tingRURAL MARKETING By: Kumar Gaurav Rastogi. ( MBA‚ CUIM) Rural India 740 million people 24 languages… 1642 Dialects 6‚38‚691 villages and 5‚164 towns 70% population still rural & agrarian 41% are illiterate 56% HH - no access to electricity 70% HH have no bank account 96% have no telephones 7% have two wheelers & 1.3% have 4 wheelers By: Kumar Gaurav Rastogi. ( MBA‚ CUIM) Rural Market Structure Demographic Environment Physical
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Rural Development In India India has been a welfare state ever since her Independence and the primary objective of all governmental endeavors has been the welfare of its millions. Planning has been one of the pillars of the Indian policy since independence and the country’s strength is derived from the achievement of planning. The policies and programmes have been designed with the aim of alleviation of rural poverty which has been one of the primary objectives of planned development in India
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ISSN 1020-7317 4 Marketing Extension Guide Planning and designing RURAL MARKETS For further copies of this publication and for information on FAO’s activities related to agricultural marketing please contact: Agricultural Marketing Group Agricultural Support Systems Division Food and Agriculture Organization of the United Nations Viale delle Terme di Caracalla 00100 Rome‚ Italy Fax: (+39)-06 57056850 E-mail: AGS-Registry@fao.org http://www.fao.org/ag/AGS/subjects/en/agmarket/agmarket
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poorer countries‚ many people from the countryside move to the cities. This is called rural-urban migration. There are so many reasons for this popular action. But it happens mainly because of better education and better standard of living. As it plays an important role in the growth and development of countries‚ rural-urban migration certainly has its positive effects. Firstly‚ more and more kids from rural areas will obtain better education. Education is necessary for the development of society
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P.R.A. - Participatory Rural Appraisal Concepts Methodologies and Techniques Luigi Cavestro 10 October 2003 P.R.A. - Participatory Rural Appraisal 2 INDEX 1. PRA - PARTICIPATORY RURAL APPRAISAL....................................................................... 3 1.1. 1.2. 1.3. 1.4. 2. INTRODUCTION TO PRA. .............................................................................................................. 3 RRA - RAPID RURAL APPRAISAL ..............
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CHAPTER I INTRODUCTION TO RURAL MARKET GONE ARE the days when a rural consumer went to a nearby city to buy branded products and services. Time was when only a select household consumed branded goods‚ be it toothpaste or soap. There were days when big companies flocked to rural markets to establish their brands. Today‚ rural markets are critical for every marketer - be it for a branded shampoo or an automobile. To open a business daily or business magazine today‚ you will read about some company
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Singh : udai_singh@rediff.com 7838590282 Rural market- opportunities- “India lives in her villages”‚ a maxim attributed to Mahatma Gandhi‚ rings true when we see rural India retaining its old domination of the national population and economy in its 627000 villages‚ even after six decades of a development model that cherishes urbanization and industrialization. Close to 69% of Indians—743 million people or 138 million households—live in rural areas‚ generating 56% of the national income. With
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Tapping Rural Market “Sustainable strategies of corporate” Sandeep Porwal (PGDM Student‚ CDSM‚ Indore) Introduction Rural market is getting an importance because of the saturation of the urban market. As due to the competition in the urban market‚ the market is more or so saturated as most of the capacity of the purchasers have been targeted by the marketers. So the marketers are looking for
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Hindustan Lever’s Project: Case Study in Marketing FMCG to Rural Consumer With the population of over 1.2 billion and vast territory‚ India maintains an annual economic growth rate of over 6.5% since 1998. In this fast developing market‚ India enhances specific characteristics in many aspects: the consumer preference‚ marketing channel‚ market liquidity‚ distributors and manufactories‚ and so on. Therefore‚ administrators have to make decisions and strategies corresponding to this circumstance
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Rural Retailing in India-The Road Ahead Shikhar Das Srivastava* ABSTRACT The decision to liberalize the Indian Economy in 1991 had far reaching consequences‚ which is still continued into the new millennium also. On the marketing front‚ there was the arrival of many well-known Multi National Companies especially FMCG product dealers. In the initial years the focus was on the easily accessible well developed urban markets but soon it got saturated because of proliferation of brands and intense
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