Business Standard

Jyothy Labs steps up its ayurveda play

The company looks to expand its cache of personal care products and cash in on the growing consumer preference for herbal-naturals

- T E NARASIMHAN

With Margo and Neem, two brands acquired from Henkel a few years back, Jyothi Laboratori­es (JLL) is connecting the dots between herbal-natural and ayurvedic in its portfolio of personal care products. With an expanded range under the ayurvedich­erbal tag, the company is hoping it can ride the wave unleashed by Patanjali in the Indian market and increase the points of engagement with consumers. However the challenge for a company that is best known for a fabric whitener brand, Ujala, will be to convince consumers about its claims and fight the financial clout of big Indian and multinatio­nal players that have upped their stakes in the herbal game.

JLL is drawn to the thriving market around ayurveda, especially in hair care, cosmetics and oral care. According to a Nielsen report (June 2017) the natural segment contribute­d 41 per cent to total sales in the personal care category and products made of natural, herbal and ayurvedic ingredient­s are a ~185 billion market. JLL wants a 10 per cent share of this market by 2021 and it is extending the Margo and Neem brands within their respective segments while developing a slew of new products under new labels.

Ayurvedic health products alone are forecast to cross $1 billion by 2021 in value as consumers are looking for ‘natural’ or ‘organic’ ingredient­s when choosing their hair and skin products. As lucrative as the market seems to be, experts say JLL has a fight on its hands. For one, ayurveda has not been a part of its brand identity (Margo and Neem are acquisitio­ns). And secondly the market is being rapidly carved out between large FMCG players Hindustan Unilever Ltd (HUL), ColgatePal­molive, Emami, Himalaya, Dabur, Patanjali and a slew of local brands.

“I don't find any difficulty. We are not getting into the healthcare base of ayurveda. We have the talent and marketing, so it is not at all a problem. A lot of work is going on in the lab about ingredient­s . Our propaganda or communicat­ion will be based on that. It will be true and fair,” said M P Ramachandr­an, chairman and managing director of JLL.

A bigger basket of products JLL has a portfolio of six power brands: Ujala (fabric whitener), Exo (dish bar), Maxo (household insecticid­es), Henko (fabric detergent), Margo (soaps) and Pril (dish wash). The six contribute­d 87 per cent to total revenue in FY17. Ujala is the flagship brand and has about 77 per cent share in the niche fabric whitener segment.

The company says that while it has steadily increased its market share with the power brands, there is enough room to grow considerin­g the large category that it operates in and the relatively lower share of JLL brands. This is especially true for the two brands Margo and Neem. Margo has a market share of around 1.1 per cent in the soap category, which is estimated to be around ~150 billion.

Ramachandr­an says that Margo and Neem are seen as homegrown brands made with local ingredient­s and are best placed to drive the company’s expansion plans. He expects the ayurvedic range of products to contribute about 10 per cent of total revenues by 2021. Ayurveda will raise JLL’s revenues from personal care to around ~4-5 billion by 2020-21 from around ~1.8 billion now, he said.

It will not be an easy transition however, warn brand experts. Pure ayurveda players have the first advantage here and then come the multinatio­nals that are investing heavily in building the market; for companies such as JLL, it is critical to convince consumers about the authentici­ty of their claims. “There is a difference in the language of a pure ayurveda player and that of partial operators,” said Harish Bijoor, CEO Harish Bijoor Consults. He adds that ayurveda is not a brand play, it is a product play and JLL does not have the legacy that other players have on this score. “Unless they have an intelligen­t strategy and can build niche products, it will be very difficult,” he said.

Setting the right tone Advertisin­g and communicat­ion play a big role in the space. Customers are more likely to trust establishe­d players or popular celebrity influencer­s rather than go by the company’s past record in other product categories. What this means is that JLL’s success with Ujala is unlikely to rub off on its ayurvedic range.

Ramachandr­an is not worried. He says that the new range will be largely aimed at the beauty segment. JLL will roll out body, face and hair care products by 2020. “We are doing a lot of R&D and it may take at least one year to bring out these products. Jyothy's products are differenti­ated. We will not talk what others are talking. We will not give what others are giving,” said Ramachandr­an.

JLL will also adopt a different advertisin­g strategy for its new range. Ramachandr­an says that the brand communicat­ion will be distinct from that applied to the rest of the JLL portfolio. “We are not in healthcare and we are not getting into that. As far as the beauty or hair care is concerned, it is one of the biggest markets and people are catering to that more and more,” he added. While JLL is right about the opportunit­y in the segment, it would be important for the company to assess the clutter in the market to create a truly differenti­ated offering say experts.

 ??  ?? Neem ( Top left) in oral care and Margo ( Bottom left) in beauty and personal care will play a big role in the company’s expanded portfolio while fabric whitener Ujala ( Right) is currently its flagship brand. The company spends more on advertisin­g its...
Neem ( Top left) in oral care and Margo ( Bottom left) in beauty and personal care will play a big role in the company’s expanded portfolio while fabric whitener Ujala ( Right) is currently its flagship brand. The company spends more on advertisin­g its...

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