1. INTRODUCTION
Amul is an Indian dairy cooperative, based at Anand in the state of Gujarat, India. Formed in 1950, it is a brand managed by a cooperative body, the Gujarat Co-operative Milk Marketing Federation Ltd. (GCMMF), which today is jointly owned by 3.6 million milk producers in Gujarat. The white revolution was spearheaded by Tribhuvandas Patel under the guidance of Sardar Patel and VergheseKurien. As a result, Kaira District Milk Union Limited was born in 1946. Tribhuvandas became the founding chairman of the organization which he led till his last day of his life. He hired Dr.Kurien three years after the white revolution. He convinced Dr.Kurien to stay and help with the mission rest was history in the dairying industry.Amul spurred India's White Revolution, which made the country the world's largest producer of milk and milk products. In the process Amul became the largest food brand in India and has ventured into markets overseas. Dr VergheseKurien, founder-chairman of the GCMMF for more than 30 years (1973–2006), is credited with the success of Amul. Amul products are now available in more than 60 countries in the world. Amul began the dairy cooperative movement in India and formed an apex cooperative organization, Gujarat Co-operative Milk Marketing Federation Ltd. (GCMMF), which today is jointly owned by some 2.2 million milk producers in Gujarat, India. Amul was formally registered on December 14, 1946. The brand name Amul, sourced from the Sanskrit word Amoolya, means priceless. It was suggested by a quality control expert in Anand. Some cite the origin as an acronym to (Anand Milk Union Limited).The Amul revolution was started as
awareness among the farmers. It grew and matured into a protest movement that was channelled towards economic prosperity.
GCMMF - An Overview
Gujarat Cooperative Milk Marketing Federation (GCMMF) is India's largest food products marketing organization. It is a state level apex body of milk cooperatives in Gujarat which aims to provide remunerative returns to the farmers and also serve the interest of consumers by providing quality products which are good value for money.
Gujarat Cooperative Milk Marketing Federation Ltd (GCMMF) is the largest Organization in FMCG industry engaged in marketing of milk & dairy products under the brand names of AMUL and SAGAR with an annual turnover exceeding Rs 5000 Crores.
GCMMF is a unique organization. It's a body created by Farmers, managed by competent professionals serving a very competitive and challenging consumer market. It is a true testimony of synergistic national development through the practice of modern management methods.
Vision:
GCMMF will be an outstanding marketing organization, with specialization in marketing of food and dairy products both fresh and long life with customer focus and IT integrated. The network would consist of over 100 offices, 7500 stockiest covering at least every Taluka. Headquarter is servicing nearly ten lakhs outlets with a turnover of Rs.10, 000 Cr and serving several co-operatives. GCMMF shall also create markets for
its
products
in
neighboring
countries
Mission:
We at GCMMF endeavor to satisfy the taste and nutritional requirements of the customer of the world through excellence in the marketing by our committed team. Through cooperative networking, we are determined to offer the quality product that provides the best value for money.
Year of Establishment
1973
18 District Cooperative Milk Producers' Members Unions
No. of Producer Members
3.6 Million
No. of Village Societies
18,549
Total Milk handling capacity per 30 Million liters per day Day
Milk Collection (Total - 2016-17)
6.44 billion liters
Milk collection (Daily Average 17.65 million liters 2016-17)
Cattle feed manufacturing 7800 Mts. per day Capacity
Sales Turnover -(2016-17)
Rs. 27043 Crores (US $ 4.1 Billion)
HISTORY. The Amul revolution was started as awareness among the farmers. It grew and matured into a protest movement that was channeled towards economic prosperity.TheKiara District Cooperative Milk Producers' Union Limited (KDCMPUL) began pasteurizing milk for the Bombay Milk Scheme in June 1948.By the end of 1948, more than 400 farmers joined in more Village Society, and the quantity of milk handled by one Union increased from 250 to 5,000 liters a day.Meanwhile, Dr. Verghese Kurien, fed up being at the government creamery in Anand, Gujarat, which held no challenge, volunteered to help Shri Tribhovandas Patel, the Chairman of KDCMPUL, in setting up a processing plant. This marked the birth of AMUL in 1946.
The success of Amul was instrumental in launching the White Revolution that resulted in increased milk production in India. It is officially termed as Operation Flood by Amul. The breakthrough technology of spray-drying and processing buffalo milk, developed by Mr. H.M. Dalaya, was one of the key factors that contributed to the Revolution.Over six decades ago the life of a farmer in Kaira was very much like that of farmers anywhere else in India. His income was derived almost entirely from seasonal crops. Many poor farmers faced starvation during offseasons. Their income from milch buffaloes was undependable. The milk marketing system was controlled by contractors and middlemen. As milk is perishable, farmers were compelled to sell their milk for whatever they were offered. Often they had to sell cream and ghee at a throwaway price.
