http://www.livemint.com/2008/10/12230331/2008/10/19222444/Tech-cos-racefor-the-rural-ma.html?d=2

Tech cos race for the rural market

Firms like Microsoft and Nokia are designing products, services and
payment models to make technology accessible and affordable in
non-urban areas

Archana Rai

For large technology companies eager to expand operations in India,
rural markets have emerged as the latest attraction. The initial draw
may have been the prospect of selling products and services to a 50
million-strong middle class, but these companies are now evincing
interest in non-urban, low-income customers, extending support to
start-ups developing technology solutions for underserved markets.
So far, the turbulence in the global financial markets hasn't affected
their plans for rural India, with multinational firms and start-ups
positive about the non-urban markets' ability to generate profits in
the long term. In fact, as the crisis was unfolding, September-end saw
two global investment firms, Omidyar Network and Unitus Equity Fund
(UEF) put Rs60 crore into Comat Technologies Pvt. Ltd, an
eight-year-old firm in Bangalore that offers e-governance,
satellite-based education services and retail insurance products to
rural consumers in 10 states.
Cashing in: Sandeep Farias of UEF and Dimple Sahni of Omidyar Network.
The global investment firms have invested Rs60 crore in Comat
Technologies. Hemant Mishra / Mint
Cashing in: Sandeep Farias of UEF and Dimple Sahni of Omidyar Network.
The global investment firms have invested Rs60 crore in Comat
Technologies. Hemant Mishra / Mint
The deal, the first direct investment, or FDI, in India by Omidyar
Network, also marks UEF's first investment outside the microfinance
sector. Omidyar Network, the private investment firm of Pierre
Omidyar, founder of eBay Inc., invests only in businesses that address
the base of the pyramid. The investment was led by Omidyar Network but
the two firms declined to mention the contribution by each party.
"The Comat deal is a catalytic one; in the next two to three years we
will have an office in India and invest in 10 more (companies such as
Comat)," says Dimple Sahni, manager, investments, Omidyar Network.
Comat's CEO Sriram Raghavan says the financial crisis is unlikely to
have a direct impact: "The repercussions of the global financial
crisis will primarily be felt in a tight credit market, so in that
sense there will be an indirect impact on companies focusing on rural
and non-urban markets, but there really will be no direct impact. For
instance, companies that sell to rural consumers have different
strategies. For instance, they may not even have invested in building
their own distribution channel and could be partnering with other
companies (LIC sells life insurance through Comat's rural business
centres), so really I feel the direct impact will be nothing."
For some, the focus on underserved markets is about inclusion.
"Increasingly, the world is moving towards a model of social and
economic inclusion and to be sustainable, businesses have to reach out
to people at the bottom half of the pyramid," says Bhupendra Sharma,
director, Erehwon Consulting, a boutique consulting firm in Bangalore
that has advised companies such as ITC Ltd and Max New York Life
Insurance Co. Ltd on innovations for underserved markets.
In a May 2007 report, Bird of Gold: The Rise of India's Consumer
Market, McKinsey Global Institute, or MGI, predicted that as the
geographic pattern of India's income and consumption growth shifts by
2025, at least 291 million people will move from desperate poverty to
a more sustainable life and India's middle class will swell at least
10 times from its current size of 50 million to 583 million.
"Selling to the base of the pyramid was seen as just a high-volume
business but now, with a proper delivery channel and the right mix of
services, it can also be a high-margin business," says Sandeep Farias,
managing director, UEF. The fund recently raised $60 million (about
Rs286 crore) for investments in social enterprise.
It is this mix of sustainability and profits that technology majors
are homing in on. In August, when Google Inc. launched Google Map
Maker in India, it was positioned as a tool to map small local
businesses and help non-government organizations identify focus areas
in semi-urban and rural locations.
