Thursday, October 24, 2013

tecso

Tesco: Every Little Bit (of Customer Data) Helps

Tesco: Every Little Bit (of Customer Data) Helps
Tesco: Every Little Bit (of Customer Data) Helps
When Sir Terry Leahy joined the now-huge UK-based supermarket chain Tesco in 1992 as its first-ever marketing director, he was tasked with transforming sales for a dwindling company.
At the time two other supermarket giants, Sainsbury and Marks & Spencer, dwarfed Tesco, which was half the size of each of its competitors.
“These were outstanding brands,” Leahy said during a keynote at the SAS Premiere Business Leadership Series in Orlando. “And when you get that far behind, it's very hard to close that gap. That's why brands last a long time.”
Yet by the time Leahy left Tesco in 2011—after 14 years as its CEO—Tesco was doing 10 times better than its two major competitors.
“These are slow-growing industries,” Leahy said. “The difference was in the use of data, in the way Tesco learned about its customers. And from that, everything flowed.”
Leahy's tenure saw the development of major programs and initiatives that pushed the supermarket forward. The most significant of which was the launch of the Tesco Clubcard in 1995, made possible by the increased processing power of computers, which could finally hold the data needed to manage customer transactions. Through this loyalty program, the supermarket was able to transition from mass marketing to personalized marketing.
Other data-driven initiatives followed. The development of an online food business at Tesco.com; an initiative to sell services, as well as products; and the development of shopper data research house Dunnhumby as a Tesco subsidiary.
Tesco's expansion, above a bedrock of customer data, was not easy—especially initially, when Leahy served as Tesco's marketing director.
“The marketing role was not a strong role,” he recalled. “Buying and retail operations and finance were stronger. But the voice of the customer was hard to argue with at the boardroom table. I had to gain credibility by demonstrating that this was really the voice of the customer.”
Later, at a journalist roundtable, Leahy reflected on his career and the future of retail.
As Tesco began its data-driven policy, what did you learn about customers that you didn't know before?
The first thing was that we realized we didn't know our customer at all.
In a way, many companies have research and feel they know something, but when you get real data on all of your customers, you realize how little your sample data is.
We also realized that customers actually like to belong to things, they like to be recognized, they like to be valued, and they're very responsive. They want to be involved in a relationship or give information or give feedback. And we learned that you have to be relevant. One of the traditional marketing techniques is that if someone buys Coke, you give them an incentive to buy Pepsi—on the basis that they already buy Coke, how do you persuade them to buy Pepsi?
Actually, you should incent them to buy Coke. It sounds obvious, but that's how the whole industry is set up, to incentivize people to do what they're not already doing when actually you should reward and reinforce what they're already doing.
What I learned was the value of creating and reinforcing loyal behavior.
Why have traditional brick-and-mortars struggled online?
Becoming multichannel is difficult because there's a different culture involved.
So it's easier for pure e-commerce businesses to expand because they understand how search data and purchasing data is the basis of their relationship. Now some [traditional] retailers [are] becoming successful with multichannel. [Retailer] John Lewis in the UK is a good example. Tesco is a good example.
The technology platforms are becoming more available so it's easier now for traditional retailers to develop a multichannel strategy. There is the difficulty between moving between the different platforms, online and offline.
The advantage that multichannel retailers have is personality and convenience. They're very visible, front-of-mind, which is helpful. But if you're pure online, keeping visibility is still a challenge.
How do you combat internal resistance toward innovation?
In most organizations people are fearful for their jobs and are more worried about doing the wrong thing than the right thing. If you can remove fear and encourage people to take risks, you can get more innovation. And if you can accept failure, you get more innovation. The hardest thing is that when something goes wrong, not to punish and react badly.
Clearly risk has its limits and you want to not risk the whole organization's future. But you can take a lot of risks in an organization and survive. That's how you get innovation.
Did you make many mistakes?
I made a lot of mistakes and I think I probably got more things wrong than right. The good news is that in business you don't have to get everything right, just a few things.
That's why I feel sorry for people in public office; the public is less tolerant of failure and expects officials to get everything right, and that tends to make them very risk adverse.
What did you get most wrong?
I should have pushed harder into e-commerce and new technology, having made an early start.
