Business Standard

Ready to roll

The entry of Adani Wilmar has intensifie­d competitio­n in the ready-to-cook category

- VINAY UMARJI

With the advancemen­t of technology in food processing and changing lifestyles, food choices and spending on food formats have changed quite a bit over the last decade or so. Part of the wider market for ready meals, the ready-to-cook (RTC) segment is now bursting at the seams with the addition of new brands and innovative products. As brands such as ITC, MTR Foods and Mccain experiment with unusual recipes, new entrants like Adani Wilmar are trying to put on your table everyday dishes that take quite a lot of preparatio­n time.

Let us look at the potential of the segment to understand why new brands an products are racing to it. The market for ready meals has grown from ~2,039 crore to ~2,741 crore between 2017 and 2019. The industry is pegged to grow at close to 12 per cent between 2019 and 2024.

Before we proceed, here’s a look at what the segment really represents. As per Euromonito­r Internatio­nal, ‘ready meals’ — that have had recipe “skills” added to them by the manufactur­er — are an aggregatio­n of shelf stable, frozen, dried, chilled ready meals, dinner mixes, frozen pizza, chilled pizza and prepared salads. “Ready meals are generally accepted to be complete meals that require few or no extra ingredient­s, however, in the case of canned/preserved ready meals, the term also encompasse­s meal ‘centres’; for dinner mixes, the term encompasse­s part meals. Some ready meals may require cooking; others may simply need reheating, prior to serving,” according to Euromonito­r.

Now back to the action in the market. Edible oil company Adani Wilmar recently threw its hat into the ring with a handful of ready-to-cook

khichdi variants. The move comes on the back of rising demand among urban consumers for meals that require minimal cooking, says Ajay Motwani, head-marketing, Adani Wilmar.

Branded as Fortune Khichdi, three variants of Gujarati, Bengali and Punjabi, can be prepared in 10 minutes. In the next three years, the company aims to garner a revenue of ~25 crore-~50 crore from the newly launched RTC products, with more variants are in the works. “The increase in the number of working women and their busy schedules is one of the main reasons for the growth of ready meals. Though local grocery shops remain the preferred channel for the purchase of ready-to-eat products, the presence of large retail chains and online channels is also contributi­ng to the increase in the demand for such products,” says Motwani. Among the early entrants, MTR Foods, with a portfolio comprising breakfast, lunch, dinner mixes and desserts to even beverages, is hoping to touch ~1,000 crore in revenue this year, having grown at 14 per cent compounded annual growth rate (CAGR) over the past five years. Sunay Bhasin, CMO of MTR Foods, attributes its steady growth to a range of factors including changing demographi­cs, rising population in emerging cities, as well as changes in consumer lifestyles

While most players acknowledg­e that the rise of ready meals is an urban phenomenon, they are actively expanding their footprint to tap the latent demand in smaller markets

and food habits.

“Increasing urbanisati­on, the emergence of nuclear families, the growing number of women in the workforce have all led to people being timestarve­d. This also means less time for preparing food at home. With double income families on the rise, the per capita spending capacity has also risen. So many consumers are shifting from traditiona­l foods to the idea of packaged food. With convenienc­e a key requiremen­t in food preparatio­n, the growth of the packaged foods industry is understand­able,” says Bhasin.

Despite stiff competitio­n from food technology apps like Swiggy and Zomato, Bhasin believes both the RTC industry and food tech companies have a lot of room to grow. “The RTC category gives instant gratificat­ion with a meal being ready in two-three minutes, whereas ordering meals from apps needs planning and time, with the minimum delivery time being 20 minutes that can go up to an hour. We firmly believe that both these have scope to grow,” he adds.

While most players acknowledg­e that the rise of ready meals is still largely an urban phenomenon, they are innovating and expanding their footprint to tap the latent demand in smaller markets. MTR plans to deepen its focus on Karnataka while expanding its footprint in South.

“We plan to deepen our distributi­on foothold with hyperlocal products. This year we will focus on our core categories of masalas, breakfast mixes, desserts and will launch locally relevant products. Geographic­ally we would be deep diving into the southern states, expanding our distributi­on and investing in hyper-local products in convenient easy-to-use formats,” Bhasin adds.

The medium of communicat­ion that MTR plans to leverage reflects its focus on hyperlocal markets — it will use traditiona­l media as well as vernacular digital medium besides short content formats like videos to reach out to the consumer.

 ??  ?? Large retail chains and online channels have contribute­d to the demand for ready meals: Motwani of Adani Wilmar
Large retail chains and online channels have contribute­d to the demand for ready meals: Motwani of Adani Wilmar
 ??  ?? We will focus on hyper-local products and reach out mainly though traditiona­l media: Bhasin of MTR
We will focus on hyper-local products and reach out mainly though traditiona­l media: Bhasin of MTR

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