Interview in Business Line of our CEO

May 08 2009 04:00:00 PM Posted By : GoFrugal Blog
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The founder and CEO of GoFrugal Technologies, Kumar Vembu was interviewed in The Business Line, the business newspaper from the Hindu group. Kumar had the discussion and interview with the Deputy Editor of the newspaper. The entire transcription is available in YouTube in the following Link :

http://www.youtube.com/results?search_query=kumar+vembu&page=1

In a free-wheeling interview Kumar discusses and shares his insights on various topics ranging from why he choose to be in a product company, on IT service companies, slowdown in kumbakonam, about his dream , about his teacher and of course a lot about the retail.
Links for few specific topics on Retail is given below :

1. http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=iEiczLhrElM

Here Kumar talks about “In which segments of Retail we can find greater technolgy absorption” ?

2. http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=3axmXrQnHXM

A SWOT analysis on organised and unorganised retail.
3.  http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=-Mc_Ejz8w2c

Here, Kumar discusses about the Best practices of traditional retailer that are worth emulating.

4.http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=4mr-mvqXls8

On how the average Indian retailer is connected.

5. http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=ElrJvsN2TNE

On the Mobile applications in retail.

Hope you find it useful !

- Sivakumar

Neighbourhood Retail.

May 02 2009 10:00:00 AM Posted By : GoFrugal Blog
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So, what constitutes our friendly neighbourhood Retail ? In a typical neighborhood of about 100 families or above what all retail stores/services we can find ? We can the define the criteria for the “neighborhood” as - it should be in a walkable distance - a 10 year old kid in the family or the eldest grandma/grandpa in the family should be able to walk and buy the things.

Basic Necessities

A departmental store/Kirana shop, a pharmacy store and a vegetable shop are the bare necessities. Sometimes the vegetable shop forms part of the departmental store itself but mostly available as a separate entity. Though the above shops take tele-order and do home delivery, mostly the customer walks-in and purchases the stuff.

Also included in the basic necessity comes the milk vendor and the newspaper vendor. Both these services are home delivered on a fixed-monthly-fee basis. For most of the homes the daily morning chore starts with the above two - a dose of the daily news and a hot cup of coffee.

Add-ons

Along with the above, a bakery, a sweet and savories shop, a chicken/mutton/fish stall, an exclusive fruit shop, a mini restaurant/hotel completes the food/grocery requirements of the neighborhood. Typically these shops may be little farther (within 1to 1.5 kms) and service two or three neighborhood clusters. They may also prefer a fair bit of floating population (adjacent to a bus stop, main road or a junction)

A mini kirana shop (”petti” kadai or a Paan shop equivalent) which mostly stocks cigarettes & related stuff and a tea/coffee shop (standalone or part of the mini kirana shop) are also the necessities in the above areas.

A fancy store and a stationary store to meet the school going kids requirement are the other two shops you can find. They sell the typical bangles, bindhi, toys, greeting card, school maps, note books etc. Some of these shops also sell mobile SIM cards or one can find a exclusive Mobile stores which sells both the handsets and SIM card of all brands of SIM. (Even 10 years before it would have been hard to imagine a SIM card selling store in your neighborhood !!)

Already I can count 16 different types of stores/services to be offered.

Services

A dhobi(Laundry) service, barber shop, tailor shop, cycle service centre, two wheeler repair/service centre, flour-mill are the typical services which you can find in the vicinity of the neighborhood. While these services mostly expects the customer to walk-in and get served, other service providers like electrician, plumber, electronics services engineer are available on call.

Other Stores

Having the reach for three or four neighborhood clusters, these stores typically serve for a much larger audience. Some of these stores are electrical spare parts, general hardware, electronics items, automobile spare parts, paint shops, furniture store, sports shop, photo studio/development centre, household articles like vessels etc. In the food and grocery segment you can find a coffee powder vending shop, rice vending shop and oil vending shop. In the upmarket areas a florist is the recent addition one can see.

The major segments that are missing in the above list are – textiles & garments, footwear, luggage items and Jewellery. Though we can find stores of these type in our neighbourhood, typically the patronage for these segments is comparatively low. Guess most of the customers still prefer the large format stores present in the commercial areas over that of the neighborhood stores (at least for these segments).

On a further micro level you can find transient stores which specialize in only one product and usually sell at a particular time only – say a flower vendor who sells only flowers near a temple only during evening, a tamarind merchant hawking the tamarind on his cycle only during morning and so on.

We can also add a plethora of utility services to the above list – Photocopy services, Internet browsing centre, Courier services, Tours & Travel services, Tuition centres, Creches, …..etc etc.

As we can see there are almost 50 different types of retail products and services (excluding the govt/PSU based service like banks, Post offices ..) serving the consumer. It will be impossible for a single or several big players to dominate such a market. It will always be the story of both organized and unorganized retail co-existing together and as usual the Customer will be the king.

Sivakumar