Business Standard

Chai Point stirs the tea pot

Bengaluru-based start-up provides office-goers freshly brewed tea across platforms, writes Viveat Susan Pinto

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Bengaluru-based start-up provides office-goers freshly brewed tea. VIVEAT SUSAN PINTO writes

It was over many cups of tea eight years ago that 41-year-old Amuleek Singh Bijral and his Harvard Business School professor Tarun Khanna decided to start Chai Point, a company focused on delivering tea to white-collar profession­als.

In a largely unorganise­d chaior Indian tea market, estimated to be ~1.51 trillion in size, Bijral and Khanna were taking a huge bet. The organised beverage retail market in India has been skewed towards coffee chains.

For tea, its very ubiquity, according to experts, has been its bane. India is the world’s largest tea market, consuming 678,200 tonnes of packaged tea in 2017, according to a study by market research agency Mintel.

Cracking the market, said experts, was never going to be easy, given that virtually every restaurant, hotel, canteen and food stall in India serves tea. Also, organised tea play pushes up price for a cup of tea. Companies such as Chai Point argue there is an out-of-home market for organised tea, largely among working profession­als, seeking something better than the local cutting chai.

First mover advantage

Chai Point is the first organised tea retailer in the country. Its pilot store was launched in Bengaluru in April 2010; rival Chaayos came into existence two years later. From then to now, Chai Point has traversed much ground — launching 100 outlets in five cities, putting up nearly 2,000 fresh-milkbased vending machines across the country and delivering tea on call in a span of 30 minutes.

Competitor­s such as Chaayos and Chai Thela also have a footprint. Hindustan Unilever and Tata Global Beverages too have experiment­ed with the tea retail format in recent years.

Business model

A combinatio­n of stores, delivery and dispensers, says Bijral, who is CEO of Chai Point, have ensured it is India’s largest organised tea retailer today, selling nearly 0.3 million cups of tea daily. Last month, Chai Point concluded its third round of funding led by Mumbaibase­d Paragon Partners, raising close to $20 million (or ~1.31 billion), the highest for an organised tea retailer in India.

So far, Chai Point has raised close to $34 million (~2.23 billion) in three rounds, with existing investors — Eight Roads (Fidelity’s India PE arm), Saama Capital and DSG — participat­ing in the third round. “What Amuleek is building is a clever business model where on one hand there is a hardware, technology-enabled business, visible through the delivery app and vending machines. And on the other, he is building the Chai Point brand through stores,” says Deepak Shahdadpur­i, founder and MD, DSG Consumer Partners.

Siddharth Parekh, co-founder and senior partner, Paragon Partners, who has joined the Chai Point board after the third round of funding, says the investment was in line with its objective of helping high-calibre entreprene­urs.

Bijral wants to quintuple the number of cups of tea sold daily in three years.

In eight years, Chai Point’s topline is nearly ~1 billion and it hopes to double this number in two to three years. The last four years, in particular, says Bijral, has seen Chai Point grow at over 75 per cent per annum.

It hopes to break-even by the fourth quarter of the current financial year and sees formats such its boxC vending machines being future growth drivers. “The boxC machines alone can give us a growth rate of 75 per cent and above (per annum),” Bijral says.

Road Ahead

The plan is to add around 35-50 Chai Point stores per annum mostly in metro cities. This financial year, Chai Point will enter the Chennai market with its stores, Bijral said, making it its sixth city foray after Mumbai, Pune, Bengaluru, Hyderabad and DelhiNCR. Ahmedabad and Kolkata are on the radar.

Experts say the challenge for Chai Point will be to strike affordable real-estate deals in metro markets. “Even if they are located within office premises and business parks, the challenge will be no less because there are a lot of food and beverage brands vying for this space,” a retail industry executive said.

Brijal says store roll-outs will be done keeping in mind availabili­ty and affordabil­ity of locations.

 ??  ?? Chai Point co-founder and CEO Amuleek Singh Bijral
Chai Point co-founder and CEO Amuleek Singh Bijral

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