2. INTRODUCTION
The Birth of Amul.
It all began when milk became a symbol of protest
Founded in 1946 to stop the exploitation by middlemen
Inspired by the freedom movement
Amul grew from strength to strength thanks to the inspired
leadership of Tribhuvandas Patel, the founder Chairman
and the committed professionalism of Dr Verghese
Kurien,who was entrusted the task of running the dairy from
1950.
3. Dr Verghese Kurien, founder-chairman of the
GCMMF for more than 30 years (1973–2006), is
credited with the success of Amul.
The word amul (अमूल) is derived from the Sanskrit
word amulya (अमूल्य), meaning priceless. Amul is
an Indian dairy cooperative, based at Anand in the
state of Gujarat, India. Formed in 1946.
4. HISTORY
The seeds of this unusual saga were sown more than
65 years back in Anand, a small town in the state of
Gujarat in western India.
In 1946, the farmers of this area went on a milk strike
refusing to be cowed down by the cartel.
Under the inspiration of Sardar Patel, and the
guidance of leaders like Morarji Desai and
Tribhuvandas Patel, they formed their own
cooperative in 1946.
5. The then Prime Minister of India, Lal
Bahadur Shastri decided that the same
approach should become the basis of a
National Dairy Development policy and it
should be emulated for the entire country.
At his instance in 1965 the National Dairy
Development Board was set up with the
basic objective of replicating the Amul
model
6. Dr. Kurien was chosen to head the
institution as its Chairman and asked to
replicate this model throughout the country.
Gujarat Cooperative Milk Marketing
Federation Ltd. (GCMMF), is India's largest
food product marketing organisation with
annual turnover (2013-14) US$ 3.0 billion.
7. For the year 2009-10, GCMMF has been
awarded "Golden Trophy" for its outstanding
export performance and contribution in dairy
products sector by APEDA.
In 2013-14, GCMMF took giant strides in
expanding its presence in International
markets.
Amul’s presence on Global Dairy Trade (GDT)
platform in which only the top six dairy players
of the world sell their products, has earned
respect and recognition across the world.
8. THE AMUL MODEL.
The Amul Model of dairy development is a three-
tiered structure with the dairy cooperative
societies at the village level federated under a
milk union at the district level and a federation of
member unions at the state level.
Establishment of a direct linkage between milk producers and
consumers by eliminating middlemen
Milk Producers (farmers) control procurement, processing and
marketing
Professional management
9. THE AMUL MODEL HAS HELPED
INDIA TO EMERGE AS THE
LARGEST MILK PRODUCER IN
THE WORLD. THEIR MILK IS
PROCESSED IN 184 DISTRICT
CO-OPERATIVE UNIONS AND
MARKETED BY 22 STATE
MARKETING FEDERATIONS,
ENSURING A BETTER LIFE FOR
MILLIONS
11. ADVERTISING AND MARKETING
STRATEGY.
In 1966, Amul hired Sylvester , then managing
director of the advertising agency AS to design
an ad campaign for Amul Butter. daCunha
designed a campaign as series of hoardings
with topical ads, relating to day-to-day issues.
It was popular and earned a Guinness world
record for the longest running ad campaign in
the world.
In the 1980s, cartoon artist Kumar Morey and
script writer Bharat Dabholkar had been
involved with sketching the Amul ads.
12. This was enabled by chairman Verghese Kurien
with creating a free atmosphere that fostered the
development of the ads.
In 2013, Amul tweeted a picture featuring the
Amul butter girl, implying that 'freedom of choice'
died in '2013', in opposition to the Supreme Court
of India overruling the judgment of Delhi High
Court and criminalizing homosexuality again.
16. 4P’S IMPLEMENTATION OF AMUL
• Amul moppet girl
• Sponsorships like Amul
voice of India and Amul
Chef of the year
• Under GCMMF
• >5 lakh retail outlets
• >3500 distributors
• 7000 AMUL parlors
• Robust supply chain and
a strong marketing
channel gives a strong
pricing advantage
• Follow standards like TQM,
Kaizan and Agmark
• Diverse packaging sizes
from 500gm – 10gms to
reach all target groups
PRODUCT PRICE
PROMOTIONPLACE
17. SWOT ANALYSIS
sssssSTRENGTH’S WEAKNES
S
OPPORTUNITIE
S
THREATS
Largest food brand
in India
High Quality, Low
Price
Introduced TQM
World's Largest
Pouched Milk Brand
Annual turnover of
US $3200 million
Highly Diverse
Product Mix
Robust
Distribution Network
Low market share
in chocolates
segment
Strong competition
from international &
domestic players in
the ice cream
segment means
limited market share
Risks of highly
complex supply
chain system
Short shelf life of
its products
Penetrate
international
markets
Diversify product
portfolio to enter
new product
categories and
expand existing
categories like
processed foods,
chocolates etc
Sell products
online
Competitors -
Hindustan Lever,
Nestle and Britannia
Still competition
from MNCs in butter
Growing price of
milk and milk
products
Political issues &
union problems
within organization
18. AMUL BUSINESS STRATEGY
Developing demand
Limited purchasing power.
Low cost pricing strategy for products.
The Distribution Network
Dry and cold ware houses.
Cash transactions through out the supply chain
Umbrella Brand
Common brand for most product categories.
Amul sub-brands and edible oil products
Third Party Service Providers
Production of dairy products
Logistics of milk collection, distribution products
22. PRODUCT MIX- FOR EVERYONE.
Amul never forgot its
primary customer.
Collects 7m litters milk
from 2.6 farmers.
Product for youth –
launched product “Amul
kool koko” targeting youth.
Product for diabetic
people
India’s first pro biotic
wellness ice cream
23. Product for health
consciousness
Low fat, low cholesterol bread
spreads
Product for price sensitive
India
Low priced ice creams and
affordable sagar whitner.
Product for urban class
Launched emmental, pizza
Mozzarella cheese
24. PRODUCT POSITIONING
Placing a product in that part of the market where
it will receive a favorable reception compared to
competing products.
Positioning of amul is “Taste of India” it has
created a value for every one in value chain be it
farmers or consumers.
USP-quality with affordablity.
26. PRODUCT OVERLAP
SITUATION WHERE COMPANY DECIDES COMPETE AGAINST ITS OWN BRANDS
Powdered milk
Health and price conscious.
“SAGAR VS AMULYA”.
USP: sagar is affordable whitener for health
consciousness.
Cheese spreads
Specific vs general.
Amul processed cheese vs cheese spread.
27. PRODUCT ELIMINATION.
Elimination
Product reaches the stage where continued
support is no longer justified where
performance is falling short off
expectations, it is desirable to pull the
product out of market place
It eliminated “JALDHARA” a decade ago as
bottled water at that time did not have
potetintal customers.