I think I should pushed harder to develop a different blend of management skills, to be more able to use new technology and be more objective. I think they were two areas I struggled to get right.
Why did Tesco not follow through with its initial e-commerce push?
Tesco still has the world's largest food business online. So it's been successful, and it's highly profitable. But we started the business in the mid-90s. [During] the TMT [Technology, Media, and Telecommunications AKA Dot Com] bust in the early 2000s, we wondered for a while how big e-commerce penetration would be so we paused. When it suddenly surged back on again, we were possibly—not slow to react—but if we'd kept going through the TMT bust, we'd be further ahead.
Also internationally, we concentrated on building out our physical stores when possibly...we could have gone to e-commerce. You never know with these things, but those are two [areas] that could have been different.
How is the online customer relationship different from the in-store relationship?
In a traditional [business relationship], a customer would have a restricted universe: hinterland is the right word. You'd be in your local village or town and that is as far as you'd look. If you were a retailer and you were present in that town, you could own that customer.
Nowadays a customer has a hinterland that's global and online. How do you own that customer? That is, in a digital world, the challenge. How do you develop that relationship with the customer?
Will product pricing become personalized?
In theory you could move to pricing the customer instead of the product. That could be possible. There are certain natural constraints to that in terms of social policy and transparency and so on. You can already see in some areas where customers are content to be priced as customers: risk pricing with insurance and so on.
It makes a lot of sense in health pricing, but there will be certain social policy restriction in terms of fair access and so on.
But if you look at the statistics, they're compelling because different customer behaviors have very different profit outcomes. You should reward the behaviors that are most profitable, and that would speak to customer behavior pricing.
Are pure online players like Amazon judged differently by the general public in terms of data use?
I do worry that some of the technology companies in the first generation have not thought enough about data privacy. I always felt that Tesco set a good standard in terms of data privacy, but some of the stories that you hear where they've sold data or not told customers how they're using data is troubling.
I think that will change. There needs to be more transparency in how data is used and ownership of data. In another sense, customers are probably more tolerant of e-commerce businesses than they are of traditional businesses in terms of standards of service and behavior. I think that will change. The delivery experience is not good in e-commerce businesses.
That will be passing; people will expect much better service, which is why Amazon is building out physical distribution points.
Multichannel is the fastest growing form of e-commerce at the moment, faster than pure online as people try to address practical problems in terms of delivery experience.
What role will mobile have?
A lot of UK businesses I look at might have anywhere from a low of 10 to a high of 40 or 50% online [revenue]. Within that figure, mobile might be 15 or 20%, but the growth rate is what's startling. I see growth rates of mobile between 50-100% year-over-year growth and what that suggests is that, before very long, most e-commerce will be conducted on mobile devices.
And the interesting thing is that it seems to be fashion products people buy on mobile, what people thought would struggle on mobile. What that reveals is consumers would like to manage their relationship with the outside world through their mobile device. They'd like to consume through their mobile device.
There are practical restrictions in terms of how good the devices are in transacting information and payment, but as those things come, people will mostly shop through mobile.
How do retailers combat showrooming and price comparison habits?
I don't think they can [fight this]. In the end, a transactional relationship is not that satisfying for a consumer. If you go online, you have to 38 different places to buy your shoes from. People will tire quite quickly from that behavior and will seek out trusting relationships where a retailer understands them.
The extra-rich relationship that can happen online creates a more trusting relationship.
Is that really enough? Consumers are very price-conscious.
They have to be. But consumer benefit isn't just in price. I can see a situation where how you deliver a benefit is more than just price-comparison based. People are still looking for the value of benefits, but it will come in a different package.
It's interesting when you look at coffee bars. The middle class are very constrained, but will pay more for coffee.
rahul singh1
pgdm 1 st year

JK Tyre spurts on the plans of investing additional Rs 1430 crore in Chennai facility

 

JK Tyre & Industries is currently trading at Rs. 113.00, up by 1.20 points or 1.07 % from its previous closing of Rs. 111.80 on the BSE.

