Wednesday, October 20, 2010

XLRI inaugurates its Behavioural Research lab

Wednesday, October 20, 2010

XLRI Lab to Map Marketing Future

Jamshedpur, Oct. 19 (The Telegraph): XLRI inaugurated its behavioural marketing research lab today and organised a panel discussion — Maxi Mindscapes — to peek into the pros and cons of neuroscience marketing.

The lab, the first of its kind in the country, will delve deeper into people’s minds to know the emotional reasons influencing consumer choices.

The panel discussion comprised of experts from various fields who explained the applications of neuroscience marketing. The meet was aimed at framing a roadmap for the institute and understanding the merits and limitations of the application. The initiative has already got the nod of XLRI director Father E. Abraham.

“XLRI has always been a pioneer in innovations. I hope the initiative will set higher benchmark in knowledge,” said Father E. Abraham.

Neuroscience plays a revolutionary role in research and marketing. When used with established research techniques, neuroscience-based research can add powerful new insights. By employing techniques of eye tracking, brainwave measurement, et al, marketers might get a whole lot of hitherto unknown information.

Saturday, October 9, 2010

Marketing Research Lab at XLRI Jamshedpur

Increasingly these days, Marketers are challenging accepted results of traditional research. It is believed that increased understanding of the brain will change marketing and the way we measure its results. In this regard, Neuroscience is seen to play a revolutionary role in research and marketing in the future. When used in conjunction with established research techniques, neuroscience–based research can add powerful new insights. By employing techniques of eye tracking, brain-wave measurement, etc marketers might suddenly have a whole lot of hitherto unavailable information to aid them in better developing not only their advertising and sales strategies, but also products and packaging.

To acquaint everybody with this new science and the exciting new possibilities that it opens up for marketing, the Marketing Association of XLRI (MAXI) is organizing Mindscapes. MAXI Mindscapes is the First conference in India on the application of Behavioral Research and Neuroscience in Marketing and aims to bring together varied perspectives – from Academia, Industry, Research Agencies, etc. The confluence seeks to churn out new thoughts and ideas on the practical application of Behaviour Research and Neuroscience in Marketing. Speaker sessions followed by a panel discussion will be held on October 19, 1800 hrs. on the XLRI campus in Jamshedpur.

Speaking at Mindscapes would be experts in the field from around the world. Among the participants are Andrew Jerina, Director, Consumer Neuroscience - Africa, Middle-East & Asia-Pacific at Millward Brown; Nicholas Hall, Managing Director of the Behavioral Research Laboratory at Stanford Graduate School of Business and JK Sharma, Author Neuromarketing: A Peep Into Customers Minds, India's First Book On This Subject.

Subsequently, XLRI plans to set up a Behavioral Research laboratory in the institute, to conduct research on consumer behavior and its aspects using Cognitive neurology. When it comes to fruition, XLRI would be the first B-school in the country to set-up such a lab to understand marketing concepts.

Sunday, June 6, 2010

I am Back

Dear All

I am back with my new postings on this blog after a long gap.
I have recently developed interest in WEB 2.0 based marketing and thought that many of you might have similar interests. I look for your contributions to develop my understanding as well of all the other readers in this field. Please share all your experiences good or bad.

Regards

Sanjeev Varshney

Sunday, October 25, 2009

"I hate the Brand Team"

Its been almost four and haf months in sales training in Tamilnadu with ITC, one thing i got to learn one thing for sure, everyone has an excuse and most of them are lies. I am being rather sympathetic to the sales force by saying that 'Most' of the excuses are lies, but if you have tough sales boss, you would never be excused for an excuse.

Leaving the nature of work aside, to look at a big picture on where does Sales Team and a Brand Team contribute to the moment of truth of selling a product. One thing i kept hearing throughout the training and later on almost started saying it myself is 'I hate the Brand Team'. Now why does this happen. This is why most of the FMCG companies put trainees first into Sales and then into Branding.

Where is the denominator ?
Lets start with the little (so called) unorganised retailer. I was asked in my project in ITC to calculate the ROI of the retailer, when i asked for the same with one of my distributor, he laughed and said, 'you should be joking, the retailer hardly invests, there is no denominator in your calculation.' More often than not, there is only one person who can make the retailer invest, thats the Brand Manager.

Lets take the case of three brands, Britannia Marie Gold,Sunfeast Marie Light,Parle Digestive Marie. First of all Marie is a generic category, though Britannia has a better brand value,thye retailer can still sell the available brand with him.

