing competition, it decided to strengthen its bread business in the southern states and was seriously looking for acquisitions and manufacturing tie-ups in that region. It also planned to leverage the key strength of the daily distribution system of its bread business in its new ventures like milk. With a view to boosting volumes, BIL also changed its packaging strategy by launching biscuits in small sachets.
Questions:
1. how do you feel that the promotional ideology and market capturing is also needed by the existing product such as BIL.[word limit 250 - 300] 2. Although the brand had tremendous strength associated with it, it needed to communicate modernity strongly, comment. [word limit 250 - 300] 3. It needed to assure the customers that apart from being a trusted and a familiar brand, it was also a contemporary one, and changed with the times, comment. [word limit 250 - 300] 4. In 1997, BIL, whose business seemed to be doing well, instead of concentrating on it, virtually charted a new course by seeking to reinvent itself. What was the need and why? [word limit 250 - 300]
5. Research had shown that the brand statement, Eat Healthy, Think Better, captured the essence of the Indian concept of the unity of body and mind. How brand management plays an important role in doing so? [word limit 250 - 300] 6. With the de-reservation of biscuits from the small sector and commoditization of the Rs 3500 crore biscuit market, coupled with cutthroat competition after the entry of multinationals and stagnating net profits, BIL looked for a fresher approach to survive and prosper. Comment. [word limit 250 - 300] 7. The red wave communicated the dynamic and energetic movement of BIL. Do you feel that that coordination, team management, team work, motivation, target and many more in the picture helped the company to be re-synergic in nature? [word limit 250 - 300] 8. "The bakery business is our pillar and we want to strengthen that first." Comment. [word limit 250 300]