They were in general illiterate. But they could see that the system under which contractors could buy their produce at a low price and arrange to sell it at huge profits was just not fair. This became more noticeable when the Government of Bombay started the Bombay Milk Scheme in 1945. Milk had to be transported 427 kilometers, from Anand to Bombay.
The Government found it profitable; Polson’s kept a good margin. Milk contractors took the biggest cut. No one had taken the trouble to fix the price of milk to be paid to the producers. Thus, under the Bombay Milk Scheme the farmers of Kaira District were no better off ever before. They were still a t the mercy of milk contractors. They had to sell their milk at a price the contractors fixed. The discontent of the farmers grew. They went in deputation to Sardar Patel, who had advocated farmers’ cooperatives as early as 1942. Sardar Patel reiterated his advice that they should market their milk through a cooperative society of their own. This co-operative should have its own pasteurization plant. His advice was that the farmers should demand permission to set up such a cooperative. If their demand was rejected, they should refuse to sell their milk to middlemen.
The trio's (T. K. Patel, Kurien and Dalaya's) success at the cooperative's dairy soon spread to Anand's neighborhood in Gujarat. Within a short span, five unions in other districts – Mehsana, Banaskantha, Baroda, Sabarkantha and Surat – were set up. To combine forces and expand the market while saving on advertising and avoid competing against each other, the GCMMF, an apex marketing body of these district cooperatives, was set up in 1973. The Kaira Union, which had the brand name Amul with it since 1955, transferred it to GCMMF.
In 1999, it was awarded the "Best of all" Rajiv Gandhi National Quality Award.
In June 2013, it was reported that the Kaira District Cooperative Milk Producers Union Limited, better known as Amul Dairy, had signed a tripartite agreement to start a dairy plant in Waterloo village in upstate New York. The plant will initially manufacture paneer and ghee. Amul will use an existing dairy plant owned by New Jersey-based NRI Piyush Patel for manufacturing. The plant is strategically located, as it close to supply centres from where raw ma terial is procured, and is near New Jersey, which has a large Indian population.
The Utterly Butterly Delicious Story Of Amul Over the years, Amul, one of the most beloved brands of our country, has become the taste of India, just as its tagline claims. Every Indian millennial has grown up listening to the jingles of its many dairy products, and the Amul girl, the brand’s mascot in the polka-dotted dress, has become a nostalgia-evoking symbol. Amul has truly come a long way since its founding in 1946.
The Butter Girl Amul did not always have the round-eyed moppet as its mascot. The Butter Girl was born in 1966 when Sylvester daCunha, the then MD of the advertising agency handling Amul butter’s account, created her for its campaign. It was a pleasant change from the dull, corporate ads that the previous agency had come up with. Being a seasoned marketer himself, Dr Kurien gave daCunha complete creative freedom to create and release the ads without taking the company’s permission. 30 years later, the Utterly Butterly Girl still wins hearts wherever she is, whether on a billboard or on the packet of butter.
Chapter 2
Company Profile
Co operative is generally operated not for profit but for the betterment of consumers and products. Their main objective is to serve people of the society with good quality of products with as much as low price. ‘AMUL’ is the successful co operative sector. The brand name itself indicates how AMUL is separated over the country and the world. AMUL gets so many awards for
THE AMUL MODEL The Amul Model of dairy development is a three-tiered
structure
with
the
dairy
cooperative societies at the village level federated under a milk union at the district level and a federation of member unions at the state level.
Establishment
of
a direct
linkage
between milk producers and consumers by eliminating middlemen
Milk
Producers
(farmers)
control
procurement, processing and marketing
Professional management
ORGANISATION STRUCTURE It all started in December 1946 with a group of farmers keen to free themselves from intermediaries, gain access to markets and thereby ensure maximum returns for their efforts.Based in the village of Anand, the Kaira District Milk Cooperative Union (better known as Amul) expanded exponentially. It joined hands with other milk cooperatives, and the Gujarat network now covers 2.12 million farmers, 10,411 village level milk collection centres and fourteen district level plants (unions) under the overall supervision of GCMMF. There are similar federations in other states. Right from the beginning, there was recognition that this initiative would directly benefit and transform small farmers and contribute to the development of society.Markets, then and even today, are primitive and poor in infrastructure.Amul and GCMMF acknowledged that development and growth could not be left to market forces and that proactive intervention was required. Two key requirements were identified. The first, that sustained growth for the long term would depend on matching supply and demand. It would need heavy investment in the simultaneous development of suppliers and consumers.Second, that effective management of the network and commercial viability would require professional managers and technocrats.To implement their vision while retaining their focus on farmers, a hierarchical network of cooperatives was developed, which today forms the robust supply chain behind GCMMF's endeavours. The vast and complex supply chain stretches from small suppliers to largefragmented markets.Management of this network is made more complex by the fact that GCMMF is directly responsible only for a small part of the chain, with a number of third party players (distributors, retailers and logistics support providers) playing large roles. Managing this supply chain efficiently is critical as GCMMF's competitive position is driven by low consumer prices supported by a low-cost system.
