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PREFACE

Marketing should not be looked upon in a vacuum or in isolation. It is an essence taking a view of the whole business organization and its ultimate objective concern for marketing must penetrate all areas of the enterprise. Market survey in todays competitive world is a must for every organization. This project is a study of market potential of TAJMAHAL . The

rational behind this particular study is to find out the present market scenario of various brands & to find out the corporate need and perception. It was a pleasurable experience to conduct a research on behalf of TAJMAHAL pertaining to the study of the Tea Sector. Conclusion and there by recommendation has been arrived at by proper and justified interpretation of the result derived from the above said analytical tools and techniques.

ACKNOWLEDGEMENT

Preparing a project of this nature is an arduous task and I was fortunate enough to get support from a large number o persons. I wish to express my deep sense of gratitude to all those who generously helped in successful completion of this report by sharing their invaluable time and knowledge. It is my proud and previledge to express my deep regards to Respected , Head of Department Dr.Pramesh Gautam, Miss. Ritu Khatri Department of Business Management , Swami Vivekanand Institute of Technology, College Sagar for allowing me to undertake this project. I feel extremely exhilarated to have completed this project under the able and inspiring guidance of Miss. Ritu Khatri He rendered me all possible help me guidance while reviewing the manuscript in finalising the report. I also extend my deep regards to my teachers , family members , friends and all those whose encouragement has infused courage in me to complete to work successfully.

(ASHISH KUMAR SINGH) B.B.A I Sem

DELCLARATION BY THE CANDIDATE

I declare that the project report titled " Market Strategies of Titan Watches " on Market Segmentation is nay own work conducted under the supervision of Miss.Ritu Khatri Department of Business Management , Swami Vivekanand Institute of Technology College, Sagar To the best of my knowledge the report does not contain any work , which has been submitted for the award of any degree , anywhere.
Date

(ASHISH KUMAR SINGH) B.B.A I Sem

CERTIFICATE

The project report titled

" Market Strategies of Titan Watches "

been prepared by Ashish Kumar Singh BBA I Semester , under the guidance and supervision of Miss.Ritu Khatri for the partial fulfillment of the Degree of B.B.A.

Signature of the Supervisor

Signature of the Head of the Department

Signature of the Examiner

CONTENTS
TOPIC TITLE 1. 2. 3. PAGE NO.

Preface Acknowledgement Declaration of the Candidate

4. 5. 6. 7. 8. 9.
10 11 12 13 14 15 16 17

Certificate Introduction of TAJMAHAL History of TAJMAHAL Scope of the Study Limitation of the Study Research Methodology Marketing Strategies Company Comparison Swot Analysis Data Analysis & Interpretation Limitation Conclusion Bibliography Questionaire

INTRODUCTION OF TAJMAHAL TEA


The Tajmahal Group is a multinational conglomerate company headquartered in Mumbai, India. In terms of market capitalization and revenues, Tajmahal Group is the largest private corporate group in India and has been recognized as one of the most respected companies in the world. It has interests in steel, automobiles, information technology, communication, power, tea and hospitality. The Tajmahal Group has operations in more than 85 countries across six continents and its companies export products and services to 80 nations. The Tajmahal Group comprises 114 companies and subsidiaries in seven business sectors, 27 of which are publicly listed. 65.8% of the ownership of Tajmahal Group is held in charitable trusts. Tajmahal companies operate in seven business sectors: communications and information

technology, engineering, materials, services, energy, consumer products and chemicals. Every

Tajmahal company or enterprise operates independently. Each of these companies has its own board of directors and shareholders, to whom it is answerable. There are 28 publicly listed Tajmahal enterprises and they have a combined market capitalization of some $60 billion, and a shareholder base of 3.5 million. The major Tajmahal companies are Tajmahal Steel, Tajmahal Motors, Tajmahal Consultancy Services (TCS), Tajmahal Power, Tajmahal Chemicals, Tajmahal Tea, Indian Hotels and Tajmahal Communications.

About Tetley
Tetley, a fully-owned subsidiary of Tajmahal Tea Limited, is the world's second largest

manufacturer and distributor of tea. Owned by India's Tajmahal Group, Tetley's manufacturing and distribution business is spread across 40 countries and sells over 60 branded tea bags. It is the largest tea company in the United Kingdom and Canada and the second largest in the United States by volume. After Tetley was purchased by the Tajmahal Group in 2000, most of its business in Asia has been integrated with Tajmahal Tea and the company plans to completely integrate its worldwide business with Tajmahal Tea by 2006. The new merged group, Tajmahal Tea Group, is the second largest tea brand in the world after Unilever.

