ANALYSIS OF CUSTOMER SATISFACTION TOWARDS SUPERMARKET M.P.B.I.M, Bangalore 1 A DISSERTATION ON “Analysis of customer satisfaction towards supermarket” Submitted in partial fulfilment of the requirement for MBA Degree of Bangalore University BY SATISH S MUSTI Register Number 04XQCM6080 Under the guidance of Prof. Shinu Abhi M.P.Birla Institute of Management Associate Bharatiya Vidya Bhavan #43, Race Course road, Bangalore-560001
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ANALYSIS OF CUSTOMER SATISFACTION TOWARDS SUPERMARKET
M.P.B.I.M, Bangalore
1
A DISSERTATION
ON
“Analysis of customer satisfaction towards supermarket”
Submitted in partial fulfilment of the requirement for MBA
Degree of Bangalore University
BY
SATISH S MUSTI Register Number
04XQCM6080
Under the guidance of
Prof. Shinu Abhi
M.P.Birla Institute of Management
Associate Bharatiya Vidya Bhavan
#43, Race Course road,
Bangalore-560001
ANALYSIS OF CUSTOMER SATISFACTION TOWARDS SUPERMARKET
M.P.B.I.M, Bangalore
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D E C L A R A T A I O N
I hereby declare that the project report titled “Analysis of customer satisfaction towards
supermarket.” is a record of independent work carried out by me towards the partial
fulfillment of the requirements for the Masters Degree in Business Administration course of
Bangalore University, at M.P. Birla Institute of Management, Associate Bharatiya Vidya
Bhavan, Bangalore – 560001.
This has not been submitted for the purpose of any award or degree or diploma of any other
university or institution.
Place: Bangalore (Mr. Satish S Musti)
Date: 04XQCM6080.
ANALYSIS OF CUSTOMER SATISFACTION TOWARDS SUPERMARKET
M.P.B.I.M, Bangalore
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PRINCIPAL’S CERTIFICATE This is to certify that Mr. Satish S Musti, bearing registration no.04XQCM6102 has
undertaken a research project and has prepared a report titled
“ANALYSIS OF CUSTOMER SATISFACTION TOWARDS SUPERMARKET”,
Under the guidance of Prof. Shinu Abhi. This has not formed a basis for the award of any
degree/ diploma for any other university/Institution.
Place: Bangalore
Date: Dr.Nagesh.S.Malavalli
ANALYSIS OF CUSTOMER SATISFACTION TOWARDS SUPERMARKET
M.P.B.I.M, Bangalore
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GUIDE CERTIFICATE
This is to certify that Mr. Satish S Musti, bearing registration no.04XQCM6080 has
undertaken a research project and has prepared a report titled
“ANALYSIS OF CUSTOMER SATISFACTION TOWARDS SUPERMARKET”,
Under my guidance. This has not formed a basis for the award of any degree/ diploma for any
other university.
Place: Bangalore
Date: Prof. Shinu Abhi
ANALYSIS OF CUSTOMER SATISFACTION TOWARDS SUPERMARKET
M.P.B.I.M, Bangalore
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A C K N O W L E D G E M E N T
At the very outset, I take the opportunity to thank Dr. Nagesh Malavalli, Principal, M.P.
Birla Institute of Management for providing me with the academic support. I express my
sincere regards and gratitude for every individual linked with my Research Work.
One such person is my guide for the semester Prof. Shinu Abhi, whose inspiring words
made me, put in all I had to offer. His continuous guidance and suggestions are the cardinal
aspects that have ultimately led me to see this fruitful end.
I would like to thank all the respondents and personnel for their co-operation and providing
the relevant data required.
I express my sincere gratitude to all my friends and well-wishers who helped me in
completing this Project Report.
Last but not the least; I would like to thank the Almighty for being there always in this
endeavor.
Yours truly
Mr. Satish S Musti
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CHAPTER
PATICULARS Page No.
1
EXECUTIVE SUMMARY
1-2
2
INTRODUCTION TO RETAILING
• Retailing • Supermarket • Retailing in India • Indian retail market • Food retailing in India • FDI in retail • Developments in retail sector
3-35
3
REVIEW OF LITERACTURE
36-39
4
DESIGN OF THE STUDY
• Research gap • Problem statement • Objective of the study • Scope of the study • Contribution from the study
RESEARCH METHODOLOGY • Research design • Sources of data collection
• Postpurchase services include shipping and delivery, gift wrapping, adjustments and
returns, alterations and tailoring, installations, engraving.
• Ancillary services include general information, check cashing, parking, restaurants,
repairs, interior decorating, credit, rest rooms, and baby-attendant service.
The services mix is a key tool for differentiating one store from another; so is
atmosphere. (See “Marketing for the New Economy: Extreme Retailing”.) Atmosphere is
another element in the store arsenal. Every store has a physical layout that makes it hard or
easy to move around. Every store has a “Look”. The store must embody a planned
atmosphere that suits the target market and draws consumers toward purchase.
PRICE DECISION
Prices are a key positioning factor and must be decided in relation to the target market,
the product-and-service assortment mix and competition. All retailers would like to achieve
high volumes and high gross margins. They would like high Turns x Earns, but the two
usually do not go together. Most retailers fall into the high-makeup, lower-volume group
(fine specialty stores) or the low-markup, higher-volume group (mass-merchandisers and
discount stores). Within each of these groups are further gradations).
Retailers must also pay attention to pricing tactics. Most retailers will put low prices
on some items to serve as traffic builders or loss leaders. They will run storewide sales. They
will plan markdowns on slower-moving merchandise.
Some retailers have abandoned “sales pricing” in favour of everyday low pricing
(EDLP). EDLP could lead to lower advertising costs, greater pricing stability, a stronger
image of fairness and reliability and higher retailer profits. Frank Feather cites a study
showing that supermarket chains practicing everyday low pricing are often more profitable
than those practicing sales pricing.
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PROMOTION DECISION
Retailers use a wide range of promotion tools to generate traffic and purchases. They
place ads, run special sales, issue money-saving coupons and run frequent shopper-reward
programs, in-store food sampling and coupons on shelves of at checkout points. Each retailer
must use promotion tools that support and reinforce its image positioning. Fine stores will
place tasteful full-page ads in magazines such as Vogue and Harper’s. They will carefully
train salespeople to greet customers, interpret their needs, and handle complaints.
PLACE DECISION
Retailers are accustomed to saying that the three keys to success are “location,
location and location”. Customers generally choose the nearest bank and gas station.
Department-store chains, oil companies and fast-food franchisers exercise great care in
selecting locations. The problem breaks down into selecting regions of the country in which
to open outlets, then particular cities and then particular sites. A supermarket chain might
decide to operate in the Midwest; in the cities of Chicago, Milwaukee and Indianapolis; and
in 14 locations, mostly suburban, within the Chicago region.
Retailers can locate their stores in the central business district, a regional shopping
center, a community shopping center, a shopping strip, or within a larger store.
• General business districts: This is the oldest and most heavily trafficked city area,
often known as “downtown”. Store and office rents are normally high. Most
downtown areas were hit by a flight to the suburbs in the 1960s, resulting in
deteriorated retailing facilities; but in the 1960s, a minor renaissance of interest in
downtown apartments, stores and restaurants began in many cities.
• Regional shopping centers: These are large suburban malls containing 40 to 200
stores. They usually draw customers from a 5 to 20 mil radius. Malls are attractive
because of generous parking, one-stop shopping, restaurants and recreational
facilities. Successful malls charge high rents and may get a share of stores’ sales.
• Community shopping centres: these are smaller malls with one anchor store and
between 20 and 40 smaller stores.
