Hindustan Times (Jammu)

Can one brand Finnish them off?

- Sanjoy Narayan letters@hindustant­imes.com

In a recent post on Facebook, Valco, the fledgeling Finnish brand that makes noise-cancelling headphones, had a video of Bhikari Bal, the late bhajan singer from Odisha, singing an ode to Lord Jagannath, with the words, “Kaliaa Re Kaalia”. The text of the post (translated from the Finnish) says this: “The executives of a big multinatio­nal headphones company are drinking champagne somewhere in Tokyo or New York. When you buy Valco’s noise-cancelling headphones, we use that money to buy beer in Finland.”

The humour will elude you if you’re not familiar with the language and with the twisted sardonic jokes that make a Finn grin. The word Kaliaa (spelt Kalja in Finnish) is the colloquial term for beer.

Last year, when a batch of Valco’s headphones turned out have faulty memory chips, they released a video where a man opens up a headphone only to find a tiny dead fish inside. Instead of papering over the problem, it turned it into a joke. It’s another matter that every defective pair of headphones that the company sold was taken back and either replaced or repaired free of cost.

If these seem gimmicky things that the brand does, the absolutely serious thing about Valco is the quality of the headphones they make. And the manner in which they have tried to take on giant brands such as Sony, Bose, and Sennheiser. With a mere 10-12 employees, most of them working remotely from little towns in far-flung corners of Finland, Valco can kind of remind you of the feisty Gauls that take on the Romans in the Asterix comic books.

Valco’s flagship model is the VMK20, which at a retail price of €169 is almost half the price of anything of comparable quality from big brands. The company sells at a low price because it makes its headphones in China; it uses Facebook, Youtube, and other social media advertise. Headphones are directly marketed to customers, eliminatin­g commission­s to retail networks.

Valco’s founders include Henri Heikkinen, 38, and Jani Rajaniemi, 49. Says Heikkinen: Heikkinen is a computer science engineer, and extrovert responsibl­e for Valco’s quirkily humour-laced manuals, and marketing. Rajaniemi, a PhD in administra­tive sciences, is an introvert and antisocial hermit who lives in a remote cabin and is responsibl­e for purchasing, tax planning and contracts. Last year, revenues touched €2.4 million. In Finland and Germany, Valco is still a cult brand. But things could change. The company has launched in-ear noise-cancelling buds and a hardy blue-tooth speaker. According to Heikkinen, they could start distributi­ng the brand through bigger retail chains. The idea is to keep prices down and, ostensibly, take strategic sniper shots at the biggies. Just like the characters in that little indomitabl­e Gaulish village.

 ?? ?? Valco’s flagship noisecance­lling headphones, the VMK20, are almost half the price of anything comparable.
Valco’s flagship noisecance­lling headphones, the VMK20, are almost half the price of anything comparable.

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