The scrip opened at Rs. 112.90 and has touched a high and low of Rs. 115.00 and Rs. 112.00 respectively. So far 52806 shares were traded on the counter.

The BSE group 'B' stock of face value Rs. 10 has touched a 52 week high of Rs. 131.25 on 10-Jan-2013 and a 52 week low of Rs. 80.05 on 28-Aug-2013.

Last one week high and low of the scrip stood at Rs. 114.70 and Rs. 103.60 respectively. The current market cap of the company is Rs. 463.97 crore.

The promoters holding in the company stood at 47.34% while Institutions and Non-Institutions held 14.21% and 38.44% respectively.

JK Tyre & Industries is planning to invest additional Rs 1430 crore in its Chennai facility. In this regard, the company has already received its board’s approval. The said investment will give a boost to the facility, from where 30 per cent of the products will be exported to around 90 markets. This will also help the company to bring down the sourcing from China and Vietnam.

Further, the company will invest $25 million in Mexico to enhance its passenger car radial (PCR) facility to cater the needs in the region. The capacity would be expanded to 25 per cent and it is expected to be commissioned in 10 months.

JK Tyre & Industries is the flagship company under the umbrella of JK Organization. JK Tyre is the pioneer for Steel Radial technology in India. Over the years, the company has expanded and diversified its business portfolio. It has developed into a multi product, multi-location corporate entity. 

NITESH KUMAR

PGDM 1ST

World Bank, IMF
GDP outlook too low: Rangarajan

RAIN GOD Good exports, monsoon will spur demand and production

NEW DELHI: India’s growth rate is expected to be between 5 and 5.5%, C Rangarajan, chairman of Prime Minister’s Economic Advisory Council (PMEAC), said on Thursday even as the World Bank and the International Monetary Fund (IMF) recently lowered their growth forecast for the country to less than 5% in the current financial year.
While World Bank lowered its growth projection for India to 4.7% from 6.1% made earlier, IMF in its World Economic Outlook said it would be 3.75% this fiscal.
“These institutions are unduly pessimistic. We think the growth rate will be between 5 and 5.5%. We have projected a growth rate of 5% earlier, which I think still holds,” Rangarajan told reporters on the sidelines of the global conference on financial inclusion and payment systems in New Delhi.
Though PMEAC too lowered its growth projection for India to 5.3% last month from 6.4% made earlier, it was higher than projections by most other agencies.
He said the growth in the agriculture sector would be “extremely good”. “Monsoon has been extremely good …this will result in pickup in rural demand,” he said, adding that the manufacturing sector would show “definite improvement” in the second half of the current financial year.
Rangarajan pointed out that exports showed healthy growth in August and September, which would also have an impact on domestic production.
“In August and September, export growth rate was in double digits …That will also have an impact on domestic production,” he added.
On high onion prices, Rangarajan said they were due to supply constraints and that it would only have a temporary impact on inflation
                                                                         NAME RAHUL SINGH 2
                                                                                PGDM 1 SEM

Anil Agarwal close to restarting Sesa Sterlite iron ore minesA resumption of mining may help ease the iron ore shortage faced by local steelmakers including JSW Steel Ltd. Photo: Abhijit Bhatlekar/Mint