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• Strip malls (also called shopping strips): these contain a cluster of stores, usually
housed in one long buildings, serving a neighbourhood’s needs for groceries,
hardware, laundry, shoe repair and dry cleaning. They usually serve people within a
five to ten–minute driving range.
• A location within a larger store: Certain well-known retailers-McDonalds’s,
Starbucks, Nathan’s, Dunkin’ Donuts-locate new, smaller units as concession space
within larger stores or operations such as airports, schools or department stores.
In view of the relationship between high traffic and high rents, retailers must decide
on the most advantageous locations for their outlets. They can use a variety of methods to
assess locations, including traffic counts, surveys of consumer shopping habits and analysis
of competitive locations. Several models for site location have also been formulated.
Retailers can assess a particular store’s sales effectiveness by looking at four
indicators:
1. Number of people passing by on an average day.
2. Percentage who enter the store
3. Percentage of those entering who buy
4. Average amount spent per sale.
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TRENDS IN RETAILING
At this point, the main developments retailers and manufacturers need to take into
account in planning competitive strategies.
1. New retail forms and combinations: some supermarkets include bank branches.
2. Growth of intertype competition: Different types of stores–discount stores, catalog
showrooms, department stores-all compete for the same consumers by carrying the
same type of merchandise.
3. Growth of giant retailers: Through their superior information systems, logistical
systems, and buying power, giant retailers are able to deliver good service and
immense volumes of product at appealing prices to masses of consumers. They are
crowding out smaller manufacturers what to make, how to price and promote, when
and how to ship and even how to improve production and management.
Manufacturers need these accounts; otherwise they would lose 10 to 30 percent of the
market. Some giant retailers are category killers that concentrate on one product
category such as toys (Toys “R” Us), home improvement (home Depot), or office
supplies (staples). Others are super centers that combine grocery items with a huge
selection of nonfood merchandise (Kmart, Wal-Mart).
4. Growing investment in technology: Retailers are using computers to produce better
forecasts, control inventory costs, order electronically from suppliers, send e-mail
between stores and even sell to customers within stores. They are adopting checkout
scanning systems, electronic fund transfer, electronic data interchange, in-store
television, store traffic radar systems and improved merchandise-handling systems.
5. Global presence of major retailers: Retailers with unique formats and strong brand
positioning are increasingly appearing in other countries.
6. Selling an experience, not just goods: Retailers are now adding fun community in
order to compete with other stores and online retailers. There has been a marked rise
in establishments that provide a place for people to congregate, such as coffeehouses,
tea shops, juice bars, book shops.
7. Competition between store-based and non-store-based retailing: Consumers now
receive sales offers through direct mail letters and catalogs and over television,
computers and telephones. These non-store-based retailers are taking business away
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from store-based retailers. Some store based retailers initially saw online retailing as a
definite threat. Home Depot shocked its top vendors ( Black & Decker, Stanley tools,
etc) by issuing a memo implying that if they started to sell online, Home Depot might
drop them as suppliers; but now Home Depot is finding it advantageous to work with
online retailers.
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SUPERMARKET
Inside Le Marches shop in New Delhi. With 15 million shops, India has the highest density of
retail outlets in the world.
Large self-service shop selling food and household goods. The first, Piggy-Wiggly
was introduced by US retailer Clarence Saunders in Memphis, Tennessee, 19919.
Supermarkets have a high turnover and are therefore able to buy goods in bulk. This cuts
down the unit cost and, in turn, the price which further encourages business.
Classic self-service 4,000-20,000sq-ft with shopping carts as popularized in India by
‘Crazy Boys’ films with typical focus on regular groceries, household goods and personal
care products. Tesco and Safeway are famous chains. In India Nanz Food world and Nilgirils
are popular name.
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STRENGTHS OF SUPERMARKET FROM CONSUMER POINT OF VIEW:
Supermarket format of retailing try to fulfill these expectation through following
merits.
1. It saves the time because customer will get everything at a one place with self-service.
2. It provides perfect platform for comparison of a same product from different company
with a different brand name with complete information, which could be required to
compare the brands and take a best purchasing decision.
3. Multi brand department stores offer an intermediate solution with complete brand
choice to the customer and spacious shop, which allows the manufacturers to present
his product appropriately.
4. Sometimes customer also get discount because multi brand stores go for bulk
purchase and pass the earning of differences toward the customer.
5. Customers get a detail and computerize bill so there is no possibility of any
discrepancy in billing.
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CHALLENGES FACED BY SUPERMARKET
Though theoretically, supermarket stores offer a number of reasons to purchase goods
from supermarket instead of purchasing from traditional provision store. It will save the time,
give a spacious purchasing experience, provide platform to get variety scheme and services
and faultless and accurate computerized billing system etc. In spite of having all these
benefits, supermarket still has not proved itself successful in India market because still it is
struggling for survival and facing the following problems.
1. Very low sales volume.
2. According to experts, the real boom in organized retailing will come once
supermarkets starts selling daily need goods at 90% of the regular price that result into
low sales turnover because of that there is very low gross margin, low net margin and
very low turn over per sq feet compare to unorganized sector in Indian and organized
sector in foreign.
3. Another very important thing is gross margins return on investment. But the problem
of Indian retailing is to source on credit and sells on cash. Yet, retail margins in India
are lower than overseas. The large format players face high costs, especially in
comparison with traditional retailers that pay very little rent for real estate.
4. Competition from unorganized retail shop.
5. Typical mindset and psychology of Indian middle class. So, it would be a biggest
challenge to transform the psychology of Indian middle class segment.
6. From strategic decision point of view another biggest problem is to select a right retail
format to fight against unorganized retail organization. Thus, there is question
regarding very existence and survival of supermarket because still it has not proved
successful in India.
7. Still organized sector does not provide full satisfaction to customer in terms of
quality, quantity, competitive price and convenience in terms of various service,
assessable location and layout of supermarket.
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RETAILING IN INDIA
Retailing in India is gradually inching its way to becoming the next boom industry.
The whole concept of shopping has altered in terms of format and consumer buying
behaviour, ushering in a revolution in shopping. Modern retail has entered India as seen in
sprawling shopping centres, multi-storied malls and huge complexes offer shopping,
entertainment and food all under one roof. By 2007, an estimated 50 million square feet of
quality retail space will be available across India. This is in sharp contrast to the situation a
decade ago. Then, there was not one shopping mall in India. Today, in Delhi, Mumbai and
their suburbs, there are about 100 malls. Of the 700 new malls coming up all over India, 40
per cent are concentrated in the smaller cities. Organized retailing in small-town India is
growing at a staggering 50-60 per cent a year compared to 35-40 per cent in the large cities.
India's vast middle class and its almost untapped retail industry are key attractions for global
retail giants wanting to enter newer markets.
Traditional markets are making way for new formats such as departmental stores,
hypermarkets, supermarkets and specialty stores. Western-style malls have begun appearing
in metros and second-rung cities alike, introducing the Indian consumer to an unparalleled
shopping experience.
As organized retailers carve out a bigger piece of the retail pie for themselves it’s an
exciting time for the retail sector.
With the growth of organized retailing estimated at 40 per cent (CAGR) over the next
few years, Indian retailing is clearly at a tipping point. India is currently the ninth largest
retail market in the world
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The Indian retailing sector is at an inflexion point where the growth of organized
retail and growth in the consumption by Indians is going to adopt a higher growth trajectory.
The Indian population is witnessing a significant change in its demographics. A large young
working population with median age of 24 years, nuclear families in urban areas, along with
increasing working-women population and emerging opportunities in the services sector are
going to be the key growth drivers of the organized retail sector.
