Thursday, May 16, 2019

Pepsi’s Strategy in Entering India

PepsiCo had been trying to enter the Indian market for quite some clock with no success. In 1988 Pepsi received a letter from George Fernandes, the General Secretary of one of the countrys leading policy-making parties, Janata dal. He wrote, I learned that you are coming here. I am the one that threw Coca-Cola out, and we are in short going to come back into the government. If you come into the country, you have to remember that the same fate awaits you as Coca-Cola. This panic-stricken PepsiCo a bit knowing that their rival was forced to leave the country in 1977 after the Janata Dal came to power.PepsiCo had to think of a way to get in without facing the same consequences Coca-Cola had to face. In May 1985, PepsiCo coupled with one of Indias leading business houses, the R P Goenka (RPG) collection, to begin operations in the India. The company, along with the RPG group company Agro Product Export Ltd. , planned to import the cola concentrate and sell soft drinks to a lower p lace the Pepsi label. PepsiCos decision linked its entry with the development and welfare of the state was aimed at winning the government over. The accompaniment that Punjab boasted a healthy agricultural sector played a role in PepsiCos decision.Coke and PepsiPepsiCo claimed that it would play a central role in bringing about an agricultural revolution in the state and would acquire many employment opportunities. It promised to create 50,000 jobs in the nation. Pepsi began by setting up a fruit and veg processing plants at Zahura village in Punjabs Hoshiarpur district. The plant then was focused on processing tomatoes to thrust tomato paste. Pepsi had a tough time convincing farmers to work for the company. Its experts from the US had to interact extensively with the farmers to explicate how they could benefit from working with the company.

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