HISTORY OF TAJMAHAL
1980s
In the early 1980s, the tea industry in India was experiencing rising input and labor costs and dwindling margins as well as high taxes. India was facing competition on the world market not just from China, but also from other countries entering the business. In 1983, Tajmahal Tea bought the stake belonging to the James Finlay group to form the individual entity Tajmahal Tea. In the same year, the company decided to move from the commodities business to consumer branding. The first brand Tajmahal Tea was introduced. This

was followed by other brands like Kannan Devan, Agni, Gemini and Chakra Gold. In spite of being the largest market in the world, the concept of branded tea took time to be accepted. In 1987, Tajmahal Tea set up a fully owned subsidiary, Tajmahal Tea Inc., in the USA.

1990s
In the 1990s, Tajmahal Tea decided to take its brands into the global markets. It formed an export joint venture with Britain's Tetley Tea in 1992. Other new enterprises included a majority interest in Consolidated Coffee Ltd. (Tajmahal Coffee Ltd.) and a joint venture to manage agricultural estates in Sri Lanka. Tajmahal Tea Inc. in the United States processed and marketed instant tea from its facility in Florida, based on sourcing of instant tea products out of Munnar and Kerala. In 1993, they entered into a joint venture with Allied Lyons PLC in the UK to form Estate Tajmahal Tetley. In the mid-1990s, Tajmahal Tea attempted to buy Tetley and the Lankan JVC acquired 51% shareholding in Watawala Plantations Ltd. In 1997 the company was embroiled in a major scandal known as the "Tajmahal Front of Asom (ULFA), an armed-struggle group operating in Assam. By 1999, Tajmahal Teas brands had a combined market share of 25% in India. The company had 74 tea gardens and was producing 62 million kilograms of tea a year, two-thirds of it packaged and branded. Towards the end of the year, the tea business was hit by a drought in much of India. In addition, Russia, once the largest buyer of Indian tea, temporarily withdrew from the market. Changes in the Operational Structure of TAJMAHAL TEA as the tried to operate worldwide and entered into JV with the Britains Tetley and even started TAJMAHAL COFFEE Ltd. Moreover, had a JV to manage the agricultural estates in Sri Lanka. Tapes

controversy" which related to funds the company provided to the outlawed United Liberation

2000s

An important step for Tajmahal Tea was the acquisition of the Tetley Group (based in the United Kingdom) in 2000. It was a 271 million ($432 million) leveraged buyout. Tajmahal Tea reportedly outbid the American conglomerate Sara Lee in what was described as the largest takeover of a foreign company by an Indian one to date. At the time, Tetley was the world's second largest tea company after Unilever's Brooke Bond-Lipton and had an annual turnover of 300 million. It was the market leader in Britain and Canada and a popular brand in the United States, Australia and the Middle East.

The company Tajmahal went globalized when the two companies Tajmahal and Tetley got merged. Tajmahal acquired Tetley in February 2000 and the company thus become Tajmahal Tetley Limited

Comparison of Tajmahal Tea & Tetley


(3/31/00) (3/31/01)
Turn Over Operating Profit Employees Tea Estates Key Markets

Tajmahal Tea
$207 million $36.0 million 59,740 54 India

Tetley
$417 million $42.6 million 1,100 0 Britain, Canada, Australia, United States

Tajmahal s Acquisition of Tetley


Rationale for the Tetley Acquisition
No 2 Global Player in tea, Stretching

TAJMAHAL TEA: Developing Market

across entire value chain

TETLEY: Developed Markets CHANGE: Tajmahal had the all the plantations and the good tea crops and it had customers all over India but with the joining of hands of Tetley it brought with the technical expertise and significant experience making tea bags, the preferred method for making tea in the West
Purchasing: Tetley bought about 8,000,000 kgs of Indian teas annually from fragmented

sources. It was envisaged that Tajmahal Tetleys equirements of Indian teas

Tea could help in sourcing or supplying

Brands: Markets where one or the other company had worked singly could be developed

jointly, leveraging the internationally known Tetley brand name. Tajmahal Tea could help launch the Tetley brand in India, the Middle East, and Russia, traditional bastions of Tajmahal Tea.

