Families that pray together, stick to older brands
The Viranis, the Sarabhais and the Thakkars are not just scaling up TRPs through their unending joint-family saga. Career avenues in retail | Mall Mania
Loyalty to ���traditional��� brands has been one of the reasons behind the success of Nirma, Rasna, Wagh Bakri and other regional brands who are able to withstand competition from bigger national and multi-national players. These brands along with many of their regional peers have their origins in Gujarat, a state that has one of the strongest joint-family cultures and a typically low migration.
While traditional businesses kept youth within families, prohibition and slow growth of knowledge-driven sectors like IT and ITeS ensured that fewer outsiders came into Gujarat to influence its culture. Thus, the joint-family culture coupled with less percentage of migrants effectively dodge MNCs and national labels while enabling the local brands to create their citadels amid the organised retail boom.
It is not just value for money that counts in Gujarat. The loyalty of the populace to regional brands is more to do with the habits of the families, says Mudra Communications president Chandan Nath. He knows that loyalty to these brands stems from their continuous usage in the families over generations.
���A Gujarati family hooked on to Wagh Bakri will not take to any other brand. Tea is an inertia-driven product and families in Gujarat will not switch over to other brands unlike (nuclear) families elsewhere. So be it edible oil or hair oil or a shampoo, consumers from a joint family will remain loyal to their family brand���the product used over generations,��� he says.
Joint families have not just ensured upkeep of traditional values but also prevented erosion by insulating them from outside influence. Gujarat boasts of a strong local consumer population than that of migrants, which explains the region���s localised consumption pattern, says analyst Harish Bijoor of Harish Bijoor Consults.
Although Fortune (Adani-Wilmar���s edible oil brand) traces its roots to Gujarat, it finds stiff competition from Tirupati brand of edible oil. ���Tirupati is deeply entrenched in the households of Gujarat. It has a heritage that is difficult to be challenged. Fortune could not find takers in those families and has become more of a national brand now,��� said an analyst.
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