Friday, April 15, 2011

What HUL can but IIPM can`t!

(A few marketing lessons for IIPM)

Many of my friends from esteemed B-schools consider IIPM to be a four letter word. I would beg to differ. I consider them to be just another institution imparting Business education to students. Just like IIMs do or my alma mater Symbiosis does. There is nothing wrong in it at all!

However the question is what makes thousands of people make nasty faces and utter expletives at the very mention of the name IIPM? Is it just because they make tall claims about being what they are not or is the reason much more deep-seated? Let`s try and figure out.

I somehow believe that IIPM has not just dug its own grave but has also ensured that the grave is cemented once the burial is over. Mind it, the reason is not because of placement figures or anything in those lines. It is a simple case of a marketing mishap!

I really don`t know what marketing curriculum is followed in IIPM. Whatever be it, one thing is for sure that they are not practising what they are supposed to be preaching. They seem to have assumed that Marketing and Promoting are synonymous. Nothing can be more follied than that. Important steps in marketing strategy design such as segmenting, targeting & positioning seems to have been totally kept aside. Ironically they have also missed out on application of the 4P`s concept even though “4Ps” happen to be the name of one of their publications.

Before I progress further with my analysis allow me to present a fictitious scenario. What if you wake up one morning, reach out for the morning newspaper and come face to face with a full page advert of Tata Nano? Will you utter expletives? Probably, not. Now consider a funnier situation. You notice that the tagline of Tata Nano is : ‘Dare to replace your BMW?’

Will you be able to restrain yourself from uttering expletives? Probably, not.

So what exactly is the source of all irritation in the above case? Definitely none of us have anything against the car called NANO. Just like we are at peace with the detergent called Nirma, the soap called Hamam or the shampoo called chic! I mean why should we complain as long as we are deriving value from products?

Now it is obvious that IIPM is not the worst B-school in the country. There are so many other B-schools that are faring even worse than IIPM. Although we may not hold such B-schools with great regard but we surely don`t use their names as intellectual swear words. With IIPM the case is slightly different. Not only is the name now hated intently across the nation but also the name has become synonymous with fraudulent practices! All so for keeping out essential steps in Marketing Strategy design.

Had IIPM adopted a conventional approach to arrive at their marketing strategy they would have never swallowed burning coal. Let`s begin with segmentation and targeting.

In the case of IIPM the overall market is the population of B-school aspirants. All aspirants are unique in terms of several variables like background, intellect, ambitions etc. It is sinful to assume that all of them are birds of the same feather. Perhaps IIPM thought so. They considered all B-school aspirants to be crazy about a seat in the IIMs and settle for nothing lesser. Had that been the case would be have B-school`s mushrooming across the country? A typical B-school aspirant is a 20 something fellow who has already gone through over 15 years of formal education. Such a fellow has some idea about his strengths as well as his limitations. Many of them consider IIMs as a fairyland beyond reach. These people readily accept deals that are far inferior to an IIM admit.

Had IIPM done the segmentation right they would have realised that quite a few segments of students might be interested in their value proposition. Instead IIPM decided to go for a full market attack strategy and targeted the entire population of students. The situation is very similar to the one where Tata Nano targets all potential car buyers (including the BMW customer). Such a strategy might work for a firm that trades in commodities but definitely is suicidal for a B-school.

Now let`s move on to the question of positioning. Here IIPM`s very tagline (” Dare to think beyond IIMs/IITs”) says it all! The IIPM thintank must have fancied creating a separate axis in the mental map of B-school aspirants. However the very usage of names of the likes of IIMs and IITs made their strategy fall flat. A layman after reading the tagline would assume that IIPM claims to hold a position on the same axis as that of these institutes of repute. Such is the trouble of comparative advertising. You have to be sure about the competitor with whom you are comparing yourself. In this case IIPM was totally unsure about the value proposition of IITs/IIMs. They assumed that the only point where they were required to match their competitors was on placement figures. Now I will not get into comparing the placement statistics of IIPM with that of IITs and IIMs as that has already been done time and again by zillions of bloggers across the world and nothing more is left to be said on that front. The fact remains that IIPM never really tried to fight out IIMs by arranging exceptional placements for their outgoing students but instead they got themselves rated high on fictitious rankings. So far, so good. Had IIMs just been glorified employment exchanges many more would have fallen for IIPM`s glossy claims. The truth is a bit different.