Technology: Tetley would give Tajmahal Tea access to specialty products such as:

flavored teas, herbal teas, organic teas, and decaffeinated teas. These introductions could be useful additions at the top end of the Indian market.
Cost synergies: Both companies could jointly relocate manufacturing of teas, both

packets and bags, and utilize a global supply chain approach and common platforms fo the infotech, MIS, and finance functions. While the geographic spread of operations was information technology, could work together without physically moving across country boundaries.
Infotech: The acquisition was seen as an opportunity to improve the infotech

infrastructure of Tajmahal

Tea, improving connectivity to remote plantations and

adopting an enterprise resource planning (ERP) system to create a global supply chain based on Tetleys SAP-based ERP solution. The merger was also important for Tajmahal Tea, because its main competitor in India,

Hindustan Levers Limited (HLL), a Unilever subsidiary, was gaining market share and also because overall growth of the tea market in India had slowed. Tajmahal Tea acquired the Tetley Group for 271 million. Tajmahal Tea used a leveraged buyout structure to acquire Tetley, with the hopes that the cash flows from Tetley would repay the leverage over time.

Major Change occurred- Globalization


Type of Change- Transformational change, as with globalization there with more employees from different countries which ultimately lead to change in cross- culture management and due to which there was a resultant change in the system and structure of the organization. Organizations have entered a new era characterized by rapid, dramatic and turbulent changes. The accelerated pace of change has transformed how work is performed by employees in diverse organizations. Change has truly become an inherent and integral part of organizational life. Organizations operate in a global economy that is characterized by greater and more intense competition, and at the same time, greater economic interdependence and collaboration. More

products and services are being consumed outside of their country of origin than ever before as globalization brings about greater convergence in terms of consumer tastes and preferences. Yet at the same time, in the midst of greater convergence, there is the opposite force of divergence at work where companies have to adapt corporate and business strategies, marketing plans, and production efforts to local domestic markets. The combined Tajmahal Tea-Tetley business, with a combined market share of 4 per cent, ranks second in the global stakes, well behind Unilever, which has lorded it over the No 1 position for many years. Understanding that challengers have to work that much harder, Tajmahal Tea is now girding its muscles to narrow the gap with Unilever.

In terms of products Tajmahal Tea entered new geographies. It expanded its thinking to take in beyond the local market; the growth canvas became global, as did the priorities

Scope of the Study


The geographical scope of the study was restricted to Mumbai due to time and resource constraints. The study being exploratory in nature, the sample size was restricted to 80 consumers (mostly student group) and 20 retailers. Focus being

mainly on in-depth probing, the generalizations drawn are only indicative and not conclusive.

Limitations of the Study


Response biasness could be one of the limitations. The sample chosen may not be the true representative of the whole population. As the research was exploratory in nature, it was not possible to study the accurate phenomenon of the fact.

RESEARH Methodology:
In order to address the above questions an exploratory study was conducted. The idea was to probe and get deeper insight into sales promotion scenario of Lux and to tap perceptions of retailers and consumers. In order to address above mentioned objectives (i) Study of secondary sources was carried out, (ii) Responses of retailers were taken using structured questionnaire and

(iii) Structured questionnaire was designed to seek consumer responses.

Convenience sampling was used for both retailers as well as consumer studies. Twenty retailers ranging from small kirana store to big provision stores were approached. All the retailers were located in South Mumbai Area. The respondents for consumer study were mostly students and consumers found as per convenience in the market. The total respondents were 80 in number. Data analysis is done using software package like MSEXCEL.
Abstract:

The origins of personal cleanliness date back to prehistoric times. Since water is essential for life, the earliest people lived near water and knew something about its cleansing properties - at least that it rinsed mud off their hands. A soap-like material found in clay cylinders during the excavation of ancient Babylon is evidence that soap making was known as early as 2800 B.C. Inscriptions on the cylinders say that fats were boiled with ashes, which is a method of making soap, but do not refer to the purpose of the "soap." Such materials were later used as hair styling aids. Soap got its name, according to an ancient Roman legend, from Mount Sapo, where animals were sacrificed. Rain washed a mixture of melted animal fat, or tallow, and wood ashes down into the clay soil along the Tiber River. Women found that this clay mixture made their wash cleaner with much less effort.

