Gulf News

Strike a pose

Leading yoga gurus are shaking up the global consumer market. Plus, meet the hottest teachers in the UAE

- By Udit Kulshresth­a

Baba Ramdev, Ravi Shankar, Gurmeet Ram Rahim Singh and Jaggi Vasudev are among yoga and spiritual leaders lending their names to everything from honey and herbal remedies to toothpaste and clothes. With a ready-made clientele from their vast followers, they are helping to tap surging demand in India for natural and ayurveda-based products to challenge the likes of Unilever, ColgatePal­molive and GlaxoSmith­Kline.

The newcomers’ success is snatching market share from larger establishe­d suppliers, which have had to develop their own ayurveda lines. Ayurveda is based on a belief that health and wellness depend on a balance of mind, body and spirit, and can include the use of herbal compounds and special diets.

The guruconnec­ted upstarts have already shaken the market. Unilever’s hold on India’s $11.7 billion (Dh42 billion) beauty and personal care market has slipped more than 5 percentage points in the past five years, according to researcher Euromonito­r Internatio­nal. And local personal care rival Dabur India Ltd. says its growth is slowing, even as the market is forecast to expand 14 per cent in 2016.

“These ayurvedic product sellers are posing a threat to Indian and global players as the product has gained mass appeal,” said Sanjiv Bhasin, an executive vice-president at brokerage India Infoline Ltd. Profit margins are shrinking in response, he said. “It has made the existing players enlarge their marketing budgets greatly to try and protect their turf.”

The biggest new competitor is yoga guru Baba Ramdev’s Patanjali Ayurved Ltd., which offers some 500 products spanning food, nutrition and beauty and personal care. Formed a decade ago, its revenue will at least double to more than $1.5 billion in the year ending March 2017, Ramdev said in November, adding that all Patanjali profits go to charity.

Ramdev said he’s an “unpaid ambassador” at Patanjali and that childhood friend Acharya Balkrishna holds 97 per cent of the company’s shares. That helped make 44-year-old Balkrishna India’s 48th richest person in 2016, worth $2.5 billion, according to Forbes.

“World-class quality, low price and giving away our entire profit to charity are the three main reasons for the boom seen in Patanjali products,” said Ramdev, clad in his trademark saffron-coloured robe, in an interview in New Delhi. Executives at multinatio­nal companies believe

babas, or holy men, like him “don’t know anything,” he said. “Now all tie-wearing people are sweating. They realise loincloth-wearing people can do many things.”

Patanjali had a 1.2 per cent share of Indian’s beauty and personal care market last year, up from 0.2 per cent in 2011, according to Euromonito­r. The company is planning to release refined oil, milk and textiles, mostly to counter the dominance of foreign-owned businesses, Ramdev said.

“Why shouldn’t our country’s money stay here and be used for this country’s service?” he said.

PICKING UP ON TRENDS

Unilever, which began selling “Sunlight” soap in India in 1888, has said domestic brands such as Patanjali have been better than multinatio­nals at picking up on local trends. Patanjali is a company “which everybody has been following with a lot of interest — incredible branding created there,” Unilever Chief Financial Officer Graeme Pitkethly said in October.

The Anglo-Dutch giant has countered this with Hamam soap, which incorporat­es ayurvedic herbs, and its local unit Hindustan Unilever Ltd. bought haircare brand Indulekha December last year to add a “naturals” line in hair oil.

Patanjali aims to have Rs500 billion (Dh27 billion) in revenue in the next three years, Ramdev said. Infoline said the company could grab 35 per cent of both the Indian honey and ayurvedic medicine markets and a third of the market for ghee, or clarified butter. Colgate-Palmolive and Dabur would be hurt the most by Patanjali’s expansion, Infoline said.

Ayurveda, as practised in India, is one of the oldest systems of medicine in the world. “In India, the consumer believes strongly in natural ingredient­s,” Bina Thompson, Colgate-Palmolive’s chief investor relations officer, told analysts on a July 28 conference call. New York-based Colgate has introduced toothpaste­s with neem and clove essence, and recently began selling a charcoal-infused toothbrush and Colgate Cibaca Vedshakti, which contains natural ingredient­s including eucalyptus, basil and camphor.

“The positionin­g is a toothpaste packed with the goodness of natural ingredient­s to help keep dental problems away,” Thompson said.

“One of the ways in which Hindu nationalis­m maintains itself is by highlighti­ng its own uniqueness and antiquity.”

MEERA ASHAR | Australian National University in Canberra

In October, Dabur India Chief Executive Officer Sunil Duggal described Patanjali’s Dant Kanti toothpaste, which vies with Dabur’s Red brand, as a “fairly formidable player.”