Helping hand: Devinder Kishore, director, marketing, Nokia India, says
they are working with several content providers to start different
programmes for farmers. Madhu Kapparath / Mint
Helping hand: Devinder Kishore, director, marketing, Nokia India, says
they are working with several content providers to start different
programmes for farmers. Madhu Kapparath / Mint
The company is also testing consumer response to another new
application, a voice-based search that uses technology to decipher
Indian accents. Once this service is launched commercially, users
across India will be able to dial a toll-free number and access
Google's search capability without using a computer.
Consumers in underserved markets lack basic access to technology
either due to language or even barriers created by the inability to
handle or install a device. "We came in with products and services
attuned to developed markets and found that India had large numbers of
semi-literate people who use phones and may not want to use
computers," says Prasad Ram, centre head and engineering director,
Google India R&D, Google India Pvt. Ltd.
Google is among a slew of technology companies, including Microsoft
Corp., Intel Corp. and Nokia Oyj, that are designing new products,
services and payment models to make technology accessible and
affordable in non-urban markets.
Nokia is running a pilot project to gauge consumer response to
initiatives such as the use of microfinance to fund the purchase of
mobile phones by rural consumers. "We are also running pilots for
agriculture-based solutions and are working with a host of content
providers to start programmes for farmers, which include information
on market prices for agricultural products to weather updates and
various financing options," says Devinder Kishore, director,
marketing, Nokia India.
Investments planned
Microsoft, which has invested at least $20 million over the last four
years in programmes to transform education systems, foster local
innovation and enable job opportunities in non-urban areas, plans to
put in more money. "We will invest another $20 million over the next
four years," says Latif Nathani, general manager, unlimited potential
group, Microsoft India. This group is focusing on taking the benefits
of computing to the next one billion people globally in the next 10
years. The goal is to reach 200 million families, earning Rs5 lakh or
less a year.
With the right mix, selling to the base of the pyramid can be a
high-margin business, not just a high-volume one
The MGI report puts the number of middle-class households in India,
earning between Rs2 lakh and Rs5 lakh a year, at 94.9 million, in
2025. The base of the pyramid is expected to swell to include 93.1
million households earning Rs90,000-Rs2 lakh per year, along with 48.8
million households earning less than Rs90,000 per year.
"There are two parts to this growing phenomenon of technology
companies focusing on non-urban areas. In the first, there is a
greater demand itself for new technology from industrial clusters in
semi-urban areas and in the second part, individual consumers from
rural areas are looking for technology services and products for their
everyday use," says Milan Sheth, partner, advisory services, Ernst and
Young Pvt. Ltd, or E&Y, an audit and consultancy firm.
In a March report, The Dhoni Effect: Rise of Small Town India, E&Y
said the urban growth story, driven so far mainly by metros, has
expanded into tier I, II and III towns. In sectors such as telecom,
the report said subscriber growth in the top four metros was at 58%,
while it grew at 93% in the rest of India.
"Rural India is an extremely important market for us; the current
teledensity in rural areas is only 6%, which means that there is a
great opportunity to offer handsets and applications that answer the
needs of the rural Indian," says Kishore.
The Finnish mobile phone maker is selling handsets adapted for rural
India with longer battery life, dust-resistant covers and local
language interface in 10 Indian languages. "In rural India, technology
such as the Internet and the mobile phone is about improving
livelihood and not lifestyle," says Google's Ram. "For instance, by
using Google Map Maker, a small business in the middle of nowhere can
acquire a geographical presence visible to all."
New models: Prasad Ram, centre head and engineering director, Google
India R&D. Google has a product development initiative focused on the
country's non-urban markets. Hemant Mishra / Mint
New models: Prasad Ram, centre head and engineering director, Google
India R&D. Google has a product development initiative focused on the
country's non-urban markets. Hemant Mishra / Mint
Insurance retailer Max New York Life, which uses technology such as
handheld terminals and Internet portals to reach consumers, is
launching a scheme for consumers with cyclical income flows. "In three
years, 15-18% of the company's income will come from non-urban
markets," says Anil Mehta, senior director, new markets strategic
business unit, Max New York Life.
