Thursday, 18 September 2008

Retailers plan course correction to beat slump

Indian retailers are focusing on lower capital-intensive formats and also restructuring operations in an attempt to boost revenues and counter the slowdown.
The Future Group now plans to focus more on growing this segment in the next 12 months, said Kishore Biyani, chief executive officer of Future Group.
Aditya Birla Retail has embarked upon restructuring its operations including administration, to beat the slump in the economy, a top company official said.
The Future Group’s low-capital intensive focus includes expanding its no-frills store model, KB’s Fair Price Stores, small convenience store format Big Bazaar Best Deals, rural retail venture Aadhar, and home solutions venture Home Town.
“We are focusing a lot on return on capital employed. We are growing those formats which require less investment but have high business potential,’’ said Biyani.
The Future Group runs nearly 140 KB’s Fair Price Stores in cities such as Mumbai, Delhi, Ahmedabad among others, and plans to open 1,500 such stores in the next 18 months.
“We are trying to make our business model profitable so that we can sustain all the costs involved in the business,’’ said Thomas Varghese, chief executive officer of Aditya Birla Retail, which has over 615 stores in the country.
The group is also conducting a pilot project on smaller grocery stores under Big Bazaar Best Deals in Kandivali, a suburb of Mumbai, and if successful, the group would launch nearly 200 stores in the next couple of years, a company official said.
“We are focusing on such models where we invest Re one as capital but can reap a turnover of Rs 10,’’ Biyani said.
The Future Group is also expanding its rural retail venture Aadhar in 800 towns and villages in the next couple of years from 60-odd towns now.
“We have grown the business of Aadhar from Rs 5 crore a month to Rs 17 crore now,’’ Biyani said. The Future Group bought 70 per cent in Aadhar from Godrej for an undisclosed amount last year.
While elaborating on the business potential in the rural areas, Biyani said, “With rentals not more than Rs 8 per sq feet, business potential is huge.’’
On the other hand, the Aditya Birla group, as part of its restructuring process, plans to eliminate unnecessary posts, freeze recruitments in back-end operations and simplify administrative process, Varghese said. He, however, declined to quantify the cost saving from the restructuring process.
Aditya Birla Retail joins the likes of the Future Group which is planning to save nearly Rs 165 crore in the current financial year by cutting administrative and operational expenses.

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