LIST OF PRODUCTS MARKETED
Breadspreads:
Amul Butter
AmulLite Low Fat Breadspread
Amul Cooking Butter
Cheese Range:
Amul Pasteurized Processed Cheddar Cheese
Amul Processed Cheese Spread
Amul Pizza (Mozarella) Cheese
Amul Shredded Pizza Cheese
AmulEmmental Cheese
Amul Gouda Cheese
AmulMalai Paneer (cottage cheese) Frozen and Tinned
Utterly Delicious Pizza
Mithaee Range (Ethnic sweets):
AmulShrikhand (Mango, Saffron, Almond Pistachio, Cardamom)
AmulAmrakhand
AmulMithaeeGulabjamuns
AmulMithaeeGulabjamun Mix
AmulMithaee Kulfi Mix
UHT Milk Range:
AmulTaaza 3% fat Milk
Amul Gold 4.5% fat Milk
Amul Slim-n-Trim 0% fat milk
Amul Chocolate Milk
Amul Fresh Cream
AmulSnowcap Softy Mix
AmulTaaza Double Toned Milk
Pure Ghee:
Amul Pure Ghee
Sagar Pure Ghee
Amul Cow Ghee
Infant Milk Range:
Amul Infant Milk Formula 1 (0-6 months)
Amul Infant Milk Formula 2 ( 6 months above)
Amulspray Infant Milk Food
Milk Powders:
Amul Full Cream Milk Powder
Amulya Dairy Whitener
Sagar Skimmed Milk Powder
Sagar Tea and Coffee Whitener
Sweetened Condensed Milk:
AmulMithaimate Sweetened Condensed Milk
Fresh Milk:
AmulTaaza Toned Milk 3% fat
Amul Gold Full Cream Milk 6% fat
Amul Shakti Standardised Milk 3% fat
Amul Smart Double Toned Milk 1.5% fat
Curd Products:
AmulMastiDahi (fresh curd)
Amul Butter Milk
AmulLassee
Amul Ice creams:
Royal Treat Range (Rajbhog, Cappuchino, Chocochips, Butterscotch, TuttiFrutti)
Nut-o-Mania Range (KajuDrakshi, KesarPista, Roasted Almond, Kesar Carnival, BadshahiBadam Kulfi, ShistaPista Kulfi)
Utsav Range (Anjir, Roasted Almond)
Chocolate & Confectionery
Marketing Mix & SWOT Analysis The Gujarat Cooperative Milk Marketing Federation (GCMMF), the country's largest milk marketing federation. The largest milk brand in Asia, today Amul is the largest exporter of dairy products in the country. Amul is today available in over 40 countries. It is exporting a wide variety of products. The major markets are the US, West Indies, countries in Africa, the Gulf region, the Saarc neighbours, Singapore, the Philippines, Thailand, Japan and China, according to B M Vyas, managing director, GCMMF.
From conventional milk products like paneer and cheese, the brand has evolved over over time and now caters to the wellness market as well with its sugar-free and probiotic milk products. According to Vyas, the company is continuously introducing innovative products that meet the
aspirational needs of the consumers. Amul has introduced a range of milk-based products such as flavoured milk, buttermilk, yoghurt, probiotic products and energy drinks. Price in the marketing mix of Amul Their pricing and promotion strategy together have made it available at food hawkers and stalls on Indian roads only to gain maximum visibility across all consumer groups. Product in the marketing mix of Amul Amul has a very strong product portfolio. Amul product portfolio is comprised mainly of Dairy products. Amul butter, Amul cheese and Amul ice cream are cash cows for Amul as they have the major market share in their product category. Amul ice cream is amongst the top 10 ice cream brands of India. Amul milk, AmulPaneer and AmulDahi consumption is on the rise. In fact Amul milk has 26% of market share in the packaged milk segment. The only disappointing performance is seen in Amul Chocolates which are a burden for Amul and lot of push is required for the sales of the same. This is because the chocolate market has established players like Parle, Dairy milk and others. Promotions in the marketing mix of Amul Amul is responsible for one of the most unique and longest running outdoor campaign as well as one of the most known outdoor advertising characters The Amul girl. We would like to take this opportunity to specially thank Mr Eustace fernandes, the creative brain behind the sweet girl. But we should know by now that the Amul girl is hardly sweet or cute. She is known to be the naughtiest advertising girl ever. Amul hoardings mainly feature the current news and are used to take a tongue in cheek viewpoint at current happenings. However, each advertisement hits the nail on the head.