The product, Max Vijay, is currently being tested among consumers in
Allahabad and is targeted at low-income workers, who enrol by paying
Rs1,000 and follow up with minimum premium amounts as low as Rs10.
"Due to their cyclical income flows, low-income consumers typically
cannot afford conventional insurance products with fixed premium and
stringent documentation," says Mehta.
So, if a Max Vijay customer moves across cities in search of work, he
can still make payments at collection centres such as local kirana
(general merchant) stores and mobile recharge centres. Mehta expects
to cover a fifth of the total consumer market by December.
Companies have no doubt that there is a huge demand for technology
among rural consumers or those who are in the middle to base of the
income pyramid. The challenge lies in reaching them and building the
right delivery channels.
"One key challenge in reaching out to rural consumers is lack of
infrastructure," says Nathani. Without basic elements such as
electricity and Internet connectivity, it is not possible for any IT
organization to fully exploit the potential that exists, he says.
Creating content
On the other hand, content service providers such as Google say the
bigger challenge lies in creating appropriate content for local
markets in India. "The digital divide that separates current Internet
users from the emerging users is less about affordability and
availability of computing and Internet but more about the absence of
locally relevant information," says Ram. Google, therefore, is focused
on creating an ecosystem to address the content, access and
application needs of emerging users.
Moves to bolster content include improvements to Google News, which
now has Indian news editions in English, Hindi, Tamil, Malayalam and
Telugu. Users can also search a large corpus of archival newspaper
content.
Google is breaking the language barrier by offering transliteration
services in Hindi, Gujarati, Marathi, Bengali, Tamil, Telugu, Kannada
and Malayalam. "By 2010, mobile phones will dominate PC usage, so
launch of mobile search, maps and Orkut and the piloting of SMS
channels and voice search are aimed at overcoming barriers to access,"
says Ram, who is directing the concept and development of services for
emerging users of technology in the country.
"It is difficult to predict the exact time frame for success in these
markets but the work to build markets is already happening," says
Nathani.
Thinking ahead: Latif Nathani, GM, unlimited potential group,
Microsoft India, says they will invest $20 mn in the next four years.
Madhu Kapparath / Mint
Thinking ahead: Latif Nathani, GM, unlimited potential group,
Microsoft India, says they will invest $20 mn in the next four years.
Madhu Kapparath / Mint
Increasingly, businesses are working with governments to break into
underserved markets. "To reach consumers in the middle of the income
pyramid, we have to deal with issues of affordability, but to reach
consumers at the base requires government intervention," says Nathani.
Microsoft India is participating in the roll-out of telecentre kiosks
across 600,000 villages at a ratio of about one kiosk for six
villages. "We are working with all 17 private sector companies that
have bid for, and are setting up, such kiosks, including start-up
companies such as Comat, and corporations, such as the Reliance
(group)," says Nathani.
Partnering with start-up firms that work in rural markets is another
strategy. In March, Microsoft Corp. took a 36% equity stake in
start-up firm Oxigen Services (India) Pvt. Ltd, which offers
aggregated services such as mobile recharge across all service
providers and utility bill payments on a single IT-enabled platform
that can be accessed at points such as kirana stores. Oxigen's
services are available at about 50,000 access points.
Chip-maker Intel is reaching out to non-urban markets through its
venture capital arm, Intel Capital, which invested $4 million in Comat
Technologies in April 2007. It is looking at investments in areas such
as voice recognition, alternative energy and broadband penetration.
"These technologies will allow a lot more people from rural areas to
access the Internet at low cost," says Sudheer Kuppam, managing
director, Intel Capital India.
Microsoft, in partnership with IDRC Canada and the MS Swaminathan
Foundation, has set up the $200,000 Rural Innovation Fund, which
provides grants to eight ventures that are using technology to build
applications for rural consumers.
Clearly, this rush of money and ideas will only increase.
