Rural Marketing
Rural Marketing
Rural Marketing
org
Seminar
On
Rural Marketing
Agriculture 75 67
Transport and 2 8
communication
Construction 4 7
Manufacturing 7 8
POTENTIALITY
Large population
742 million Indians consisting of 138 million households
reside in 6,38,365 villages (Census, 2001).
It constitutes about 73% of the Indian population and 12% of
the world population.
Despite the rural urban migration, the rural areas continue to
be the place of majority of Indians.
Growth of market
The market has been growing
at a rate of 3-4% annually adding
more than one million new
consumers every year.
Growth rates of the FMCG market and the durable market are
higher in rural areas for many products.
The Indian rural market today accounts for about Rs 8 billion
(53 per cent - FMCG sector, 59 per cent durables sale, 100 per
cent agricultural products) of the total of Rs 120 billion,
claiming 6.6 per cent of the total share.
Media
Mass Media has created increased demand for goods and
services in rural areas.
Smart marketers are employing the right mix of conventional
and non-conventional media to create increased demand for
products.
Cable television has played a noteworthy role in bringing
about the change in rural people’s mindset and influencing
their lifestyles.
Growth in consumption
Consumption in rural India is growing faster than in urban
areas, a survey by ratings and research firm CRISIL revealed.
Between 2009-10 and 2011-12, additional spending by rural
India was Rs. 3,750 billion, significantly higher than Rs. 2,994
billion by urbanites.
CHALLENGES
Understanding the rural consumer
The biggest challenge is to understand the perceptions,
viewpoints and actual needs of the rural people, which is
dramatically different from urban people.
Males 34 46 58 75 82
Females 13 18 31 54 65
All 24 30 45 65 74
Seasonal Demand
Demand for goods in rural markets depend upon agricultural
situation, as agriculture is the main source of income.
Agriculture to a large extent depends upon monsoon and,
therefore, the demand or buying capacity is not stable or
regular.
Lack of proper infrastructure and other physical
facilities
Nearly 50 percent of the villages do not have all weather
roads. Physical communication to these villages is highly
expensive. Even today, most villages in eastern part of the
country are inaccessible during monsoon season.
Many rural areas are not connected by rail transport. Kachha
roads become unserviceable during the monsoon and interior
villages get isolated. Facilities such as telephone, fax and
telegram are rather poor in rural areas.
About 20% of the six lakh villages are without telephone
facility even today.
Underdeveloped people and underdeveloped
markets
Unfortunately, the impact of the
technology is not experienced uniformly
throughout the nation.
Except some districts in Punjab, Haryana
and Western Uttar Pradesh, large areas and
groups of people have remained beyond
the technological breakthrough.
In addition, the farmers with small agricultural land holdings
have also been unable to take advantage of the new
technology.
Inadequate banking and credit facilities.
Traditional outlook
Due to the traditional outlook of rural consumers, they are
resistant to change.
Life in rural areas is still governed by customs and traditions
and people do not easily adapt new practices.
For example, even rich and educated class of farmers does not
wear jeans or branded shoes. There is a lack of desire of new
things and styles.
Many language and Dialects
The number of languages and dialects vary from state to state
and region to region.
The Indian constitution recognizes 18 official languages.
Hindi only has more than ten variations. Hindi spoken in
Rajasthan is different from Hindi spoken in Bihar or Hindi of
Himachal Pradesh.
Barter system
It means exchange of goods for goods.
This system is practiced In the developing country like India,
even today.
This is a major obstacle in the way of development of rural
marketing.
Promotional strategy
• Rich traditional media forms like
puppetry, folk dances, audio visuals,
etc. should be used to convey the
right message to the rural folk.
• Forms with which the rural
consumers are highly comfortable with should be used.
By communicating and changing quality
perception
Companies are coming up with new technology and they are
properly communicating it to the customer.
There is a trade-off between the quality a customer perceives
and a company wants to communicate.
The perception of the rural Indian about the desired product is
changing.
By proper communication in local language
The companies have realized the importance of proper
communication in local language for promoting their
products.
They have started selling the concept of quality with proper
communication.
By understanding cultural and social values
Companies have recognized that social and cultural values
have a very strong hold on the people.
It plays a major role in deciding what to buy.
Moreover, rural people are emotional and sensitive.
By providing what customer wants
The customers want value for money. They aim for the basic
functionality of the product rather than the frills associated
which would not be of much use and will increase the price of
the product.
However, if the seller provide frills free of cost they are happy
with that.
By associating themselves with India
MNCs are associating themselves with India by talking about
India, by explicitly saying that they are Indian.
M-TV during Independence Day and Republic Day time make
their logo with Indian tri-color.
In 1998, Nokia had launched cellular phone 5110, with the
India tricolor and a ringtone of ”Sare Jahan se achcha”.
Companies are picking up Indian models and actors for
advertisements and promotions.
It is a normal tendency of an Indian to try to associate
himself/herself with the product. If he/she can visualize
himself/herself with the product, he/she becomes loyal to it.
That is why FMCG companies usually showcase their
products in around families in their advertisements.
By giving Indian terms for brands
Companies use Indian words for brands.
Like LG has used India brand name
”Sampoorna” for its TV. The term is a
part of the Bengali, Hindi, Marathi and
Tamil tongue.
By adopting localized way of distribution
Proper distribution channels are recognized by companies.
To succeed in India they have to reach the nook and the corner
of the country.
MNC shoe giants, Adidas, Reebok,
Nike started with exclusive stores
but soon realized that they do not
enjoy much Brand Equity in India,
and to capture the market share in
India they have to go the local
market shoe sellers and with
low priced products.
By effective media communication
Companies can either go for the traditional media or the
modern media or an effective combination of both.
The traditional media include melas, puppetry, folk theatre etc.
while the modern media includes TV, radio, and e chaupal.
LIC uses puppets to educate rural masses about its insurance
policies.
In between such shows, the lights are switched off and a torch
is flashed in the dark(Eveready’s tact).
SOME NOTEWORTHY SUCCESS
STORIES
"Yaara da Tashan..." ads with Aamir Khan
created universal appeal for Coca Cola.
Coca-Cola India tapped the rural market
in a big way when it introduced bottles
priced at Rs 5 and backed it with the
Aamir Khan ads.
In 2000, ITC took an initiative to develop
direct contact with farmers who lived in
far-flung villages in Madhya Pradesh.
ITC's E-chaupal was the result of this
initiative.
In 1998 HUL’s personal products unit initiated Project Bharat,
the first and largest rural home-to-home operation by a
company.
The project covered 13 million rural households by the end of
1999.
It had vans visiting villages across the country distributing
sample packs comprising a low-unit-price pack each of
shampoo, talcum powder, toothpaste and skin cream priced at
Rs. 15 to create awareness of the company’s product
categories and of the affordability of the products.
Small unit products like a one rupee or a five rupee sachets of
shampoo for single use or the small Hamam helps in giving
the consumers a trial opportunity.
Of two million BSNL mobile connections, 50% are in
small towns / villages.
Of the 6.0 lakh villages, 5.22 lakh have a Village
Public Telephone (VPT).
41 million Kisan Credit Cards have
been issued (against 22 million
credit-plus-debit cards in urban), with
cumulative credit of Rs. 977 billion
resulting in tremendous liquidity.
Of the 20 million Rediff mail sign-ups, 60% are from
small towns. 50% of transactions from these towns
are on Rediff online shopping site.
42 million rural households (HHs) are availing
banking services in comparison to 27 million urban
households.
HUL with its Project Shakti has already
has a reach of 1.7 lakh villages, and
aspires to reach 5 lakh villages by
2020.
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