Initially, this was about Indian corporate houses rolling out malls and supermarkets,
but with Wal-Mart coming into the Indian market, the era of the superstore is dawning.
Unlike the kirana stores that served us for decades, this new breed of retail chains is heavily
dependent on IT.
Wal-Mart, the world’s largest retailer, and Bharti Enterprises have signed a
Memorandum of Understanding (MoU) to explore business opportunities in the Indian retail
industry. This joint venture will mark the entry of Wal-Mart into the Indian retailing industry.
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THE INDIAN RETAIL INDUSTRY / MARKET
The Indian retail industry in valued at about $300 billion and is expected to grow to
$427 billion in 2010 and $637 billion in 2015.About 98% of the retail trade in India is in the
hands of 15-20 million unorganized small retailers. In our daily lives, we find them
everywhere, as kirana and pan shop vendors, hawkers, sellers of fruits and vegetables, either
at the street corner or carrying their wares in baskets or carts to deliver them at the doorstep
of the residents. They are invisible but omnipresent. They supply a wide variety of items that
we consume daily. They account for as much as 10 percent of the GDP. Only four percent of
the retailers in the unorganized sector have shops that occupy more than 500 sqft. Most of
them are so small that they occupy not more than 30-40 square feet. In a way, small retail
business in India helps absorb about sex to seven percent of the huge mass of the unemployed
for whom the gov’t agencies are struggling hard to find employment by investing thousand
crores of rupees every year.
Only three percent of Indian retail is organized. It is estimated at only US$ 8 billion.
However, the opportunity is huge—by 2010, organized retail is expected to grow to US$ 22
billion. It is expected to grow 25 per cent annually, driven by changing lifestyles, strong
income growth and favorable demographic patterns. It is estimated that 70 million Indians in
a population of about 1 billion now earn a salary of $18,000 a year, a figure that is set to rise
to 140 million by 2011. Many of these people are looking for more choice in where to spend
their new-found wealth.
Strong fundamental changes including the changing lifestyles of Indian people, rising
incomes etc have fuelled the growth of modern retailing and has attracted investment in this
sector.
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With the government being in the process of determining the level of FDI in Retail, a
number of foreign players including Wal-Mart, Carrefour, tesco have evinced interest for
entering India in a big way.
Retail in India has grown beyond mere retailing and now encompasses sectors such as
telecom, automobiles and finance.
Given the size, and the geographical, cultural and socio-economic diversity of India,
there is no role model for Indian suppliers and retailers to adapt or expand in the Indian
context
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FOOD RETAILING IN INDIA
Food and Grocery (F&G) Retail Market in India
Unlike in the past, the debate today is no longer whether food and grocery retail in India
would grow but rather how fast can it grow and what challenges need to be overcome. Tata
Strategic Management Group (TSMG) projects that organized F&G retail in India could grow
to Rs. 1750Bn (at current prices) by 2015 representing 11% of overall F&G sales. A recent
world bank report on India’s fruits and vegetables trade comes up with some sour facts India
producers 11 percent of the world’s vegetables and 15 percent of fruits at 53-63 percent of
global prices, but its share in global fruits and vegetables trade is 1.7 percent and 0.5 percent
respectively.
Key Challenges in Food Retailing
Demand Side
Penchant for fresh/home-made and value consciousness
The Indian consumer, unlike his western counterpart, has a penchant for freshly cooked food
over packaged food. This is a result of dietary patterns, poor electricity supply, low
penetration of refrigerators and a family structure where one of the primary roles of the
housewife is feeding the family. The Indian consumer is extremely value conscious. A
TSMG study indicates that packaged food players need to drive down prices by almost 35-
40% to be comparable on cost with home made food.
Diversity of tastes and preferences
Multiple cultures, languages and religions have a huge bearing on the tastes and preferences
of the Indian consumer. This will pose a challenge for players aspiring to develop a pan
Indian presence
Willingness to travel
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Given the current density of retail outlets in India, retailers will have to motivate the
consumer to trade convenience with price, range and ambience.
Supply Side
Sourcing base and efficiency
The fragmented agri supply base coupled with an inadequate legal framework make it
difficult for retailers and food processors to procure quality produce at competitive costs
directly from farmers. The small size of the food processing industry further limits the supply
options.
Real estate availability and cost
Rentals account for 7-7.5% of the total costs for organized retail in India against global bench
marks of less than 3%. Real estate availability and costs will continue to remain a challenge
in the retail industry with factors like adequate parking, ambience and proximity being the
key drivers of footfalls.
Manpower availability
As organized retail expands, there is expected to be a dearth of skilled manpower. The lack f
institutions and courses for different aspects of retail management will have an impact on the
overall supply of quality manpower.
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Emerging trends in food retailing
Big becoming bigger
Globally, retailers have realized that size drives profitability, not just through economies of
scale in operations but also through higher bargaining power leading to better margins. While
many players are entering the retail space in India currently, the growth stage will be
characterized by rapid expansion and consolidation among these players.
Rise of organic foods and health and wellness segment
Consumer attitudes and preferences are undergoing a shift owing to factors like increased
disposable incomes, changes in lifestyle patterns, shift in age structure, increased number of
working women and multi cultural exposure. These would lead to increasing health
consciousness in the future. Organic foods and wellness products would be emerging
opportunities in the years to come.
Increasing focus on private labels.
As competition in the organized retail market increases, discounts and promotions are
expected to play a critical part in generating footfalls. To counter the impact on profitability,
organized players will find it more attractive to promote private labels or store brands given
their higher margins. The consumer too would benefit from lower prices.
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Scope for innovation in food retail
As the organized food retail market matures in India, there would be an increased need for
players to differentiate through innovation. Innovations would largely come under two heads:
Innovation on Retail format - Players can innovate on formats in different ways:
By targeting specific customer segments and serving their needs better e.g. working
women, single office goers, etc
By changing the product mix e.g. entirely private label stores, exclusively fresh
produce stores
By offering new forms of convenience and wider range to the customer e.g. tele- retail
and internet retail
Technological Innovations - Employing cutting edge technology in retail could prove
to be the source of competitive advantage for retailers.
Self-scan checkouts have the potential of both reducing check-out time manpower
cost for the retailer
Using RFID tags can help track and reduce in-store inventory management costs and
give retailers better insights into customer in-store movement patterns
Web-enabled POS systems, e-SCM systems, e-Procurement systems and warehouse
management systems will enable food retailers in integrating the entire agri value
chain leading to efficient procurement and supply chain management.
Use of cutting edge analytics can bring insights into customer buying behaviour with
implications on store layout, pricing and promotions.
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FDI IN RETAIL
FDI in retail is a subject that seems to rear up its ugly head
every now and than. It is not as though these that oppose it or
support it are consistent about what they say.
In India, the logic and ideology that go into either
supporting a reform or opposing it depends on whether the
concerned political party is in power or not. There is no clarity or
understanding of the ground retailers that should guide such
decisions.
In January 2006, UPA government allowed FDI up to 51% in single-brand multiple-
product retail business. This drives the foreign institutional investors would be permitted to
control equity in retailing up to even 100 percent.
Retailers of multiple brands can operate through a franchise or a cash-and-carry. But
allowing in the big multi-brand, international retail groups like Wal-Mart, Tesco and
Carrefour was considered a step too far. The gov’t has announced a partial opening of the
retail market, to single-brand retailers.” But beyond that, gov’t need to find a model that
doesn't displace the existing retailers. The Indian government has been conducting an impact
analysis of how the introduction of supermarket chains like Tesco and Carrefour would hit its
retail sector. An estimated 50% of the country's fruit and vegetables rot by the roadside
before they reach market.
