Tag: natural products

  • Beco launches new campaign with Dia Mirza for its eco-friendly product range

    Beco launches new campaign with Dia Mirza for its eco-friendly product range

    Mumbai: Homegrown eco-friendly D2C home, kitchen & personal care brand Beco has launched its new ad campaign featuring its latest range of home care and cleaning products. The campaign, designed and created by ^ a t o m Network, features Beco’s new brand ambassador, Bollywood actor and environmental conservationist Dia Mirza. 

    The campaign takes a direct dig at some of the leading and widely available & advertised range of home cleaning products which today’s consumers are unaware of, as being not only harmful to the environment but also for the family’s health. It pitches the brand as the safe and natural alternative with its ‘new range of antimicrobial dishwashing liquid, floor cleaner, laundry liquid, and tissues made from 100 per cent plant-based ingredients and extracts of essential oils.’

    “Truth is the most powerful sword a brand can possess. We just took it out of the sheath and presented it in a hard-hitting yet entertaining way,” said ^ a t o m CCO Yash Kulshrestha, speaking about the campaign and the ad film. “The integrated campaign starts with a set of teasers, followed by multiple films starring Dia Mirza, which talks about chemicals left on your dishes after cleaning them with regular dishwashing liquid and how they may contain carcinogenic substances. The category is brimming with loud and look-alike ads with superficial claims. It helped us mount our narrative and highlight the grim part in a more palatable way.”

    The 50-second film directed by Jeet Lotia and produced by Another Idea productions features an ad within an ad to give the entire campaign a realistic feel. It emphasises that although most over-the-counter cleaners do the trick of cleaning our homes, the high levels of toxic and carcinogenic chemicals that can be present in them pose a health risk for the users.

    “The homecare category hasn’t seen much innovation for the past 20 years, let alone the sustainable space. Customers don’t even know that their basic essentials like tissues and cleaners can be harmful,” stated Beco lead of marketing Akanksha Gupta. “Positioning Beco in a captivating, easy to understand and impactful fashion, we are bringing in the much-needed disruption. This campaign is just the beginning of a more consumer-focused, data-led, and creative-technology interspersed brand that we are in the process of building.”

    “Everyone talks about the idea of sustainable living, but when it comes to real adoption, we are still sticking to harmful products which are not only bad for the earth but also dangerous for every member of the family,” said Beco co-founder Aditya Ruia. “Using technology, every product of Beco is naturally sourced and uses no harmful chemicals – making them safe for daily use, and are available at affordable pricing.”

  • No competition from Himalaya or Patanjali: Nyassa founder

    No competition from Himalaya or Patanjali: Nyassa founder

    MUMBAI: Working at a renowned financial company like Ernst & Young may be what most youngsters dream about. But not Ishween Anand, who left her cushy finance job in New York to pursue her passion for fragrances in India. 10 years down the line, she does not regret her decision one bit. 

    Anand was always inclined towards soap-making, the process and various fragrances. And once she came back to India, she decided to pursue her dream and combine all things she loved by launching Nyassa in 2007. The word has its origin in Sanskrit that means healing through touch by chanting tantras and mantras.

    At that time, there were barely any exclusive natural soap brands in the country, and she sensed a huge opportunity. But the Indian consumer was alien to buying bath soaps worth Rs 100 when a standard soap bar was available at the cost of just Rs 20. 

    Knowing the challenges she might have to face, Anand went ahead with her initial investment of Rs 15 lakh into the business. She didn’t have to spend a lot of resources on machinery and setting up a plant as natural soaps are made by hand. But it isn’t all that easy to launch your own company and manufacture products and Anand had her own hurdles in getting the FDA (Food and Drugs Administration) licence from the government.

    She recalls an incident when she reached out to the FDA seeking necessary documentation to launch bath bombs, a concept which was pretty foreign to India at the time. “The executives were baffled on which category do we put bath bombs under as it was something they hadn’t heard about before,” she says.

    She began her entrepreneurial journey by selling only soaps and body lotions at the food court of Atria Mall in Mumbai. This proved to be a masterstroke for her, as within three months of launch, she had already partnered with 15 stores who were willing to sell the products. 

    Anand’s company broke even in just about a year. The soap-maker tasted success without actually investing in conventional ATL (above the line) advertising. With a y-o-y growth of 30 per cent for the last three years, Nyassa does not believe in advertising on traditional media. “If we ever do anything on advertisement, it will be on digital,” says Anand. Another natural brand, Soulflower, went ahead of its time to advertise on social media when the medium was just catching up and Anand now realises that it’s time to buck up.

    Today, the company advertises on social media platforms Instagram and Facebook with its own in-house marketing team due to budget constraints. But Anand now realises the importance of having a full-fledged agency on board. “We haven’t really gone out and marketed ourselves but I think we will have to do it now as the competition today is cutthroat and it’s important to distinguish your brand from the rest.”

    The appetite for beauty segment is huge is India and Nykaa’s Rs 600 crore revenue just by selling bath and beauty products goes to show how cluttered and interesting the segment is.  

    The bath and body brand sells 80 per cent of its products through offline channels and a mere 20 per cent through third party e-commerce websites Amazon, Flipkart and Nykaa. However, 30 per cent of the company’s revenue comes from online sales and a staggering 70 per cent still comes from people who visit the stores to buy products. Even though Nyassa has its own website, a major chunk of the sale comes from Amazon, Nykaa and Flipkart and that’s where the company wants to focus.

    With a strong presence in Mumbai and airports across India, Anand now wants to expand the company to other locations in India, next up being Delhi. 

    What e-commerce has enabled the company to do, is reach out to consumers in smaller towns and cities with orders pouring in from Kochi, Patna, and the eastern and southern belts as well. On this, the entrepreneur says, “I think our consumers are everywhere. But with the limited resources that we have, we have to prioritise whether we want to open a shop in a tier II town or Delhi. We will eventually open shops everywhere.”

    The beauty and bath segment has begun seeing an uptick only recently but the international market is extremely cluttered as every local city has soap makers along with high-end premium soap manufacturers. The consumers there also have an appetite for fancy products and money to spare. It will be interesting to see an Indian manufacturer tap that market with Indian fragrances and products. Anand admits that she would love to enter the international market eventually, but does not have an immediate plan for the same. 

    It is pretty fair to assume that any consumer today is willing to explore his options when it comes to soap bars as we have over 500 different brands opening in the segment. The recent trend being of buying herbal and natural soaps after yoga guru Baba Ramdev popularised Patanjali by selling its soaps for only Rs 10.  Anand does not believe in positioning the company as either ayurvedic or natural and rather opines that the positioning is about offering fragrant products which are chemical free. 

    However, Anand does not see competition from brands like Patanjali or Himalaya. “Brands like Himalaya and Patanjali are not our competition because a person that uses these products is not our consumer. We don’t get deterred by a brand like Patanjali. But if we were a Hindustan Unilever, we would definitely be worried,” she adds.

    Going forward, Nyassa is all set to launch customised perfume bars where consumers can walk into the store and create their own perfumes with the fragrances they like. 

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