Introduction – What
is reverse innovation?
Historically, multi-national companies innovated in west
(developed countries) and sold those products in east (developing countries). Reverse Innovation is doing exactly the
opposite. It is about innovating in east
and bringing those products to west. Reverse Innovation is the strategy of
innovating in emerging (or developing) markets and then distributing/marketing
these innovations in developed markets. Reverse innovation has two parts; one
is that companies got to innovate in east and then bring those innovations into
west.
Who is doing what?
Many companies are developing products in emerging countries
like China and India and then distributing them globally. One has to look at
innovation paradigms in companies like GE, P&G, Nestle, Pepsico, Tata
Motors, Godrej, etc. these companies have shed the conventional way of
innovating in the west and have really generated dramatic growth by means of
reverse innovation that has created huge market not only in the east but also
in the west.
GE – GE MAC 800:
GE’s innovation on the GE MAC 400 to build a portable low-cost ECG machine to
cater to the rural population who cannot afford expensive health care was
launched as an improved version a year later in 2009, in U.S. as MAC 800.
P&G – Vicks
Honey Cough – Honey-based cold remedy: P&G’s (Vicks Honey Cough)
honey-based cold remedy developed in Mexico found success in European and the
United States market.
Nestle – Low-cost,
low-fat dried noodles: Nestle’s Maggi brand – Low-cost, low-fat dried
noodles developed for rural India and Pakistan found a market in Australia and
New Zealand as a healthy and budget-friendly alternative.
Pepsico – Kurkure
and Aliva: Pepsi is planning to give developed markets (particularly
West Asia) a taste of its salted snack Kurkure (and also another snack Aliva).
The product enjoys huge success in India and has become a Rs. 700 crore brand
within a decade of its launch. The success is attributed to product innovation
and a good marketing strategy. E.g. Made from corn, rice and gram flour, zero
per cent trans fats and no cholesterol, Rs-3 small packs for pushing sales in
the lower-tier towns.
Tata Motors – Tata
Nano: While companies like Ford set up its global automobile platform in
India and catered to the niche premium segments in India, Tata introduced the
Tata Nano for the price conscious consumer in India in 2009. Tata plans to
launch Tata Nano in Europe and U.S. subsequently.
Godrej – Chotukool
Refrigerator: In 2010, Godrej Group’s appliances division, Godrej &
Boyce Manufacturing Co Ltd test-marketed a low-cost (dubbed the world’s
lowest-priced model at Rs. 3,250) refrigerator targeted mainly at rural areas
and poor customers in India. The product runs without a compressor on a battery
and cooling chips. The company wants to use a community-led distribution model
(as an alternative channel of distribution) to push for product growth.
Key Drivers
The fundamental driver of reverse innovation is the income
gap that exists between emerging markets and the developed countries. The per
capita income of India, for instance, is about US$3,000, whereas it is about
$50,000 in the U.S. There is no way to design a product for the American mass
market and then simply adapt it and hope to capture middle India. You need to
innovate for India, not simply export to India. Buyers in east demand solutions
on an entirely different price-performance curve. They demand new, high-tech
solutions that deliver ultra-low costs and "good enough" quality.
to be continued...
2 comments:
If I get it right, is 'reverse innov' about the next iteration in engineering to come up with cost effective solution based on the manufacturers recognition in market. All the examples given are big moguls in their area and have a lot of cushion to experiment and iterate on their production life cycle. Will this model be practical for smaller players, can they innovate, challenge the price point and at same time market their products successfully ? .
Just a query, don't know any answers here... and really curious to know what chance do the smaller players have in this similar models.
Interesting piece.. I think the aakash tablet would be a good example here.
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