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Underlying challenges faced in establishing a brand for Maggi in the Indian Market by
Bhawani Nandan Prasad - MBA IIM Calcutta
Five tests of a great brand are:
i. Relevance: Does it contain the brand’s underlying “value”?
ii. Memorability of its ad: Does it make an impact and prompt recall?
iii. Integration: Does it lend itself to a compelling brand identity?
iv. Differentiation: Is it sufficiently differentiated from competition?
v. Endurance: Does it stand the test of time?
India is unique in its diversity--1.2 billion population, 17 major languages, 1600 dialects. It lives
simultaneously in the 19th
and 21st
century. Finding common ground across all this diversity is a
real challenge.
To start with I would like to define what is brand. Brand is a name, term, symbol, sign or design
or a combination of them, intended to identify the product or services of one marketer and
differentiate the offering from that of its competitors. A brand thus signals to the customer the
source of the product, and protects both the customer and the producer from competitors who
would attempt to provide identical or seems to be identical products.
Building a great brand is a lifelong commitment that takes time and great planning which
produces intangible outputs including greater customer satisfaction, reduced price sensitivity, a
greater share of customers’ wallets and a higher percentage of repeat business
Brand building is about establishing a person-to-person relationship as opposed to a
salesperson-to-customer relationship. Branding in India is still at nascent stage. Too many
people continue to confuse branding with brand building or brand management. While brand
building is linked with a mere identity/ design; the latter is a long-term process requiring effort
and time. In absolute sense, true brand building is like playing a 5 day test match in an era of
Twenty-20s cricket.
Challenges In India
1) In India, the tools and methods utilised for establishing a brand are different. Primarily,
the difference between India and the developed economies would be that in India, the
information is unorgainsed. It is not readily available. Anywhere in the western world,
information is very easily available. A lot of information can be collected by mining data
and buying reports online etc. In India, we still have to do face-to-face interactions to be
able to get information. Second, the techniques used in US, Europe like email
questionnaires to collect information-wouldn’t work in India. You will not be able to get
the information you need within a stipulated time frame. In India any research becomes
a time consuming and laborious effort simply because while we are getting professional
there is still a lot of indiscipline.
2) Price sensitivity: Large part of Indian population is still middle or lower middle class. To
have security in future, everybody wants to do some savings which can be used in odd
time or whenever needed. There is still inclination of people towards lower price items
with nominal quality. People have priority for brand which they have heard of and
somebody known have already used it and there is word of mouth. Everything which is
in range of Rs 5 or 10 will be purchased easily
3) Non Homogeneous market: Apart from these two factors, I would say it is extremely
important that the marketing naunces be well researched. The Indian market is not
homogeneous and therefore very complex. The needs and preferences of a person living
in Kerala and Delhi may not be identical. In fact, brands like Coke have different
campaigns for the north and the south. So customization is more important in India than
in its Western counterparts.
4) Limited sources of Information flow : A large part of Indian population lives in Rural
India who have limited sources of Information only TV (with Doordarshan in general)
and local newspaper. Because of low literacy rate, people intend to understand the
product from look and feel. They would not like to buy any product with out touch and
feel so if brand is already established and trusted, then only they will purchase its
products with-out hesitation
5) Reach and diversity : Because of large geography and wide diversity of population, only
those brands can be established who can widely spread their base and is always
reachable. People look for some time even brand logos in local language. Look, color,
feel can be same but if logo is in local language, then that creates a larger impact.
Choose a brand:
There are many brands who have established themselves in India like Nokia, Airtel, Idea,
Colgate, Surf, Godrej, Fevicol, Bisleri, Cherry, Samsung, LG, Videocon, Maggi, Amul, Coke, Pepsi,
Cadbury, Kellogg’s corn flakes etc.
I would like to elaborate how Maggi – Just 2 minutes established itself as brand in instant food
market when there was no as such mechanism of safely storing the food and using it.
In 1980s during launch period, Maggi was distributed free in schools to promote trials. In 1990s,
The company made an attempt to change the formulation of the product but that was rejected
by customers and company had to go back to old formulation.
Maggi noodles – A brand of instant noodles manufactured by Nestle is such a strong brand in
mind of consumer that it met all the key parameters of brands relevance (whenever I am
hungry, this will take only 2 minutes, memorability of its advertisement (mummy, bhuk lagi
hai), Integration (every age group person likes this and have some memories with Maggi),
differentiation (every noodles is call Maggi in first instance) and Endurance.
