Havells: Making a brand of a commodity
How a raft of homegrown brands lords over MNC counterparts in the fast-moving electrical goods segment


What Havells did brilliantly over the last few decades—much like what Pidilite did with its adhesive brand Fevicol—was to create a brand out of a commodity. Wires, and other electrical products like switches and gears, were never a brand. “It (electrical goods) was a cottage industry. Brand was an alien concept,” says Anil Rai Gupta, chairman and managing director of Havells India. The company is ranked 64th on the Forbes India-TRA Research Most Respected Consumer Tech Brands list, followed by Indian brands such as Bajaj Electricals, Syska, Cona, VGuard and Wipro. What helped Havells, Gupta adds, in becoming a household brand was the trust painstakingly built over four decades. “Building trust,” he says, “takes ages. It’s a long-term thing.”
Most of the Indian brands, reckon marketing experts, score high on three critical attributes that are essential for any brand to win market share: Actual, factual and perceptual. “All the three elements together lead to the success of a brand,” says Jagdeep Kapoor, managing director at Samsika Marketing Consultants.
Gupta of Havells points out one more crucial element in having an edge over rivals: Building trust among retailers and distributors. In a country like India, having high quality is not sufficient unless you also have the trust of the army of retailers. “Everything boils down to trust.”
First Published: Dec 17, 2019, 09:30
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