Some of the early instances of commercial manufacturing of soap are:

In Britain references began to appear in the literature from about 1000AD, and in 1192 the monk Richard of Devizes referred to the number of soap makers in Bristol and the unpleasant smells which their activities produced A century later soap making was reported in Coventry. Other early centers of production included York and Hull. In London a 15th century "sopehouse" was reported in Bishopsgate, with other sites at Cheapside, where there existed Soper's Lane (later renamed Queen Street), and by the Thames at Blackfriars Andrew pears. In 1789, he commenced production of a transparent soap at a factory in Wells Street, off Oxford Street and became hugely successful.

MARKET STRATEGIES
Strategic measures and acquisitions have led the growth over years3500 3040 3000 3151 2968

2500

2000

Turnover EBITDA PBT 1097

1500

1000 692 500 111 0 1983 1989 1993 1996 1999 2000 2003 2006 32 26 496 222 40 25 135105 140115 314265 281 141 434 179 590 411

Strategic Benefits for Tajmahal Tea


Change in business mix
Tajmahal Teas business mix to include significant sales from high growth new

age drinks a more balanced portfolio of brands from different beverage segments Reduced impact of cyclicity of tea and coffee businesses Stronger brand presence Global focus on beverage brands Opportunity to achieve greater globalisation Taking the Glaceau brands to new geographies within developed markets outside the US

Developing opportunities in emerging markets (including India) with new or adjusted formats

Operational Synergies

Pooling of global talent within Tajmahal Teas beverage businesses to develop and execute an integrated business plan

Cross-utilisation of distribution channels for tea, coffee and enhanced water sales Coordination of a US beverage growth agenda for Tetley, Good Earth and Eight

OClock Coffee and Glaceau

New Product Development: integrated NPD and applications across Tajmahal 's beverage businesses

Financial Synergies/Benefits

Tax shield on interest paid on debt to finance the acquisition Avoidance of double taxation of any dividends or capital gains repatriated from the US Savings in distribution and marketing costs in the US Tajmahal Tea GB will be able to consolidate the earnings of Glaceau to the extent of its 30% ownership

COMPANY COMPARISON
Tea industry is highly fragmented with a large number of small companies. The branded tea market in India is dominated by two major players Hindustan Unilever Ltd (HUL) and Tata Tea with a combined market share of more than 50%. Other players include Duncans Tea, Goodricke and some well-known regional players like Jivaraj and WaghBakri

MAJOR TEA PLAYERS

TATA TEA

HUL

DUNCANS GROUP

GOODRICKE GROUP

OTHERS

Tata Tea Agni Tata Tetley Chakra Gold

Red Label TajMahal Taaza Lipton Green Label

Sargam Double Diamond Shakti

Goodricke Zabardast Castleton Caddy

WaghBakri Tez Jay Shree Tea

SWOT ANALYSIS OF TAJMAHAL TEA


Strength: Demand for tea has been growing at some 2% per annum Technical & Manpower Skill: Due to a huge population base in India Technical & Manpower Skill is available in abundant

Good Research Support by tea growers has will help industry grow further Weaknesses: Labor intensive industry: The second generation labors are reluctant to join this industry hence it could pose a problem of skilled labor in the near future No Effective Cost Management system adopted by companies and other regulatory bodies Supply from more efficient players like Kenya, China, Sri Lanka Declining Export of India over the years Opportunities: Export Potential if India can increase its production capacity To make tea more acceptable and fashionable like coffee To come up with new flavors/formulation of the tea, tea houses etc. to popularize the concept of tea in India Large untapped rural market for branded tea companies like HUL and Tata Tea Threats: Global competition Low Cost in some countries like China, Sri Lanka and Kenya Import of Tea from other countries Cost escalation on account of increase in the cost of production

Comparing the current market position of Tata Tea and HUL


PARAMETERS TATA TEA HUL

Profitability SWOT Analysis

Positive but declining High threat from substitutes. Opportunities in functional drink market Less Profitable Strong Distribution network Resource and Capabilities

Profitable Already exist in functional drink market

Porter Analysis Value Chain Analysis

Profitable Strong Value Chain

Core Competency

Supply chain including the distribution network and marketing strategies Price Cash Cow

Selling USP BCG Matrix Analysis

Brand Name Cash cow moving towards dog

Comparing the HUL and Tata Tea on a BCG Matrix


TTL TT

Stars

???

