يحاول ذهب - حر
INSIDE NESTLE INDIA'S BHARAT TRAVELS
October 10, 2023
|Mint Mumbai
Pujari Hotel, a small wayside dhaba on the highway connecting Sitapur to Lakhimpur, two cities in eastern Uttar Pradesh, has a menu that can surprise you— vegetable Maggi: ₹35; butter Maggi: ₹50; paneer Maggi: ₹55.
The hotel’s owner, Mayaram, once made a living selling daal-rice and kachori. A year back, he switched to selling Maggi, the instant noodle brand from Nestle India Ltd that quickly rose to become urban India’s favourite comfort food since it was introduced over four decades ago, in the 1980s.
Mayaram’s switch to serving travellers noodles was partly driven by a shortage of cooks who could make elaborate meals. Instant noodles only take a few minutes to prepare and for ideas, the 42-year-old occasionally logs on to YouTube to look for recipes.
Sales have been brisk, Mayaram said. He stocks about 10 cartons of Maggi Masala noodles every week. Each carton has 12 packets, 420 grams each.
But it was not just demand or the shortage of cooks that influenced Mayaram to switch to easy-to-cook food. A huge sales machinery from Nestle is at play in this rural belt dotted with sugarcane fields.
About 90 km from Pujari Hotel, is Balak Ram Purwa, a village of 250-odd residents in the Bahraich district of Uttar Pradesh. Here, on a hot August day, 47-year-old Shobha Verma, was busy manning Ma Gayatri Computers and Electronics. Once, this store operated as a repair store for broken fans and mobile phones. No longer. It is a grocery store that is covered in Nestle paraphernalia. There are neatly stacked rows of Kit-Kat and Munch chocolates. Nescafe coffee, Masala-e-Magic spices and Everyday milk powder sachets hung from strings.
This year, Nestle’s on-ground representative in the area, approached Verma to open a Nestle-fronted store. Verma, and her brother, then decided to convert the phone repair shop into a grocery store.
هذه القصة من طبعة October 10, 2023 من Mint Mumbai.
اشترك في Magzter GOLD للوصول إلى آلاف القصص المتميزة المنسقة، وأكثر من 9000 مجلة وصحيفة.
هل أنت مشترك بالفعل؟ تسجيل الدخول
المزيد من القصص من Mint Mumbai
Mint Mumbai
Defence signals
The US has approved the sale of Excalibur projectiles and Javelin missile systems to India in a deal valued at about $93 million, according to the US Defense Security Cooperation Agency.
1 min
November 21, 2025
Mint Mumbai
Small loans against property begin to sour for non-banks
Indian lenders are seeing the stress in their microfinance books gradually spread to their secured portfolios as overleveraged customers delay repayments. This comes less than a year after the Reserve Bank of India warned of a spillover.
3 mins
November 21, 2025
Mint Mumbai
LIFE OF VI: HOW INDIA AVERTED A TELCO DUOPOLY
The inside story of how the Centre created a limited legal reopening to prevent Vi's collapse
9 mins
November 21, 2025
Mint Mumbai
Kirin in talks to recast B9, has no plan to sell stake
Japan's Kirin Holdings, among the largest shareholder in B9 Beverages, that operates Bira, is holding joint discussions with stakeholders and creditors of the beer-maker to restructure the existing business including the management and business strategy as the company navigates a funding crunch and employee unrest.
2 mins
November 21, 2025
Mint Mumbai
Cracks are appearing in OpenAI’s dominant facade
THE 21ST-CENTURY tech landscape was built with a winner-takes-all mindset. It started with Microsoft’s Windows monopoly at the end of the 1990s. Since then Alphabet-owned Google has cornered search and Amazon has become the king of e-commerce. Meta, too, has blanketed much of the world with social media—though on November 18th, a judge in Washington, DC, spared it the ignominy of being declared a monopolist.
2 mins
November 21, 2025
Mint Mumbai
DATA RECAP: THE WEEK IN CHARTS
From widening trade gaps caused by US tariff headwinds and surging gold imports, to a rise in the urban unemployment rate in October, shifting consumption patterns in the economy
2 mins
November 21, 2025
Mint Mumbai
Automation hits tech jobs as GCCs dial back on hiring
Automation is beginning to reshape India's tech-hiring landscape, with global capability centres (GCCs) pulling back on routine recruitment-intensifying the slowdown already hitting large staffing firms dependent on information technology (IT) hiring.
2 mins
November 21, 2025
Mint Mumbai
Bluechips lift Street to a 13-month high
Eyes on Q3 earnings as Nifty crosses 26,200, FPIs turn positive
3 mins
November 21, 2025
Mint Mumbai
Delhi's toxic air: Do we have an adaptation plan?
The national capital has seen two citizen-led protests in November over worsening air quality in the region. Doctors have called the winter air pollution in Delhi a public health emergency, urging stringent measures. Mint explores the issue.
2 mins
November 21, 2025
Mint Mumbai
Automation hits tech jobs as GCCs too dial back on hiring
Quess ended last quarter with ₹3,832 crore in revenue, up 5% sequentially.
1 mins
November 21, 2025
Translate
Change font size

