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Rural India Goes hi-tech
FMCG and retail giants are making good
use of technology to reach out to rural India.
From low-cost handsets to tablet PCs,
the Indian FMCG and retail sector is latching on to technology
and applications to reach out to rural India.
For instance, Marico. It is using mobile
technology innovatively to arm its field representatives in
their procurement process. The company procures large quantities
of safflower (kardi) seeds for its flagship product sunflower
oil. Safflower is sourced through imports as well as domestic
procurement. Domestic procurement involves traditional markets
(mandis) and the contract farming initiative of Marico. In
the process, it covers almost 80,000 acre of farmland spread
across seven states.
Since these farmers were in remote areas, reaching
them was a problem. We wanted a system that could not only
help the representatives in locating the farmers but also
allow us to monitor them, said Jitendra Mahajan, executive
vice-president and head-supply chain and operations development,
Marico.
The IT team at Marico developed a mobile-based application
for Nokia 5235 series handsets. The company gave these GPS-enabled
phones to 120 of its field representatives, with mapped routes.
This helped the agri-representative to get the exact route
and also saved on time.
The mobile application can also get real-time data from farmers.
Pictures of crop and soil taken from the camera are used for
monitoring progress of contract farming, seed information
and weather condition. Since the data is available online,
this also helps the company in analysing and taking decisions
quickly.
Earlier, a query related to any crop yield would take
10-15 days to get addressed by an agronomist. But with mobile
phones, it is much easier. The query is now solved within
24 hours, added Mahajan.
Marico has also set up a management information system (MIS)
that connects all its distributors. This is based on
re-order level at distribution. It keeps a track of the inventory
at all our distributors. If the system senses that a distributors
stock is replenishing, it automatically generates a sell order,
says Mahajan. The system has covered 80 per cent of Maricos
distributors.
Meanwhile Hindustan Unilever Ltd (HUL), is experimenting
with tablet PCs in its attempt to increase its rural reach.
It has been able to reach to 500,000 outlets in a years
time.
Nitin Paranjape, managing director, HUL said: We put
all the villages on an IT map. The name of the village, its
total strength, nearest distributors available, whether it
has a school, a hospital, a primary health centre, all of
this was mapped. We used this information to determine the
opportunity the village presented to us.
To start with, HUL thought of widening its distributor network.
It already uses Shakti amma channel to reach out to rural
markets. But to increase penetration, the company focused
on the male members of the family. Called as Shaktiman, these
distributors are provided with bicycles to improve their radius
of coverage.
The next part was how to track whether the Shaktimaan
was doing his job. We equipped our rural sales force with
mobile phones. Expanding Shakti, the role of the Shaktiman,
putting in place a supervisory mechanism to make sure the
Shaktiman is sustained, reducing the van coverage to some
of these villages by putting distributors in place, all of
these started with digitisation of the entire country,
added Paranjape.
However, for the group one of the biggest technology implementation
has been for its supply chain. The Future Supply Chain Solutions,
a specialised subsidiary, offers consolidated approach to
meet the groups large supply chain requirements as well
as those of select supply and business partners. The team
currently oversees the operations of an existing fleet of
over 600 dedicated trucks, contracted from established regional
and national transport carriers, most of which are now equipped
with GPS sets.
For Future Group, Indias largest retailer with over
1,000 stores across India, one of the biggest challenge is
to get the right inventory to the right store.
To minimise errors, it has a put-to-light system in place.
The technology is used for sorting, where containers of items
are directed to a put-to-light packing area and each store
of container has an assigned packing location. The system
is useful in case there is a unit level picking. We use this
system for apparel, said P Ravikant, Head-project and
planning, Future Group.
Future Group, that started using the system a year back is
using it across six distribution centres. Each of these centres
can cater to 30-50 stores. The reason we tried this
technology was the expansion of stores. Doing manual picking
and sorting is possible if you have three or four stores but
as you expand, the system becomes inefficient. Since the system
is semi-automatic, and the process is assisted by light, its
almost idiot-proof. We have seen almost 99 per cent accuracy
in batching, he said.
Source: Business Standard
Date: May 3, 2011

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