agribusiness - reaping harvests in chaos

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  • 8/14/2019 Agribusiness - Reaping Harvests in Chaos

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    Agribusiness Reaping Harvests within Chaos

    Dr Rahul Mirchandani, Executive Director, Aries Agro Limited

    Paradox seems inescapable when we speak of Indian Agriculture. It begins when we say we have

    the largest cultivable landmass on the planet with one of the lowest productivity. It magnifieswhen we say in a nation of a billion plus people, agricultural labour is one of the scarcest and

    most expensive resources and farmers cannot afford mechanization. But what is perhaps the mostalarming of all the plethora of paradoxes is that agriculture is the largest component of Indias

    people economy (56% of the workforce, 273 million people) with a contribution of just 18% tothe countrys GDP (Rs 764,000 crores).

    While reams have been written on the paradoxes that plague agribusiness in India, several timesmore has been written on the global financial crisis. Unlike in earlier times of turbulence, most

    notably during the Asian meltdown, when India was largely insulated as we were inward lookingwith limited stakes overseas, this time around a globalized India is caught in the chaos.However the scale, scope and speed of the impact on the various sectors have differed

    significantly.

    Agribusiness has been affected in a rather limited manner as the crisis affected the moneyeconomy before it affected people. The 18% share of agriculture to GDP ensured that the extentof the damage this crisis could do was correspondingly reduced. There have infact been certain

    positive impacts of this emerging chaos as well.

    Rising Global Food Prices

    Inflation caused due to a global shortage of food and consequent increase in food prices was aprecursor to the current financial crisis. However, it has been lost in the debris of the Wall Streetbubble burst. The inability of several consuming economies like the US to adequately feed its

    people spawned global demand for food items. The ripple effect of rising food prices was felt inIndia and we all pay much more for our food today than what we paid a year ago. Though this

    pinched urban consumer budgets, it has increased farm gate realizations for all agriculturaloutput. There was even a sharp hike in certain minimum support prices for essential cereals likewheat, by the Government. Overall, farmers today are getting much more for their produce than

    they did in the past. Cost of agricultural inputs like seeds, fertilizers, pesticides, labour, etc. havealso risen. However the increase in the output prices has been higher than the rise in the cost ofinputs, leaving a net gain to the producers.

    Inflationary Expectations

    Inflation is almost always fuelled by inflationary expectations. People think prices will rise

    further and hence buy more today. This adds to short term demand significantly while supplytakes times to adjust and hence further increases prices. The producing farmers also look at

    inflationary trends in certain crops and make decisions on cropping patterns. This inevitably leadsto a herd mentality of majority farmers shifting to a crop that appears to be having the highestincremental return, causing oversupply in the following season. Farmers need to tread withcaution while making such decisions and be driven by medium term demand patterns rather than

    purely by inflationary expectations.

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    Lack of credit flow

    Indian farmers have always had a cash flow problem. The financial crisis has made banksunwilling to lend due to the experience of bad loans, defaults causing a liquidity crunch and rising

    cost of money. The high risk, rain dependent, highly seasonal nature of agriculture has never beenone of the darlings of the banking system. The massive loan waiver announced by the

    government added to the woes of banks that took the plunge and funded farmers. Starting withthe loan waiver aftermath, the availability of adequate institutional credit flow to agriculture hasradically dried up. Even public sector banks are unwilling to lend unless farmers have taken steps

    to de-risk themselves. Farmers are now left with no alternative but to use traditional high costsources of funds again.

    This being the macro context facing agribusiness companies, working in this environment hasrequired developing unique solutions to the emerging problems.

    Aries Agro is Indias largest manufacturer and marketer of Specialty plant nutrition solutions

    offering the widest portfolio of 41 brands and 107 crop specific formulations of plant nutrients to7 million farmers across 22 states of India. Aries continues to grow with a CAGR of 25% despite

    the turbulent environment. Some of the key elements of the companys strategy have been

    Continued focus on Innovation

    Aries has always been a niche, highly specialized player in the plant nutrition sector. Innovationsin product design, process re-engineering and continuous revamp of crop specific formulations

    have been the cornerstones of our product strategy. Investing further in R&D despite the ongoingcrisis have helped us launch 6 new products even this year when most of the competition is

    scaling back. The new products have been cost savers to farmers, but continue to earn money forthe company. Crunching time-to-market to the minimum is however critical to overcome theshortfall in offtake of certain products which became unaffordable as a result of a huge increase

    in raw material costs.

    Farmers in India have been moving to less rain dependent cash crops, growing geneticallymodified seeds that are drought and disease resistant and also using micro-irrigation to reducetheir need for water. These are ways in which progressive farmers are de-risking themselves from

    the vagaries and cycles of agriculture and making themselves for acceptable to lenders. Ariesproduct line is configured to meet the growing needs of these next-gen farmers, with customized

    formulations for horticulture, spices, oilseeds and plantation crops. We also have designed products ideally compatible with modern agricultural techniques like fertigation, hydroponics,green house cultivation, etc.

    Convert fixed costs to variable costs

    Aries has set up 4 new manufacturing units during 2008, in addition to the existing 4 units inIndia and 2 overseas. Several new projects needed fixed investments in real estate. With realestate prices falling, Aries decided to begin operations at some of these new locations on leased

    premises currently and will exercise its option to move to owned premises once real estate rates

    bottom out. This has converted fixed costs to variable costs in the short term, with no compromiseon roll out time deadlines of new projects. No new projects have been kept on hold. However

    cash has been conserved by not investing at present on fixed assets.

