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December 7, 1998 |
HP-India to prise open new marketsIt's the new HP way: if the market shows signs of saturation, print new boundaries for the market.
Penetrative, because for the first time, HP-India is moving beyond metros in the quest for new customers. Instead, starting with the first quarter of 1999, it plans to determinedly expand its market reach to class B towns across the country. In phase one of the project, the company plans to target 30-40 class B towns. A critical element of this exercise will be partnering with local dealers. The idea is to not just create local excitement for the HP brand, but to let loose a very focused marketing blitz that targets specific end-users in these towns. Currently, HP-India is shortlisting a panel of key HP dealers in each city to run the end-user contact programmes. Each dealer will then define a focused exercise for generating excitement around new HP products in his area, through a mix of events like exhibitions and fairs, lectures in engineering colleges, display stalls at institutions, product demos on campus, etc. To this end, HP-India has hired a market research agency to help manage the end-user contact programme by first identifying the key class B cities. The agency will also help identify the size of the printer market in each city, as well as the names of the specific industry and end-user segments worth targeting in each city. "Rather than a burst campaign we want to have a prolonged campaign. Especially, as we will be the only IT company present in these cities," says HP-India market-development manager, commercial hardcopy Tarun Thadani. Currently, HP-India has asked key dealers to come up with proposals for lucrative schemes and promotions for end-users in their cities. Right now 75 per cent of HP India's total revenues accrue from class A towns and only 25 per cent from class B towns. Earlier, in November, in a bid to expand its end-user base, HP-India flipped its marketing strategy for printers from product-centric to customer-solution focused. As a result, the major categories of end-users that it is targeting for its state-of-the-art laser and inkjet printers are: the financial segment, which will essentially look at the application of cheque printing for banks, corporates and large institutions; bar-code printing which will target corporate users with large printing needs as in the FMCG sector and pharmaceuticals, and label printing; big publishing houses which traditionally outsourced work to offset printers; in-house printing of corporate brochures, catalogues and magazines; and the all-in-one Laser 1100A, which is a printer, copier and scanner for the small-office/home-office user. While the company conducted a series of road shows in the last six weeks, showcasing the 18 Hewlett Packard printers that were launched globally in November '98 - the festivities are now moving into the smaller towns and cities.
- Compiled from the Indian media |
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