Ga onbeperkt met Magzter GOLD

Ga onbeperkt met Magzter GOLD

Krijg onbeperkte toegang tot meer dan 9000 tijdschriften, kranten en Premium-verhalen voor slechts

$149.99
 
$74.99/Jaar

Poging GOUD - Vrij

WE NEED TO REACH OUT TO MILLENNIALS GLOBALLY

Business Today

|

February 21, 2021

Bata shoes are an integral part of almost every school-goer’s life in India. That is why most Indians believe that the brand — founded in what is now the Czech Republic in 1894 and headquartered in Lausanne, Switzerland — is local, despite operating in over 70 countries. The company, which does a ₹3,500 crore business in the country, recently appointed India CEO Sanjiv Kataria as its global head. Kataria, who had taken over as India head in 2017 and under whom Bata India’s profits rose 46 per cent, tells Ajita Shashidhar how India’s diverse footwear consumption habits have given him a unique understanding of customer needs across the globe. Edited excerpts:

- Ajita Shashidhar

WE NEED TO REACH OUT TO MILLENNIALS GLOBALLY

It will be interesting to know what the pandemic has taught you ...

The pandemic has been a great learning experience. The first is the huge effort of the team to ensure that our stores are open and our supply chain fully functional despite working remotely. The huge collaboration has flattened the organisation in many ways. The other part is ability to take innovations forward. The organisation has shown tremendous agility. We have launched store-on-wheels to get close to consumers, and WhatsApp calling, through which our people have been able to reach out to Bata Club members and meet their requirements at home, apart from new collections such as washable footwear. The pandemic has shown us organisation muscles we were not aware of. It will put the company in a great position to go forward.

What did you tell your team when operations came to a halt and business began to shrink?

When the pandemic first broke out, the most important thing was to ensure that everyone was safe, and more importantly, aware of what was going on in the organisation. That was a period of over-communication, having town-halls with our managers across the country every fortnight, every functional leader reaching out to their teams at least twice a week to make sure they knew what was happening and how we were moving ahead. We said there would be phases, and the first phase was survival. Then came revival. We started reaching out to consumers. Then there was the revitalise phase, when we said we can see footfalls, so how can we expand our reach, how can we get closer to consumers? We are in the revitalise phase, getting sharper, getting our act on products and channels right. Our ability to bring in learnings from several markets and use some of those in India helped us plan for the future.

MEER VERHALEN VAN Business Today

Business Today India

Business Today India

BREAKING THE SILICON CEILING

INDIA'S FIRST COMMERCIAL FAB IS FINALLY TAKING SHAPE, BUT BUILDING A RESILIENT SEMICONDUCTORS BASE WILL TAKE FAR MORE THAN JUST CAPITAL

time to read

10 mins

September 28, 2025

Business Today India

Business Today India

WAITING FOR THE IPO WINDFALL

LIGHTSPEED HAS QUIETLY EVOLVED ALONG WITH INDIA'S START-UP STORY, ARMED WITH A $2.3 BILLION PLAYBOOK. NOW, IT AWAITS THE ULTIMATE PRIZE: A MARKET-DEFINING IPO

time to read

7 mins

September 28, 2025

Business Today India

Business Today India

RIGHT ON TARGET

TARGET MATURITY FUNDS ARE A GOOD OPTION FOR PREDICTABLE RETURNS BUT IT'S IMPORTANT TO LOOK AT THE INDEX COMPOSITION AND CREDIT RATINGS OF ENTITIES WHOSE SECURITIES ARE INCLUDED IN THE BENCHMARK

time to read

6 mins

September 28, 2025

Business Today India

Business Today India

TO A GOOD TIME

DISCOVER THE CRISP, CITRUSY OR BITTER WORLD OF BEER THROUGH HOMEGROWN BRANDS

time to read

3 mins

September 28, 2025

Business Today India

Business Today India

PASSING THE BATON

INDIA'S FAMILY BUSINESSES ARE REWRITING THE RULES OF SUCCESSION—ELEVATING PROFESSIONALS, BUILDING FAMILY OFFICES, AND SEPARATING LEGACY FROM MANAGEMENT

time to read

6 mins

September 28, 2025

Business Today India

Business Today India

A RARE SHIFT

AS THE SHORTAGE OF RARE-EARTH MAGNETS TURNS INTO A FULL-BLOWN CRISIS WITH CHINA'S IMPORT RESTRICTIONS, DOMESTIC PLAYERS ARE LOOKING BEYOND TO SUCCEED WITH THEIR EV PLANS

time to read

5 mins

September 28, 2025

Business Today India

Business Today India

Put energy where you can be the best

PARTHA BASU | MD, ASHIRVAD BY ALIAXIS

time to read

1 mins

September 28, 2025

Business Today India

Business Today India

Thematic Investing: Spotting Structural Themes Before They Become Mainstream

It's a truth well acknowledged in the markets, that extraordinary wealth is created when the investors spot a powerful theme before it captures the imagination of the crowd. To ride such a wave in its infancy, is to participate in returns—so outsized that they defy neat calculation.

time to read

2 mins

September 28, 2025

Business Today India

Business Today India

INDIA'S ETHANOL DILEMMA

INDIA ACHIEVED A 20% ETHANOL BLENDING IN PETROL THIS YEAR, FIVE YEARS AHEAD OF SCHEDULE. WHILE IT IS AN IMPORTANT STEP TOWARDS REDUCING CRUDE OIL IMPORTS, AUTO OWNERS ARE COMPLAINING ABOUT REDUCED MILEAGE AND DAMAGED ENGINES. DOES INDIA'S ETHANOL POLICY NEED A TWEAK?

time to read

7 mins

September 28, 2025

Business Today India

Business Today India

"GST cut is the manifesto of 1.4 billion Indians"

Finance Minister Nirmala Sitharaman on GST rate cuts, lessons from Covid-19, and more

time to read

7 mins

September 28, 2025

Translate

Share

-
+

Change font size