If the neighbours of all those entrepreneursor Shakti ammas (literally, mother, a respectful way to address women), as theyre calleddrink Brooke Bond, bathe with Lifebuoy and plump for HULs other consumer goods, it will bear out Project Shaktis promise: to cultivate the vast markets of rural India, sourcing saleswomen from the very villages that it hopes to tap.
Analysts agree that rural markets will prove more resilient to the simmering global economic trouble. Compared to last year, rural FMCG sales have grown at 6-8% over the last couple of months, while urban sales have grown at 4%, says Debashish Mukherjee, a principal at AT Kearney in New Delhi. For many of these FMCG companies, rural markets contribute 40-50% of revenues, which is very impressive.
On average, a Shakti amma records monthly sales of Rs10,000, on which she earns Rs600-800; those earnings come out of a 3% discount that HUL gives her on its products, as well as a trade mar- gin of approximately 10%. A really outstanding Shakti ammaa Dia- mond Shakti ammacan even book Rs30,000-40,000 of sales ev- ery month, often turning her house into an HUL store.
The ideal Shakti amma candidate is probably Rojamma, the woman from an Andhra Pradesh village who stars in her own 6-minute film on the HUL website. Abandoned by her husband, and with two young daughters to raise, Rojamma was rescued from that cinematically dire life by Project Shakti. Everybody knows me, I am someone now, a voice-over says on her behalf, And I can have big dreams. Gita Devis situation wasnt quite as precarious when she became an amma three years ago; her husband drives a tractor, and she joined to supplement that income and to better care for her five daughters and one son.
I was able to pay for my daughters sewing classes, she says, indicating a girl who, ill with typhoid and hooked up to an intravenous line, smiles feebly from a bed. I also bought that television, she adds, pointing to a set perched high in one corner, above a poster for the Mimoh Chakraborty film Jimmy.
Home-to-home In a room at the back, next to portraits of assorted deities and another, smaller poster of Jimmy, is Gita Devis stock of HUL products: soaps, shampoos, washing powder, lotions and creams. I sell regularly to 70 houses in this village, and 50 houses in the next, so I visit those home-to-home once a week, she says. Otherwise, I go out for an hour every morning to new houses…to convince them not to buy from anywhere else. This routine would ordinarily be inefficient and time-consum ing, but in a village where the Shakti amma knows everybodyknows what they can afford to buy and when they buyand where everybody knows her, the inefficiencies fall away. I can just go up on my roof and call my roof and call out to Gita Devi, and shell come over and give me what I want, says Krishna Sharma, a housewife next door.
Earlier, Sharma made the trek to Muradnagar, at least 12km away, to shop. There were small kirana stores in this village, but they had no range, she says.
They didnt have this, for instanceshe pulls a Pears soap bar out of Gita Devis bagor thisiodized salt.
Every 15 days, on such visits, Gita Devi is accompanied by Mishra, who as a Shakti trainer helps his wards pitch HUL to prospective customers. Mishra supervises 25 Shakti ammas, helping them keep records, listening to their problems, and liaising with rural distributors; he and 40-odd other trainers are managed, in turn, by one of Uttar Pradeshs 14 rural sales officers.
Gita Devi is thus FMCGs equivalent of last-mile connectivity.
Mishras rural sales officer, P.K. Aggarwal, lives in Ghaziabad but makes village runs nearly every day, monitoring the network of Shakti trainers and ammas under him. Earlier, he worked with Project Shakti in eastern and central Uttar Pradesh, and he calls the states western segment far better off.
To do business in rural India is not a cheap alternative. Apart from orienting an urban-centric supply chain to access smaller villages, companies have to accept that rural consumers often have illogical or impenetrable loyalties. Rural consumers are a more sensitive to getting value for their money, especially with consumer goods, Lokhande says. Now a secondary school student is an opinion leader. He knows what he wants, and his parents will listen to him.