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Vora and Company Case Study - Understand the Concept of Marketing Mix

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VORA AND COMPANY*

Understand the Concept of Marketing Mix

In December 1963, M.C. Vora, proprietor of Vora and Company manufacturers of Blossom Quick-Cooking Oats located at Lucknow, sought counsel from the Small Industries Service Institute at Lucknow regarding steps that might be taken to increase the sales of his company. The company had been organized in 1959, had started to sell its product nationally in 1961, but by December 1963 had failed to attain a profitable volume of sales.

Mr. Vora's family had been in the group business for several generations. In 1959, some four years after the Government of India had stopped the importation of packaged cereals, Mr. Vora and his family decided to enter the business of processing and selling a product similar to Quaker brand of quick-cooking rolled oats, a product of the Quaker Oats Company of the United States. For some years previous to the Government's embargo, this product had been imported into India by the firm of Muller and Phipps, which acted as sole selling agents. The firm had advertised the product in many Indian cities and reportedly had attained at least a moderate volume of sales, particularly in South India, in the states of Kerala and Madras.

In 1956 shortly after the embargo on Quaker oats, the Ganesh Flour Mills of Delhi started to develop and market a quick cooking white oats under the trademark Champion. After some three years of experimental marketing in nearby areas, Ganesh Mills extended its distribution nationally, devoting a moderate amount to advertising in city markets throughout India

The management of Vora and Company developed the machinery and the method of processing its product on a trial and error basis. The first product offered was not deemed satisfactory by the management and was withdrawn from the market. Not until 1961 was the company satisfied with the product's quality and with its processing equipment, which, when perfected, could produce on a one shift basis 500 cases a month, each case consisting of 36 tins of 550 grams each. White oats of finest quality were imported from Australia under Government licence, since India grown oats of required characteristics were not available.

The perfected product was submitted to test among consumers and was rated by them as equal to or better than the competing product. The management had made application for permission to use the mark of the Indian Standards Institution and learned that the product and its processing measured up to required standards. Mr. Vora anticipated early arrival of the papers, which would permit the company to place the I.S.I certification mark on its packages and to refer to the mark in company advertising and selling. He looked upon the I.S.I certification mark as a valuable aid towards building a reputation among the trade and consumers as to the quality and purity of the product. The competitive product Champion bore the I.S.I certification mark on its packages.

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*This case was made possible by the cooperation of Small Industries Extension Training Institute, Hyderabad.

When entering the business Mr. Vora had no definite data regarding the volume of sales that had been obtained by Muller and Phipps for Quaker Oats before the embargo, nor did he know the sales figures for Champion Oats. He did know that oatmeal porridge was the leading hot breakfast cereal in the United States and some European countries. He had been informed that the cost of the imported product had restricted its sale in India, to families with high medium to high income. Moreover, he found that its use had gained wider acceptance in South India than in other parts of the country. From his discussion with agents Mr. Vora listed demand for quick cooked oats in order of quantitative importance by regions as follows :

1. Kerala

2. Mysore

3. Madras

4. Bombay

5. Calcutta

6. Northern region comprised of Delhi, UP & Rajasthan.

Apart from the high nutritive value of oatmeal porridge, its taste when eaten with milk and sugar or with butter or syrup was liked by many people. The quick cooking oats had appeal to many housewives because they had to be boiled for only four to five minutes to be ready to serve, whereas the older variety, rolled oats required about thirty minutes of cooking. Moreover, since the housewife had to exercise care to prevent the porridge from sticking to the pan and scorching, either by stirring frequently or cooking over a low fire, or by cooking in a double boiler, the long cooking type was less appealing than the new quick cooking type. The quick-cooking type was made possible by pre-cooking in manufacture after the oat grain had been split and rolled.

PACKAGING AND TRADE MARK

Vora and Company adopted a round heavy tin package similar to that which was being used for Champion Quick-cooking Oats, which, in turn, was presumably patterned after the package in which Quaker Oats had been imported. The management had adopted the trademark Blossom. The label was printed directly on the tin. A bright green background had the brand name in large red type at the top of the can. Directly below this was an illustration of several sheaves of oats and a smiling girl. Beneath the left half of the illustration in large white type was the phrase White Oats with the word White over the word Oats. The phrase quick cooking in smaller type was to the right of the white oats lettering.

The competing tin of Champion oats carried the smiling face of a young boy.

The Blossom tin contained 550 grams of oats, the quantity contained in what was thought to be the largest selling package of Champion Oats, although Ganesh Mills also marketed a tin containing 750 grams. Quaker Oats had been sold in a 500-gram tin.

The case in which the product was delivered to retailers contained 36 tins. The Champion case also contained 36 tins.

DISTRIBUTION CHANNELS AND TERMS FOR SALE

To secure distribution of its products Vora and Company appointed agents, who generally were selling non-competing food products, with exclusive regional rights. For instance, for the State of Punjab, U.P., Rajasthan, Jammu and Kashmir

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