******
Aiming to make the mobile phone a default credit card
In just four years since its inception in 2004, Oxigen Services
(India) Pvt. Ltd has built an IT-enabled distribution platform with at
least 50,000 access points that customers use to recharge mobile
subscriptions, pay monthly bills for Internet connections or buy
railway tickets. This includes rural and semi-urban locations. "Every
month, we add 2,000 new access points countrywide," says Pramod
Saxena, founder and chief executive officer, Oxigen Services.
Saxena was part of the team at Hutchison Essar Ltd (now Vodafone Essar
Ltd) that led the buyout of BPL Mobile Communications Ltd. It is this
understanding of the mobile space that he has used to build a single
payment platform that multiple service providers can now tap into in
their bid to reach customers in rural locations.
"The challenge has always been how to reach technology to the masses
and using Oxigen outlets is one solution to that challenge," says
Latif Nathani, general manager, unlimited potential group, Microsoft
Corp. (India) Pvt. Ltd. In March, Microsoft Corp. bought a 36% stake
in Oxigen Services, an investment that is expected to boost technology
support for the start-up while allowing the world's largest software
maker to increase its presence in India's rural and semi-urban
markets.
Oxigen was first set up as a joint venture with South African firm
Blue Label Telecoms Ltd. Subsequently, in early 2006, Citigroup
Venture Capital International, the private equity arm of Citigroup
Inc., bought a 26% stake in the company.
"Citi provided us financial support, but we soon realized that what we
required was a strategic technology partnership to roll out additional
services," says Saxena. So, this year when Citi divested its holding,
Oxigen Services firmed up a partnership with Microsoft, turning its
focus to offering technology-enabled services to customers at the base
of the income pyramid who are unable to avail of banking services.
The firm has created a cashless service called OxiCash Wallet that any
mobile phone user can register for by paying Re1. Subsequent payments
(called OxiCash) from Rs50 onwards can be used to pay for all the
services available at an Oxigen outlet.
"The mobile phone then becomes a default credit card for various
functions such as mobile and fixed line telephone bill payments and
railway and even airline tickets," says Saxena.
With rural consumers mostly accessing Oxigen's services at kirana
(general merchant) stores, the start-up is now looking to turn this
relationship into a brokerage for financial services.
"The retailer can be trained as a banking correspondent who opens
small, no-frill accounts for rural consumers who do not possess a
regular bank account," says Saxena. In turn, this large unbanked
segment of the population will have access to a host of financial
services such as money deposit and loan facilities. "We hope to add on
features such as money transfer and also make it possible for Oxigen
customers to pay the same retailer OxiCash for his purchases across
the counter," says Saxena, who is aiming to bring the country's large
unbanked population into the fold of technology–enabled services. The
company has clocked revenues worth $150 million (about Rs715 crore) in
the fourth year of operations.
"In the next two to three years, Oxigen Services will be available at
over 250,000 access points, enabling 10 million transactions every
month," says Saxena.
******
A retail network selling insurance, training services
The company started as a provider of e-governance services to help
farmers in Karnataka access landholding details as part of the Bhoomi
project—a state government initiative to digitize land records.
Since then, Comat Technologies Pvt. Ltd has emerged as a distributor
of satellite-based education systems and operator of rural retail
outlets for the country's largest insurance firm, Life Insurance Corp.
of India Ltd, or LIC. Today, Comat runs at least 1,100 kiosks (called
Nemmadi in Karnataka) across 10 states, reaching out to a million
farmers.
"It has taken nearly eight years for us to prove that there is
long-term value in a business focused on rural consumers," says Sriram
Raghavan, chief executive officer, Comat Technologies, who has steered
the company's expansion plans in the last three years. The defining
moment for the start-up was when it turned from being a provider of
government services to a retail network selling a variety of services
to rural consumers.
Once its rural business centres started attracting visitors, Comat
realized a clear utility value could be leveraged by sectors such as
banking and financial services. To begin with, Comat signed on as a
representative for ICICI Lombard General Insurance Co. Ltd, selling
general insurance products. This year, it has finalized an arrangement
with LIC to retail insurance products to rural consumers through the
kiosks.