HUL

Cows

Dogs

High Market Share

Low Market Share

Tata Tea is moving from Stars to Cash cows with reducing growth while HUL is enj

DATA ANALYSIS & INTERPRETATION


(1)Sales Promotion Schemes Offered On Tajmahal Tea

S a le s P r o m o tio n 4 0 3 5 3 0 2 5 P E R C E N T A2 0 G E 1 5 1 0 5 0

sc h e m e s

The

P r i c e o f f P r o d u c tC a s h C r o ss P r iz e s B u n d l i n gR e f u n d P r o m o tio n S C H E M E S

primary analysis found that Price off is the best sales promotion schemes offered on Tajmahal (40% of the retailers agreed on this). Product Bundling was the next best with 30% of the retailers in favour of the same.

(2)NORMAL DURATION OF SALES PROMOTION SCHEMES

60 50 40 30 20 10 0

60%

Duration

25% 15%

15 Days 1 Month

1 Month 3 Month

More than - 3 months

Theprimary analysis found that 1 month 3 month is the normal accepted duration of sales promotion schemes (60% of the retailers agreed on this). More than 3 months was the next best with 25% of the retailers in favour of the same
(3)HOW OFTEN SALES PROMOTION SCHEMES ARE OFFERED ON TAJMAHAL

F req u en cy o f S ch em es O f f er ed

6 m o n- t 1h sy e a r 3 -6 M o n t h s L ess t h a n 3 m o n t h s

5% 2 0% 75 %

The primary analysis found that Less than 3 months is the general perceived frequency for sales promotion schemes offered on Tajmahal Tea (75% of the retailers agreed on this). 3 months 6 months was the next best with 20% of the retailers in favour of the same.

(4)AFFECT ON SALES OF TAJMAHAL TEA TO SALES PROMOTION SCHEMES

A ffe c t o n S a le s
1 0 0 8 0 6 0 4 0 2 0 0 7 5 % S a le s

1 5

% 1 0 % E ffe c t

In c re a s e C a n t s aNy o in S a le s

M o d e o f c o m m u n i c a ti o n fo r p r o m o ti o n s c h e m e s 80 70 60 4 5 % 50 40 25 % 30 20 % 1 0 % (5)COMMUNICATION OF SALES PROMOTION SCHEMES 20 10 0 T h ro u g Sh a l e s T h r o u gT hh r o u g hT h r o u g h R e p re s e n tw a thi vo el e s a lPe rr isn t E l e c t r o n i c M e d ia M e d ia

The primary analysis found that Wholesalers were the best medium of communication of sales promotion schemes (45% of the retailers agreed on that). Sales representatives was the next best with 25% of the retailers in favour of the same

LIMITATIONS
There were many problems in integrating the two companies and these are as follows:

1.

How to Integrate: The Tajmahal s decided that the best way to integrate was not to
integrate initially but to maintain a joint-venture type of arrangement. Furthermore, the integration process was not rushed in order to protect Tajmahal Tea from the risk of Tetleys debt. Tajmahal Tea did not want to change that structure until the debt level was manageable. The arms-length relationship required that Tajmahal Tajmahal management took new positions on the Tetley board of directors. Tea retain existing management at Tetley. Ken Pringle remained as the Tetley Group CEO, and

2.

Size Difference: Tajmahal Tea was half the size of Tetley in terms of revenues and
number of upper management. Tajmahal Tea feared a domination of Tetleys corporate culture.

3.

Financial Constraints: There were three financial constraints restricting integration.


The first constraint was that legal and capital controls in India made the listing of Tetley shares in India unattractive. The second constraint was that Tajmahal Tea did not want to carry the heavy debt burden held by the SPV, particularly as Tajmahal Tea was an AAArated Indian company. The third constraint was the restrictive covenants at Tetley as a consequence of the LBO, which meant that changes in Tetleys structure needed to be pre-approved by bankers.

4.

Regional Players: Soon after the merger, the highly fractionated regional tea makers
in India grew faster, putting pressure on Tajmahal Teas market share and profitability at home. Regional players gained 6 percent market share in 2001.

5.

