Consumer India
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Consumer India

Inside the Indian Mind and Wallet

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eBook - ePub

Consumer India

Inside the Indian Mind and Wallet

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About This Book

A richly insightful account of one of the most significant transformations in the world today. Dheeraj Sinha's intelligence vividly illuminates the intersection of culture and commerce in New India.
Adam Morgan
Founder
eatbigfish

Among the many books I have read on the cultural evolution taking place in India, this is perhaps the most insightful. It does not just map mindset changes; it does so with the certainty of a person who has lived the changes as much as he has witnessed them. Every marketeer should keep this book on his office desk as a ready reckoner.
Ranjan Kapur
Country Manager – India
WPP

India in many ways is a "Nation of Nations." So much heterogeneity and hence complexity in understanding consumers and consumerism. Dheeraj has done a commendable job in peeling off the layers from the onion—creating frameworks and providing very relatable examples to understand the culture. For instance, Dheeraj has used Bollywood as an effective mirror to portray societal changes. Consumer India is a must-read for those who want to understand the cultural evolution of India with its nuances.
Rajesh Jejurikar
Chief Executive - Automotive Division
Mahindra & Mahindra Ltd.

A labor of love. For years, I have marveled at how Dheeraj's inquisitive brain continuously churns away to make meaning of everything he observes. His writing simultaneously reflects him as a " sutradaar " telling the captivating story of a changing India, even as it does so with the unbiased and expert credentials of the " computerji " he describes here. Dheeraj insightfully marries the rapid changes he chronicles with the assimilative fabric of India; where "and" trumps "or." Against the cliché "change is the only constant, " he underlines that in India, change works with the constant. Enjoy the ride on Dheeraj's time machine!
Prasad Narasimhan
Managing Partner, Asia
Brandgym