For the first time, chains like McDonalds, Marks & Spencer, Body Shop and Ikea can,
if they want to, open and control their own operations in India.
Previously, many of them had gone down the path of working with franchise partners,
a policy followed by M&S which supplies clothes to eight "Planet Sports" stores.
They look like M&S stores on the inside, but they are owned by local retailers, and
the UK retailer has no plans for that to change.holesale model.
There are about nine million
small grocery shops in India
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Challenges in organized retail
The first challenge facing the organised retail industry in India is: competition from
the unorganised sector. Traditional retailing has established in India for some centuries. It is a
low cost structure, mostly owner-operated, has negligible real estate and labour costs and
little or no taxes to pay. Consumer familiarity that runs from generation to generation is one
big advantage for the traditional retailing sector.
In contrast, players in the organised sector have big expenses to meet, and yet have to
keep prices low enough to be able to compete with the traditional sector. High costs for the
organised sector arises from: higher labour costs, social security to employees, high quality
real estate, much bigger premises, comfort facilities such as air-conditioning, back-up power
supply, taxes etc. Organised retailing also has to cope with the middle class psychology that
the bigger and brighter a sales outlet is, the more expensive it will be.
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DEVELOPMENTS IN RETAIL SECTOR
India's first true shopping mall – complete with food courts, recreation facilities and
large car parking space – was inaugurated as lately as in 1999 in Mumbai. (This mall is called
"Crossroads").
1. $ 7 billion to be invested in retail by Bharti
Bharti enterprises plan to invest about US $ 7 Billion by 2010 to set up 200
hypermarkets and hundreds of small stores across India. This group had recently announced a
joint venture with the world’s top retailer, wal-mart stores; Inc. it expects to earn $1-2 billion
revenue from its retail business, which would constitute 10-20 percent of the group’s turnover
2010. The group aims to have 200 large stores and hundreds of small stores in the first phase.
Depending up on the company’s real estate and logistics business the company will invest
around US $ 7 billion by 2010. The group plans to enlist small retailers as franchises and also
decide whether the venture would undertake logistics or out source functions such as trucking
and cold chains. It would operate several hundred stores across the country within five years
and investment could run into billions of dollars.
2. Mother care India, the UK based retailer for expecting mothers and kids is on an
expansion mode in India. The company’s exclusive franchise, shoppers stop is now
expanding their retail network to 14 stores at a combined investment of about Rs-10 crores in
4 months.
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3. Land mark books and music retailer
Books and music retailer ‘Landmark' launched its first store in western India at
Infiniti Mall, Andheri, Mumbai on April 26. Spread across 18,000 sq. ft Landmark is housed
on the 2 nd floor of the mall, with lavish interiors. This is the sixth Landmark store in the
country. Landmark so far had five stores – three in Chennai, one each in Kolkata and
Bangalore. The store has over 1, 00,000 plus book titles, 70,000-plus movies, a wide range of
stationery, toys, accessories, perfumes, diamond jewellery and an inviting, comfortable
environment, Landmark is a category killer in all focus categories. Later this year Landmark
plans to open stores in Delhi, Baroda, Pune and one more in Mumbai .
4. Prozone- omaxe in retail JV
As part of Prozone's plan to develop India’s largest shopping mall network, Prozone
Enterprises, the wholly owned subsidiary of Provogue, signed a JV with Omaxe Group, one
of the largest real estate developers in North India, to develop shopping malls in townships
owned by the latter.
In the first phase, a SPV promoted by the joint venture will invest Rs.1 ,500 crore to
develop 10 malls across north India and in the second phase invest Rs.5,000 crore to develop
30 properties owned by Omaxe.
Omaxe is building 30 townships and 14 malls, has projects worth Rs.12, 000 crore
under implementation and another Rs.10,000 crore under-pipeline projects. At present,
Omaxe is developing 4.1 million sq.ft of commercial development, mainly malls. Prozone is
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developing over 12 million sq.ft. of modern retail space and plans to develop 50 retail malls
across the country focused on tier two cities which will come up in two years.
5. AFL launches India’s first ‘Convenience Services’ retail store
AFL, a leading provider of integrated supply chain services in India, has launched
AFL Touch World, India’s first ‘Convenience Services ' retail store in Mumbai. The various
services offered at the AFL Touch World store include Forex, money transfer, international
telephony, international and domestic courier, travel insurance and e-ticketing. It is for the
first time in India that such a wide range of ‘convenience services' is being offered under one
roof. The first Touch World store is located near Regal Cinema in south Mumbai and the
company plans to expand into all major Indian cities in the near future.
6. Calvin Klein Inc., the clothing design and marketing studio formed in 1968, is to set up a
retail operation in India. The clothing empire and Murjani India Ltd. have announced an
agreement for the latter to market and distribute the brand's various labels throughout India
and open dozens of retail stores planned for the subcontinent.
The agreement authorises Murjani to market the Calvin Klein lineup through
exclusive retail outlets and select department stores approved by the company. It includes the
original Calvin Klein Jeans line and the unisex ck Calvin Klein label, which the company
introduced in the mid-1990s.
7. Infiniti Retail, a 100-per cent subsidiary of Tata Sons, has launched the first mega store of
Croma, India’s first national chain of multi brand outlets for consumer electronics and
durable products. Ratan Tata, Chairman, Tata Sons, and Roger Corbett, Independent
Consultant, Woolworth’s, Australia, jointly launched the first Croma mega store in Juhu,
Mumbai , amidst a high-tech display of technology and human interface built around the
concept of 'See, Touch and Feel'. The sprawling store, spread over 20,000 sq ft of space, has
on display more than 6,000 products across eight categories, namely, home entertainment,
small appliances, white goods, computers and peripherals, communication, music, imaging
and gaming software. The store currently offers more than 180 national and international
brands.
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8. Wadhawan Food Retail Pvt. Ltd. (WFRL), which operates 10 food retail outlets under
the brand name Spinach, has plans to open 60 food and grocery stores in Mumbai and Pune
by the end of this year. The company plans to expand further to the Eastern and Northern
states in another two years.
WFRPL launched its first store in Mumbai in February this year and targets to cover
1,54,000 sq.ft of retail space by the year end. These stores are mainly in supermarket format
and will be rolled out in three sizes -- Spinach Express of about 1,000sq.ft, Spinach Local of
3,000 sq.ft and Spinach Super of 6,000 sq.ft.
9. Bangalore based real estate developer; Prestige Group, plans to invest Rs.2,500 crore into
the mall development business over the next two to three years. The group has plans to set up
malls in Chennai, Hyderabad, Bangalore, Mangalore, etc. Each mall will entail an investment
of about Rs.200 to 300 crore and will be designed with the expertise of an in-house team and
a set of out sourced architects. The company plans to dedicate three million sq.ft of space
across the four cities.
10. Trinethra Super Retail Ltd. (TSRL), the Hyderabad-based retail marketing chain, will
invest Rs.1 billion over the next two years in order to expand business and open more outlets
in South India. The number of retail outlets would be increased to 205 by the end of current
fiscal from the existing 170. The number of outlets in Andhra Pradesh would be increased to
90 from the present 73, and 50 would be opened in Karnataka. TSRL will open 40 retail
shops in Tamil Nadu and 25 in Kerala by the end of FY`07. All the stores in Kerala would be
opened under the group's 'Fabmall' brand. By September end, there would be nine Fabmall
stores, including two supermarkets at Aluva and Kottayam and a supercentre at Kakkanad.
The company, which had a total turnover of Rs.2.4 billion in FY`06, has targeted turnovers of
Rs.3.6 billion by March 2007 and Rs.6.5 -7 billion by FY`08.
