Hindustan Times (Gurugram)

Xiaomi changes tactics to stay relevant to Indian users, moves beyond flash sales

- Sunny Sen ■ sunny.sen@hindustant­imes.com

NEW DELHI: Hugo Barra is playing the “Make in India” card. The former Google employee, who is currently the global head of Xiaomi, has often spoken about India’s growing importance for the Chinese handset maker. Manufactur­ing is one aspect.

“We have gone from zero to 75% local manufactur­ed in six months,” said Barra. To be sure, this is only local assembly. Barra claims that no other phonemaker has done this before.

Xiaomi imported equipment, all custom- made, to assemble phones in India. “It is also the most economical­ly viable approach to do business,” he said.

Xiaomi shot to fame in India (as it did in China), with its flash sale model, by putting a limited number of mobile phones for sale online. They would vanish in seconds. Now, more than half a dozen phonemaker­s do that. And Xiaomi is moving on. “We use the flash sales only when we are launching a model, when we know we have much less (supply) than the demand. Otherwise we practice an open sale, which is more sustainabl­e,” he said. It will also sell its phones offline.

According to IDC’s smartphone report which takes into account tier-I, II and III cities, Xiaomi ranks seventh in terms of sales in the country. 5.5 million Xiaomi phones were sold in India in 2015. Globally the company sold 70 million handsets.

Barra hopes that 50% of smartphone buying will happen online (it is 30% now), and is leaving no stone unturned to get every possible buyer. To start with, Xiaomi is also engaging offline partners to sell its phones. It has set up an R&D centre, has opened a 50,000 square-feet warehouse, 70 service outlets, and will open smaller warehouses all over the country.

It also started a special accidental and liquid warranty called Mi Protect, offering free home pickup and drop, and free servicing in the first year of buying a device. The phones also support up to 13 regional languages.

Barra has more to say, now on acquisitio­ns. “We will pick up some stake (that’s what we have done in China). We have looked at quite a few companies, and are in serious discussion­s with some,” he said. These are Indian companies that have mobile apps and offer services that people can use through a mobile app.

 ??  ?? Xiaomi global head Hugo Barra
Xiaomi global head Hugo Barra

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