Tag: Hafele India

  • Customer experience is king, but AI might just be the sneaky new prince of modern commerce

    Customer experience is king, but AI might just be the sneaky new prince of modern commerce

    MUMBAI: At a time when the average consumer can scroll through 600 metres of content with a flick of their thumb, customer experience (CX) has become the new battlefield for brands. At Indiantelevision.com’s Media Investment Summit 2025, the panel titled ‘The Experience-Driven Commerce: Why CX is the New Brand Differentiator’ proved that tech, touchpoints and taste all matter-but timing is everything.

    Moderated by Indiantelevision.com’s founder Anil Wanvari, the session brought together Sujay Ray (L’Oréal India), Anjali Dutta (Tech Mahindra), Namita Bohara (Hindalco Industries), Amruta Pawar (Hafele India), and Durgesh Singh (WebEngage), who revealed that when it comes to CX, the devil isn’t just in the details—it’s in the data.

    Kicking off the session, Sujay Ray of L’Oréal India emphasised the need to create a “seamless experience across touchpoints”. Whether in a salon, an e-commerce app or an Amazon product page, Ray argued, “there has to be a value exchange”. From virtual hair trials using AI to beauty advisors guiding customers in-store, Ray believes true brand loyalty comes from creating consistent, context-aware moments.

    “CX is not about adding glitter to one channel—it’s about synchronising the entire journey”, he said. And for L’Oréal, that meant building “Plus Plus experiences” across every brand interface.

    Representing Hindalco Industries, Namita Bohara unpacked the duality of B2B and B2C engagement. “For a carpenter, it could be a sample kit. For the end customer, it’s about the finish and touch”, she noted. She called attention to Hindalco’s clear demarcation of ‘partner customers’ and ‘end customers’, urging brands to rethink standard definitions.

    “For us, every partner is a customer”, Bohara stressed, adding that her organisation has instituted design centres and standardised brand touchpoints to ensure a coherent experience across product categories like furniture fittings and appliances.

    Anjali Dutta from Tech Mahindra painted a broader canvas—marrying technology with empathy. “I want to get a small space in my customer’s subconscious mind. That’s what CX means to me”, she said. Dutta urged brands to go beyond vanity metrics and embrace ethical AI.

    “CX isn’t only digital—it’s physical too”, she said. She cited scenarios where in-store agents equipped with purchase history can offer a personalised recommendation. “That’s the new CRM: remembering who walked in and when”.

    At Hafele India, general manager Amruta Pawar believes that physical contact still trumps virtual bells and whistles—especially in the business of soft-close drawers and modular furniture. “Our industry needs customers to touch and feel the product. That can’t be virtualised yet”, she said.

    Hafele’s CX strategy includes design centres, live demos, and QR-based packaging systems that allow customers to scan for specs instantly. “Digital helps nudge a customer down the funnel, but final conversion often happens offline”, she explained.

    Durgesh Singh of Webengage added the sharpest edge to the panel, diving into lifecycle mapping and predictive analytics. “Every customer is on a different journey. Our role is to ensure each touchpoint adds value”, he said.

    Singh highlighted how AI helps brands send the right communication at the right time—citing models that predict whether a lipstick buyer will next purchase sandals and when. “We use LSTM, next-best-action models and AI-driven time-of-day messaging to improve conversion by as much as 25 per cent,” he said.

    All panellists agreed: AI can’t replace intuition, but it can scale it.

    While all brands had embraced technology in varying capacities, the panel made it clear that customer experience isn’t a one-time campaign-it’s a constant calibration.

    Ray put it best: “Today, you might feel like you’ve hit 30 per cent, but the next challenge resets the goalpost. It’s a journey, not a destination”.

    And with the audience nodding along, it was clear: if you’re not obsessively refining your customer experience, someone else is doing it better.

  • IdeateLabs wins 360-degree Marketing mandate for Hafele India

    IdeateLabs wins 360-degree Marketing mandate for Hafele India

    MUMBAI: IdeateLabs, one of India’s largest independent digital-first creative agency has won the complete communication mandate for the luxury brand Hafele India. The win comes after the brand invited several leading agencies for a 360 pitch, facilitated by Landor Consultancy (Part of the WPP Group).

    Hafele’s mandate to IdeateLabs consolidates the responsibility of Creative, Content and Media with one agency. This includes, developing the Marketing Blueprint, Creative Strategy, Brand Architecture, Media Planning & Execution, Reputation Management, Social & Digital Assets, PR, Performance Marketing and Content Creation. Starting with increasing brand awareness and building a strong community of consumers & influencers, the agency intends to take it all the way to showcasing Hafele’s innovations and creating thought leadership for the brand.

    On acquiring the prestigious account, Vrutika Dawda, Director, IdeateLabs commented, “Hafele India is not just another win. It is the opportunity to draw upon our many talents and employ them in a focused manner for brand Hafele. Building brands is all about building the right conversations. This has been our differentiator and our philosophy. Here’s a great chance for us to build it in a true 360-degree approach. For sure, dynamic story-telling and disruptive formats will play a vital role. We are keen to be a part of Hafele’s business ambitions and explore concepts that will redefine the way a brand communicates.

    Commenting on this partnership, Sanjay Swami, Head – Marketing Services, Hafele India said, “We were looking to partner with an agency who understands the luxury lifestyle industry on one hand, and who has a holistic brand perspective, on the other. Having been partners for a few years on the digital front, IdeateLabs understands our brand and our growth plans in India and South Asia regions. We are entering a phase of dynamic growth and are confident that IdeateLabs is the right partner who can help us get there”.

    Häfele is an international leader in the manufacturing and supply, space for kitchen fitting, furniture fittings and architectural hardware. With a legacy of over 95 years, Hafele India has expanded its product portfolio to Appliances, Lighting, Sanitaryware and Surfaces.

  • Hafele to up media spends this year

    BENGALURU: Hafele India, a distributor of furniture fittings, hardware and architectural ironmongery, is intending to shift its focus from business-to-business (B2B) to business-to-consumer (B2C) operations. The company is planning to increase its media spends for this year as it is eyeing over 50 per cent growth in the revenues this year.

    Last year, the company had spent around Rs 120 million – 10 per cent of its India revenues – towards print (furniture magazines) and principal sponsorship of Master Chef -Australia.

    With the addition of new products in its portfolio, Hafele managing director Jurgen Wolf is looking at a 50 per cent growth in revenues to Rs 1.8 billion by December 2012.

    “Though the media spends will not be proportionate, they will certainly be higher,” said Wolf while talking with indiantelevision on the sidelines of the launch of an upgraded design franchise‘s studio ‘Varun‘s Innovation‘ in Bangalore.

    The company is on the lookout for suitable communication opportunities that will help it reach its TG.

    Varun‘s Innovation is Hafele‘s largest studio in terms of size as well as revenues. Hafele has 41 franchisees in India and will be adding another 11 by December 2012.

    For calendar years 2013 and 2014, the company plans to add 20 more studios/franchisee per year.

    At present, MX Advertising is handling the creative and media duties of the company.