IIPM failed to realise that one important component of IIM`s value proposition was its exclusivity. An IIM grad has high regards in the industry because of his business knowledge and also because of the fact that no ordinary Johny can bag a seat in his institute. When IIPM began to wage a war against IIMs did they at all work towards making themselves exclusive? They appointed telemarketers to cold call students, their selection procedure had no rigour involved and they began operating in almost thirty branches. In simple words an IIPM admit was an easily available option. This by itself dilutes their entire value proposition.

IIPM also got it wrong when it comes to the application of 4Ps of marketing: Product, Price, Place and Promotion. Consequentially they became a weak product at an inappropriate price-point sold through improper channels! IIPM`s product strategy is a classic case of marketing myopia. The key highlights of its offering emphasise on free laptop and a Europe trip. These are perhaps the last things that a student is looking for in a B-school.

If you remember correctly , years ago Kodak introduced cheap cameras which they tried selling through kirana outlets and failed. The reason was that a kirana outlet visitor has come there to buy groceries and not a cam. Similarly, telemarketing is dangerous for a B-school that compares itself with IIMs in advertisements. It is nothing less than selecting an improper marketing channel.

When it comes to Promotion IIPM undoubtedly surpasses all others in its league. Its promo budget could well be comparable to those of FMCG giants. However, Promotion activities which helps FMCG giants sell their products has made IIPM some sort of a swear word. Promotion is helpful only when all other steps are in place. Roping in a silver-screen celebrity might be a good option for an FMCG player but is not worthwhile for selling something like Business education. I might take an actors word when it comes to selecting a fairness cream but I definitely won`t take his advice while choosing a B-school.

IIPM brings us face to face with the importance of aligning a firm`s marketing strategy with the uniqueness of the business that the firm is in. It is perhaps impossible to sell Business education in a method similar to selling a soap. What might be magical for HUL could well be poisonous for IIPM.

It would be interesting to observe IIPM`s future marketing activities. If they are not waging a ego-war soon enough we might observe intense repositioning happening. The repositioning might not make them a better B-school but would definitely save them from becoming a permanent intellectual swear word.

14 comments:

Shivani said...

Good post.. There is yet another "ugh" factor.. The full page picture of Arindam Chaudhuri with the IIPM Ad...What is that.. B - association?I wonder if any tier 2 college also refers to his work...

dasguptasamrat said...
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dasguptasamrat said...

can't agree more bunsen,a perfect case study of marketing myopia...

btw just a piece of conversation i had with my aunt (a housewive with not much idea of the b-school circuit)prior to my admission at NITIE, my alma-mater...

SHE: so samrat, where did u get thru in CAT?
ME: Aunty, I have converted NITIE, Mumbai..
SHE: ohh..u did not get IIM?
ME:no Aunty, messed up a section in CAT..
SHE:(with a sympathetic look turning serious now):u did not even get IIPM?
ME:(coughing,obviously mindfucked!!!): No Aunty, my scores r not that good..
..This is what IIPMs marketing strategy has achieved...WOM... but unfortunately (or thankfully!..:)) they have got their 4Ps wrong where it matters the most...

Sneha said...

Brilliantly written Anir.. :) Iipm does need to work on its exclusivity factor.. Ppl nowadays refer to the amount of preparation done as " Iipm mein toh ho jayega yaar.."

Rahul aka Blade said...

awesome Brother!

Ritesh Vaidya said...

Hey Dude..nice timepass..but i would like to make some observations. First of all IIPM is never targetting intelligent or even average IQ guys. Their target segment is the SoBo(south bombay) kinda lukkas whose dads have lotsa monies. These kids think of IIM's as employment exchanges, enroll in the best coaching classes albeit never attend them. Then after CAT with poor scores they show off this "Dare to think beyond IIM's" advert to their rich dads. At such points maximum international placements, tour of europe, No.5 ranked in ZEE business ranking, SRK hosting quiz shows counts. U gotta understand that these kids dads are equally eager to boats to their other pan chewing buddies who are equally clueless about the quality of education but fascinated by the add-ons, that their son/daughter is in Germany on study tour. The kind of "Hamara chokra States mein udi gayo". So the IIPM is aptly located in the Posh Western suburbs locale of Mumbai next to the most hip discos. So these IIPM's are making promises of giving quality education to not so education-oriented students and roping them in through correct freebies.So Mr.Ansen how much correct you may be with your marketing fundas, please first think of the value proposition the service is meant to offer and to whom. Thanks, still well written.

Thunderdog said...

mast hai yaar! if only all chapters of a management book are written as interestingly :D let that mighty pen of urs flow more dude.

Navin said...
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Navin said...

