Raj Jain of Wal-mart

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Wal-Mart India's Raj Jain: 'The Biggest Challenge Is There Is No Organized Supply Chain' Wal-Mart India's Raj Jain: 'The Biggest Challenge Is There Is No Organized Supply Chain'  Published : July 10, 2008 in India Knowledge@Whart on This is a single/personal use copy of India Knowledge@Wharton. For multiple copies, custom reprints, e-prints, posters or plaques, please contact PARS International: [email protected] P. (212) 221-9595 x407. Wal-Mart, the world's largest retailer, finds itself in a curious situation in India. Barred by  government restrictions, it cannot directly operate as a retailer. As a result, the company's  strategy has been to develop what Raj Jain, Wal-Mart India's president, calls a business-to-business wholesale cash-and-carry operation. In addition, Wal-Mart India is playing a leading role in helping develop modern supply chains in India. In an interview with India  Knowledge@Wharton in Washington, D.C., at the 33 rd annual meeting of the U.S. India Business Council, Jain spoke about Wal-Mart's operations and strategy in India.  An edited transcript of the conversation appears below. Knowledge@Wharton: Before you joined Wal-Mart, could you tell us about your career at Whirlpool and Unilever? Jain: Yes, for sure. I am an engineer. Soon after getting my engineering degree, I joined Unilever, where I worked, both in Europe as well as in India, for 16 years in various assignments in manufacturing, logistics, supply chain, and marketing. Then, I moved to Whirlpool in the supply chain area. Finally, I was the managing director of Whirlpool India, and then moved on to a regional role in Shanghai, in China. For the last two years, I've been working in Wal-Mart. I was based in Shanghai and recently moved to India, with a view to run our joint venture in India. Knowledge@Wharton: How did your move to Wal-Mart come about? Jain: Having worked for 10 years in Whirlpool, I was getting a bit tired of selling appliances in that industry. I was looking for a change. I learned that Wal-Mart was looking for a president of emerging markets to evaluate entry of Wal-Mart in new countries outside of where Wal-Mart was already present. It seemed like an interesting challenge. I interviewed, and it led to this new job. Knowledge@Wharton: Wal-Mart is the world's largest retailer and the number-one company on the Fortune 500 list. But Wal-Mart in India is not really in the retail business. Could you please explain this curious fact to people who may not know the whole story?  All materials copyright of the Wharton School of the University of Pennsylvania. Page 1 of 5 al-Mart India's Raj Jain: 'The Biggest Challenge Is There Is No Organized Supply Chain': India Knowledge@Wharton (http://knowledge .wharton.upenn.edu/ india/article.cfm? articleid=4305)

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Wal-Mart India's Raj Jain: 'The Biggest Challenge Is There Is No Organized Supply Chain'

Wal-Mart India's Raj Jain: 'The Biggest Challenge Is There Is No Organized Supply Chain' 

Published : July 10, 2008 in India Knowledge@Wharton 

This is a single/personal use copy of India Knowledge@Wharton. For multiple copies, customreprints, e-prints, posters or plaques, please contact PARS International: [email protected]

P. (212) 221-9595 x407.

Wal-Mart, the world's largest retailer, finds itself in a curious situation in India. Barred by government restrictions, it cannot directly operate as a retailer. As a result, the company's strategy has been to develop what Raj Jain, Wal-Mart India's president, calls abusiness-to-business wholesale cash-and-carry operation. In addition, Wal-Mart India is playing a leading role in helping develop modern supply chains in India. In an interview with India

 Knowledge@Wharton in Washington, D.C., at the 33rd annual meeting of the U.S. India BusinessCouncil, Jain spoke about Wal-Mart's operations and strategy in India.

 An edited transcript of the conversation appears below.

Knowledge@Wharton: Before you joined Wal-Mart, could you tell us about your career atWhirlpool and Unilever?

Jain: Yes, for sure. I am an engineer. Soon after getting my engineering degree, I joinedUnilever, where I worked, both in Europe as well as in India, for 16 years in various assignmentsin manufacturing, logistics, supply chain, and marketing. Then, I moved to Whirlpool in thesupply chain area. Finally, I was the managing director of Whirlpool India, and then moved on toa regional role in Shanghai, in China. For the last two years, I've been working in Wal-Mart. Iwas based in Shanghai and recently moved to India, with a view to run our joint venture in India.