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Publisher
Wiley
Year
2011
ISBN
9780470826324
Edition
1
CHAPTER 1
TRANSFORMING THE KARMA
HOW CULTURAL FORCES ARE SHAPING CONSUMPTION BEHAVIOR IN INDIA
A Changing India
There are two reasons for this book. In a world economic environment in which most developed economies are struggling to maintain a positive GDP growth rate, India boasts an emerging economy that’s looking at an 8.5 percent growth rate in 2010–11. Although it’s critical that the developed markets of the world regain their health for the rest of the world to feel better, it’s also clear that the current economic crises will certainly shift unprecedented power and responsibility for growth to the East. India and China are therefore the two countries expected to power the world GDP in the next decade. As Indian consumers constitute a market that is becoming increasingly central to the shape of the world economy, we need a better understanding of them.
Even before the axes of the world economy started shifting, the Indian consumer market had been undergoing its own transformation. To be precise, the Indian consumer has been subjected to a lot of change in the relatively short span of the last decade. The changes, most of them triggered by the economic liberalization of the country, have had a cascading effect on the overall affluence of the middle class and the available choices in business, jobs, and consumer products. For a nation and a people who have lived with a comparative lack of opportunities and limited means for many decades, this experience has been nothing less than life-changing. In fact, for the India that had trained itself, socially and mentally, to believe that real fulfillment is almost always nonmaterialistic, opening up of the floodgates of consumerism has been a positive stimulus to its cultural consciousness. In the interplay of consumption and culture, a new value system is emerging in India. An understanding of how today’s consumer India behaves must begin with an understanding of the changing mindset of the Indian consumer.
The economic liberalization of India, which began in the early 1990s, has had a profound impact on how Indians live and think. The opening up of the economy has opened up the minds of the people. The emerging Indian mindset has its roots in the Kshatriya values of the traditional warrior class rather than the Brahminical values of the priestly knowledge class that have previously been the biggest influence on the Indian mindset. The new India has found a connection with its cultural roots in the Kshatriya way of life—which emphasizes extrinsic values of action, success, winning, glory, and heroism—in contrast with the Brahminical values of knowledge, adjustment, simplicity, and restraint that had always dominated the Indian way of life.
Brahminism, derived from Brahmin, is the foundation of the long-established social norms of India. Of the four main castes in the Indian society, Brahmins are at the top. Custodians of the religious sacrament, they are deemed to be the learned class of the society who possess the knowledge of the religious text. They are the epitome of simple living, having (ideally) renounced all cravings for the material pleasures of life. The archetypal Brahmin wears a white dhoti (the Hindu loincloth), reads scriptures, and practices ideals of self-control.
Built around these principles, Indian society over a period of centuries learned to value things cerebral over things material, giving greater importance to the intrinsic qualities of patience, adjustment, and inner contentment. Individuals sought to be a part of the larger whole and abstained from things that could break the fragile social equations. Ideals such as slow and steady, living within means, and correctness over opportunity dominated, by virtue of overwhelming social approval. Excesses of any kind—whether success, material well-being, or heroism—were seen as threats to the society’s equilibrium.
Kshatriyas are the warrior class. They represent action, valor, and competitive spirit. Kshatriyas were actually the men of action as against the Brahmin who were the men of knowledge. Until recently, Kshatriyas values have always been overshadowed by the dominant Brahmin value system. However, in the changing Indian context, as a formerly more passive and restrained India is opening up to the new influences, Kshatriyas values seem to be taking center stage.
This change in the Indian mindset is becoming the cultural engine of the Indian economic charge. Individual energies of the young people are adding up to a greater momentum for the country as the whole. Considering that more than 500 million Indians are under age 21 and the median age of 25 is even lower than in China (where it is 33), the young are quite a force in Indian society. Their changing mindset is redefining what is culturally desirable. The new behavior codes are different in principle from the codes that have traditionally governed. The change is visible in people’s everyday behavior, their dreams and aspirations, their career choices, and their overall approach to life. This change appears to be driven by a new core value that pretty much defines the way the new India is thinking.
Karmic Transformation: The New Diving Force
Karma, in Hinduism, is fate. According to Hinduism, our individual karma is a function of our fate, shaped by our actions. Traditionally Indians have taken refuge in the idea of karma: if one’s life is governed by one’s fate, not much can be done to change what’s writ. But the new India is seeking to transform its karma. Today’s Indian mindset is a new but true interpretation of karma. The emerging belief is that if karma is shaped by your actions, then it’s possible to transform your being—to achieve the life that you desire rather than humbly live the one that’s destined. The India of today is seeking a karma transformation. Nothing is writ for today’s India. A refusal to accept their current state of being and a burning desire to transform their lives—and a belief that they can do so—mark the spirit of today’s India.
The driving idea of karmic transformation is manifesting itself in the following five key cultural codes, principles that govern the cultural response and behavior of today’s India:
