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Indian Journal of Marketing

ISSN: 0973-8703 Frequency: Monthly Peer Review: Double-blind Published since: 1968 Language: English
A publication of AMCPL
amcon.co.in
New Delhi, India
Indexed in: Scopus Q3 UGC-CARE Group II ABDC: C Google Scholar J-Gate NAAS NISCAIR Crossref

Original Article

Open Access Original Article

Non-conventional MARCOM Strategy for Rural India

Sudhanshu Sekhar Kar1Sarat Kumar Sahoo2
Volume 40
Issue 2
Pages 56–61
Year 2010
Published: Feb. 1, 2010
Abstract

The villages and small towns of India, which were once considered inconsequential from the marketing point of view, are now getting the attention of the marketers and rural markets are proving to be vital for the growth of most of the FMCG (Fast Moving Consumer Goods) companies. Rural India accounts for more than 30 - 60 per cent of the total sales of consumer goods like biscuits, toothpastes, shampoos, washing machines etc. Because of saturation in the urban markets, marketing strategy should shift its attention towards the rural markets, which are no longer seen as the dumping grounds of the consumer products popular in urban areas. Rural consumers have a distinct preference of their own. But due to perceptible changes seen in the improvement of infrastructure, rising level of income, explosion of media and wide coverage of TV, radio etc., the gap between the urban and rural divide is gradually narrowing. The rural consumer is more discrete, more cash-conscious and more utilitarian in outlook. The marketing communication i.e., MARCOM strategy for rural areas should be different from the urban areas because of inaccessibility of electricity and electronics media, thin population density and widely scattered villages, poor exposure, low disposable income and availability of counterfeit products.

How to Cite

Sudhanshu Sekhar Kar, Sarat Kumar Sahoo (2010). Non-conventional MARCOM Strategy for Rural India. Indian Journal of Marketing, 40(2), 56–61.

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