Friday, November 27, 2015

FOOD BUSINESS SPECIAL....................First-gen foodpreneurs pack OLD VADA IN NEW PAV





First-gen foodpreneurs
pack OLD VADA
IN NEW PAV


Barring a Haldiram or a Bikanervala, most desi snacks and beverages
have stayed in the unorganized sector, sold by vendors using ancient,
unstandardized methods.
Several entrepreneurs are trying to change that by using global practices
 to sell Indian street food

Green mangoes are hard.
And no one knows this better than Neeraj Kakkar, co-founder of Paperboat.
Hector Beverages, the makers of Paperboat, has been selling its aam panna
drink (green mango juice flavoured with roasted masalas) for a while.
Green mangoes are notoriously hard to process because they are tough,
and Kakkar says his team had to innovate extensively to make Paperboat's
aam panna flavour taste like its fresh, home-made version.
“So our biggest challenge is today our biggest advantage. Nobody has done
this kind of thing before and it is difficult to replicate,“ says Kakkar.
Paperboat now boasts an array of 10 distinct beverages including jaljeera,
golgappe, kokum and chilled rasam. Many more innovative products are
under development including coconut water and the juice of purple carrots.
The company, which opened its biggest factory in Mysuru a few months
ago, works with agricultural universities and farmers across the country
to figure out best practices, as they break new ground on products.
Across the country , entrepreneurs are picking up traditional Indian food
and beverage products to challenge Western imports like colas and
burgers. In some cases they are reimagining the products and offering
innovative variants. Mr & Mrs Idli and Idli Factory offer exotic stuff like
Idli Manchurian, Kanchivaram Idli and Punjabi Idli. Faaso's, with funding
from Sequoia and Lightbox, and Kaati Zone do a variety of Indian rolls,
including Cheesy Corn Salsa and Chicken Mushroom.
In other cases, they are using technology to make the products at scale
and sell them around the country , the way McDon ald's and KFC do.
Ammi's Biryani, with funding from Saif Partners, is doing that with
biryani, as is the Hyderabad-based chain Paradise which is opening
outlets in cities like Bengaluru at a fast clip. At Paradise, the self-service
counter is clearly modelled after the McDonald's and Burger Kings of the
world, with combos and packages and easy-to-select options.
Similarly, Jumboking pioneered the organized vada pav business, and
was quickly followed by Goli Vada Pav, which has received funds from
Ventureast.
Dheeraj Gupta of Mumbai initially dabbled in the Indian mithai (sweet)
 market. But the technology needed to keep sweets fresh was expensive
and since the venture wasn't very profitable, Gupta was finding the going
difficult. He looked at India's streets and realized how disorganized the
vada pav business was. “Vada pav was the largest selling snack in Mumbai
but no one had thought of organizing that segment,“ he says. He borrowed
 Rs 2 lakh from his father and founded Jumboking.The venture is about to
open its 100th store and is present across the top eight cities in the country.
The company charges a 30% premium on vada pavs compared to the
street pavs. It also focussed on the bread size, weight and size of the patty
and eliminated wastage. The patties needed instant quick freezing at minus
18 degrees centigrade, and with hygiene a priority for Gupta, he invested in
the required technology .
Hygiene is a big focus for most, because for many middle class Indians
today, that's the concern they have about food offerings from the unorganized
segment. “Tea is available in all corners of this country but our focus is the
white collar corporate employee in the top seven cities who are conscious
about cleanliness and consistency,“ says Amuleek Singh Bijral, founder
of Chai Point.
Most tea joints in India end up being smoking joints, which discourages
nonsmoking customers. Chai Point does not allow smoking and so enjoys
a broader clientele. The average price of a glass of tea at Chai Point is less
than Rs 20, less than a fourth of the price at leading cafe chains, and is
designed to drive volumes.The company's 50 outlets sells more than three
million glasses a month.
Hygiene, comfort and innovation is also the focus of Chennai's Idli Factory
.“My biggest driver is to create food for travelling, which means comfort
food that is well-packaged and easy to carry,“ says R U Srinivas.
The company's flagship product is its `Madras bars' which are idlis shaped
like bars coated with powders such as milagai podi, garlic podi and curry
leaf podi. Srinivas researched and tested 300 different batters before
arriving at the best combination of rices and dal to create idlis that
would remain soft and fresh even after they are cold.
Arvind Singhal, chairman and MD of retail consultancy Technopak, says
native food offers great opportunity in terms of revenue. “Indian food has
long been neglected,“ he says, and appreciates startups like Chaayos and
Chai Point that have leveraged Indian tea rather than going after coffee,
like many others.
Singhal also notes that many Indian startups in this space fail because
they complicate their menus by adding too many different items.
Keeping it simple helps with handling the supply chain, quality assurance
and faster service across all outlets, and in keeping prices low.
Bijral of Chai Point agrees. While expanding his food variety option looks
enticing -currently it contributes 25% of topline -Bijral wants to reduce it
 to 20% and focus even more on tea. “Let others sell food,“ he says.
Idli Factory also has a skeletal menu, and Srinivas intends to keep it
 that way. So does Jumboking's Gupta, who notes that multinational
food chains too stick to a narrow menu but offer different versions of
that menu. “Once this mindset (to complicate menus) changes, it will
benefit a lot of entrepreneurs,“ he says.
But that strategy could have its limitations too. When Mohan Kumar,
partner with Norwest Venture Partners, received a request from a food
startup for investment, he analysed a number of companies in the space.
He found that some 25 companies in the space had touched revenues of
Rs 200-300 crore, but then stopped growing. “Probably there aren't enough
categories to scale up and these companies tend to get acquired by bigger
ones. Big Indian players like ITC and Marico understand the market well.
Some of the MNC competition too could catch up,“ he says.
Jacob Kurian, partner at private equity fund New Silk Route, which has
invested in Bengaluru-based Vasudev Adigas, a south Indian food retail
chain, feels that Indian food businesses tend not to grow beyond the local
area as the promoters tend to be contented at a certain size.One exception,
 he notes, is Haldiram.“The skill set needed to grow till Rs 200 crore and
to grow beyond that are different,“ he says.
Kurian also notes that unlike the earlier family-owned Indian businesses,
those like Paperboat and Chai Point are not family businesses and don't
have legacy issues. “Let these guys reach around Rs 200 crore and then
we will see,“ he says. That could happen if the brands can go into smaller
towns or even global. Paperboat's Kakkar is not sure if his drinks can be
as popular as Coke in small towns. But he notes with some satisfaction:
 “Cola sales are declining globally.“
Anand J, Shalina Pillai & Ranjani Ayyar
TNN13NOV15

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