Knowledge@Wharton: How did your move to Wal-Mart come about?

Jain: Having worked for 10 years in Whirlpool, I was getting a bit tired of selling appliances inthat industry. I was looking for a change. I learned that Wal-Mart was looking for a president of emerging markets to evaluate entry of Wal-Mart in new countries outside of where Wal-Mart wasalready present. It seemed like an interesting challenge. I interviewed, and it led to this new job.

Knowledge@Wharton: Wal-Mart is the world's largest retailer and the number-one company onthe Fortune 500 list. But Wal-Mart in India is not really in the retail business. Could you pleaseexplain this curious fact to people who may not know the whole story?

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Jain: Sure. I think it emanates out of the fact that in India, currently, retailing is a protectedsector. The government does not allow any multinationals to operate in retailing so no foreigninvestment is allowed in retailing -- other than in wholesaling, and 51% in single brand retail,which, of course, is not our business model. That's why we do not have any retailing in India.

What we propose to have in India is a wholesale cash-and-carry business, which is only permittedfor business members. We are also a franchise store to a retailing company, which is BhartiRetail, who are our joint venture partners, who will run and own stores, but we provide them withmerchandise and management expertise to do so.

Knowledge@Wharton: How exactly would that business-to-business model work?

Jain: The way it works is -- essentially, India is a nation of retailers. If you look at it, India has 12million kirana (grocery) stores, which, in a per capita, given even the population of India, is, I believe, the highest in the world. We have a lot of small, mom-and-pop stores in India, catering toall kinds of consumers.

These kirana stores traditionally buy from wholesale markets, and some of them are also serviced

directly by manufacturers. In fact, India has one of the most evolved distribution systems by bigcompanies. Companies like Unilever, for instance, and ITC have probably one of the mostevolved distribution systems in India. They service just close to a million of those 12 millionkirana stores, directly, which basically means that 90% of these stores actually have to go towholesale markets to buy products.

There is a very evolved wholesale network in India for products, from which these kirana storesget serviced. It is a low-cost operation, but it is also very inefficient. Especially when you move to produce areas, fresh merchandise, fruits and vegetables, meats, and so on and so forth, it is veryunevolved and it is very archaic in many ways.

How this model works is, essentially, that you have a selling point, where you directly source products from manufacturers, and then sell those products to kirana stores at great prices, allunder one roof.

Knowledge@Wharton: Wal-Mart's success around the world has been driven by your effectiveuse of information technology and supply chain management techniques. That is basically whatallows Wal-Mart to pass along low costs to its customers. In the context that you just described,how would you apply those principles?

Jain: Wal-Mart's mission, worldwide, which is extremely relevant to all emerging markets, letalone the United States -- is saving people money so that they can live better. As a result, thewhole Wal-Mart business revolves around running a very efficient supply chain, saving in every

aspect of that supply chain. It's not just about negotiating better prices with the suppliers; it isactually about working with suppliers to remove any inefficiency in the supply chain.

That is exactly what we will do and are doing in India. We are working with suppliers on packaging. We are working with suppliers on stock control. We are working with suppliers on better management and inventory, and so on. All those savings which come out of that effectivemanagement of supply chain will be passed on to the kirana stores, who will be our customers inthis case.

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Knowledge@Wharton: You have also worked with Wal-Mart in China. What are the maindifferences between working in India and China?

Jain: India is very unique. In fact, I have lived in China, so maybe I can say it with a little bitmore liberty that the only thing common between India and China is the one billion people. If youreally operate in the two countries, I think, there are very different consumers, very differentkinds of legislation, very different levels of economic development, social infrastructure, andgovernmental management of the economy.

The differences in China and India are very, very unique. India is a unique market, because Indiahas had an evolved wholesale network for several centuries.

Knowledge@Wharton: What are some of the main challenges you face in implementing supplychain strategies in India?

Jain: The biggest challenge is that there is no organized supply chain in India. We've even beensurprised by some of the leading manufacturers in India like Unilever, Procter & Gamble, andsome other big names, who are actually welcoming the arrival of organized supply chains in Indiaand Wal-Mart pioneering that effort.

Because of the lack of that supply chain today, there is no forecasting, there is no understandingof how demand is. It's largely a push based system. So, I think, getting that transparency acrossthe supply chain will be very unique.