Operational challenges: The merger posed a variety of operational questions, such


as: a. Growth issues: How could the combined corporate vision of Challenging for leadership in tea around the world be achieved? The merger required vertical integration between a tea production company and a global marketing company,

and the question was what growth targets needed to be defined for the individual companies? b. Supply chain: How should they set up processes to harness the synergies on tea sourcing and blending, purchasing, packing, logistics, and supply to allied functions to the mutual advantage of both companies? c. Support processes: How should they integrate various support processes covering Finance & Legal, IT, R&D, HR, and Communications so that the objectives of both companies were in sync? The back-office integration was complicated by the fact that Tetley reported in UK GAAP, while Tajmahal Tea adhered to Indian GAAP. d. Commercial processes: How should they put in place benchmarked processes, which would be adopted uniformly by the two organizations?

6.

Cultural/Racial: There was a great deal of concern that British employees would
resent having Indian managers. These concerns were largely the result of the fact that India was a former British colony. Anecdotally, Tetley employees were given substantial retention packages to avoid exodus, which may have created negative feelings among Tajmahal Tea employees.

7.

Corporate Philosophy: The two companies had different opinions on how the
business should be run. Tajmahal Tea was a collection of estates that just happened to sell package tea and focused on Asia (excluding China), Middle East, and Eastern Europe. Tetley was a marketing and packaging company that had relationships with tea estates and focused on North America, Australia, and Western Europe. Due to the significant differences in customer base, the two companies had dissimilar products. In Tajmahal Teas markets, tea was usually brewed in pots, so Tajmahal Tea was an expert in bulk and loose teas, while Tetley was an expert in tea bags and instant tea. This gave rise to three types of differences:

a. Objectives of the company: Tajmahal Tea was an integrated tea company, with

its dual emphasis on plantation as well as domestic marketing, whereas Tetley was primarily a global marketing company. Whose approach was correct?
b. Geographical spread: Tajmahal

Teas international presence was limited to

bulk tea sales, whereas Tetley was into brand marketing with sizable international presence. Which customers should the organization focus on?
c. Differences in skill-sets: Tajmahal Tea was a plantation company whose major

strengths were managing the estates, dealing with a huge work force, and making teas. There was a drive since the mid-80s to create domestic brands and export bulk teas. In contrast, Tetleys strength lay in its ability to buy quality teas worldwide, perfect its blending skills, bring about innovation in packaging, and combine good logistics with management skills. How were people to be crosstrained?

8.

Kenya vs. India: It was initially believed that huge synergies would be achieved
because Tetley could source teas substantially from Tajmahal Teas estates. Unfortunately, the majority of Tetleys teas were of a different flavor, quality, and cost from teas found in Tajmahal s estates. Therefore, the integration process had to focus more on new products than on substitution.

9.

Branding: Both companies had very strong brand names in their respective regions.
There was debate as to the surviving name of the new entity. The Tajmahal name was not strong in Western markets, while Tetley was relatively unknown in Tajmahal Teas markets. There were also talks about pensioning off the lovablebut old fashioned Teafolks in favor of promoting tea as a modern lifestyle choice.

10. Conglomerate: Tajmahal Tea was ultimately part of a huge conglomerate. The impact

of the conglomerate on the operations of a related foreign entity and the strength of Tajmahal Tea within the conglomerate was unknown to Tetley employees. The

Tajmahal organization required group companies to pay fees for the use of the Tajmahal name and adhere to standards of financial and social responsibility. The ramification of these standards on Tetley was still a mystery.
11. Auctions/Commodity

Price: The acquisition of Tetley by Tajmahal Tea came at a

time when the prices of raw materials for making Tea were increasing. There were also rumors in the market about Hindustan Lever Limited and Tajmahal Tea controlling the price of Tea.
12. Demand

for Tea: The general demand for tea in many of Tetleys core markets was

slowing or decreasing. This was partly because tea was viewed as a boring or sophisticated drink. Sodas, coffee, and juices were gaining significant ground. There were a number of questions about how to revitalize tea as a drink of choice.
13. Exchange

Rate: The rupee was strengthening relative to the pound, which caused the

acquisition of teas from India to be more expensive for Tetley and made the transfer of money back to the Tajmahal organization less remunerative.