Maggi (taste bhi health bhi) is so popular in Indian markets from Kashmir to Kanya kumari that
people still opt Maggi as first instant food option over others where there are lot of options
available in market these days. Maggi have adopted so well in Indian market that people feel
that this in made in India and made for India. To cater to health conscious buyers, Maggi
started vegetable aata noodles and now mothers are not hesistant to serve this as afterschool
snacks.
Nestlé India Ltd (NIL) offered a variety of culinary products such as instant noodles, soups,
sauces and ketchups, cooking aids (seasonings), etc., under the Maggi brand. Of these, instant
noodles had been NIL's main product category in the culinary segment since the launch of
Maggi 2 Minute Noodles (Maggi noodles) in 1982. Over the years, Maggi noodles became a
popular snack food product in India. In fact, the word "Maggi" has become a synonymous term
for any brand of instant noodles in India
This is so easy to cook that even on a day when males like to cook on their own (which is not a
culture in India generally), The Maggi noodle cake and seasoning is added into boiling water for
two minutes and it is ready for consumption. Egg, seaweed, boiled vegetables, lemon or even
milk can also be added to the noodles for a better flavour
Various flavours
 Maggi Noodles are available in a large assortment of different flavours like normal
noodles, aata noodles
 Maggi noodles also produces instant noodles known as "Hot Bowl" noodles named
"Cuppa Mania" in India..
 New drinkable Maggi noodle soups are also available.
New compaign of Maggi is Meri Maggi 2 minutes Khushiyan where you will share the good
experience which you have with Maggi. “Maggi se bane Khushiyan 2 minutes mein”. As
Amitabh Bachaan is brand endorser of these ads who himself is so well established and role
model for every Indian, this became added advantage for Maggi’s market share in this
competitive market space.
Overall, this segment has good growth potential because of changing lifestyle, eating habits of
Indian consumers and the increasing purchasing power of the growing middle income group.
Demand for convenience food is increasing day by day and Maggi is still first choice of every
Indian when we talk for instant food which is easily available in even remotest of location in
India.

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Underlying challenges faced in establishing a brand for maggi in the indian market by bhawani nandan prasad

  • 1. Underlying challenges faced in establishing a brand for Maggi in the Indian Market by Bhawani Nandan Prasad - MBA IIM Calcutta Five tests of a great brand are: i. Relevance: Does it contain the brand’s underlying “value”? ii. Memorability of its ad: Does it make an impact and prompt recall? iii. Integration: Does it lend itself to a compelling brand identity? iv. Differentiation: Is it sufficiently differentiated from competition? v. Endurance: Does it stand the test of time? India is unique in its diversity--1.2 billion population, 17 major languages, 1600 dialects. It lives simultaneously in the 19th and 21st century. Finding common ground across all this diversity is a real challenge. To start with I would like to define what is brand. Brand is a name, term, symbol, sign or design or a combination of them, intended to identify the product or services of one marketer and differentiate the offering from that of its competitors. A brand thus signals to the customer the source of the product, and protects both the customer and the producer from competitors who would attempt to provide identical or seems to be identical products. Building a great brand is a lifelong commitment that takes time and great planning which produces intangible outputs including greater customer satisfaction, reduced price sensitivity, a greater share of customers’ wallets and a higher percentage of repeat business Brand building is about establishing a person-to-person relationship as opposed to a salesperson-to-customer relationship. Branding in India is still at nascent stage. Too many people continue to confuse branding with brand building or brand management. While brand building is linked with a mere identity/ design; the latter is a long-term process requiring effort and time. In absolute sense, true brand building is like playing a 5 day test match in an era of Twenty-20s cricket. Challenges In India 1) In India, the tools and methods utilised for establishing a brand are different. Primarily, the difference between India and the developed economies would be that in India, the information is unorgainsed. It is not readily available. Anywhere in the western world, information is very easily available. A lot of information can be collected by mining data and buying reports online etc. In India, we still have to do face-to-face interactions to be able to get information. Second, the techniques used in US, Europe like email questionnaires to collect information-wouldn’t work in India. You will not be able to get the information you need within a stipulated time frame. In India any research becomes