11. Kaya Skin Clinic, the beauty & wellness services chain from Marico Ltd., plans to open
55 outlets by the end of 2007. The company is hoping for a tally of 50 such outlets covering a
total retail space of 75,000 sq.ft across 18 cities by the end of FY 2006-07. Kaya Skin Clinics
– all owned and operated by the company – is targetting to touch a turnover of Rs.65 crore in
the current fiscal, growing from Rs.45 crore in the last year. The chain is also setting up Kaya
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Skin Zones in malls across India to provide easy access for customers to Kaya range of skin
solutions. The company is aiming to establish 15 Kaya skin zones by end-2007.
12. New Delhi-based florist Ferns n Petals plans to add 15 more outlets to its existing 55
retail points across 32 cities by the end of the FY 2006-07. The company would be adding
11,000 sq.ft of retail space, with the cumulative total rising to 40,000 sq.ft, through this
expansion plan.
13. Corporate safety and security service provider, Zicom Electronic Security Systems Ltd.
(ZESSL) is planning to enter the consumer segment through its new division Zicom
consumer service group. Through this division, the company plans to launch 600 Zicom retail
stores in 100 cities across the country by 2008-09. The stores would retail Zicom Home
security systems priced between Rs.6,495-12,995 and Zicom Business security systems for
small and medium enterprises and retail outlets priced from Rs.54,995 to Rs.99,995.
In the first phase, the company plans to enter the retail market with 100-125 stores in
24 towns across all directions. Spread in 500-600 sq.ft area, the stores are targeted at high
footfall regions. Expansion will be through franchise route .The Company is planning to
invest Rs.10-15 lakh in the set up of each outlet. The cost would include investment in
leasing out spaces and doing up the outlet in terms of branding and interiors. The outlets will
then be handed over to franchisee for day-to-day operations. Franchisees would need to
invest in stocks while returns will be in the form of margins generated from sales. The retail
outlets will also provide add-on services like installation, after sales services, central
monitoring etc.to customers.
14. Vishal Group launched their first hyper market Vishal Mega mart in Udaipur this
month. Spread over 25,000 sq.ft, the store offers extensive range of men’s, women’s and
kids’ range of fashion clothing. Beside fashion attire, it will also have separate sections and
counters for watches, sunglasses, fashion accessories, gifts and novelties, electrical
appliances, digital diaries, perfumes, cosmetics and grocery items etc.
Currently, Vishal Mega Mart operates 29 fully integrated and self-owned stores
spread over a total shopping area of 5,70,000 sq.ft in 21 cities across India
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15. RPG Retail is planning to foray into books retail, with the launch its own bookstores
“Books and Beyond” by October this year. “Books and Beyond” will follow the Music World
strategy for its expansion. The first standalone outlet will be launched in Kolkata before
moving ahead with pan-India expansion. “The outlets are to occupy spaces between 15,000-
18,000 sq.ft and will also include the concept of a Music.
Meanwhile, RPG is also planning to expand its retail brand Music World to the
Middle East market. The format would primarily target areas with a substantial chunk of
Indian population. “For the Middle East market.
16. Murjani India, a subsidiary of the Murjani Group, focuses on attracting international
brands and retail concepts to India. Murjani forged a separate deal with The Warnaco Group,
a New York-based apparel company, granting Warnaco exclusive rights to distribute the
Calvin Klein Underwear line of products in India and supply Calvin Klein Jeans to
Murjani.The broad plan is to open at least 40 Calvin Klein-branded stores during the first five
years of the operation, with construction beginning as early as March 2007.
17. EMKE group, the biggest retail chain based in the UAE with operations spread across the
Middle East is all set to enter the Indian retail sector with mega shopping malls and
hypermarkets. The group which has the flagship "LULU" Hypermarkets and department
stores chain with 48 branches in all major cities of Gulf, controls 34 per cent market share of
the Middle East retail sector. The proposed shopping mall is coming up in Cochin, the
commercial capital of Kerala. Apart from this one million sq. ft shopping mall, the project
also consists of a 250 room five star hotel and an International standard convention centre
which will be set up in the second phas
18. Pantaloon enters healthcare retail
Pantaloon Retail is preparing to enter the healthy & beauty segment with beauty salons and
diagnostic healthcare centres. The first retail outlet catering to the Big Bazaar profile
customers, “Star and Sitara”, will open in Bangalore in March. The salon would be spread
across 2,500 sq.ft and will offer services for both sexes. Thereafter Pantaloon plans to enter
Ahmedabad, Mumbai, Hyderabad, and other cities where the group would have a mall
presence through Kshitij The diagnostic centres will offer eye, skin, dental treatments and
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preventive care. They will also include pharmaceuticals, beauty centres and will also provide
alternative treatments like ayurveda and homeopathy.
19. Pantaloon Retail & Liberty Shoes ink MOU on Large Format Footwear Retailing
Pantaloon Retail (India) Limited & Liberty Shoes Limited on September 2, entered into a JV
for setting up a chain of stores for footwear retailing and other accessories. PRIL will hold
51% and Liberty 49% stake in the new company; having an authorized capital of rs.25rore.
The company will set up a chain of large format footwear stores across the country, with each
store covering an area of 10,000-15,000 sq. ft.
The proposed JV will combine the property and retail expertise of Pantaloon with the design
sourcing & merchandising expertise of Liberty. This will provide a focused attention to the
footwear category, which today commands a sizeable portion of the consumer spending. The
MOU is only for retailing and not for manufacturing; it will retail all brands and products
sources from all over the world as well as India.
20. Deccan chronicle buys odyssey
Media group Deccan Chronicle Holdings (DCHL) on September 5 had acquired South India-
based retail chain Odyssey for Rs 61 crore, in an all-cash deal, and upped its revenue and
profit targets for this fiscal.DCHL, which went public earlier this year, said as part of the
deal, it has acquired 100 per cent equity of Odyssey, which currently has 40,000 sq.ft of retail
space in 12 locations in six cities -- Chennai, Hyderabad, Trichy, Coimbatore, Salem and
varnasi.
Odyssey has lined up major expansion plans, including growth in western and
northern India by March 2008. The retail chain sells books, music, toys, greeting cards and
FMCG products of leading domestic and international brands, including that of ITC,
Cadbury, Duracell, Parker and Penguin.
21. Oswal group targets 120 sensa stores
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Two years after the split of Ludhiana -based yarn manufacturer Oswal Group, a breakaway
group led by Ashok Oswal is foraying into retail with major expansion plans for the existing
fashion chain stores AO's and Sensa , through Amram Trading Pvt . Ltd.
Sensa, among India’s first multi-brand intimate wear retail chains with about 16
brands, plans to set up 120 stores by the next three years with total investment of Rs.30 crore.
22. Adidas India to expand retail in tier II & III towns
Adidas India is planning to expand its distribution network in North India, targeting the tier II
and III towns. To add on to the current 80 exclusive outlets, company plans to open 60 new
brand stores. Adidas India is following a franchise model and prefers to be located on high
streets and through stand alones.
23. US footwear major marks 2006 for India launch
The $325-million privately-owned fashion company and US footwear major Global Brand
Marketing, Inc. (GBMI) will launch retail operations in India next year, with the opening of
exclusive brand stores across the country.
Founded in late 1996, GBMI is the majority owner of Pony International, LLC, owner
of the Dry- shoD brand and retail store chain Global Feet and Global Feet Kids, and the
authorized global footwear licensee of Diesel, XOXO, Nautica, and Mecca. Based in
California, GBMI designs, develops and markets stylish apparel, footwear and accessories for
men, women and children, and is distributed in over 130 countries worldwide.