CONCLUSION

The world retail packaged tea market is worth US$ 20.3 billion and the world ready-to-drink tea market is US$ 24.5 billion. Currently Tajmahal Tea Ltd and Tetley operate in countries accounting for 53% of the world packaged tea volume. Thus a significant canvass is yet to be tarred by its global brush. The complexion of mature markets such as the UK and Canada is changing. Consumer demand for traditional black tea products is declining, while sectors such as specialty, green, fruit and herbal infusions are growing rapidly. To take advantage of this trend, Tajmahal Tea has been building its business in these high value sectors during the past year by supporting key products, anticipating and responding to consumer needs with a range of new product developments, and making acquisitions. The fragmented nature of the global tea market makes it ripe for consolidation and many tea markets have strong, established brands whose presence makes organic growth slow and costly. In this environment, acquisition is, and will remain, a vital element of our Tajmahal Teas growth strategy.The Good Earth and Jemca brands have improved Tajmahal Teas US portfolio and made it the brand leader in the Czech market. Given the brand leadership role in its key markets and the current upturn in domestic demand in most countries,Tajmahal geographic expansion.The out-of-home is a big opportunity that the company is looking to address. Outofhome is becoming a significant feature of the tea market in India and elsewhere in the world.The company has made progress in this direction through Real Brew iced tea concentrate in the US and Comic vending machine, a real breakthrough. The acquisition of 8 OClock has transformed Tajmahal Coffee from being a regional plantation layer to a significant branded player globally.The company would be looking to build a coffee play by moving up the value chain and extending existing brands into new geographies.With the foray into the mineral water through Glaceau acquisition the company has signalled its intentions of looking at an integrated beverage company where it leverages cross synergies for both branding and distribution. Tea continues to invest in new product launches and explore

BIBLIOGRAPHY
Books Consulted

An experiential approach to organization development By: Donald R. Brown &Don Harvey

Links Visited
http://www.Tajmahal .com/media/releases/inside.aspx?artid=oJbaL9LmLPs= http://business.outlookindia.com/article.aspx?240792 http://m.digitaljournal.com/article/282149?doredir=0&noredir=1 http://www.Tajmahal tea.com/Tajmahal _tetley.htm http://www.tetley.com/Tetleycom/TetleyGroup/OurHistory/ http://www.Tajmahal tea.com/comp_profile.htm http://www.Tajmahal .co.in/media/interviews/inside.aspx?artid=L2LqQFHxsIA= http://www.Tajmahal .com/media/articles/inside.aspx?artid=Ho84/twpG+M= http://www.Tajmahal .com/media/interviews/inside.aspx?artid=Y1VmRENiA68= http://www.seeburger.com/fileadmin/com/pdf/SEEBURGER_Tetley_User_Story.pdf http://www.planmanconsulting.com/post-merger-culture-shock.html http://www.Tajmahal .com/company/Articles/inside.aspx?artid=tidRQ98HOBM= http://www.thehindubusinessline.com/2002/09/24/stories/2002092402880300.htm http://www.Tajmahal .com/company/Media/inside.aspx?artid=vRxAuj/Xs94=

http://www.allbusiness.com/manufacturing/food-manufacturing-food-coffee-tea/5262611.html http://www.india-today.com/itoday/20000313/business.html http://www.Tajmahal coffee.com/business_units/plantations/quality_control.htm


http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Tajmahal _Tea

http://www.geert-hofstede.com/ http://www.businessballs.com/changemanagement.htm http://humanresources.about.com/od/organizationalculture/a/culture_change.htm http://www.Tajmahal .com/aboutus/articles/inside.aspx?artid=vyj45RCRud4=

DEPARTMENT OF BUSINESS MANAGEMENT SWAMI VIVEKANAND INSTITUTE OF TECHNOLOGY , SAGAR QUESTIONAIRE


Researcher's Name : Mr.Pushpendra Sen Class : B.B.A. Ist Sem Gender : Address : Name of Person : ___________________ Age : _____________________________ Occupation : ________________________

Q.1Do you know about Tajmahal Tea ? a. Yes. Q.2. Have you used Tajmahal Tea ? a. Yes. b. No. b. No.

Q.3 How Often Sales Promotion Schemes are offered on Tajmahal Tea
a. 6 months 1 year Q 6. b., 3-6 months c. less than 3 months.

Rate the following factors you consider are important for building brand Image. a.Price Looks e. b. Quality Clarity c. Durability d.

Q 7.

What do you look for while purchasing Tajmahal Tea ? importance? a. c. Comparative Advantage Scheme/Discount/Free Gift b. d. Price Quality

Please rank in order of

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