The biggest (local) value additions come before the manufacturing process. Number one is the product design. We design all the products by ourselves, in house. We have an enormous product and industrial design team. We have 3D printers. We build up and own our own molds, the molds from which the plastics and the products are produced.
Second is the technology that we work on. The technology and the IP is our own.
We do 20 to 25% of manufacturing by ourselves, in our own factories. So we take all of that learnings and give it to our contact manufacturing partners, where they manufacture these products for us.
And lastly is the raw material sourcing. About 30 to 35% of the raw materials are sourced in India, which is rubbers, silicons, plastics, some part of batteries and some products. We also do SMT (semiconductor mounting technologies) through our partners.
And lastly, through packaging, charging cables and all other paper materials, etc.
Having said that, some technical components like PCBs, semiconductors and audio drivers are still sourced from international geographies.
So the idea is to increase local purchase of raw materials as a percentage. Already we are assembling and manufacturing more than 99% of the products in India. So we want to reduce the dependence of sourcing raw materials from international geographies, or increasing the raw material sourcing from India.