24. Derby Clothing to open Colombo shop-in-shop
Chennai-based apparel retailer Derby Clothing Pvt. Ltd is to open a shop-in-shop in
Colombo, Sri Lanka on November 15. The outlet is a new venture of DSI group Samson &
Sons Ltd. – the largest footwear brand in Sri Lanka. The launch is part of the current fiscal's
expansion targets for the company, which hopes to set up 12 more stores this year.
Derby Clothing currently has 14 exclusive stores, eight of which are company-owned
and six are franchised. The existing stores are spread over Tamil Nadu, Andhra Pradesh,
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Kerala, Karnataka and Gujarat (one store at Ahmedabad). With typical store size of around
800 sq.ft. and median shop-in-shop space of about 150 sq.ft., average investment per store is
around Rs.25 lakh.
The company is also setting up two new manufacturing units at Chennai, to buttress
its current production capacity of 20,000 shirts and 9,000 trousers.
25. Dabur India is planning an entry into the consumer retail business especially in the area
of health and wellness. Presently their plan will be Focused and specialized with health and
wellness being the obvious option at the moment. The new business could be through dabur
India or a separate company. The idea behind the move is that the company would sell its
own brands and also offer a complete portfolio of products, catering to the health conscious
urban Indian. This model would be close to one followed by retailer boots in the UK.
Dabur India is still exploring various formats and working on possible store sizes. If
dabur ventures into this specialty format, it will have to set up stores measuring close to
2000-2500 square feet. The company may also in for an arrangement with one of the
upcoming multi-brand or hypermarket retail chains.
26. Redtape –Indians finest fashion footwear and lifestyle brand known for its international
style, quality and elegance and its core competency lies in providing excellent quality to its
customers. Red tape is one of the brands which have been able to get world wide recognition,
acceptance and admiration.
Globally, red tape is recognized as a stylish and high fashion brand. It is planning to
expand 50 retail outlets by the end of this year in India. Currently it has 40 retail outlets in
India & two international stores in sharjah & Dubai.
It has moved from men’s footwear to women’s footwear called ‘miss red tape’. It has also
diversified its brand in to men’s apparel and accessories like belts, wallets & so on. The
company is also planning to introduce women apparel line same time next year. It is also
planning to set up its own manufacturing base of customers
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REVIEW OF LITERATURE
The retail sector in India is highly fragmented and organized retail in the country is at
a very nascent stage. Of the 12 million retail outlets, more than 80% are run by small family
businesses which use only household labour. China and Brazil, took 10-15 years to raise the
share of their organized retail sectors from 5% to 20% and 38% respectively. India too is
moving towards growth and maturity in the retail sector at a fast pace.
Value retailing: more hypermarkets in the offing
The hypermarket route has emerged as one of the most preferred formats for
international retailers entering India. In most emerging retail markets, such has Eastern
Europe, Latin America and china; hypermarkets have been the major high growth format.
Hypermarkets provide consumers with a combination of good prices, overall shopping
convenience and experience. Product range and quality. Currently there are less than 50
hypermarkets in India, operated by 4-5 big retailers. The report says that India’s 67 cities
with population of half a million or more have potential to absorb many more hypermarkets
in the next 4-5 years.
On the success of hypermarkets, the report draws a parallel between consumer
behaviour in India and china. It says that there is a similarity in the buying pattern of the
Indian and Chinese consumers. In china. Most hypermarkets are located with in the city
limits as consumers do their shopping more than once a week, have low passenger car
penetration and limited refrigeration space at home.
Malls to move beyond the metros
The boom in the retail sector is also associated with rise of malls across India. There
are 220 mall projects in the pipeline till 2007, 139 in the big 8 cities-including the metros-and
81 in other tier II cities. Increasing awareness levels in tier II cities are eroding the ‘urban
aspiration’ lead of the metros and the international brands have started looking at these
smaller cities to increase their penetration.
Organized retail penetration highest across footwear, clothing
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The footwear and clothing categories have seen the highest organized retail
penetration (ORP). Footwear has a 22% ORP which is driven by high levels of franchising
activity and dominance of home-grown players as well as MNC retailer Batas dominant
market share. Clothing, with a 12% penetration, is also hotting up for further organized retail
presence due to high level of branding activities by apparel retailers and merchandising
spread across formats such as department stores, hypermarkets, own retail outlets and
franchises.
The report says that though the food & grocery segment contributes about 41%of
private consumption expenditure and about 77% of total retail sales, it is largely controlled by
the unorganized small outlet sector- penetration of organized retail is about 1% in this
segment. Other segments like books and music, jewellery, consumer durables, home
furnishings, medical care and health & beauty have seen limited penetration of organized
retail and will require innovative and aggressive plans on the part of Indian and international
retailers to fully exploit their potential.
Franchising is the way ahead
The report says multinational retailers are firming up their India entry strategies. If
they are already present here, they are undergoing rapid expansions. Franchising is gaining
steam with the retailers and franchisee activity in tier II cities is pegged to rise. The report
forecasts a number of strategic partnership opportunities between Indian and international
retailers. An international retailer looking to enter India needs to be extremely well versed
with local retail culture and know-how. The number of states and union territories in India
number 35 and languages, cultures; habits and consumer preferences are different in every
one of them. Companies have to understand and retain customers. A 5% reduction in
customer defections can treble profits.
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Fraud and theft: an expensive affair
The report also lists fraud and theft as key challenges for the sector in the future.
Theft, including employee pilferage, vendor frauds and inaccuracy in supervision and
administration costs the Indian industry a huge amount every year. The implications and size
of this loss will be more significant as retailers continue to scale up and increase product
lines.
Shorted of talented professionals
Though the retail industry is expected to create 2 million jobs by 2010, shortage of
professionals remains a big challenge. There has been a rise in the number of retail
management programmes and institutes, which is expected to bridge the gap in availability of
talented professionals. However, talented professionals will put increased pressure on wage
costs. Therefore, operating margins, especially for mid-sized retailers are likely to come
under pressure.
An agile and adaptive supply chain is key
Logistical issues, constant changes in consumer preferences and patterns, crowded
marketplaces, efficient customer responsiveness and swiftly evolving retail formats are the
hallmarks of today’s retail environment in India and pose a huge challenge for driving
growth. As Indian and international retailers continue to grow their presence regionally, there
eill be a pressing need for a single, enterprise-wide IT platform to manage operations, which
will become increasingly complex.
In the last 2-3 years, several retailers, ranging from F&B operations to discount
clothing, have implemented Supply Chain Management (SCM) solutions to improve core
business processes such as global sourcing, distribution, logistics, innovation, transparency
and visibility in financials and inventory, compliances and management of point of sale
(POS) data. Going ahead, both FMCG and retail sectors are likely to see an increase in
the adoption of SCM.
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Further the lack of a distribution sector and specialized distribution companies is a
major obstacle for retailers to fully utilize India’s retail potential. The report says private
logistics companies offering specialized services, refrigerated transport and warehouse
facilities across the country, along with timely distribution of supplies to retail outlets will
create some of the much needed back-end support for retailers to enhance operational
performance. If addressed urgently and seriously, infrastructure can translate into India’s
biggest opportunity.
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DESIGN OF THE STUDY
RESEARCH GAP OR BACKGROUND OF THE STUDY In the competitive world super markets are increasing day by day. They are also
implementing newer methods of attracting the customers. This has resulted in enhancement
of customer satisfaction. Hence this has evoked me to do a research investigation in to the
analysis of customer satisfaction level towards supermarket.
RESEARCH TITLE: ‘‘Analysis of customer satisfaction towards supermarket”
PROBLEM STATEMENT: To assess the customer satisfaction level towards food and grocery retailing and design
marketing strategies for enhancement of customer happiness. This study will help the supermarket to ascertain their customer satisfaction level. Thus a
research titled “analysis of customer satisfaction level towards supermarket” was carried on.