Comat, which is already working with LIC to digitize policy documents,
will now use its rural business centres to accept cash premium
deposits, generate online receipts for payments and, more crucially,
facilitate hassle-free settlement of insurance claims in rural areas.
In the field of education, the company offers training for rural youth
in fields such as medical transcription. At present, course content is
disseminated through satellite technology—experts conducting the
course from a studio, and this is beamed to Comat's kiosks across
Karnataka. The six-month course covers subjects such as science (human
anatomy), English grammar, English typing and American accent
training.
"In different states, this ready platform can be used to retail
different services across e-governance, education and financial
services," says Sandeep Farias, managing director, Unitus Equity Fund,
which joined private investment firm Omidyar Network to invest Rs60
crore in Comat in September.
By the end of the year, Comat expects to roll out at least 6,000 more
kiosks leveraging this new investment.
"We are now looking to rapidly build scale into the business and need
investors with a large war chest who could fund this roll-out," says
Raghavan.
In 2007, Intel Capital took an equity stake in the company that was
rapidly building its presence in states such as Uttarakhand,
Rajasthan, Madhya Pradesh and Haryana.
"Employability training, such as courses for retail staff, is another
area that we are looking at," says Raghavan. The company provides
online coaching to rural students sitting for the common entrance test
for admission to professional colleges using the distance education
model—lessons are beamed down using satellite technology offered by
Hughes Software Systems Ltd, now known as Aricent Inc.
The company, which has a revenue base of Rs64 crore, expects to double
revenues every year as it reaches out to an expanding base of rural
consumers hungry for services.
*******
Using e-commerce portals to link rural communities to urban buyers
In 2007, when he was developing an enterprise computing application
for a non-government organization, or NGO, entrepreneur V.G. Ram Kumar
realized there was no online medium that linked mainstream
organizations with rural communities. To bridge that gap, especially
at a time when rural markets were growing rapidly, presented a
business opportunity that the electronics engineer zeroed in on right
away.
It was work that provided him a unique insight into the way rural
markets were expanding across the country. After a 12-year stint as an
entrepreneur, Ram Kumar worked as a consultant for technology
implementation in the NGO sector—and to raise funds for rural
education.
So, last year, when Mission 2007, a competition to identify innovative
grass root-level enterprises that develop technology applications was
announced, Aruntec, the start-up that Ram Kumar had floated to develop
an e-commerce portal for Indian villages, was among the 1,000 outfits
that applied for a grant. These entrepreneurs were vying for seed
capital funding from the Rural Innovation Fund, an initiative of
Microsoft Corp. (India) Pvt. Ltd in association with IDRC Canada and
MS Swaminathan Foundation.
"RIF is a $200,000 (about Rs95 lakh) fund set up to back enterprises
that are developing innovative ICT applications that address some
existing problems in rural areas," says Latif Nathani, general
manager, unlimited potential group, Microsoft India. There were 42
projects shortlisted—nine, including the Web portal proposal from
Aruntec, were eventually chosen as winners.
"It was a great start—to win a nationwide competition, it brought
recognition as well as a financial grant," says Ram Kumar, who aims to
build e-commerce portals for 10,000 villages by the end of March.
The idea is to build a two-way business channel between rural
entrepreneurs and buyers in urban markets; this can include trade in
products developed by weavers, potters, handicraft makers as well as
agricultural produce.
"There are social benefits, such as increased skill-building for rural
workers, and they get direct access to buyers with whom they can
interact and sell their products," says Ram Kumar.
He says the biggest challenge for the roll-out of technology access in
rural areas is the paucity of Internet access. "I have identified the
broadband service required and hope to have it implemented soon," says
Ram Kumar. He is now using Internet dial-up services in rural areas to
offer access to the Web portal.
In addition, there are other projects, such as e-books publishing,
that Aruntec hopes to add on to the project later.