So, Assume, that Britannia salesman goes to a retailer and takes an order for 50 packets of Mariegold and delivers it the next day, lot of companies follow a bill to bill system i.e You bill to the retailer only if he clears the credit on the last bill, and the companies norm to clear the bill is mostly within 7-15 days.So, the salesman goes to the retailer after 15 days to collect the money, and the retailer cites a lot of excuses and asks for an extension, but 80% of the stock delivered is already sold off the shelves. Now the retailer has a problem of losing his customers, if he doesnt have any Marie in his shop, so enters the Sunfeast salesman and he takes the order of say 40 packets and he gives a credit of 15 days. After 15 days the retailer still wouldnt have paid anything to either Britannia or Sunfeast , but would have ordered from Parle salesman for the next 15 days. The point to be noted here is that the retailer would have sold and earned around 150 packets of Marie, without investing a rupee.After 45 days, he pays back to the Britannia salesman and so will be the case with Sunfeast and Parle.(The case explained here is an extreme case, but in reality , the retailer does follow this kind of cycle in differing proportions).

The question is, how do you correct it? That is what a Brand manager should thrive for, to make his brand Differentiated and Indispensible. The power should be in the hands of consumer and the Brand, The retailer should run to the company for the brand's availability. But it is not as easy as it seems, because in the market, no one is alone, there is a huge force called competition, which keeps fighting you off the shelves, off the minds of consumers.That is why some companies opt for a niche positioning through different variants.There are ofcourse a few other ways to correct this situation like merchandising, Trade loyalty programs and 100% availability.

The sales team gets frustrated when their sales targets are not met due to the credit problem, even the distributor's investment increases and ROI decreases. And when the pressure mounts from bosses above, the sales guys use their ultimate weapon of Undercutting with their dear friend and foe-The Wholesaler. More of it later. But for now, the point is not to hate the brand team, but to acknowledge and appreciate the relation between sales and marketing.

Kartheek

Thursday, October 22, 2009

Trends in Pharma Business in India

Dear Friends

I have discussing the future prospects of Pharma Marketing in India in my Marketing classes. The article attached here and published by Wharton throws some light on the same and discuss the current trends in the market.

Enjoy reading;

Sanjeev Varshney

http://knowledge.wharton.upenn.edu/article.cfm?articleid=2356

CK Prahlad on success stories of Bottom of The Pyramid Strategies

Dear Friends

This is what Prahlad has to say on the success of companies who have used startgies targeted towards Bottom of the Pyramid. Enjoy reading

http://knowledge.wharton.upenn.edu/article.cfm?articleid=2356

Dilemmas during SIP process

Dear Friends

I am for the first time writing my feelings in this Blog. I was amazed to see the kind of dilemmas a student goes thru at the time of SIP process.
1. what to choose Fin or marketing
2. Am I really creative to survive in Marketing
3. should I opt for sales or marketing based profiles
4. what is there in really for me, if I go for sales based profiles, my experience with sales has not been really good in past company
5. which company can give me a fast track career
and so on so forth.
more than all this how should I prepare for my summers process, should I know all the brands and the companys they belong, should I be aware of all the jargons, should I know for sure how a new product launch is made in the company ---bla bla bla.
I am really intrigues with so many thoughts in mind and really want people to contribute to these dilemmas, be they practitioners, acadmecians consultant etc.
Any kind of information will rellay help my students at XLRI and many more in the world.
I tried to resolve few today by taking an extra session with the junior BM batch but do not really know how successful I was in doing that. Also I would like to know if there are any more serious dilemmas in the minds of students who sit for SIP.
I am leaving this post with all this set of dilemmas in my mind. But I certainly for sure wish ALL the BEST to all my students for the coming process.

Regards

Sanjeev Varshney

Friday, August 21, 2009

How is Africa Similar or different from India and China in marketing

Prof. Vijay Mahajan has come out with this intesresting read on Markets in Africa. this has been posted on Knowledge Wharton. I am sharing this with you all. http://knowledge.wharton.upenn.edu/article.cfm?articleid=2288

Regards


Sanjeev Varshney

Sunday, August 9, 2009

Dear all

The reality of sales and marketing and application of marketing concepts to real world is what one of my ex-student has beautifuly captured in his mail to me. He was also the one who initiated this blog and his thoughts on academics vs reality can be eye opener for all the future MBA's.

I am posting his mail without any edits for all to cherish.

