Transforming agri-business the e-way

>From BUSINESS INDIA * June 24-July 7, 2002 By MEERA SHENOY

* * * * *

The 750-crore (Rs 7500 million) ITC group's e-choupal model provides
agri-business with an e-solution. Farmers can now use the Net to
leverage transmission capabilities and access market data.

* * * * *

LIFE IS DIFFERENT for the 32-year-old Devaiah. A coffee planter and
agent in Mercara, Coorg, his day begins by opening his computer and
logging on to www.plantersnet.com. His father, with whom he shares the
office of Agro Input Consultancy Centre, is clear that he leaves these
gadgets to his son to handle.

But he admits the office is busier these days. Planters, young and old,
drop in to ask his son questions like the trends in coffee price or if
they have a technical problem. Says Devaiah, "I have been an agent for
ICT's trading house for some time. But this new facility is really like
a one-stop shop for the planters and traders."

Shashank Joshi is a soya farmer in Mendki village, Madhya Pradesh, and
holds two acres of land. Now he has a new status as a 'sanchalak' in the
ITC's soya e-choupal. A computer was installed in his house which gives
him information on prices, weather and technical issues.

Other farmers come and drop their soya bags at his home-cum-office. The
days of hanging around the 'mandi', waiting for the agents to examine
their stock and dictate prices, are over. Prices of major 'mandis' are
transparently provided on the computer screen, giving the farmer the
choice to sell his stock to ICT or a 'mandi' of choice.

The Rs 750-crore (Rs 7500 million) ITC International Business Division,
a part of the ITC group, has four broad divisions. It exports bulk
products like soya, wheat, sugar, oil and rice worth Rs 450 crore; aqua
products worth Rs 100 crore; volatile products like coffee and pepper
worth Rs 75-200 crore and small volumes of value-added items like fruit
pulp and basmati rice worth Rs 25 crore.

Margins in this business are wafer thin; its net profit last year were
at Rs 20 crore. But a greater crease on ICT's brow was a lack of control
over the supply chain.

In Madhya Pradesh, the marginal soya farmers were located in far-flung
villages. In coffee, there was a mixture of large and small planters,
traders and agents. This resulted in the company not having any control
over quality, which is of critical importance in exports, and caused a
complete dependence on middlemen. Till, finally, a solution was found
using information technology in a project called e-choupal launched
one-and-a-half year ago.

Says S. Sivakumar, CEO, ITC Agribusiness and IBD, "We began with
conceiving an alternative supply chain management model." The challenge
for any corporate in the agri-business, he explains, is dealing with
fragmented farms, infrastructure bottlenecks and numerous
intermediaries.

These intermediaries make unreasonable profits for themselves by
blocking market and price information. But they cannot be wished away as
they add critical value at very low cost by substituting for the
infrastructure gaps along the chain. Adds Sivakumar, "We used the power
of the Internet, and worked out a model which not only leverages the
physical transmission capabilities of these intermediaries, but also
disintermediates them from flow of information and market signals."

The click and mortar model was first established in Madhya Pradesh for
soya farmers. An Internet kiosk was set up in the house of an
influential farmer known as the choupal sanchalak. The site provides
farmers with real-time information on the latest weather report, prices
in various 'mandis', global prices and the best farming practises.

All information based on the farmers' needs was gathered and the content
rewritten in some cases by the farmers themselves for user-friendliness.
Soil testing services offered at the sanchalak's office also provided
ITC with a valuable database. Rather than leaving the middle-men
completely out of the loop, a role was created for some of them in the
logistics operations with the title of 'choupal samyojak'.

The oath-taking ceremony is public for transparency in the appointment
of the 'samyojak' and 'sanchalak'. The farmers have the option of either
bringing the produce to the ICT warehouse or factories and get
reimbursed for transport costs, or they could give their supplies to one
of the collection hubs or to the 'sanchalak'.