OBJECTIVE OF THE STUDY
• To decide on the parameters which effect the customer satisfaction while shopping for
food and groceries.
• To measure these parameters.
• To analyze the existing marketing strategies of various retail brands.
• To know the quality of service.
• To suggest better marketing strategies to improve customer relations.
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RESEARCH METHODOLOGY: RESEARCH DESIGN: Research design is a detailed blue print used to guide the research
study towards its objectives. The process of designing a research study involves many
interrelated decisions. The most significant decision is the choice of research approach as it
determines how the information will be obtained.
The type of research is descriptive approach which means asking questions to people
who are believed to possess the desired information. It measures the magnitude of people’s
knowledge, attitudes and buying behaviour. In survey method the data collection is through
structured direct interview. Structured direct interview is a formal questionnaire (i.e. set of
questions) that is structured and direct and the interviewer is instructed to ask the persons
those questions only in the order given in the questionnaire. This type of interview is referred
to as “Structured survey”. Its advantage is that, less skilled interviewers can be used resulting
in lower cost per interview. It gives standardized information and hence editing, tabulating
and analyzing of the data are more easily done.
SOURCES OF DATA COLLECTION: Primary data: It has been collected using the structured questionnaire with personal
interviews with the customers at the stores and through personal observations.
Secondary data: It bas been collected from various magazines, papers, Text books and related
websites.
SAMPLING DESIGN: SAMPLING TECHNIQUE:
Stratified random sampling: Under this sampling design item has an equal chance of
inclusion in the sample. All choices being independent of one another. It gives each possible
sample combination an equal probability of being chosen.
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• SAMPLING UNIT: The survey was conducted at five food retail brands such as food
world, subhiksha, spencers, fabmall and reliance fresh.
• SAMPLE SIZE: Simple random sample has been taken as 100 respondents with 20
respondents from each of the retail outlet brands.
• SAMPLE DESCRIPTION: Sample is taken for this research is from Rajaji nagar,
Mahalaxmi layout of Bangalore north. Selection of respondents for the study
conducted review and feedback for 14 days. Each day I selected the random time slot
to go to stores for interviewing customer. The procedure I adopted to distribute the
questionnaire to all the customer present in the retail stores and interviewed who were
agreeable to answering questions. This way the above procedure ensured randomness
of respondents
RESEARCH ANALYSIS: The data so generated would be subjected to rigorous statistical treatment and the inferences
will be drawn accordingly. The basic analytical tools like bar charts and pie charts will be
used.
RESEARCH LIMITATIONS:
Sample size is small because of the time constraint.
Respondent may provide data from their memory recall, there may only be rough
estimates.
Survey is limited considering the wide spread location of customers over Rajaji nagar,
Mahalaxmi layout in Bangalore metropolitan.
The sample size is small hence arriving at an overall opinion of the supermarket is
difficult.
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SCOPE OF THE STUDY:
It will help the supermarket to understand the level of customer happiness.
It will help the supermarket to retain the service.
It will help the supermarket strength and weakness.
This study will also reveal the customers attitude towards supermarket.
CONTRIBUTION FROM THE STUDY:
• This research study would help the supermarkets to improve the service.
• The study analysis the schemes employed by the supermarkets to influence the
purchase.
• The study would help to the stores in improving the existing level of satisfaction
among customers.
• The study seeks competitive analysis of pricing among retailers.
• The study contributes to identify problems if any in the field of customer satisfaction
in the grocery retail sector and come out with a solution.
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DATA ANALYSIS AND INTERPRETATION
TABLE 1: FREQUENCY OF PURCHASE BY RESPONENDS TO STORE
Source: Field Study
GRAPH-1
INTERPRETATION
From the above table and graph it is clear that out of 100 respondents surveyed, 33% of them
purchase daily, 31% of them purchase weekly, 36 of them purchase monthly and there are no
respondents who purchase occasionally. This clearly shows that frequency of purchase by the
consumers is very high. Respondents who purchase regularly visit store weekly and monthly.
It is found that many of the respondents purchase on Saturday and Sunday.
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GRAPH 5: INTERPRETATION
Store timings are convenient attribute is ranked as first by considering cumulative score.
Most of the respondents rated strongly agree by 69 respondents and agree by 31 respondents.
This indicates that customers are very much satisfied about time convenience of shopping.
Ambience attribute is rated as second. Most of the respondents rated strongly agree by 66
respondents and 31 of them rated agree. Store need to improve the space as they carry three
category sections in one store which results non convenience in shopping by customers
From the cumulative score the store looks modern & well equipped attribute has been ranked
third. 66 respondents consider modern and well equipped attribute strongly agree and 29 of
them felt agree. Store has to take measures in visual merchandising such as design, graphics
etc.
Well arranged, clean & ventilated attribute has been ranked as fourth as major of the
respondents said strongly agree, 28 of them felt agree and 7 of them rated disagree.
Vegetables need to be kept fresh as this is been purchased daily by customers and constitutes
more revenue to the store.
Convenient of store attribute ranked as sixth & is considered as strongly agree by 55
respondents and agree by 30 respondents. Study indicates there is a lot of market.
Rating for different attributes of Location & Ambience
425 456 460 443 469
5 3 2 4 10
50100150200250300350400450500
storelocation isconvenient
store looksmodern &
wellequipped
ambience isappealing
wellarranged,clean &
ventilated
storetimings areconvenient
Attributes
Cum
ulat
ive
scor
e
Cumulative scoreRating
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.TABLE 6: DATA SHOWING THE RATINGS GIVEN BY RESPONDENTS FOR
DIFFERENT COMPONENTS OF QUALITY & MERCHANDISE
No .of Respondents SL.No
Particulars
Excellent 5
Good 4
Fair 3
Poor 2
Very poor 1
Cumulative Score
Ranking
1. Fruits & vegetables are fresh
57 25 18 00 00 439 3
2. Large varieties of fruits & vegetables
44 16 16 24 00 380 6
3. Well known brand names
48 23 26 03 00 416 4
4. Prices are reasonable
69 22 09 00 00 460 1
5. Display of products makes it easy to choose
62 28 10 00 00 452 2
6. Discounts on bulk purchase
46 24 19 11 00 405 5
Source: Field Study Cumulative score = The Number of respondents * Weight =57x5 + 25x4 + 18x3 =439
ANALYSIS OF CUSTOMER SATISFACTION TOWARDS SUPERMARKET
M.P.B.I.M, Bangalore
55
GRAPH 6: INTERPRETATION
By using the cumulative score the prices are reasonable attribute is ranked as one. 69
respondents consider prices are reasonable component as excellent and 22 of them rated price
charged is affordable and only 9 of them price charged are high. Prices on certain food
product brands need to be priced low.
From the calculation by using cumulative score the weighate given for display of products
makes it easy to choose component is 452 & ranked second, as 62 respondents rated excellent
for display of products makes it easy to choose component, 28 of respondents felt good and
10 of them rated fair.
From the data of cumulative score fruits & vegetables are fresh component has been ranked
as third. 57 respondents consider Fruits & vegetables are fresh component as excellent, 25 of
them felt good, 18 of them rated fair and none for poor. Vegetables still need to be cleanly
washed and kept freshly.
Well known brand names component ranked as fourth and is considered as excellent by 48
respondents, 23 of respondents rated good and 26 of them felt fair. International brands have
to be kept in store.