Interesting post... and guess am too getting bored.. so let me add my point of view.... I guess IIPM is doing greatly... they are doing it the smarter way... Lets first talk about why IIPM uses that punchline... "IIM" - the three letter which are synonymous with success... they ring a bell.. they arouse curiosity... they make you read a story... 3 idiots could have been shot anywhr. why IIM B? Newspaper headlines say "MBA/DU Student met with an accident"... had it been the IIPM. it wud have been same... had it been IIM Grad??? The headline wud have definitely changed to "IIM Grad met with an accident"... Leveraging is the rule of the game... Lets talk about the consumer... the student with 15 yrs of formal education... why do we do an MBA? because we want to be a manager? I guess a greater number join bandwagon for MBA is for money... success... growth etc etc... Thats the state of affairs in India... We have Civil/Mechanical enginneers with experience in IT companies doing MBA in Finance wanting to be a Banker? Where does the formal education help? the career decision making is too constraint byt he societal/opportunities pressure... We have to join the herd.... Thus the eternal question- "WHY MBA?"....Lets talk abt segmentation.... If we assume the likes of IIMs and other very good B Schools in form of pedagogy/reputation/placement.. lets say 30 of them with each @400 students.... that makes it 12000 students...Every yr around 240,000 aspirant takes the exam... That means almost 95% people are not going to make thru these colleges.... when the market is so much skewed... whr is IIPM faultering?? they are going ahead targeting these aspirants... Customers (relatives- as mentioned in of the posts) do knw abt IIPM.... they do make a recognition in the industry.... so wheres the flaw? IIPM is playing very smartly... People like us are not their target customers... and they dont care what we think about their advertisements/tag lines.... their customer wants to join a college with known name... IIPM is a known name.... Free latptop n Europe tour is attractive... post fee hike all colleges are at par... placememnts figures are something you cant comment on any college post top 30... so how does an aspirant of those 2.2 lakhs left out decide???? IIPM is growing... it has many centers.... and it has students on its rolls... so trust me 4Ps whether they knw it or not... they knw the core of marketing.. Consumer behaviour & Psychology....

Ashish Sukhadeve said...

Foreign trips, students-exchange program and big ads are not enough to claim think beyond IIMs. Brand building is important for any product to succeed in the market, but false claims makes it a total failure.

Nikhil said...

Anirban,

Classical marketing says that if your STP is wrong, chances are, that the product will also fail. However, IIPM has succesfully(Why do I say successful? Because regardless of what we all say, IIPM mints money) managed to byepass their
wrong positioning, and create an empire. How do you explain that?

Well, thats because by using the full-market attack strategy, they have managed to target a large proportion of students whose only aim is to obtain
an MBA from anywhere. Literally anywhere. Here's how -

Let us have some numbers here. Assume CAT is the universal favourite of ALL MBA aspirants. From the 2L+ janta, only about 25%(=50,000) are insanely intelligent(really?!)
enough to get through a B School of their choice. Lets call them "The Good". What happens to the rest? lets say about 25% of them try again next year, cursing the huge population that India has and hence affecting their much
deserved chance at an IIM et al("The Bad"). That leaves us with "The Ugly" 1L aspirants.
Now IIPM knows exactly what The Ugly want. "The Good" and "The Bad" feel that a free laptop is not a good enough bait
and a foreign tour is just a hogwash.

Have you ever wondered what a that the typical IIPMite looks like? One of my friend's friend, who studies in IIPM Delhi says that
these are sons/daughters of people having fat pockets, who want an MBA just for namesake. And they would definitely be swooned by a big-ticket celebrity like SRK.

Our country has no dearth of karodpatis, esp., the nouveau riche, isn't it? So you are wrong when you say
"They considered all B-school aspirants to be crazy about a seat in the IIMs and settle for nothing lesser." and "they became a weak product at an inappropriate price-point sold through improper channels"
(what other channel do you recommend the IIPM thinktank to spend their marketing rupees on?)


You are right when you say their positioning is wrong, but their segmentation, targeting and 4Ps have been spot on.

Harsha said...

Great post. I have been planning to write something like this on IIPM, but that never happened. I would tag IIPM as a cheap B-School. The center spread ads they give and the odd colors they use reflects an immature mentality of the marketers. Because, using a superstar as a brand ambassador and promising to give free laptops and free foreign tours twice a year just shows how unsecured Arindam Chaudhuri is about his institution. These so called promotion activities actually work for HUL's products as you rightly said. And comparing themselves with IIMs is a foolish attempt which they feel can attract potential students. Excellent read it was!

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Unknown said...

Well written.

@Samrat
Whoa! You serious??