  • 2. a time consuming and laborious effort simply because while we are getting professional there is still a lot of indiscipline. 2) Price sensitivity: Large part of Indian population is still middle or lower middle class. To have security in future, everybody wants to do some savings which can be used in odd time or whenever needed. There is still inclination of people towards lower price items with nominal quality. People have priority for brand which they have heard of and somebody known have already used it and there is word of mouth. Everything which is in range of Rs 5 or 10 will be purchased easily 3) Non Homogeneous market: Apart from these two factors, I would say it is extremely important that the marketing naunces be well researched. The Indian market is not homogeneous and therefore very complex. The needs and preferences of a person living in Kerala and Delhi may not be identical. In fact, brands like Coke have different campaigns for the north and the south. So customization is more important in India than in its Western counterparts. 4) Limited sources of Information flow : A large part of Indian population lives in Rural India who have limited sources of Information only TV (with Doordarshan in general) and local newspaper. Because of low literacy rate, people intend to understand the product from look and feel. They would not like to buy any product with out touch and feel so if brand is already established and trusted, then only they will purchase its products with-out hesitation 5) Reach and diversity : Because of large geography and wide diversity of population, only those brands can be established who can widely spread their base and is always reachable. People look for some time even brand logos in local language. Look, color, feel can be same but if logo is in local language, then that creates a larger impact. Choose a brand:
  • 3. There are many brands who have established themselves in India like Nokia, Airtel, Idea, Colgate, Surf, Godrej, Fevicol, Bisleri, Cherry, Samsung, LG, Videocon, Maggi, Amul, Coke, Pepsi, Cadbury, Kellogg’s corn flakes etc. I would like to elaborate how Maggi – Just 2 minutes established itself as brand in instant food market when there was no as such mechanism of safely storing the food and using it. In 1980s during launch period, Maggi was distributed free in schools to promote trials. In 1990s, The company made an attempt to change the formulation of the product but that was rejected by customers and company had to go back to old formulation. Maggi noodles – A brand of instant noodles manufactured by Nestle is such a strong brand in mind of consumer that it met all the key parameters of brands relevance (whenever I am hungry, this will take only 2 minutes, memorability of its advertisement (mummy, bhuk lagi hai), Integration (every age group person likes this and have some memories with Maggi), differentiation (every noodles is call Maggi in first instance) and Endurance. Maggi (taste bhi health bhi) is so popular in Indian markets from Kashmir to Kanya kumari that people still opt Maggi as first instant food option over others where there are lot of options available in market these days. Maggi have adopted so well in Indian market that people feel that this in made in India and made for India. To cater to health conscious buyers, Maggi started vegetable aata noodles and now mothers are not hesistant to serve this as afterschool snacks. Nestlé India Ltd (NIL) offered a variety of culinary products such as instant noodles, soups, sauces and ketchups, cooking aids (seasonings), etc., under the Maggi brand. Of these, instant noodles had been NIL's main product category in the culinary segment since the launch of Maggi 2 Minute Noodles (Maggi noodles) in 1982. Over the years, Maggi noodles became a popular snack food product in India. In fact, the word "Maggi" has become a synonymous term for any brand of instant noodles in India This is so easy to cook that even on a day when males like to cook on their own (which is not a culture in India generally), The Maggi noodle cake and seasoning is added into boiling water for two minutes and it is ready for consumption. Egg, seaweed, boiled vegetables, lemon or even milk can also be added to the noodles for a better flavour Various flavours  Maggi Noodles are available in a large assortment of different flavours like normal noodles, aata noodles
  • 4.  Maggi noodles also produces instant noodles known as "Hot Bowl" noodles named "Cuppa Mania" in India..  New drinkable Maggi noodle soups are also available. New compaign of Maggi is Meri Maggi 2 minutes Khushiyan where you will share the good experience which you have with Maggi. “Maggi se bane Khushiyan 2 minutes mein”. As Amitabh Bachaan is brand endorser of these ads who himself is so well established and role model for every Indian, this became added advantage for Maggi’s market share in this competitive market space. Overall, this segment has good growth potential because of changing lifestyle, eating habits of Indian consumers and the increasing purchasing power of the growing middle income group. Demand for convenience food is increasing day by day and Maggi is still first choice of every Indian when we talk for instant food which is easily available in even remotest of location in India.