439
3
380
6
416
4
460
1
452
2
405
50
50100150200250300350400450500
Cum
ulat
ive
scor
e
1 2 3 4 5 6
Componends
Rating for different components of Quality & Merchandise
Cumulative scoreRanking
ANALYSIS OF CUSTOMER SATISFACTION TOWARDS SUPERMARKET
M.P.B.I.M, Bangalore
56
A discount on bulk purchase component is ranked fifth. Most of the respondents rated
excellent by 46 respondents, 24 of them felt good and 19 of the respondent rated fair.
Customers who buys in bulky needs to be given better discounts especially for restaurants,
hotels and resorts. Discounts on the bulk purchase of certain brands have to be increased by
keeping competitive prices.
Weighate given for the large varieties of fruits & vegetables component is 380 and has been
ranked sixth.44 respondents consider large varieties of fruits & vegetables component as
excellent, 16 of them rated good and 16 of them felt poor. Some stores have to keep large
varieties of vegetables as customer purchase daily.
.
ANALYSIS OF CUSTOMER SATISFACTION TOWARDS SUPERMARKET
M.P.B.I.M, Bangalore
57
TABLE 7: DATA SHOWING THE CUSTOMERS RATING ON THE DIFFERENT SALES
PERSONNEL ATTRIBUTES
No .of Respondents
Cumulative Score
Ranking
SL.No
Particulars
Strongly Agree 5
Agree 4
Neither Agree or Disagree 3
Disagree 2
Strongly Disagree 1
1. Employees are knowledgeable & friendly
53 26 07 14 00 418 4
2. They give prompt services
59 38 00 03 00 453 3
3. Sales people are friendly & helpful
62 37 00 01 00 460 2
4. Sales staff are clean & presentable
73 27 00 00 00 473 1
Source: Field Study
Cumulative score = The Number of respondents * Weight =53x5 + 26x4 + 07x3 + 14x2 = 418
ANALYSIS OF CUSTOMER SATISFACTION TOWARDS SUPERMARKET
M.P.B.I.M, Bangalore
58
GRAPH 7:
INTERPRETATION
From the above cumulative data, it is clear that the rank given for the attributes of sales
personal are first for sales staff are clean and presentable, second for sales people are friendly
and helpful, third for they give prompt service and fourth for Employees are knowledgeable &
friendly. There are certain aspects like giving prompt services, offers information etc need to
be improved.
Rating for attributes of sales personal
418
453
460
473
4
3
2
1
Employees areknowledgeable
They give promptservice
sales people arefriendly & helpful
sales staff are clean
Cumulative score Rating
ANALYSIS OF CUSTOMER SATISFACTION TOWARDS SUPERMARKET
M.P.B.I.M, Bangalore
59
TABLE 8: DATA SHOWING THE RESPONSE GIVEN BY RESPONENDS ON RATINGS
FOR DIFFERENT COMPONENTS OF SERVICES
No .of Respondents
SL.No
Statements
Very Satisfied 5
Satisfied 4
Neither satisfied nor dissatisfied 3
Dissatisfied 2
Very dissatisfied 1
Cumulative Score
Ranking
1. Free home delivery is provided
58 19 00 03 00 372 7
2. Store is willingly handles returns and exchange the products
74 26 00 00 00 474 1
3. They respond through phones and mails
69 31 00 00 00 469 2
4. Billing services are fast and correctly
66 34 00 00 00 466 3
5. Post sales problems solved immedidetly
48 43 00 09 00 430 6
6. Store loyalty programmes
55 41 00 04 00 447 4
7. Parking is sufficient
61 27 00 12 00 437 5
Source: Field Study Cumulative score = The Number of respondents * Weight
ANALYSIS OF CUSTOMER SATISFACTION TOWARDS SUPERMARKET
M.P.B.I.M, Bangalore
60
GRAPH 8: INTERPRETATION Store is willingly handles returns and exchange the products component has been ranked first.
Stores need to be improved on the exchange of products by giving value gifts.
From the cumulative score they respond through phones & mails component has been ranked
second. Most of the satisfied respondents said there should be improvement in sending
weekly mails regarding offers available by stores.
By using cumulative score the ranking given for the attribute of billing services are fast and
correctly is three. Print on the bill need to be dark.
Store loyalty programmes component is ranked as fourth. Most of the respondents who are
daily customers said that loyalty programs such as party tickets and cinema tickets need to be
considered which it could add more in building relation ship and sales.
A chart depicts that parking is sufficient component is ranked as fifth. Though few
supermarkets have luxurious space in house store, it is also necessary to have parking
facilities for customers who comes by car.
Rating for different components of services
372
474469
466430
447437
7
12
3
64
5
0 100 200 300 400 500
1
2
3
4
5
6
7
Cumulative score Rating
ANALYSIS OF CUSTOMER SATISFACTION TOWARDS SUPERMARKET
M.P.B.I.M, Bangalore
61
A chart shows that post sales problems solved immedidetly component has been ranked as
sixth.48 respondents rated very satisfied for post sales problems solved immedidetly
component, 43 of respondents rated satisfied 9 for dissatisfied.
Free home delivery is provided component is ranked as seventh and considered as very
satisfied by 58 respondents and 19 of respondents rated satisfied. Free home delivery has to b
increased up to 4kms.
ANALYSIS OF CUSTOMER SATISFACTION TOWARDS SUPERMARKET
M.P.B.I.M, Bangalore
62
TABLE 9: DATA SHOWING THE OVERALL OPINION OF RESPONDENTS ON
SUPERMARKET
SL.No. Particulars No. of Respondents Percentage 1. Extremely satisfied 54 54 2. Satisfied 43 43 3. Not satisfied 03 03 4. Not at all satisfied 00 00 Total 100 100
Source: Field Study
GRAPH 9:
INTERPRETATION The above table clearly indicates that 54% of respondents are extremely satisfied and 43% of
respondents are extremely satisfied. The survey indicates that most or almost all the customer
are extremely satisfied tore and it is because of quality and availability of wide range of
products, free home delivery, replacement on dissatisfied products, good packing facilities,
price reduction on total purchase salesperson are friendly and helpful, good services, etc.
54
43
3
0
0 10 20 30 40 50 60
Extremely satisf ied
Satisf ied
Not satisf ied
Not at all satisf ied
Rating of customer satisfaction
ANALYSIS OF CUSTOMER SATISFACTION TOWARDS SUPERMARKET
M.P.B.I.M, Bangalore
63
TABLE 10: OCCUPATION OF THE RESPONDENT VISITING THE STORE
Source: Field Study GRAPH 10: Graph depicting occupation of respondents INTERPRETATION Respondent refer to the customer that have been selected for the study on random basis on the
basis of occupation. On the basis of survey I found that 26% of respondent who visit store are
professional, 23% of the respondent are business, 22% of them are employees, 21% of
respondent are housewife and only 8% who visit store are students.
SL.No. Particulars No. of Respondents
Percentage
1 Employees 22 22 2 Professional 26 26 3 Business 23 23 4 Housewife 21 21 5 Student 08 08 Total 100 100
22%
8%
21% 23%
26%
Employee Professional Business Housew ife Student
ANALYSIS OF CUSTOMER SATISFACTION TOWARDS SUPERMARKET
M.P.B.I.M, Bangalore
64
TABLE 11: DATA SHOWING THE RESPONENDS INCOME CATEDORY
Source: Field Study
GRAPH 11: INTERPRETATION The chart depicts that, out of 100 respondents 30 of respondent belongs to income group of
15-30 thousand per month, 25 of them belongs to below 15,000k, 16 of respondents belong to
30-50k, only 8 of them belong to above 50,000k and 21 of respondents don’t belong to any
income category as the respondents occupation are housewife and they are not earning.
No of Respondents SL.No Particulars Below 15k 15k-30k 30k-50k Above 50k