According to company officials, the farmer saves Rs 250 per tonne on
soya bean since he no longer has to pay for bagging, transporting,
loading and unloading, plus wastage and wrong weighting at the 'mandis'.
For ITC, on the other hand, even after paying transport cost, it saves
about Rs 200 a tonne and gives them direct access to the farmers.

The next step was converting the computer from a mere supply chain
mechanism to a one-stop shop. This meant not just enabling the farmer to
sell his product but also source his inputs and daily items for
household use.

For instance, it has tied up with Monsanto and Madhya Pradesh's Seeds
Corporation for seeds and BASF for fertilisers. ITC charges a 10 per
cent commission on the percentage of sales accrued in the choupals, one
half of which is passed on to the 'choupal' sanchalak who executes the
sale. It also sells solar lanterns and cooking oil through the same
chain. "The supply chain tool has actually become a delivery mechanism
tool for FMCG and other items the farmer may want," says a spokesman of
Nagarjuna Fertilisers.

Points out Sivakumar, "Having succeeded with soya, we decided to extend
the concept to crops grown in four states with different socio-economic
characteristics." As the company officials point out, while the basic
character of agriculture is the same across India, the value chains of
different crops have their own dynamics.

The zeroed-in were coffee in Karnataka, aqua in Andhra Pradesh and wheat
in Uttar Pradesh. Setting up and managing choupals in these four diverse
states and crops would give them the expertise to replicate the model in
any part of the country.

Take for example coffee. It was a plantation crop with a more
sophisticated grower profile. Market prices were highly volatile; the
agent's role was crucial, since planters preferred to trade with known
counterparts. The value chain was efficient and scope for
disintermediation low.

The strategy was to set up one-stop shops for information, knowledge,
inputs and outputs, and the interlocking of a network of partners. But
the information was more sophisticated, like parity charts where raw to
clean coffee conversion rates could be calculated. And knowledge was
offered through specialist service providers like the Australia-based
Future Source for future information. ABN Amro, which is the largest
futures player in the world, provides a daily analysis on the volatile
movements of the market.

Unlike soya, the computers had to be placed at different target groups
like the agents' kiosks, clubs and cooperatives of smaller planters. ITC
also created an e-trading platform with special features.

Says Lakshmi Venkatachalam, chairman, Coffee Board: "This Web site is a
harbinger of better export prospects of coffee from India and could
serve as a virtual extension of services for the cash-strapped small
grower who have no information on scientific cropping and market
information. It could also help build brands in international markets."

The ITC e-choupal has attracted global attention. Says David Upton,
professor, Harvard Business School, who flew down to India to write this
case study for his students, "This is a supply chain innovation that is
local to India but has broad applications to the world. What is
interesting is the social good it brings in the wake to the small,
marginal farmer."

Upton points out several issues which the company has addressed.

Firstly, it is not just tweaking around but a greater efficiency in the
supply chain. One of the problems in redesigning supply chains is how to
use different tools, thus making the various players still own the
chain. Here, the farmer and the team are involved in painting the big
picture, so there is enthusiasm and a feeling of ownership.

Further, how do you avoid a channel conflict by finding space for the
middle-men? Upton also points out that the 'roll out, fix it, scale up'
model is a new approach to strategic management. The philosophy here is
that the terrain has so many uncertainties that gaps will exist. So,
unlike in the past, where focus was on well-laid strategic plans, here
you give experimentation-based strategies more weightage.

Says Upton: "Admitted I do not have all the answers but I will not wait
for them; instead build safety nets while I roll it out, learn lessons
and then fix it. This means you are not attached to your design and are
sensitive to lessons from the outside world."

The company's target is to eventually have 50,000 choupals to cover
200,000 Indian villages which means covering one-fifth of the country.
With this infrastructure, ITC targets Rs 2000 crore (Rs 20,000 million)
by the year 2005 from its international exports.

Says Sivakumar, "Even while we set up choupals all over India, we have
offers from international organisations to replicate this in Africa and
other developing countries." 

-- MEERA SHENOY



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