  • Activating your destiny
  • The new currency of extrinsic values
  • The criticality of the last lap
  • Finding extraordinariness
  • Making use of tradition
These new cultural codes undergird how the nation and its people are thinking today, and they have implications for the products, brand imageries, and stories they are buying into.
Activating Your Destiny
One of the biggest changes in today’s India, especially for the younger Indians, is a belief that individuals can break free of their birth barriers. India’s newest generation does not recognize any limitations of class, country, or gender in the pursuit to realize its true potential.
This is a marked departure from how Indians have always lived: with an unquestioned belief in the idea of destiny. The omnipotence of destiny tied an Indian to his or her birth variables forever. Profession, marriage, and social circle—were all determined by where and to whom the person was born. These birth variables continued to wield their power over an Indian’s life well into the modern era in India, as a severe lack of resources ensured that the average middle-class person could almost never escape the socioeconomic bracket of his or her birth. This is no longer so. Indians today believe that they can achieve their desired destiny by sheer dint of their efforts and ability.
This new cultural code is making itself visible in many ways. For instance, the average age of new homebuyers in India is now in the early thirties, and it is declining every year. The India of yesteryear could almost be divided into two halves: those who owned their own abode and those who for almost all their lives could only dream of doing so. If they were lucky, they could accumulate just about enough money by the time they retired to own a modest house.
This has changed dramatically. An Associated Chambers of Commerce and Industry of India (ASSOCHAM) analysis in 2007 showed that the age range for property registration for personal use had plummeted—from the 50 to 58 that it was 20 years ago to a range of 30 to 38 years from the year 2000 onward. Owning your own house at the age of 30 is thus one of the biggest goals that today’s young Indians strive for, in their effort to activate their own destiny.
The impact of change is not confined to the upper strata of society. The city of Bangalore in the southern state of Karnataka, for one, has faced a genuine scarcity of chauffeurs. As India’s southern populations, in general, are more fluent in English than those in the northern states, most of the chauffeurs working in a city like Bangalore had some fluency in English. The boom in the services sector has meant that anyone who can speak a bit of English and is open to working hard to get trained is much sought after by the business process outsourcing (BPO) industry. Many chauffeurs in Bangalore joined the BPO industry as customer service agents, at salaries four to five times higher than what they likely earned simply driving someone else’s car.
The change is visible too in the sheer number of young women joining the workforce and building careers that until recently they could only dream of. One of the most potent symbols of this change is the Frankfinn Institute of Airhostess Training, which has over 100 centers in 95 Indian cities. The institute, as the name suggests, is making it possible for young girls from all over India to take a shot at a career of glamour and independence. The Frankfinn Institute is representative of the flight that young Indians today are taking toward a life that fulfills their dreams and desires, irrespective of their gender, class, and place of birth.
In a New York Times story in February 2007, Somini Sengupta writes,
Until recently, many Indian families would have frowned on the idea of a young woman dressing in a short skirt and serving strangers on a plane. But a rapidly expanding economy has helped to transform the ambitions, habits, and incomes of India’s middle class in ways that would have been unimaginable just a generation ago, not least for young women. One consequence of India’s new prosperity is the hunger among the young to pursue careers that were simply unavailable to their parents for wages that would have been beyond their elders’ compensation.1
The world has recognized the entrepreneurial successes of people like Narayana Murthy, who has built a world-class IT organization, Infosys, with zero start-up capital but ample ability and confidence. There are many other such stories in today’s India that may or may not have made global headlines but embody this newfound ability of its people to knock on the doors of opportunity rather than wait for it to come knocking. One such story is that of E. Sarathbabu, CEO of Foodking Catering Services, which has reached annual sales of $1.5 million. It’s just a little ironic that Sarathbabu, whose company now runs food outlets in more than four Indian states (including Tamilnadu, Goa, Andhra Pradesh, and Rajasthan), grew up in extreme poverty selling idlis (savory rice pancakes) door to door. Sarathbabu still managed to get into India’s premier business school—the Indian Institute of Management Ahmedabad—and later started his own food venture. In a country where national politics is still avoided by the well educated and the intellectual class, Sarathbabu entered politics in the 2009 general elections, with an election manifesto that signed off “vote for youth, vote for good governance.”
Indian Idol (the Indian version of American Idol) has run four successful seasons as of this writing. In India, Indian Idol has been more than just a TV program; it’s been a social phenomenon. Indian Idol has offered the potential of fame, glory, and success to average middle-class Indians who have the talent but no resources. The first Indian Idol, Abhijeet Sawant, came from a lower-middle-class area in Mumbai; he was born to a clerk in the Mumbai municipal corporation. Abhijeet Sawant is now the role model of all the Indians who believe that one day they will be able to find their calling through the sheer force of their talent. Ability and intellect in today’s India are seen as the weapons to achieve a life of your dreams.
