Вы находитесь на странице: 1из 8

SYNOPSIS FOR FINAL YEAR PROJECT PGDM 2011 2013

(1) Name of the Student : Sudhir Kumar (2) Registration No. : 1101029 (3) Title of the Project: Rural Marketing of HUL

Signature of Student

Signature of Supervisor

1|Page

Table of Contents

S.No.
1. 2. 3. 4. 5. 6. 7. 8. 9. 10. 11. 12. 13. 14. 15. 16. 17. Executive Summary Company Description History of HUL Goals and Objectives Mission statement Rural Marketing

Topics

HULs Strategic Marketing Mix Customer Perception and Customer Expectation HULs SWOT Analysis Competitors Analysis Research Methodology Data Analysis and Interpretation Recommendations and Conclusion Appendices Bibliography Questionnaire

2|Page

Executive Summary
While the prospects of the rural sector are promising, the real challenge lies in costeffective and efficient distributing and delivering systems. W i t h t h e r u r a l m a r k e t s expanding in both size and volume, any marketing manager will be missing a great potential opportunity if he does not go rural. The buying behavior of the rural Indian differs tremendously when compared to the typical urban Indian. , the values, and needs of the rural people vastly differ from that of the urban population. So a marketer ne ed to cater rural consumer demand at their level and should devise plans which can help them to grab the potential. Hindustan Unilever Limited is India's largest Fast Moving Consumer Goods Company, touching the lives of two out of three Indians. HULs mission is to add vitality to life through its presence in over 20 distinct categories in Home & Personal Care Products and Foods & Beverages. The company meets every day needs for nutrition, hygiene, and personal care, with brands that help people feel good, look good and get more out of life. My project is to study rural marketing HUL, to understand rural buying, aspects of 4Ps in context of rural marketing, challenges and opportunities which is lying for HUL. To understand how rural buying is different from urban consumers and why? HUL is the leading fast-moving consumer goods (FMCG) company in India with deep rural penetration of its home and personal care brands. The company has put in place a direct distribution model to enhance its presence in the hinterland. Over the last decade, the maker of Lux soap, Wheel detergent and Sunsilk shampoo has launched special initiatives to push its rural sales through project shakti and shaktimans.

However, HUL is not the only company which is keen on growing its rural pie. Powered with an incremental increase in earnings through schemes such as NREGA (National Rural Employment Guarantee Act), rural consumers are upgrading to aspirational products like face wash, deodorants, cream biscuits and noodles. HUL
3|Page

launched Project Shakti in 2001. Project Shakti benefits business by significantly enhancing HULs direct rural reach, and by enabling its brands to communicate effectively in these media-dark regions. HUL promotes Surf Excel, Wheel detergents, Lifebuoy, Lux, Breeze soaps, Clinic Plus shampoo, Fair & Lovely skin creams and Pepsodent toothpastes in rural India and aims to reach 600 million consumers in 500,000 villages through 100,000 entrepreneurs by 2010. Hindustan Unilevers unique multi-brand rural marketing initiative Khushiyon Ki Doli, which was launched in 2010 in three states Uttar Pradesh, Andhra Pradesh and Maharashtra was an outstanding success. Through this initiative more than one crore (10 million) consumers were contacted directly in more than 28,000 villages across these three states in 2010. Through this initiative about 170,000 retailers were also contacted in these villages in 2010. In 2011, HUL extended this initiative to five states West Bengal, Bihar, Maharashtra, Andhra Pradesh and Uttar Pradesh, thereby covering around 70K villages, 25 million consumers and 4 lakh retailers.

4|Page

Summary of the Project


Introduction:

The real India lives in the village. Rural marketing is the new buzzword as the new marketing mantra for the survival and the growth of and the success forcing companies to go rural. These statements tell the importance of rural marketing for the survival and the growth of any marketers and are supported by the facts given belowThe total FMCG market is in excess of US$16.4 billion and is set to treble from US$11.6 billion in 2003 to US$33.4 billion in 2015. It is currently growing at 14%. With 12.2% of the world population living in the villages of India, the Indian rural FMCG market is something no one can overlook.

