Kraft Heinz could well be Warren Buffett’s favourite investment right about now, given how his 2013 investment in HJ Heinz resulted in a windfall gain of $4.4 billion for his firm Berkshire Hathaway. Thanksto the one-time gain, the firm’s third quarter net profit nearly doubled. Buffett teamed up with investment firm 3G Capital in 2013 to buy ketchup maker HJ Heinz and then embarked on a massive cost-cutting drive to improve the company’s profitability.
Heinz has been selling ketchup for 140 years now, holding over 60% market share in the US and a similar chunk of market share in some of its other key markets, such as UK and Canada. Post the merger, the combined entity boasts of total sales of $28 billion and profit of $1.65 billion, looking to get stronger with $1.5 billion savings in costs by 2017.
Hervé Le Faou, managing director, Heinz India, has been in India since last June and is intrigued by its complexity. He travels at least a week each month for market visits to get insights into what consumers are buying. In his mid-forties, this FMCG veteran has spent time working with giants such as Unilever, Danone and Cadbury Schweppes before moving to HJ Heinz in May 2011.
For Heinz, by any yardstick, it an uphill battle from here on, with the likes of Maggi and Kissan accounting for at least 70% of this ₹900-crore organised market. An equal worry for Heinz is the fact that smaller players with limited budgets have made serious inroads by just being more Indian in their approach. Take the case of Cremica, which was launched just a decade ago. It offers over a dozen variants, including Mexican salsa, English mustard, barbecue and schezwan, in addition to tomato and chilli.
Complan has always been a nutraceutical drink that reportedly helped children gain height, among other things. According to Arvind Sharma, former chairman, Leo Burnett, the agency that handled the Heinz account, Complan was historically bound by two key principles. “One was to look radically different from Horlicks and the other was to always have high GRPs (gross rating points or, simply, a higher level of spend on advertising),” he explains. Complan was meant to be everything that Horlicks was not.
“The brand has strengthened its cooling power and fragrance offering through research and understanding consumer needs. Apart from prickly heat and cooling powder offerings, the plan is to launch more variants,” he says. Today, Nycil has seven variants, some of which are chandan, gulab jal and lavender. If Nycil responded to a changing consumer profile, it was really because Dermicool played the disruptor. “Today, prickly heat is only about cooling power and the competition has been forced to move to that positioning,” adds Patel.