The successes on the world stage of Indians in various walks of life is serving as an inspiration for the entire country, bolstering a belief that anything is possible. Slumdog Millionnaire did it by sweeping the Oscars; Abhinav Bindra, a 25-year-old shooter from Chandigarh, did it by winning India its first ever individual Olympic gold medal in 108 years in the 10-meter air rifle event at Beijing in 2008. In the same year, 33-year-old novelist Aravind Adiga bagged the Man Booker Prize for Fiction for his debut novel The White Tiger. Vishwanathan Anand won the World Chess Championship title in 2007 and retained it in 2008 by defeating Russia’s Vladimir Kramnik in a match-play series in Bonn, Germany. Indians today have witnessed all these feats that they once believed were impossible, right before their eyes. If seeing is believing, there is now desire among Indians at all levels of society to go out and make things happen and not sit content with what happens to them on its own. The feeling on the streets is one of genuine optimism, a feeling that it’s India’s time for a metamorphosis into a world-class butterfly.
The New Currency of Extrinsic Values
The traditional way of living, through the Brahminical values, meant upholding the principles of simplicity, giving precedence to means over ends, and choosing correctness over opportunity. “Simple living, high thinking” and “mind over matter” have been the tenets of the traditional Indian way of life. Content claimed cultural superiority over form. Depth was always better than surface. Classical got more respect than popular. Academics scored higher than talent.
For the first time, however, several years ago, 60 million Indian households (those with cable and satellite connections) were introduced to the term “X Factor” for that indefinable something that makes someone a star. The X Factor—or more specifically, the lack of it—was used by the judges of Indian Idol to decimate the chances of many talented singers, some with over 12 years of training in classical music. For the first time, the Indian middle class realized the importance of looking good, dancing well, and being stage-savvy. They realized that 12 years of training in classical singing may not be enough to win a talent competition, but being able to perform like a rock star might be. For a Brahminical India—which had valued talent over flair, substance over style, and academics over personality—realizing the importance of the X Factor marked a fundamental shift in mindset. The concept of X Factor in many ways epitomizes the second new code—the currency of extrinsic values—that is fast taking hold in India.
The changing value system is evident in the ranking of educational institutes, for instance. Jawaharlal Nehru University (JNU) has traditionally been the revered seat of academics in India. The university offers postgraduate programs in social sciences and specializes in social studies. JNU has been the beacon of academic pursuit and has provided the talent pool for the most elite Indian civil services. The crown of the most prestigious institute in India, however, has quietly slipped away from JNU to the Indian Institute of Management (IIM). This is not surprising, because IIM is the institute that has made the Indian middle class believe that they too can have access to an annual salary of $200,000 and a job based in New York or Singapore—if they can crack its rather difficult entrance examination.
Education has now become more a practical than a philosophical matter in India. People have come to value enrolling in a three-year diploma course in IT from a private education player such as NIIT (the largest private player in computer education in India) over pursuing an undergraduate course in economics or biochemistry. It’s the salary potential of the course that is determining the importance of an institute, not the depth of education to be gained. This, when formerly earning a Ph.D. or an M.A. was a matter of such pride in India that the initials were placed prominently on the nameplate hung outside people’s houses.
The traditional Indian mindset attached little value to things ornamental. On a train journey through the countryside, you would see huge houses, built on large plots of land, neither plastered nor painted. It was important to own a large house; it was not so important to make it look good. Contrast that with the fact that the biggest hooks now used by real estate advertising today are landscaped gardens, Italian marble on the floors, and weatherproofing on the exteriors. The boom in the exterior paints industry in India is certainly proof of a shift in mindset, from an absolute emphasis on intrinsic values to recognizing the merit of extrinsic values. According to a report by the Freedonia Group, a U.S.-based market research firm, exterior paints have been the fastest-growing architectural paint market segment in India, registering around 20-percent annual growth from 2004 to 2006.2
Beauty as a category in India has seen an unprecedented boom in the last decade. Although this is in part a function of rising affluence and exposure, a large part of it has to do with the increasing importance accorded to looking good. In one of our interactions with consumers, young men confessed to going through elaborate facial and beauty treatments before an important interview. Not only did they believe that looking good was important for them to feel confident within, but some of them strongly believed that if they looked good, prospective employers would feel they would be good at their job as well.
The India of today places an unprecedented emphasis on extrinsic values. Ends are today as important as means, if not more so. Talent is not considered much of an asset if it doesn’t have money value. Success is not just internal; it needs to be celebrated. Life is no longer ...

Table of contents

  1. Cover
  2. Contents
  3. Title
  4. Copyright
  5. Dedication
  6. Foreword
  7. Acknowledgments
  8. Introduction
  9. Chapter 1 : Transforming the Karma
  10. Chapter 2 : The Currency of Emotion
  11. Chapter 3 : Beauty in Action
  12. Chapter 4 : Masala Media
  13. Chapter 5 : Meaningful Technology
  14. Chapter 6 : Branding the Bazaar
  15. Chapter 7 : Youth versus Youthful
  16. Chapter 8 : Seamless Savitris
  17. Chapter 9 : Small is Big
  18. Chapter 10 : Three Generations, One Big Market
  19. Notes
  20. Index