However, the RIF mandate is for speedy implementation of the Web
portal project on the ground, to ensure that rural communities are
drawn into the mainstream.
"If we are to reach the 200 million families who are in the middle or
the base of the pyramid, we have to bring relevant access and
affordability to customers," says Nathani.
******
A supply chain model for dairy farming & health care
Rural markets may be the next new thing for technology companies
looking to expand their footprint in India but the missing link
clearly is a channel that connects service providers to consumers in
underserved markets. This is the gap that Moksha-Yug Access Ltd, or
MYA, a Bangalore-based start-up, aims to bridge by using technology to
link rural households with buyers and suppliers.
"The cost of servicing rural markets is very high and I am a firm
believer that technology can help reduce the cost of servicing the
rural poor," says Harsha Moily, chief executive officer, MYA.
The company raised Rs6.9 crore in March from investors, including
Silicon Valley-based venture capitalist Vinod Khosla and Unitus Equity
Fund, which focuses on microfinance and social enterprise investing.
"The equity investment will enable the company to build a supply chain
and infrastructure for dairy farming and health care centres, continue
to create key market linkages between the rural community and upstream
players, strengthen its technological platform to gear the business
for volume-driven activities and expand MYA's microfinance arm," says
Moily.
The start-up began operations in April 2006 by creating a microfinance
network that has 37,000 members across rural Karnataka. This network
is now the base for the roll-out of a supply chain model across two
sectors—dairy farming and health care.
"MYA is a company which is riding on the India growth opportunity and
not on the microfinance opportunity," Moily says.
The start-up aims to build a delivery system for the rural poor across
a gamut of services, including agribusiness and retail, in addition to
the two sectors that MYA is already active in. It is a strategy that
clearly finds favour with investors. "MYA's business is not
microfinance, yet it understands it well and views it as an organized
platform, both in terms of manpower and infrastructure, which can be
leveraged on to provide a range of other income-generating services,"
says Johanna Posada, limited partner, Unitus Equity Fund (UEF) and
managing director, Elevar Equity Llc., which manages UEF.
Each dairy unit set up by MYA caters to 3,000 people, utilizes the
services of 100 dairy farmers, and is run as a franchise unit by a
microfinance client group. Each unit can generate 18,000 litres of
milk every month, using an average of 18 tonnes of animal feed
concentrate and 20 acres for cultivating green fodder. MYA works
towards building partnerships to procure the milch animals, provides
the inputs and finally arranges for purchasing the milk produced.
"Once our last mile supply chain management services is in place, we
plan to enter into partnerships with companies in the dairy farming
sector," says Moily. Five such dairy farming franchises have already
been set up in Bagalkot district in north Karnataka.
In the health care sector, MYA is setting up primary health
centres—each one caters to a population of 30,000 and offers basic
medical services such as outpatient care, laboratory and diagnostic
facilities and a pharmacy.
"The next step will be to build alliances with companies that can set
up tertiary care hospitals where primary health clinics can refer
their patients to," says Moily. One such health care franchise is
already operational in Bagalkot.
"Availability of quality manpower is the only challenge we face in a
business focused on rural markets," says Moily, who struggles to find
talented people ready to work in rural India. To bridge that gap, MYA
plans to hire domain experts as consultants for short-term projects
while working on a long-term plan that involves building partnerships
with educational institutions and offering employees a stock option
plan.
"We aim to set up a non-profit foundation that will establish high
schools in rural areas that can provide a stable source of quality
field staff for our operations," says Moily, adding that rural India
is a vibrant market waiting to be tapped.
It is this promise of growth that is encouraging investors such as
UEF. "In addition to the growth we are seeing in the Indian urban
markets, it is estimated that the annual growth rate in real income
for an average rural household will increase from 2.8% to 3.6% in only
two years. To capitalize on this growth is an attractive opportunity",
says Posada, who expects MYA to launch at least two new products and
services in the next three years that will be both large-scale and
profitable.

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