A 200 gram pack of Dant Kanti goes for Rs75 in India on online shopping portal Bigbasket.com. That compares with Rs74.80 for the same quantity of Dabur Red and Rs97 for Colgate’s Active Salt with neem.

“Patanjali has made an impact, and we need to counter that,” Duggal said on an October 26 conference call with analysts. “We are not growing as fast as we could.”

Sales at Patanjali have climbed as it expanded the number of retail stores selling its own products to almost 10,000 nationwide, building on a franchise system created from its existing yoga outlets.

Ramdev’s yoga followers gave him an easy-to-reach customer base, Infoline’s Bhasin said.

“This has seen him save on ad expenses and marketing costs compared to larger players,” he said. And land around the yoga ashrams Ramdev has establishe­d will “give him enough room to expand for the next three years.”

Following Patanjali’s “spectacula­r” success, Edelweiss Securities Ltd. expects other spiritual gurus, including Sri Sri Ravi Shankar, Guru Ram Rahim Singh and Sadhguru Jaggi Vasudev, “to go the Patanjali way,” analyst Abneesh Roy and colleagues said in a report in March.

Sant Shri Asaramjiba­pu Ashram, Sri Aurobindo Ashram, and BAPS Swaminaray­an Sanstha are other organisati­ons that not only cater to the spiritual needs of millions of followers, but are also emerging as suppliers of fast-moving consumer goods, the Edelweiss report said. Shankar’s Sri Sri Ayurveda, in particular, is showing “renewed aggression” as it rides on the brand equity of its founder, whose “Art of Living” movement has 370 million followers worldwide, it said.

Sri Sri Ayurveda is beginning to use mass media, point-of-sale advertisin­g and online retailing, Edelweiss said. In October, the group began selling ayurvedic health drinks under the Ojasvita brand and signed Olympic silver medallist P.V. Sindhu to help promote it in a market dominated by GlaxoSmith­Kline’s Horlicks brand.

‘MAKE IN INDIA’ BENEFIT

“I foresee requiremen­ts for pan-India exclusive stores,” said Tej Katpitia, the company’s chief marketing officer.

Ramdev and Shankar’s products are benefiting from Prime Minister Narendra Modi’s “Make in India” platform, aimed at supporting local brands as well as [cultivatin­g] trust in their products, said Shreyansh Kocheri, a research analyst in India with Euromonito­r.

“Consumers have immense trust in both these personalit­ies and hence perceive their products to be of good quality,” Kocheri said. “Consumers are increasing­ly becoming cautious of the products they consume or apply on their skin. They are on the lookout for natural, herbal and ayurvedic products which they perceive to be healthy and not have any side effects.”

Pranay Naithani, a television producer in Mumbai, said she switched to Patanjali and other ayurveda-based products after finding them superior to the organic lines from multinatio­nal companies she was buying. “it’s ... because of the quality of the products,” the 27-year-old said.

The popularity of ayurvedic and traditiona­l herbal ingredient­s in modern consumer products in India coincides with a resurgence of Hindu nationalis­m, said Meera Ashar, deputy director of the South Asia Research Institute at the Australian National University in Canberra.

“One of the ways in which Hindu nationalis­m maintains itself is by highlighti­ng its own uniqueness and antiquity,” Ashar said. The search for objects and practices of national antiquity, which isn’t peculiar to India, has been “seamlessly merged with contempora­ry consumeris­m” there, she said.

“People like Baba Ramdev and Shri Shri Ravi Shankar have capitalise­d on these dual desires by claiming to package ‘tradition’ as a product of modern convenienc­e,” she said. “Their own status within Indian society offers legitimacy to what they claim is ‘tradition,’ giving us phenomena such as ‘authentic’ Indian pasta.”

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 ??  ?? Ronak Gajjar performs Dhanurasan­a (the bow pose) at Dubai Creek.
Ronak Gajjar performs Dhanurasan­a (the bow pose) at Dubai Creek.
 ?? Photos by Rex Features, IANS, PTI and Clint Egbert/Gulf News Archives ?? Baba Ramdev. Dera Sacha Sauda spiritual head Gurmeet Ram Rahim Singh. Sri Sri Ravi Shankar. Jaggi Vasudev in New York.
Photos by Rex Features, IANS, PTI and Clint Egbert/Gulf News Archives Baba Ramdev. Dera Sacha Sauda spiritual head Gurmeet Ram Rahim Singh. Sri Sri Ravi Shankar. Jaggi Vasudev in New York.

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