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Beyond Tobacco

Rajeev Dubey January 10, 2018

More than two decades ago, Y.C. Deveshwar had just taken charge as the managing
director at ITC when a senior executive came up to him to inform him about his
resignation as ITC had decided to sell the international commodities trading business
that he was heading. It so happened that after completing the negotiations, Deveshwar
changed his mind (to sell the business) - and so did S. Sivakumar, the executive.

That would be the defining moment for ITC and its future. For, Sivakumar went on to
conceptualise, build and lead the highly complex agri business, which has not just
transformed millions of rural lives through e-Choupals and created a new era of
technology-led farming but is also the bedrock of most of ITC's current and future
businesses - FMCG, retail, food, exports, chocolates, dairy, among others.

This foundation of the ITC of today was laid more than two decades ago when
Deveshwar revisited ITC's vision. It was clear in the mid-90s that sin goods such as
cigarettes and liquor would come increasingly under regulatory pressure and
discouraged with high taxation.

"Without ceding ground in that, in the interest of all our stakeholders, ITC had this
aspiration to make an increasing economic contribution to the economy," says Sanjiv
Puri, CEO & Executive Director and Deveshwar's successor. That time, ITC had
revenues of around `800 crore and market cap of `100 crore. In its 95th year, in 2006,
ITC had revenues of around `5,000 crore and market cap of `5,000 crore. In 2017, in its
106th year, revenues are around `57,000 crore and market cap `3.2 lakh crore (as on
Jan 2, 2018). Deveshwar has been at the helm for much of this journey.

ITC decided to shed businesses such as financial services, FMCG/edible oils,


international commodities trading (though it wasn't sold finally) and focus on businesses
where it believed it was strong: hotels, paperboard and agri. And then, it got into
information technology and re-entered FMCG.

Why did the diversification fail before? "We did not give it our best shot. We moved on to
the next business without taking any of these to conclusion. Also, we did not have a
proper strategy to nurture those businesses. This time, what we did was to have a
proper selection process, divesting those not matching ITC's strengths, and focusing on
those that made sense for us," says Deveshwar.

This was also the period when just like his predecessor K.L. Chugh, Deveshwar was
struggling to prevent ITC's largest shareholder, British American Tobacco (BAT), from
taking control of ITC; BAT was asking ITC to stick to the knitting (as it did in the UK) and
preventing it from diversifying into new areas. Deveshwar was able to reason with the
government and financial institutions to keep BAT at bay and let ITC remain an
independent, board-managed organisation, just like Larsen & Toubro. This ensured that
BAT was not just unable to increase its stake but was also unable to prevent ITC from
diversifying. It worked. Deveshwar got just the breather he needed to prove that his
strategy was working.

In the process,
Deveshwar,
with his
undying faith
in the Indian
growth story,
transformed
ITC forever.

A lot of
businesses
ITC has
incubated over
decades now
have the size
and scale to
be on their
own. Take the
case of
Aashirvaad
Atta. It has
made ITC the
second-largest
buyer of wheat in the country after Food Corporation of India; it buys nearly one million
tonnes every year. The agri and e-choupal business has worked towards providing
livelihoods, improving agri quality and productivity and promoting climate-resilient
agriculture. The choupal 4.0 will be equipped with latest digital technologies. Not to
forget ITC's ability to leverage distribution and creating large brands: between these
businesses, it has 25 mother brands which are either No. 1, 2 or 3 in their categories.

Besides, Deveshwar follows the strategy of incubating and nurturing businesses in their
early lifecycle through healthy cash flows from tobacco until they are on their feet. "The
reason we failed in edible oils was because we created a separate company. When you
start a separate business, it's not easy to establish it. It takes time, it takes blood, it takes
a lot of inputs. That is why we folded paperboard and hotels businesses back into ITC so
that they could be nurtured by cash flows from our tobacco business," he says.

Even while pursuing profitability, growth and diversification, Deveshwar was convinced
that all this could be achieved via triple bottom line - social, ecological and financial. So,
even as ITC has a robust bottom line and reported a net profit of `10,201 crore in
2016/17, it's also a carbon positive company, a water positive company and a solid
waste recycling positive company. It has also created six million livelihoods. At the heart
of all that Deveshwar has done is to build the organisation to last. As Puri says, "We're
not here for five or 10 years, we are looking at the next century".

If there's one business ITC believes has the highest potential to take the company into
the next century, it's FMCG. Not just because India's FMCG penetration and per capita
consumption levels are way lower than the world average but also because it's the
space where ITC's enterprise strengths can be best leveraged. "We are hoping FMCG
will be that business. It is a formidable opportunity. But it won't happen overnight," says
Deveshwar.

In foods, the synergies are even more pronounced. "For good quality produce, you need
good quality inputs. And we have hotels where chefs help us with design and testing of
food products," says Puri. FMCG is where the company expects the steepest spike in
growth with the `10,000 crore business projected to grow 10 times to `1 lakh crore in
revenue. "That is how we are gearing the enterprise. We are building step by step.
We've got into dairy, coffee, chocolates. The latest is sea food with shrimps," says Puri.

What's driving the FMCG space is ITC's science and technology centre where over 350
scientists focus on creating products for the new age lifestyle, especially in health and
wellness space. The centre has over 500 patents to its credit. In fact, some of ITC's
most successful products have been born at the centre - Aashirvaad sugar control
release Atta; digestive biscuits from 100 per cent Atta with no artificial sweetener, no
maida and no sugar; even juice made from real fruit rather than fruit pulp. "One litre of
tetrapack is made of 25 pomegranates," says Puri. And finally, the 'Super Safe' spices.
To meet global standards, they are tested for 470 contaminates versus 9-10 that are
required under Indian norms. "The trick was to work with farmers with a package of
practices so that these kinds of spices can be developed," says Puri.

The trick to succeed with such a diverse set of businesses was to leverage the
economies of scale in manufacturing and distribution. This means making more
businesses ride piggyback on common manufacturing and distribution infrastructure to
distribute fixed costs and share variable costs. So, it started integrating factories and
warehouses. ITC can now build a factory that has one biscuit unit, one juice unit, one
soap unit, one confectionary unit, one shampoo unit, one noodles line, etc. The idea is to
build such factories at multiple locations to get close to markets. Each time a product is
manufactured, it has to be transported to a warehouse and then to distributors. If
factories can have warehouses too, that's a cost saved. "That is what we are engaged in
building now so that the cost of delivery is the lowest that anybody can have," says
Deveshwar.
"When we were diversifying initially, if you look at the media reports then, the media was
on the side of what our overseas shareholder was saying - stick to your knitting. But now
I am being credited with enormous foresight. Remember we diversified at a time when
there was no threat (to the tobacco business). As a matter of fact, you should do things
well ahead of the threats emerging," says Deveshwar.

"Our strategy is extremely simple. To use tobacco cash flow to build multiple drivers of
growth. And to build world-class Indian brands for Indian consumers and maximise the
capturing of value within India," says Deveshwar.

But Deveshwar isn't still sounding the death knell for the tobacco business: "I don't think
the tobacco business is going to die out despite the pressures. Do you think you can just
snuff it out and rob people employed in the sector of their livelihood?" he says. True, as
it is, this is as much a reality as it is a challenge.

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