Bubbly is the latest in a string of brands that are touching the three-digit mark quickly.
A year ago when Mondelez India launched the country’s first aerated chocolate called Bubbly under the Cadbury Dairy Milk Silk umbrella, little did the company and its executives expect the brand to touch the Rs 100-crore (Rs 1 billion) mark in six months flat.
Bubbly became the first chocolate brand for Mondelez India, the country’s largest chocolate maker, to touch the Rs 100-crore mark in this span of time.
Bubbly is the latest in a string of brands that are touching the three-digit mark quickly.
Now, 14 months later, Shashank Surana, vice-president, new product development, DS Group, says the brand has crossed Rs 150 crore (Rs 1.5 billion) and should touch the Rs 200-crore mark in the next few months.
There are other examples of products touching the Rs 100-crore mark.
Sensodyne, GSK Consumer’s toothpaste for sensitivity, crossed Rs 100 crore in sales within two-and-a-half years of launch in January 2011, the fastest in niche oral care.
It is now a brand with sales in excess of Rs 150-200 crore in India and remains a power brand for GSK Consumer in the country along with flagship Horlicks and over the counter drugs like Crocin, Otrivin and Voltaren.
“As consumption of branded goods grows in India, reaching the three-digit mark in terms of sales in a short span will increase,” says Arvind Singhal, chairman, Technopak.
Quite often an interesting product format or flavour gets the sales register ringing. In Bubbly’s case, for instance, says Prashant Peres, director, marketing (chocolates), Mondelez India, it was the unique format — the product has air bubbles both inside and outside, giving the chocolate a puffed-up look — that grabbed the attention of consumers.
“We played up this format and its unique eating experience in all our communication. Given that distribution is limited to stores that have visi-coolers, we were pleasantly surprised with the response,” Peres says.
It was this same need for innovation that drove DS Group to a unique flavour in Pulse, combining mango (kaccha aam) with a tangy twist.
“The product was a differentiated one in a market that was fairly stagnant in terms of flavours. We wanted that flavour in our candy and we worked on cracking the code,” says Surana.
While DS Group is working on other confectionary products, Surana is not getting into the details. The next Rs 100-crore brand could be round the corner.
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