The promotions of Amul are mainly for butter but for all the other products there is hardly any promotions. During the launch of products, Amul is known to go ATL and advertise milk, butter etc. The SmitaPatil ad wherein Smitapatil is shown as a village milk collector is one of the most famous ads for Amul. But overall, the main advertisement is BTL through outdoor, trade promotions, discount schemes and sales promotions. Place in the marketing mix of Amul Amul has a massive distribution network because its ice creams, milk, butter and cheese is found practically everywhere. As it is a FMCG product, Amul follows the methodology of breaking the bulk. The initial factory output is in bulk. Later on, this bulk becomes smaller and smaller and finally one individual slab of butter or scoop of ice cream is sold at the retail place. There are two different channels through which Distribution happens in Amul. One is the procurement channel which is responsible for collection of Milk through dairy co-operatives. The other is the distribution channel which is responsible for distributing the finalized product to the end customers. In the procurement channel, the milk is individually delivered from farmers to the co-operatives. The co-operatives then collect all this milk and send the bulk to the manufacturing facility. At the manufacturing facility, the milk is used to manufacture the finalised products
SWOT ANALYSIS The study of this SWOT analysis shows that the ‘strengths’ and ‘opportunities’ far outweigh ‘weaknesses’ and ‘threats’. The strengths and opportunities are fundamental and weaknesses and threats are transitory. STRENGTHS: Demand profile: Absolutely optimistic. Margins: Quite reasonable. Flexibility of product mix: Tremendous. With balancing equipment, you can keep on adding to your product line. Availability of raw material: Abundant. Presently, more than 80 per cent of chocolate produced is flowing into the unorganized sector, which requires proper channelization. Technical manpower: Professionally-trained, technical human resource pool, built over last 30 years. WEAKNESSES: Perishability: Pasteurization has overcome this weakness partially. Which gives chocolate long life. Surely, many new processes will follow to improve chocolate quality and extend its shelf life. Lack of control over yield: Theoretically, there is little control over chocolate yield. However, increased awareness of developments like embryo transplant, artificial insemination and properly managed animal husbandry practices, coupled with higher income to rural milk producers should automatically lead to improvement in chocolate.
Logistics of procurement: Woes of bad roads and inadequate transportation facility make milk procurement problematic. But with the overall economic improvement in India, these problems would also get solved. Problematic distribution: Yes, all is not well with distribution. But then if ice creams can be sold virtually at every nook and corner, why can’t we sell other dairy products too? Moreover, it is only a matter of time before we see the emergence of a cold chain linking the producer to the refrigerator at the consumer’s home! Competition: With so many newcomers entering this industry, competition is becoming tougher day by day. But then competition has to be faced as a ground reality. The market is large enough for many to carve out their niche. OPPORTUNITIES: Value addition: There is a phenomenal scope for innovations in product development, packaging and presentation. Given below are potential areas of value addition: Steps should be taken to introduce value-added products like shrikhand, ice creams, paneer, khoa, flavored milk, dairy sweets, chocolates etc. This will lead to a greater presence and flexibility in the market place along with opportunities in the field of brand building. Addition of cultured products like yoghurt and cheese lend further strength - both in terms of utilization of resources and presence in the market place. A lateral view opens up opportunities in milk proteins through casein, caseinates and other dietary proteins, further opening up export opportunities.
Yet another aspect can be the addition of infant foods, geriatric foods and nutritional. Export potential: Efforts to exploit export potential are already on. Amul is exporting to Bangladesh, Sri Lanka, Nigeria, and the Middle East. Following the new treaty, opportunities will increase tremendously for the export of agricultural products in general and dairy products in particular. Rise in purchasing power of Indian people. THREATS: Milk vendors, the un-organized sector: Today chocolate vendors are occupying the pride of place in the industry. Organized dissemination of information about the harm that they are doing to producers and consumers should see a steady decline in their importance. New companies’ entering in Indian market like Fantasia fine poses lot problems for amul
Strong competition from international players.