Will Sports Drinks Survive in India

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    Will sports drinks survive in India?April 19, 2006 10:11 IST

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    A child throws a tantrum in a Delhi [Images] supermarket. He is pointing towards a bottle of sports drink, Gatorade.Another little boy apes him. The stubborn kids attract a few impulse buyers to the sports drink.

    But not all of them are buying it. A store attendant comments, "Shoppers prefer juices. Only those who've bought it

    once tend to come back, though infrequently."

    That remark could bother Gatorade, which is cola major PepsiCo's international sports drink brand, and Stamina, a

    sports drink that belongs to the Gujarat Co-operative Milk Marketing Federation.

    But this is just the first volley; their game has just begun. Stamina was launched in early 2006, while the made-in-

    India [ Images ] Gatorade has been available only for a little over six months. (Earlier, the brand was imported for

    seven-eight months and sold in India at Rs 45 for a 200 ml pet bottle.) Now, it costs only Rs 25.

    Stamina is cheaper. At Rs 12 for a 200-ml Tetrapak, it competes with fitness drinks like Godrej [Get Quote] Foods'

    soya-milk brand Sofit, which costs Rs 13 for 200 ml tetrapak.

    Points of sweat

    The brands may carry affordable price tags, but pricing alone isn't likely to win them the match. So Stamina and

    Gatorade are focusing on points where customers work up a sweat. At the Mumbai [ Images ] Marathon held in

    January this year, GCMMF distributed free samples of Stamina.

    The company claims to target customers in the age bracket of 15-25 years whose interest in sports extends beyond

    the television screen. GCMMF flaunts Stamina's association with sports even through its point of purchase: its sales

    team has distributed danglers shaped like tennis rackets and cricket bats.

    The company has also got an endorsement from Apollo Hospitals [Get Quote]. The endorsement is displayed on the

    pack, at points-of-sale and even at gyms, fitness centres and sports events. "The endorsement builds credibility of the

    product," says Pawan Kumar Singh, manager, marketing, GCMMF.

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    Not everybody in the trade believes that's a winning stroke, though. Says a Delhi-based retailer, "Two factors work

    against Stamina: its tie-up with Apollo Hospitals and its medicinal taste."

    Amul's Singh does not agree. "Consumers who've tasted Stamina appreciate its taste and benefits. They prefer it

    over other sports drinks," he contends.

    If Stamina banks on health endorsements, Gatorade is taking the tournament route. PepsiCo is already participating

    in international tournaments like the Davis Cup, PGA (Professional Golfers' Association) events and so on - pushing

    Gatorade at these events will, therefore, be easy.

    But it's also played a masterstroke: winning over the sports coach to its side. In April 2005, 130 sports trainers from

    Delhi and Mumbai were invited to a contact programme by Gatorade, where to create awareness about Gatorade.

    The brand is also trying to add a dash of glamour by associating with beauty pageants held by Gladrags.

    PepsiCo executives see a logical extension between sports and pageants. "The contestants stay in shape through

    rigorous workouts. So they need Gatorade to replenish their system, just like someone exercising in a gym," says

    Geetu Verma, vice-president, new business market unit, PepsiCo India.

    Also, the Gatorade displays have sportstars from soccer to cricket - Brazilian star, Ronaldinho [ Images] and Indian

    cricket's Irfan Pathan [Images], amongst others.

    Piggyback ride

    Gatorade and Stamina are both using the equity of other popular brands to their advantage. While Gatorade tied up

    with sports equipment major Nike's consumer activation programmes at school football championships in the top nine

    cities, Stamina's associated with Amul, the flagship brand of GCMMF.

    For instance, Stamina's introductory offer tapped customers who took home an Amul Pizza - Amul frozen heat-and-

    eat pizza plus Stamina, for just Rs 30 That implies Stamina is also looking at consumption at home and not just on

    the sports field.

    For their part, consultants do not see any rationale behind the joint promotion. "The connection is just not right," says

    Anand Halve, co-founder, Chlorophyll, a Mumbai-based consultancy.

    Defends Singh, "There's a strong connection. After eating pizza, people opt for beverages. That's where Stamina

    comes in plus we got consumer feedback on the product."

    There are other problems too. As Stamina is milk-based (it is made of whey), as opposed to a water-based Gatorade,

    most retail stores display Stamina along with milk-based products, like flavoured milk Amul Kool. In some stores,

    even butter and cheese give Stamina company in the cool cabinet.

    "Most retailers stock a company's various products together, instead of stocking them category-wise. So Stamina is

    stocked in the Amul corner," explains Singh and adds, "Sports drinks as a category is not yet big. We're trying to

    educate modern format store owners to give sports drinks separate shelf space."

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    But Stamina's milk-based formulation will probably require some hardselling. "Stamina requires a behavioral change

    from the consumer," says Munir Suri, vice-president, Technopak Advisors.

    Then, sports and milk-based drinks haven't really proved match-winning teams. Consider brands such as Boost and

    Milo, which fall in the Rs 1,100-crore (Rs 11 billion) health foods market. In the case of these brands, sportstars were

    roped in as ambassadors.

    "Yet the leading healthfood brands are Horlicks, Complan and Bournvita. They didn't use sportstars," points out

    Halve.

    The market shares: Horlicks commands a 44 per cent market share; Bournvita has a 16 per cent market share;

    whereas Boost, which has been endorsed by sportstars like Kapil Dev [ Images ] and Sachin Tendulkar [ Images],

    commands just 13 per cent marketshare (Source: Technopak Advisors).

    If Stamina's handicap is perhaps its formulation, Gatorade, too, doesn't have an open field ahead. For decades now,

    active Indians have turned to glucose-based drinks like Glucon-D and oral rehydration supplements like Electral for

    refreshment and replenishment during play. Getting them to switch to a branded sports drink may not be easy.

    PepsiCo's Verma, though, has a different take on the issue.

    "Consumers need to prepare these drinks. But Gatorade is a ready-to-drink formulation," she points out. That

    argument doesn't impress consultants. "People will shift only if the sports drink brand offers more than glucose-based

    drinks," says Halve.

    Not just that. Energy drink brands like Red Bull have been making waves in the party circuit. Though expensive at Rs

    75 for a 250-ml can, Red Bull roughly targets the same swish set of customers.

    Also, there is a thin line of difference between sports and energy drinks. Halve says, "Consumers won't see anydifference between energy drinks and sports drinks. Both of them energise." Sports drinks could pick up lessons from

    Red Bull.

    "It appeals to consumers at a logical level, by energising, and at an emotional level, by representing an active

    lifestyle, that people relate to. Sports drinks too will have to perform dual functions, to succeed. They have to position

    themselves as social consumption products," contends Halve.

    "Perhaps they should pitch themselves as performance boosters instead, because India doesn't have a sports

    market, but it has a huge performance market."

    But the companies are confident. "When we begin communication, later this year, consumers will become aware of

    Stamina's benefits and will opt for it," says Singh.

    Verma adds, "Sports drinks are no longer niche. More and more health conscious consumers are embracing themnow." Their confidence might not be misplaced. But one thing's for sure. It is going to take much more than pesterpower to succeed.

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