
Reliance Retail, the retail arm of Mukesh Ambani-led conglomerate Reliance Industries (RIL), has entered a distribution partnerships with over 50 traditional, regional sweets (mithai) makers from across India to distribute, mass produce, modernise packaging and develop traditional Indian sweets with extended shelf life.
These packaged mithais such as laddos, barfis and pedas, which are being positioned to compete with chocolate brands such as Cadbury and KitKat, are already being placed at all Reliance grocery stores such as Smart Bazaar, Smart and other grocery formats, besides Reliance Retail's e-commerce platform JioMart.
Damodar Mall, chief executive, grocery retail at Reliance Retail, confirmed the developments. "We want to democratise traditional sweets and not relegate a particular variety to a region," he told ET, adding that the company wants to take consumption of traditional sweets beyond seasonal opportunities.
The scaling up coincides with peak festive season in India followed by the wedding season, with discretionary products makers including those selling gourmet foods, reporting double-digit surge in sales.
Mall said Reliance Retail is taking the partnerships with traditional sweets makers forward with individual consumption packs as well. "We are also developing single serve packs of these mithais which will be placed at kirana stores," he said.
At its grocery stores, Reliance Retail has created multiple bays and free standing units for traditional sweets, similar to what modern trade stores do for chocolates. So far, the partnerships have led to over 500 packs and hundred varieties of traditional sweets.
These packaged mithais such as laddos, barfis and pedas, which are being positioned to compete with chocolate brands such as Cadbury and KitKat, are already being placed at all Reliance grocery stores such as Smart Bazaar, Smart and other grocery formats, besides Reliance Retail's e-commerce platform JioMart.
Damodar Mall, chief executive, grocery retail at Reliance Retail, confirmed the developments. "We want to democratise traditional sweets and not relegate a particular variety to a region," he told ET, adding that the company wants to take consumption of traditional sweets beyond seasonal opportunities.
The scaling up coincides with peak festive season in India followed by the wedding season, with discretionary products makers including those selling gourmet foods, reporting double-digit surge in sales.
Mall said Reliance Retail is taking the partnerships with traditional sweets makers forward with individual consumption packs as well. "We are also developing single serve packs of these mithais which will be placed at kirana stores," he said.
At its grocery stores, Reliance Retail has created multiple bays and free standing units for traditional sweets, similar to what modern trade stores do for chocolates. So far, the partnerships have led to over 500 packs and hundred varieties of traditional sweets.
Read More News on
(Catch all the Business News, Breaking News Events and Latest News Updates on The Economic Times.)
...moreDownload The Economic Times News App to get Daily Market Updates & Live Business News.