Conquer Rural Marketing in Developing Countries


Book Description

In this book, I have endeavoured to study all the facets of marketing, concerning "Rural Markets". Rural markets are blossoming in India and in many developing regions like Asia, Latin America, Africa and the Middle East. The villager is becoming more affluent in countries like India, China, Brazil, Colombia, Venezuela, Ecuador, Indonesia, Sri Lanka, etc., due to improvements in agricultural productivity, dispersion of industry in rural areas, exposure to media like television and the rapid advancement of the Internet and mobile phone technologies. The exploding rural markets pose a prodigious challenge to marketers. They have to harvest these markets comprehensively.Ever since I started working in 1975, the assimilation of consumer products in the villages and their consequent impact on the lifestyles and habits of villagers, has fascinated me. Since then, I have been an avid student of rural marketing in India and the countries I worked in abroad, marketing and selling a host of products like soaps, detergents, toothpaste, shampoos, food products, animal feeds, etc., to the villagers in Asia, Latin America, Africa, etc. In this book, I have covered all the four P's of marketing, i.e. the Product, Place, Pricing, and Promotion. The evolution of the Indian urban and rural markets has also been covered. The book is written very substantially in anecdotal form, to make it an interesting reading. It is based on my personal interactions with rural consumers, shopkeepers and wholesalers in hundreds of villages in India and abroad. These narratives are analysed within conceptual frameworks.




Conquer Rural Marketing Across Countries


Book Description

In this book, I have endeavoured to study all the facets of marketing, concerning "Rural Markets". Rural markets are blossoming in India and in many regions like Asia, Latin America, Africa and the Middle East. The villager is becoming more affluent in countries like India, China, Brazil, Colombia, Venezuela, Ecuador, Indonesia, Sri Lanka, etc., due to improvements in agricultural productivity, dispersion of industry in rural areas, exposure to media like television and the rapid advancement of the Internet and mobile phone technologies. The exploding rural markets pose a prodigious challenge to marketers. They have to harvest these markets comprehensively.Ever since I started working in 1975, the assimilation of consumer products in the villages and their consequent impact on the lifestyles and habits of villagers, has fascinated me. Since then, I have been an avid student of rural marketing in India and the countries I worked in abroad, marketing and selling a host of products like soaps, detergents, toothpaste, shampoos, food products, animal feeds, etc., to the villagers in Asia, Latin America, Africa, etc. In this book, I have covered all the four P's of marketing, i.e. the Product, Place, Pricing, and Promotion. The evolution of the Indian urban and rural markets has also been covered. The book is written very substantially in anecdotal form, to make it an interesting reading. It is based on my personal interactions with rural consumers, shopkeepers and wholesalers in hundreds of villages in India and abroad. These narratives are analysed within conceptual frameworks.







Rural Marketing as a Tool for National Development


Book Description

Charles Chatterjee delves into the multifaceted realm of rural marketing and its impact on national advancement.




Markets, marketing and developing countries


Book Description

Markets are increasingly seen as vehicles to solve problems in developing countries. For example, improvements in market performance make potentially important contributions to achieve the Millennium Development Goals. Access of smallholders to well-functioning markets is increasingly expected to contribute to poverty alleviation and improvement of both food security and environmental sustainability. This book presents the views of leading experts on where we stand and where we are heading in the field of markets, marketing and developing countries. Twenty essays in this book describe the role of marketing in achieving development goals, the track record of past market policies, the current functioning of value chains, the roles that market institutions play to facilitate market access for smallholders, as well as the potential to add value to farm produce through certification schemes, new technologies or innovation systems. The book is published in honour of the retirement of Aad van Tilburg, one of the pioneers in the field of marketing in developing countries. Early on in his career Van Tilburg recognised that improvements in the functioning of markets and marketing can be key to economic development with special reference to the livelihood of small producers and other market actors in developing countries.




Rise of Rural Consumers in Developing Countries


Book Description

Watch Vijay Mahajan talk about Rise of Rural Consumers in Developing Countries: Harvesting 3 Billion Aspirations This is the first comprehensive book highlighting the expanding consumer power of rural markets in developing countries. It takes a close look at one of the key stories in emerging markets: the untapped potential of the world’s 3.4 billion rural consumers -- 90 percent of whom live in Asia and Africa. The sheer number of rural consumers can provide a massive customer base for innovative companies that figure out how to reach them. The book provides a profile of the rural developing world and examines the forces that are increasing rural prosperity, including billions of dollars in remittances from migrant workers. It includes several examples of innovations and best practices that are allowing companies to tap into this opportunity.




Rural Marketing


Book Description

With reference to India.




Agricultural and Food Marketing in Developing Countries


Book Description

Marketing is defined as the business activities associated with the flow of goods and services from production to consumption. The marketing of agricultural products begins on the farm, with the planning of production, and is completed with the sale of food or other goods to consumers or manufacturers. Agricultural marketing also includes the supply to farmers of fertilizers and seeds as inputs for production. Overall, marketing is an essential component of successful agriculture but its importance is often underestimated, especially in developing countries. This book brings together the most significant writings on agricultural and food marketing as related to development over the last 40 years. The editor has selected key sections of significant books and papers, grouped them by their overall theme, and provided introductory commentaries. The book is intended for students of food and agricultural marketing in the developing countries and will also interest professionals in this subject area.




Rural Marketing: Text And Cases, 2/E


Book Description




Managing Rural Markets


Book Description

Rural Marketing has emerged as an important branch of learning given the significance of rural markets and bottom of pyramid populations across the globe and more so in developing countries which have grown fast in the past few decades. Rural markets are now part of the new growth and development agenda not only in their own right but also as part of the inclusive growth and development agenda of the state. But, understanding of the subject and its application remains poor in business and development circles. There are very few courses being offered which add value and which attend to the needs of business executives especially in developing and emerging markets. This book takes a fresh look at the rationale and practice of the discipline by examining major aspects like definition and scope of rural marketing, nature and magnitude of rural markets, segments in the rural sector, innovative product and distribution management strategies and major promotional measures besides examining creation of new rural markets across product categories. The book contains many cases and caselets to make it useful to executives and students to help learn not just concepts but learn them from a real life context. The book is targeted at the undergraduate and post-graduate students in business management, agribusiness management and rural management and at the business executives in management training and learning programs across the developing world. The book brings in many years of experience of the trainer in rural and agribusiness markets across programs at IIMA, IRMA and the like. The book combines the conceptual and the empirical insights on various topics in rural marketing and offers a research based analysis and examination to dispel many rural marketing myths.