Shaving equipment to fast food. Is there a connection? Saroj Poddar, chairman of Poddar Heritage Group and current FICCI chairman, is widely known as the man who brought Gillette to India, before Procter & Gamble bought it over globally. Now he's setting up Pulse, a chain of quick service restaurants that hopes to run a clockwork of low-cost, high-volume operations in India and even overseas.
The broad opportunity, according to Pulse Food's CEO Neeraj Jain, is in the market gap that exists between exotic fine dining and roadside dhabas.
Outlets have already come up in Ludhiana, Bangalore, Pune and Delhi's NCR, and 20 more are coming soon. Some 60 outlets are planned across India in phase one, some 40 of them kiosks/carts, all supplied just-in-time by centralised sourcing and processing units.
Yes, it's pretty much like the McDonald's model. Pulse's menu card starts enticingly low too, a la McDonald's soft-serve ice-cream, at Rs 5 for Nimbu Pani. There's the equivalent of French fries, Chatpate Aloo, as well. Meals range from a Dal Chawal combo for just Rs 35 to a non-veg combo for Rs 120.
"We experimented with various combinations," says Jain, "For instance, in Gurgaon's Cyber Green we started with only
Paratha Rolls since it was an office area. Later we extended it to mini combos in convenient paper boxes which can be had there or taken away."
Still, doing a McDonald's with Indian food, an