Business Standard

Reliance Retail may reduce back-end staff

- VIVEAT SUSAN PINTO

Reliance Retail may rationalis­e the workforce that will be added after the acquisitio­n of the Future group’s retail, logistics, warehousin­g, and wholesale assets in a nearly ~25,000-crore transactio­n.

This will be at the backend, said persons in the know, including those in managerial positions, which constitute­s around 20 per cent of Future's 60,000 total workforce. About 80 per cent of Future's workforce consists of store staff, said sources, who are likely to be retained, as close to 1,800 retail stores from the Future network will be part of Reliance Retail.

According to experts, Reliance is expected to carefully examine all areas of synergy once the deal is completed, to ensure that it is value-accretive. Doing away with duplicate roles and harnessing strengths will be part of the exercise.

Executives at Reliance Retail were not immediatel­y available for comment.

But Arvind Singhal, chairman,

Technopak, said that a retail business was people-intensive and therefore the requiremen­t of staff at the front end would be high. “Whatever attrition will happen following the acquisitio­n will be at the corporate level,” he said.

Reliance will control a third of the organised retail market in India, following the transactio­n, with access to multiple retail formats, including Big Bazaar, FBB, Easyday, Central, and Foodhall, spread in over 400 cities. Reliance Retail’s store count will expand to over 13,500, consolidat­ing its position as a retail giant, sector analysts said.

Reliance has also launched its new commerce venture called Jiomart since May, which it has taken to 200 cities and will require people to drive its operations, persons in the know said.

At the same time, the company is expanding its neighbourh­ood store concept under its SMART point network for which people will be needed, again at the front-end.

In its FY20 annual report, Reliance Retail said that it was aiming to capture a sizeable share of the untapped consumptio­n potential in the country using physical stores, digital platforms and B2B channels. “Our large scale and rapid execution has been the major driver of robust growth in the retail market,” the company said.

The deal with Future is expected to take six to eight months to be completed, since there are mandatory approvals that have to be sought to clear the transactio­n. This includes nods from the SEBI, CCI, NCLT, shareholde­rs and creditors among others.

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