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Feb 27, 2013, 04.53 PM IST
L'Oréal India's Managing Director Jacques Challes tells Forbes India how emerging market innovations are driving the company's growth
L'Oréal India's Managing Director Jacques Challes tells Forbes India how emerging market innovations are driving the company's growth
Jacques Challes
The industry was already under transformation in 2008. The transformation was mainly due to what I call ‘pre-premiumisation.' The Indian market was seeing an increasing aspiration for the slightly more expensive brands. In fact, there was a decline of the cheaper brands that had established themselves in the local market. At that time, L'Oréal was focused just on the consumer division and didn't have many brands.
We have tripled the turnover from 2008 [to around USD 200 million] and have also increased our market share, which in the urban market is around 10%. Four years back, L'Oréal was relying only on the consumer division. Today, the consumer division itself has expanded and we also now focus on professional [salon] and luxury segments. We have scaled up our capacity in the manufacturing facility in Pune to 200 million units and a new R&D centre is coming up in Mumbai.
We don't do soaps, washing products, tooth paste or oil, which are big in the rural market. At the same time, we are going to reach the smaller towns.
I think the consumer is more and more aware, educated and is conscious of the brands. Indian women have become more discerning and sophisticated.
It will play a big role in the coming years. This is only the third one in Asia after Japan and China and the sixth one globally after France, US and Brazil. We will be innovating the present products and will launch new ones for the Indian market.
Though it's a worldwide role, the future for L'Oréal lies in markets like India, Brazil and China. So in terms of ideas and innovation, these will come out of these countries and this will be instrumental for the whole company.
I'm right now in Paris but am missing India. I had got a bike in India, a Bullet 350, a 30-year-old bike from a French expat. I used to drive around Mumbai with my wife on that bike.
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