Mumbai: Sesa Sterlite Ltd, controlled by billionaire Anil Agarwal, is close to restarting some of its iron ore mines in India as early as next month after a two-year shutdown shrank its revenue to the least since 2008.
“Sesa has met requirements for a permit to extract the raw material in Karnataka, which accounted for about one-fifth its output,” two officials familiar with the matter said, asking not to be identified before an announcement. The nation’s top court, which banned excavation in the southern state and neighbouring Goa amid environmental degradation, said in April Sesa needs the consent of federal and state governments to commence operations.
A resumption of mining may help ease the iron ore shortage faced by local steelmakers including JSW Steel Ltd, the nation’s third-biggest producer of the alloy. The raw material accounted for 98% of earnings at Sesa Goa Ltd, which in August merged with another Vedanta Resources Plc. unit Sterlite Industries (India) Ltd to form Sesa Sterlite. Dividends from investments have helped Sesa report quarterly profits.
“They aren’t firing on all cylinders right now, especially in their iron ore business,” Alan Greene, a Singapore-based analyst at Moody’s Investors Service, said in a telephone interview. “They are relying too much on dividends to prop up their balance sheet. The full benefit of the merger will be seen once the iron ore business adds to its earnings.
Sesa Sterlite is scheduled to report second-quarter results on 31 October.
Cairn investment
Agarwal bought 58.76% of Cairn India Ltd, an energy explorer, as attempts to develop his copper, aluminum and iron ore business in the South Asian country were undermined by environmental regulations and remote tribes inhabiting bauxite- rich regions. Sesa, which owns 20.09% of Cairn India, earned Rs.625 crore ($101.6 million) from its share in the unit, helping it post a profit in the quarter to 30 June.
The court has allowed Sesa, which was India’s No. 1 exporter of the material prior to the court-ordered ban, to mine as much as 2.29 million metric tons a year in Karnataka, about 38% of its original capacity. The potential revenue from the mines in the state is estimated at about $305 million, according to calculations based on data compiled by Bloomberg and spot prices at Tianjin port in China.
A ban on outbound shipments of iron ore still remains in force in Goa, the nation’s biggest exporter of the commodity. Karnataka is the country’s third biggest.
Share rally
Sanjeev Verma, a spokesman at Sesa Sterlite declined to comment on when the company could restart mining. The Vedanta unit can reach its target in four to five months,” executive director Prasun Kumar Mukherjee said in an earnings call in July.
Sesa Sterlite shares rose 0.1% to Rs.198.80 on Thursday in Mumbai. The stock has risen 1.7% this year, compared with a 6.7% gain in the benchmark S&P BSE Sensex. Sesa Sterlite completed the merger process in August after securing court approvals.
The shares have rallied 53% since mid-August after a local court approved the merger of the two Vedanta units.
“The company won the environment ministry’s approval in August and is working with the Karnataka government agency to get final permits,” one of the people said. “Once allowed, it will add to 17 operational mines in the province with capacity of 15 million tonnes annually, which falls short of the 30 million tonnes needed locally,” one person said.
Weaker currency
Sesa’s produce will be sold through an online auction process that’s being monitored by a court-appointed panel, the people said. An 11.7% decline in the local currency against the dollar in the fiscal year that started 1 April discouraged imports of the steelmaking ingredient, worsening the shortage.
“A weak rupee and a supply shortage of iron ore in Karnataka may push up domestic prices in the near term,” Rakesh Arora and Sumangal Nevatia, Mumbai-based analysts at Macquarie Capital, a unit of Australia’s largest investment bank, wrote in an 11 October report.
JSW Steel, which operates its biggest unit in the state, sources the raw material in auctions and doesn’t own a mine, prompting it to consider buying the local assets of Stemcor Holdings Ltd, two people with direct knowledge of the matter had said on 24 July.
‘Key catalyst’
Goa banned mining in September last year after a government-appointed panel said the province lost Rs.34,940 crore because of illegal extraction, forcing all companies including Sesa to suspend operations. The following month, the Supreme Court banned mining and sales of the ore in the state.
The resumption in Goa can be a key catalyst that could substantially improve earnings and drive the re-rating of Sesa Sterlite’s stock over the next one year or so, according to the Macquarie note.
Setbacks in India have prompted the company to seek mines overseas. Sesa is in the process of investing as much as $2.4 billion to develop assets in Liberia in its first overseas expansion.
The company will use the money over the next four years in building a 30 million tonnes of mining capacity in three properties in the west African nation. The first part of the project is scheduled to start by March 2014 with 4 million tonnes capacity.
Sesa’s iron ore mining business is under ban currently but at $20 a ton free-on-board costs, it is highly competitive, according to the Macquarie note. Bloomberg