The other thing is, there is no refrigerated cold chain for fresh produce in India, so therefore a lotgets wasted. By McKinsey's own work, which the consulting firm has done, almost 40% of fresh produce in India gets wasted from farmland to the time it reaches the consumer.

And thirdly, because there is no transparency of consumption, the farmer and the smallmanufacturer actually ends up selling to the middle men who actually may or may not be so

transparent about pricing.Knowledge@Wharton: Some of these challenges seem to be big issues that the governmentshould be tackling, rather than an individual company. How are you navigating your way aroundthose challenges?

Jain: We are, as far as possible, working with the government in trying to tackle some of theseissues. The good news is that the government realizes that it is restricted in its ability to invest anddo a lot in this area. So, there are a lot of public/private partnership possibilities in this area.

We are working with the government in areas like training and development. The government isvery keen in promoting training for people who can work in the supply chain area. We are also

working with the government in the area of setting up large warehousing and distributionfacilities and making land available at a reasonable cost to us to be able to do that.

The government also recognizes this as an issue, and, from a taxation standpoint, the recent budget actually reduced the taxation on cold chain equipment, which will go a long way inmaking some of those investments possible.

Knowledge@Wharton: What is Wal-Mart's sourcing strategy for India and how is it differentfrom that strategy in China?

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Jain: Wal-Mart's relationship with India is much older than our recent joint venture and our recent steps in the area of wholesale supply chain. We've been more than 10 years in India,sourcing products in India, largely textiles, apparels, home products, and most recently, gems, jewelry and so on.

We do approximately $400 million of sourcing out of India, and that could grow several-fold aswe go forward. But, once again, the efforts become magnified several times if there is a deeper understanding of the supply base. With this new effort in this joint venture about wholesalecash-and-carry, we will make deep inroads into small and medium industries and help developthose industries to a level where they can improve their quality and compliance, where these products can then be taken into other parts of the world. I see a bright future for sourcing out of India with Wal-Mart over the next decade.

Knowledge@Wharton: One of the big problems in sourcing from China was the recentcontroversy over lead contamination that affected products like toys. Do you see any hiddenlandmines in sourcing from India that consumers should be concerned about?

Jain: The issue of India is once again developing responsible sourcing points in India, and

manufacturers in India. As I said earlier, developing that responsible base, which is compliant toglobal standards in terms of the kind of labor which is used, the manufacturing practices, andfinally the quality of the product, is critical.

At Wal-Mart, we spend an awful lot of time and energy in doing that. It is a slow process; itdoesn't happen overnight. All we need to do is be patient and work through those processes toensure that Indian small and medium manufactures come to that level. There are very high qualitymanufacturers in India who are supplying to us already. We are pleased with our sourcingoperations out of India.

Knowledge@Wharton: Where will Wal-Mart India be four to five years from now?

Jain: We are just setting up the initial foundation of our business in India from a wholesalecash-and-carry standpoint. I think, it's learning about the market, learning about the endconsumer, learning about the trade. Developing a team of good leadership and a team of largeassociates can make this business work.

If all goes as per plan, I think, in five years we should have several cash-and-carry operations inIndia. It may not be across India, but certainly in the important geographies in India. We shouldhave a very good understanding of the end consumer, of the trade. And we should have a scalefrom which we can grow very rapidly.

Our submission to the Indian government is that we hope in this time-frame the Indian

government would liberalize the FDI regulations in retail, and permit Wal-Mart and companieslike Wal-Mart to be able to participate in the retail growth going forward.

Knowledge@Wharton: In thinking back on your career, what is the single biggest leadershipchallenge that you have faced? How did you overcome it, and what did you learn from it?

Jain: The single biggest leadership challenge in my experience has been to craft a vision, whichis way beyond quarterly goals, which is way beyond financial goals. Sometimes leaders get toomired into achieving financial targets and so on.

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I think a compelling vision that is not unique to the business, but is good for the larger societyand the customer whom you are serving is important. I think, equally important is staying true toit, because for leaders, it is very easy to get derailed into meeting financial, quarterly goals and soon and so forth. If your vision is compelling and you can stay true to it, developing a sustainable business becomes that much easier in whatever you do.

Knowledge@Wharton: Thank you so much for joining us today.

Jain: Thank you very much for the opportunity.

This is a single/personal use copy of India Knowledge@Wharton. For multiple copies, customreprints, e-prints, posters or plaques, please contact PARS International: [email protected] P.(212) 221-9595 x407.

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