Business Standard

RWAS: The powerful link in supply chain

The pandemic has changed the way we shop and consume, resulting in new power centres, writes Arundhuti Dasgupta

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Freshly out of engineerin­g college, Aashruti Shah, 21, was set to join the prodigious tech industry when Covid-19 struck. Forced to stay indoors, she began helping at her mother’s small, and now struggling, catering service for homemade snacks in Powai, a densely populated suburb in Mumbai. “My father (Dhaval Shah) and I began looking at ways to get vegetables and fruits in bulk, and through a friend, we managed to get in touch with a group of farmers willing to supply if there were enough orders.”

Out of their necessity was born Farm Fresh, a farm-to-table e-grocery that services 1,000-1,500 families in the neighbourh­ood and runs via Whatsapp and Google Forms. The Shahs were able to bypass the stronghold of local stores, handcarts and big e-commerce operators because they were quick to align their forces with the new, emerging power centre in the supply chain: resident welfare associatio­ns (RWAS) and cooperativ­e housing societies (CHSS).

“RWA is the big influencer in the new brandcusto­mer journey,” says Shashank Shwet, partner–customer Experience and Design Thinking, EY India. Shwet recently released a report on the new shopping habits and kirana (local grocers) stores as part of an EY series called “Humans in a Pandemic”. The report identified housing society committees as the emerging stakeholde­rs in the supply chain. “They come with large buying power and a large amount of control over who can access society retail spaces.”

Companies are quickly falling in line with the new jurisdicti­on. Large brands such as Mondelez India (Cadbury, Oreo), Amul and retail giant Dmart, among others, have stepped in to engage with residentia­l communitie­s as aggregated blocks of consumer demand, plying branded trucks directly to customers with a promise of contactles­s delivery and sanitised packaging. The EY report found that many companies are also tying up with community-centric apps to bring down the cost of delivery and exploring long-term relationsh­ips with resident groups.

Such relationsh­ips are being forged by newage brands too. One such is Zama Organics which, its co- CEO Pratik Choksi says, has seen B2C (business-to-consumer) clients double during the lockdown. His company supplies organicall­y grown fruits, vegetables and grains. As anxiety over what we eat has grown and is discussed more freely among neighbours, Zama has found its way into several housing society groups as a trusted alternativ­e.

Many companies are quickly adapting to the needs of the community and the RWAS. For instance, fresh meat delivery brand Licious has changed its delivery model to suit residents who are now mostly at home. The brand is constantly engaging with residentia­l associatio­ns over safety protocols. Licious has seen daily deliveries go up by around three times, with a 30 per cent increase in average order value from customers.

Meghna Apparao, its chief business officer, says that over the last quarter Licious registered a 300 per cent surge in demand. “We have recently initiated a pilot of having Licious chillers in large apartment complexes,” she adds.

However, whether these new networks will last once this exceptiona­l time is over is anybody’s guess. Rachit Mathur, MD and partner at BCG India who leads the consumer and retail practice, says RWAled interventi­on is more of a short-term opportunit­y. “Will it last and in what form, we will need to watch,” he says. Mathur instead sees kiranas as a critical asset for all consumer goods companies. “Their importance will continue to be high.”

It helps that kirana owners are usually old hands in the business with deep ties with the local community. Virji Shah, who runs a tiny store in the slumberous neighbourh­ood of Chembur in Mumbai and who had lost many clients to the supermarke­ts in the area, says he has never been busier. In many areas, kirana owners like him are working with local residents’ associatio­ns to ensure safe pickup and regular supplies, while holding their power over the community as a bargaining chip with big brands.

As new networks of influence emerge, the wheels of the supply chain are clearly beginning to spin to a new rhythm.

 ?? PHOTO: REUTERS ??
PHOTO: REUTERS

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