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    Revisions of emoluments to the staff have been made with additions to variable pay. Aries, ratedamongst one of the top 100 Best employers of India in a BT-Hewitt survey, has always had a

    merit pay system across all levels and job functions and hikes in variable pay have furtherinstitutionalized meritocracy in the corporate culture while minimizing load on fixed cash

    outflows.

    Certain curbs have also been placed on recruitments and revision of emoluments. However fastgrowth does require more people and gaps are often filled using temporary field staff for 6 to 8months of the season rather than year long employment. Moreover, all the 4700 distributors and

    69000 dealers of the company have been provided with a scheme to employ persons to work forAries range of products with reimbursement taking place on a percentage to sales basis. For eg.A dealer can employ a field staff and if his annual sales are Rs 5 lakhs, Aries will reimburse 5%

    of sales to reimburse the employee cost. If he sells higher, he gets a higher percentage, and viceversa. This increases the field force with no fixed cost addition to Aries and dealers ensure sales

    upto a minimum threshold so as to earn enough under this scheme to compensate for theemployees cost.

    Conserve Cash

    In the current environment, cash is king. Cost control has been institutionalized across the board.Most physical meetings have been made virtual, with extensive usage of web conferencing and

    tele-conferencing. This is not common in agribusiness companies but has been very effectivelyused during the last six months to reduce executive travel for routine meetings. More importantlywith over 500 sales persons spread across the country, not only has this drastically cut costs, but it

    has now became possible to be present at three meetings a day rather than just one, increasingproductive time and reducing unproductive travel time. Email communication is mandatory for

    all employees above officer grade. Penalties and demerit points are imposed on staff and branchesnot recycling, using both sides of each sheet of paper, saving energy costs, etc.

    Manage Inventories

    With input costs on the rise, a strong procurement team with forward contracts, assured deliveryschedules and buffer stocks become essential. Aries also imports more than two thirds of its rawmaterials and the rupee depreciation has added further challenges. Unexpected increases in

    customs duties were additional pressures. Moreover, as detailed initially, higher output pricesmeant more demand for nutrition products by farmers. Hence, stock levels were increased in the

    first half of the year to very high levels with purchases made when the dollar was lower andbefore raw material prices peaked. This added to working capital requirements temporarily butthese stocks were procured with an eye on liquidating them in the second winter season which is

    not rain dependent and more certain than the summer/monsoon season. Forecasting the yearsdemand was an essential part of this inventory planning exercise and micro-level estimates were

    made down to product-wise, pack-wise, month-wise, dealer-wise targets. Variance analysis was

    conducted fortnightly to adjust procurement decisions and delivery schedules.

    Invest on Technology to Integrate Operations

    With 8 manufacturing locations, 41 brands, over 800 SKUs, decentralized manufacturing,movement control regulation across states, global procurement and highly seasonal demand,

    Aries has used the past few months to revamp operations while scaling them up. A company-widechange management program is underway that is putting in place a real-time information and datamanagement gateway using a completely integrated, customized ERP solution. We have chosen

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    to use follow a software-as-a-service model as against purchasing high cost, non user friendly,ready-made ERP packages. The operations of the company from purchase to inventory to

    accounting to HR will be totally integrated with Aries paying a monthly service fee to the serviceprovider, after the go-live date. The monthly fee will include the software usage, data storage,

    data transfer, software updates and hardware requirements at all the companys nationwidelocations, with no heavy fixed costs at sign up or for the development of the customized IT

    solution. The integration will also reduce duplication of data entry, eliminate delay and time lagsin data capture, reduce additional manpower requirements and optimize data transmission costs.

    Scale up Customer Communications using low cost means

    Aries has made a conscious effort to stay visible in the eyes of its customers. With zero

    advertising in mass media, the company still manages to build strong brands in rural India.During the past year, we have scaled up brand building efforts using low cost means like sms-

    based marketing. Demonstration and field trials and farm meetings continue to be highlyeffective, low cost methods to create awareness. Aries has also made it compulsory for every staff

    member to give 2 guest sessions in 2 rural schools each month providing latest agriculturaltechniques information to students in their science classes. This cost the company a minimal

    amount but the message delivered builds future customers. Advertising in newspapers has beensubstituted with branded ribbons used to roll the newspapers before delivery by local papervendors. To read the newspaper, the person has to be exposed to the ribbon and the exposure is

    guaranteed at a fraction of the cost.

    Some brand building efforts have been converted into revenue streams, like crop advisories,

    weather reports, output price information, soil testing, etc. Aries provides all these services tobuild its brands but now charges farmers a small amount for each of these services. This makes

    the service valued and increases trust in the companys efforts as the service is not providedfree. In the process, the running costs of the company to provide access to these services to thefarmers is recovered.

    These are by no means normal times. Extraordinary circumstances have necessitated lateralthinking. Aries has succeeded in converting certain threats into opportunities using innovationand inventing next practices. Staying top-of-the-mind amongst target customers is essential inthese times as many competitors may be driven out of business or scaling back. Conserving cash

    has kept the companys resources strong to ride the storm. But using innovation in creatingproducts that are suited to the changed needs and priorities of customers have been critical to our

    success. The rules of the game have changed. To succeed now, Be the game changer.

    Dr Rahul Mirchandani is Executive Director, Aries Agro Limited and ational Vice Chairman Confederation of Indian Industrys Young Indians. He has a decade of experience in the specialty plant

    nutrition sector and handles the marketing efforts of Aries in India. In addition to a CFA and an MBA fromAustralia, Rahul has a Ph.D. in Rural Marketing from MIMS University, Mumbai. He teaches Marketing,

    Consumer Behaviour, Rural Marketing, Marketing Research & Integrated Marketing Communication at

    MIMS University and is Visiting Faculty for Rural Marketing at IIM-Ahmedabad.

    Rahul can be reached [email protected]