Need and Importance of Rural Marketing Mix Policy : As we know the differences between the rural and urban customers on the parameters of the environment they are living, the marketers must try to formulate a different policy of marketing mix for marketing to the rural customers, containing the guidelines for providing coherence in decision making with respect to any course of action under well defined and determined situation. If a simple question is asked Who does not want to get more out of their life? Who does not want to add vitality in their life and? Who does not want to look good, feel good?

Rural Marketing Mix: Marketing mix refers to the set of tools used by a company to promote and sell its brands or product in market. The most important decisions, and indeed the essence of the marketing managers task within a company, are decision about the controllable marketing variables: decision about what E. Jerome Mc Carthy termed the 4Ps: product, price, place and promotion. On contrary to the traditional 4Psmodel, some of the marketers are adopting the 4Asmodel, which is considered to be more customers oriented. As per figure 2, The4As of rural marketing mix i.e. Affordability, Availability, Acceptability and the
5|Page

Awareness have been now universally accepted both by practiconers and the academicians, as touch stone for the success of any product/ business strategy in the rural market. What 4Ps are to main stream marketing, the 4As are for the rural marketing.

Research Methodology
Scope of study: This study cover rural consumer spending pattern on HUL product, what kind customers are there in rural areas and how much of their earning spend on these product and its competitors. What type of product is demanding, it is in small or medium or big size of product. What is the ratio of spending on different categories like personal care, body care, detergent etc

Strategies which are adopted in urban areas those cannot implement on rural marketing, this study also focus on the strategies and initiative which are being taken by HUL to communicate, educate, product. guide and increase brand awareness, having access of the

Objective of Study To Know about Company To know about its Rural Strategies To Have an understanding of Rural Customer To Have an understanding of Rural Consumption To Have an understanding of Rural Spending To Know about Product loyalty To Know facts which influence customers

6|Page

METHODOLOGY Type of research-Descriptive & Exploratory research Descriptive study is a fact finding investigation with an adequate interpretation. It is the simplest type of research and is more specific. Mainly designed to gather descriptive information and provides information for formulating more sophisticated studies. Descriptive research, also known as statistical research, describes data and characteristics about the population or phenomenon being studies. Scaling technique For the measurement of variables, Nominal Scale is used which is the most widely used scale in market research, where respondents specify their response to a statement.

DATA COLLECTION
Research Tool: Structure close and open-ended question along with frequently asked questions (FAQs), observation and interviews.

Primary Data: (A).Questionnaire: - A set of questions related to the research topic is formulated. Response for each questions included in the questionnaire has been collected from the customers. (B). Interview: - Apart from collecting different responses from the customers some extra information has been obtained through face to face interviewing activity. (C) Observation: - Customers as well as retails will be observed for finding real picture of their spending. For secondary Data: Data obtain from internet, research institute, magazines, books, newspapers. Sampling design
7|Page

The sampling methodology uses Non Probability sampling technique. Convenience sampling (A non probability sampling technique that attempts to obtain a sample of convenient elements. The selection of sampling unit is left primarily to the interviewer) Sample size I choose 50 samples for the analysis.

Questionnaire: The questionnaire is formed in such a way that the information required for the study is acquired from each item i.e. questions. Here I use Nominal scale of measurement to measure the respondents responses with each of the series of the items in the form of statements. The respondents category range from housewives & working women to working men. 6. Sampling area: Selection of study area: Near about SRMSIBS UNNAO Data analysis: After tabulation, we analyze the data with the help of pie chart and other because it is easy to understand everything in the percentage as well as given picture. I will also use hypothesis which will give me clear analysis about my study.

8|Page

Вам также может понравиться