If there is a product that requires lighting up, ITC will make it — cigarettes, of course, but also agarbattis and candles.
ITC officials say that the company’s leap into fragrant incense sticks received a telling comment from Sri Sri Ravishankar — “from smoke to holy smoke.”
In a business context, the contribution of Mangaldeep agarbattis to ITC’s turnover is a trifling Rs 40 crore to the company’s net sales of Rs 13,000 crore. However, the business is growing and is profitable. The three-year-old agarbatti division has now gathered enough momentum to grow, like its safety matches business did, into a medium-sized business in a few years.
Now, ITC wants to replicate the agarbatti model in its new candles business. The company got into this business only in November last year. A Bangalore-based company Wellburn makes the candles for ITC which are packed and exported under the brand ‘Expressions’. In November-March last year, ITC sold Rs 1.2 crore worth of candles.
US marketBut the US market for aromatic candles is $3 billion big. Mr V. M. Rajasekhar, CEO of ITC’s agarbatti division, who is also incharge of the candles business, says that ITC saw an opportunity when the US imposed an anti-dumping duty on Chinese candles. The market held by the Chinese is now slowing moving into Vietnam and Thailand and ITC moved into for a bite.
However, why does a company of ITC’s size get into these little businesses? (There are many of them — stationery, greeting cards, and organic manure.) Mr R Srinivasan, Member, Corporate Management Committee, notes that first of all these businesses have a synergy with one of ITC’s main lines of operations — FMCG. Secondly, they are profitable, with prospects to grow to a few hundred crores of sales in good time.
Building managersBut according to Mr Srinivasan, more important than these considerations is the management-bandwidth spin-off that ITC gets from these divisions. “Each division is an incubation centre for a future manager,” Mr Srinivasan told Business Line. Professionals who manage these divisions, like Mr Rajasekhar, learn aspects of brand building, quality control, handling human resources, and above all, working under tight budgets.
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