RANJAY KUMAR

PGDM 1st year

Wednesday, October 23, 2013

The deal, led by Fidelity Investments, makes Pinterest one of the most valuable privately held consumer internet companies just two-and-a-half years after it secured its first round of venture capital financing in May 2011. Photo: AFP
The deal, led by Fidelity Investments, makes Pinterest one of the most valuable privately held consumer internet companies just two-and-a-half years after it secured its first round of venture capital financing in May 2011. Photo: AFP
San Francisco: Pinterest has won a $225 million round of equity funding that values the virtual scrapbooking website at $3.8 billion, the company announced on Wednesday.
The deal, led by Fidelity Investments, makes Pinterest one of the most valuable privately held consumer internet companies just two-and-a-half years after it secured its first round of venture capital financing in May 2011.
Fidelity will not take a board seat as part of the deal, a person familiar with the deal said. Previous venture capital investors, including Bessemer Venture Partners, Firstmark Capital, Valiant Capital Management and Andreessen Horowitz, also participated in the latest round.
The company said it would use the capital to expand internationally and develop its mobile apps.PGDM 1

Steve Webb set to propose auto-enrol charge cap of less than 1%

.Since the announcement there has been growing speculation about where the charge cap will fall, with some suggesting the Government would simply replicate the 1 per cent stakeholder pensions cap.
However, speaking at the National Association of Pension Funds conference in Manchester yesterday, Webb indicated the Government was preparing to take a tougher stance.
He said: “We are going to produce a consultation document very shortly in light of the Office of Fair Trading report which will set out options for tackling the issue of excess charges.
“In a world where the Government has created a provider with a public service duty to provide pensions of the equivalent of 50 basis points, why should anybody be automatically enrolled and have their money invested by default into something that charges twice as much?
“In the old days we thought 1 per cent was progress, but are we really saying we can’t do better than we did 10 years ago when we don’t even need to sell the products?”
Speaking to Money Marketing, Webb said the Government will also seek views on how to cap charges for schemes with dual charging structures, such as Nest.
He said: “If you had a charge cap then you would have to ask what does that mean if you have a mixed charging structure, so that is something we will address in the consultation.
“The context is the OFT did not say we should go for a charge cap, so it would be very odd if another bit of Government piled in six weeks later and said we are going to set a charge cap and this is the level.
“Part of the consultation will be evidence gathering so we understand what we are doing and the consequences of what we are doing.”
PRAVEEN SHARMA
PGDM IST

SSTL announces rollout of 3G services in all its circles in India 

 

MTS RECENTLY GOT PERMISSION TO USE AN ADDITIONAL SLOT IN THE 800MHZ BAND, WHICH IT HAS USED TO LAUNCH THE NEW SERVICE
NEW DELHI: Sistema Shyam Teleservices (SSTL), which runs its telecom services under the MTS brand in India, on Wednesday rolled out its 3G-plus telecom network across all its circles in India.
The network is based on the evolution-data optimised rev B phase II technology and is useful for high-speed data services.
The services will be available in Delhi, Rajasthan, Gujarat, Kerala, Karnataka, Tamil Nadu, Kolkata, Uttar Pradesh (West) and West Bengal.
“The rollout is all set to make MTS India the first telecom operator to provide 3G-plus network coverage across all its nine circles of operations,” MTS India CEO Dmitry Shukov said.
Shukov said the company is planning to launch a slew of smartphones by the end of 2013.
The operator launched tariff plans between ` 798 and ` 1,498 for prepaid customers and between ` 700 and ` 1,399 for postpaid users having a validity of one month.
MTS was recently granted permission by the government to use an additional third 1.25MHz slot in the 800MHz band that it has used to launch the new service.
MTS has also launched a new dongle named MBlaze Ultra, which is priced at ` 1,299 for both prepaid and postpaid customers. According to the company, the dongle provides data speeds of up to 9.8 Mbps.
NAME- RAJ GAURAV
             PGDM 1 SEM