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tanishqfinalppt-150106074558-conversion-gate01.pdf

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tanishqfinalppt-150106074558-conversion-gate01.pdf

  1. 1. By mitalee chowdhury Maitregi vishwanathan Aviva noronha Atul mathews
  2. 2. Titan industries Incorporated in 1984 Joint venture between tata group and TIDCO QUARTZ watches was a global standard. Repositioned titan as not just a timepiece but as gifts, accessories & fashion. Brands in the portfolio : sonata, fast track, nebula.
  3. 3. Sonata – lower end brand
  4. 4. young affluent market
  5. 5. Nebula- high end Target: Upper middle class
  6. 6. Two failures 1. International expansion in early 90’s • Pricing pressure • High frequency of new product introductions • Demanding customers needed ordered serviced at short notice • Presence of low cost hongkong based competitor
  7. 7. 2. Introduction of jewellery watches under a new brand tanishq. Positioned it as a jewellery that tells time Target market : income of more than 1lakh High snob value, ego satisfier • Design problem : heavy, appeared clunky & high price
  8. 8. Jewellery in india • Gold jewellery market :60000 crores annually • Considered streedhan – womans wealth • Indian wedding has 2 bangles , necklace, earings, a ring, nosepin. • Investment of $2550 ; per capita income $350 • Dhanteres- biggest gold buying day. • no national competitor but local bigger than tanishq
  9. 9. • 25000 family owned independent jewellers • Buyers : men, target : woman • Jewellers : Retail stockists • Inventory owned by vendors • Design ordered by jewellers • Karigars ( craftsmen) controlled by vendors • Received rs 30 per gram of gold • Long standing relationships
  10. 10. Move from watches to jewellery • 1996:manufacture &marketpreciousstudded jewelleryundertanishq. • Indianmarketwasbasedon22-karatgold. • Studdedgoldjewellerywasbasedon18-karatgold • Asfirstnationaljewellerybrandchallenges: i. Establishitself as differentiated jeweller ii. Paradigmshiftinusage&attitude, educate customers Positioneditselfas“adornmentofbothbody&mind” Westerninstyle&design
  11. 11. • Injuly1996,1stboutiqueinchennai • Advertising campaginsfocusedoncreatingdesirability &boutiqueswereaspreciousastanishqjewellery. • Createmystery&intrigue aroundthebrand setback Consumerswerestuckon22karatgold Boutiqueswere5starhotel:intimidating &ltdinventory Toowesternelicited:NOTFORMEreaction.
  12. 12. Repositioning tanishq : a gem of an oppertunity. • June 1997 ,piloted offering of 22 karat • 400 designs + 1000 18 karat diamond studded • Focused on traditional design to counter perception • Inuagral offer promoted to increase walk ins & purchases • Focused on jewellery for adornment not investment
  13. 13. • Brandwasforlookinggood,feelinggoodunlike weddingjewellery • Salesrosetors.24croresbyapril1998bt mainstreambuyereluded • Changeofpaceproductnotmainstream • In1999renewedpush,includedindianinspired designs • couldnottaptheweddingmarket • Tanishqdifferentiation wasbasedonpurity& quality
  14. 14. • Pionereedkaratmeter • Adsreinforcedquality, highlighted manufacturing process,invokedtatatradition oftrust • 5000womenchecked;60%foundunderkaratage • By2000,hadhitRs.100croremark. • Newchallenges:markup15%to25%incontrastto 5%to15% • Localjewellerswereovercharging.
  15. 15. Exhibit 7 & 8
  16. 16. • Through1999-2001spelledtrouble • Shiftedtobelowthelinepromotions. • Ran360launchesatthestores • Perceivedas“exclusive&outofreach” • “grand,historicaldesigns&latestbutlimitedrange” • “modern,sophisticated,elegant&artistic” • Consumersreliedontheirlongstandingrelations • Offeredtotestjewelery
  17. 17. • By 2001 sales reached Rs.166 crores • But struggled to maintain local brand presence.
  18. 18. A changing of the guard • A karigar park was set up • Quick delivery, flexibility,reduced lead times & logistics cost • Continued to offer designs for wedding market, karatmeter service & exchange schemes, running promotions. • Consumption habits changed • A story was attached to each collection e.g. Aria • In 2002, diva launched offering pearls & diamonds
  19. 19. • Perception of “not for me” • Target customer – woman • Brand awareness was high but translation to visits was low • Perceived as too expensive, unapproachable, with a low width and depth of product offerings • 2004 – titan underwent a brand valuation exercise
  20. 20. 2003 – high-end collection
  21. 21. • Daytimes , a diamond based collection to reposition diamonds as affordable, casual, young & contemporary. • Colors, aimed to correct the perception that Tanishq only had modern designs • Aarka high fashion 22-karat gold collection to position tanishq’s design & image leadership • Aamra a collection of studded jewellery to tackle its unapproachable image
  22. 22. • Associated with high profile fashion events Femina Miss India, apsara film awards, Milan fashion week • Sales exceeded Rs. 550 core target • In October 2005, segmented the market into 5 psychographic segments • Confidentmatriarch, sanction speaker,thebalancer, theindividualist, uninvolvedconformist
  23. 23. 37% 30% 20% 5% 8% confident matriarch sanction seeker balancer individualist uninvolved conformist
  24. 24. • Confident matriarch: - 37% of the market - woman in the age group mid 30’s or older - open to new ideas - confidence to adapt and to adopt cange • Sanction Seeker: - 30% of the market - spread across all ages and life stages - most widespread segments in small towns
  25. 25. • Balancer: - 20% of the market - younger woman married or unmarried - drawn to the modernity of designs • Individualist: - 5% of the market - upper class working women, primarily in urban centers - strongly identified with being “modern”
  26. 26. • Uninvolved conformist: - 8% of the market share - similar to the sanction seeker
  27. 27. • Positioneditselfasprogressiveindianbrandthat combinedtradition &heritage • Tanishqdesignedjeweleryforthefilmpaheli. • In2005,advertising customized regionallyinthe locallanguage • By2006,ithad80stores;designsweretraditional indianpatterns
  28. 28. The GoldPlus Proposal • The semi-urban/rural market was 36000 crores • Leverage supply chain capabilities & compete on price • Erode & ratlam • Goldplus ads “ girl next door look” • Goldplus customers lived in small town & wore jewlery in weddings & festivals
  29. 29. • Marketing expenses were 50lakhs • Erode store had sales of 10 crores • Ratlam hit 3 crores
  30. 30. The dilemma • Multibrandstrategywontworkinjewellerymarket • Goldpluspositioning wasbasedontatasname • Couldcannablisetanishqssales • Goldpluspermitting pricenegotitation complicated matter • Tanishqwasabrandtochargepremiumprice • Government passed excise duty on branded jewellery
  31. 31. • Goldplus was positioned to serve gold wedding jewellery market in smaller cities • Both had positive results • Should tanishq or goldplus pursue gold wedding jewellery market in smaller cities & rural locations.??????
  32. 32. • The decision would impact the goal to reach a billion dollar sale by 2010 (5000 cr)

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