Science, asked by babitagarg99, 1 year ago

how bhaskar bhatt is popular

Answers

Answered by hemanth101
2
Heyy mate here is the answer...


 Indian watch-and-jewellery-maker Titan Industries was in the doldrums, saddled with debt from a flailing jewellery business and an expensive foray into Europe. That’s when the new Managing Director, Bhaskar Bhat, sat down with Indian investor Rakesh Jhunjhunwala, who was considering putting money into the Bangalore company. They met for nearly three hours. “Bhaskar was extremely blunt and truthful,” recalls Jhunjhunwala, who is often referred to as India’s Warren Buffett. “He said that the task [of turning around Titan] wasn’t easy, but he would do it.”

Today Jhunjhunwala owns 11 percent of Titan, and it’s an investment that’s certainly paid off. In the past decade, Titan’s market capitalisation has soared from $45 million to $3.5 billion. In the same period, its annual revenue has jumped from $153 million to $1.74 billion, while profits have mushroomed from $1 million to $118 million. “[Bhat] brought it from the jaws of death onto the road to success,” says Jhunjhunwala. “Now Titan is best positioned to capture the mega retail opportunity that India presents.”

This year, for the first time, Titan clinches a spot on the Fab 50 list. The company is graduating from last year’s 'Waiting in the Wings' list of companies poised to crack the top 50. “The whole mantra is growth,” says the 58-year-old Bhat, who started his third five-year term as managing director in April. “We have an aspiration to grow to three times our current size in the next five years.”

Since its founding in 1984, Titan has gone from a niche watchmaker to a leading speciality retailer that sells everything from gold jewellery to bags, belts and wallets. Titan boasts of five manufacturing plants and 847 stores in seven chains across 160 towns around India. And it’s now incubating new businesses in youth watches, prescription eyewear and branded leather accessories.

Titan is looking to add 320 stores in different brands over the next year. Jewellery, which contributes 76 percent of revenue, will continue to be a big growth driver. The company is the country’s biggest jewellery retailer, with nearly twice the sales of Dubai’s Joyalukkas, which is No. 2, according to Ambit Capital, but it has less than a 6 percent market share in the $28 billion gold jewellery market. It pioneered branded jewellery in India with its Tanishq brand, introduced in 1996, and that segment is expected to grow 40 percent a year over the next five years. “We have a lot of headroom for growth,” says Bhat. “We are trying to change the game toward diamond jewellery. We’ve made diamonds more price-friendly.”

In recent months, Titan has launched diamonds for teens and diamond-studded lines for working women. It’s also spearheaded an affordable-diamonds campaign sell- ing diamond jewellery for $180 to $450. The gold-to-diamond ratio at Titan is now at 72-to-28. Within five years, it wants diamonds to make up 40 percent of jewellery sales. It’s a smart move, given the rapidly rising rupee price of gold—it’s up nearly 60 percent in two years, according to the World Gold Council.

While Titan is bullish, analysts say growth isn’t going to be easy, with India’s stubbornly high inflation, a slowdown in the economy and lacklustre consumer sentiment. “Nothing seems good for the economy,” agrees Bhat. “But for us it’s not that bad because we have significant amounts of cash. We don’t want to stop expanding.”

Titan needs to keep growing because volume growth has sagged in the last few quarters. Total Indian jewellery demand for the first half of this year dipped to 263 tons from 378 tons for the year-earlier period. So the company is drumming up sales with new stores and a push across several segments. One thrust, for instance, is its Goldplus stores—first rolled out in 2006 for southern markets.

These are mass-market stores aimed at customers who are looking at gold more as an investment and less as an adornment. This $100 million segment is expected to double in the next three years.

Over the longer term Titan is also looking at expanding into the swathe of 400 second-tier cities with populations of 200,000 or more. “We see huge potential in middle India,” says Bhat.

Jewellery is a highly competitive segment where Titan jostles for visibility alongside 300,000 mom-and-pop retailers. But the company has a history of entering unorgan- ised sectors and then bringing in more professionalism and more players. It happened with watches and then jewellery and now with youth accessories and prescription eyewear. “We get in early, and we trigger the growth,” says Bhat.

Hope it helps you.......!☺️☺️
Similar questions