Dear Sir,

My first instinct was to post my experiences in ITC on the blog, but i thought it would be better if you take the call on what should be there. I have tried to edit my experiences on whatever wouldn't be a problem for the company as well.You can use the below material for any academic purpose, if there is anything fit for it.This is primarily an experience in the sales department.
"I have joined ITC on June 9th, after a 10 day induction in conference halls, i have been posted to Coimbatore Branch. For a month i had to shadow the sales man from all categories, cigarettes, foods and personal care. I am restricted here to take the brands and their nature in the market, but at a general level, my first observation was ---
Sales force is like an army, the number of people involved in it and the area they cover , they literally work as if they are guarding the kingdom. This enormity is what is actually difficult to capture within a B-School. I have had really interesting experiences like following a sales man on bicycle for 2 days(not to forget that i was formally dressed), but it made me realize his hardships.When you get see that crores of turnover of any company is actually contributed by thousands of salesman(or foot soldiers) who earn some where between 4000-5000.
I would say that people who did their summers in sales are very lucky that they can get a sneak peak into the life of a sales man. At first i felt how come we didnt realise all this in class, be it S&D course or i remember your class on sales transaction and its analysis(now that i have seen a 1000 of those at retail outlets, i realise that class's importance). But later i have come to the conclusion that the ever arguing and complaining duo of the retailer and the salesman are impossible to totally comprehend and understand through a book or a class. And also the problem arises from the fact that Kotler and a few american books we follow have only a Marketing Perspective, because American market is more modern retail oriented.
I have seen salesman making a bill worth of 5000 over a good joke and ofcourse retailers cursing me like hell because of problems in stock delivery. I learnt it by practise that one should absorb those selectively.
Another animal in this chain that is very difficult to understand is the distributor. I once again would like to clarify that its not that we arent taught about it, in fact i remember memorising all the functionalities of the distributor from the book. But to which extent he performs these duties and what keeps him motivated is very difficult to generalise.
Few things that keep coming back from college courses are the fundas of competition and branding, Push and Pull(not to seem funny, sometimes you see this in physical terms, i mean, the sales man pushing the stock across the retail counter, while the retailer refuses, and in another scenario, retailer coming out of his shop and giving orders and taking the stock). Regarding competition, one will only be humbled, when you see a target customer coming and asking a local brand by name and purchasing it.You will feel that all your advertising budget had just been flushed into the drain And I could find all products that fall under the categories of guerilla,Challenger,Imitator, Follower.
The guest lecture on A.C nielsen retail audit was very useful( though i actually forgot basic funda like Wieghted distribution). A.C nielsen's retail audit data is the Bible for all FMCG companies here."
There are many other learnings from these 2 months, just that i am struggling to explain exact instances and funda with examples.

Kartheek

Saturday, July 11, 2009

New Model for Consumer Decision making process

Snehil one of my student from CB class has sent me the below attached article today and wants to share the same with all her colleagues. Enthusiam of people like her and others motivate me to work on this blog more seriously. Thanx Snehil, and I am sure others will benefit from the same.
This article is putting forward a new way to look at CDMP. I leave it to the judgement of readers to check how new is this. http://www.mckinseyquarterly.com/Marketing/Strategy/The_consumer_decision_journey_2373

Regards

Sanjeev Varshney

welcome to this Blog once again

Dear Readers

I am happy to restart active postings on this blog. Whole motivation to do this has come from my Consumer behaviour students of XLRI, who have often prompted me to rethink about various established concepts of Consumer Behaviour and motivated me to restart a discussion forum, where all the concepts discussed in class or even outside will be put forward for extended discussion. This blog will also carry information from other related sources as well for the mutual benefit of the readers, both outside and inside XLRI.
I would also give some onus of this to my Dubai students, atleast few of them who prompted me to work on a limited access blog in Dubai for making postings related to the project work they were carrying out as the part of course.
I invite comments from all the readers but also would like to make a point that all the ideas can coexist and there cannot be just one right way always. We all will learn from each other and will take the body of knowledge on Consumer Behaviour further.

Regards


Sanjeev Varshney
Faculty Marketing Area
XLRI Jamshedpur

Monday, February 25, 2008

What is TRP

TRP stands for Television Rating Points.A television program or a commercial, sent over the air, on a cable system, or direct from a satellite is available for viewing by millions of viewers. How does one know how many of those millions are actually viewing a particular programme? Unlike a newspaper or a magazine, where the publisher can count how many copies are sold, there is no direct way to know exactly how many people are watching any given programme. Hence, indirect measuring techniques based on the statistical sampling theory, called Television Audience Measurement (TAM) are used. Technically speaking, TAM is a specialised branch of media research, dedicated to quantifying and qualifying detailed TV audience information. In India, the TAM is commonly referred to as TRP or Television Ratings Points. Generally, when used for the broadcast medium, one rating point equals 1 per cent of the given population group.

Friday, December 7, 2007

Some comments on Shopping Behaviour of Men and Women

Dear All:

The following article on knowledge wharton will help you to understand shopping from various perspectives.
'Men Buy, Women Shop': The Sexes Have Different Priorities When Walking Down the Aisles When it comes to shopping, women are from Nordstrom's and men are from Sears. Women are happy to meander through sprawling clothing and accessory collections or detour through the shoe department. For men, shopping is a mission. They are out to buy a targeted item and flee the store as quickly as possible, according to a new study by Wharton's Jay H. Baker Retail Initiative and the Verde Group, a Toronto consulting firm. The study's findings have implications for retailers that are looking for ways to tailor their goods and services to specific segments of the shopping population. http://knowledge.wharton.upenn .edu/article/1848.cfm



Sanjeev

Welcome to this New Marketing Blog

I take the pleasure to welcome you all to this new marketing Blog. This has been started to promote discussion on marketing issues and practices among the class members of XLRI BM 2007-09 Batch. However, we would like to invite comments form various people across the globe to enhance our understanding of various marketing issues and practices.