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Rajahmundry Calling



Author: Rajneesh De
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Rajahmundry Calling
Monday, November 14, 2011

What is common between Jabalpur, Silchar, Rajahmundri, Muzaffarpur, Kottayam and Kota? Apart from being small towns dotted across the map of India, these cities are part of the annual roadshow Rashi Peripherals is organizing across 51 cities over the next two months. Rashi is just an example and these cities are some names I have randomly picked up from their roadshow agenda. The bigger story is this epitomizes best how the IT market in India is now growing in the D and E class cities. It's not just that the metros are saturated, even the Tier 2 cities are close to saturation; no wonders the vendors (and that means the national distributors) are aggressively courting these small towns.

Small towns though were not on the agenda of these vendors even a few years back but with the passage of time they have assumed enough importance for each company to sit up and take note of their existence. It's true that few years back a Dell or Cisco or an LG might not have even heard of Rajahmundry or Muzaffarpur. The channels that added tier-2 and tier-3 markets helped distributors who played their cards well to stay ahead. For deeper penetration into the C, D, E class channels voted for a requirement of good strength. It's not always the NDs, but sometimes even vendors are directly appointing distributors in small towns. HP has already appointed Linkworld and Karuna Management as zonal distributors in the east. The entire idea behind this is to appoint local distributors who understand their respective local market dynamics better and can generate better business and growth.

Realizing the importance of these small towns that are growing at 60%, NDs like Rashi decided to increase it focus on these towns-Rashi, in fact, has been one of the biggest beneficiaries with small cities collectively contributing 40% to its overall revenues. Education is expected to be the biggest growth driver of this segment. The SOHO segment was the strongest segment which did not de-grow even after recession, offering a major advantage for those banking on it. Though enterprise demand slowed down SMB and SOHO appeared the promising segments.

The challenging situation during the recession ensured the growth of these smaller cities, as everyone were forced to look at newer avenues to not just sustain, but even survive. And with another recession (according to many round the corner) the importance of penetrating further into the likes of Silchar, Kottayam, Gwalior or Bilaspur cannot be emphasized any further. It's not just Rashi, most of the Tier 2 NDs are also following the same roadmap. In FY09, Iris restructured its regional focus by declaring Delhi NCR as N1 and North India as N2 regions. This enabled the company in FY10 to penetrate smaller towns like Ludhiana, Chandigarh, Shimla, Ambala, Jammu, better; this reflected in its 25% growth that year.

Without churning out more specific numbers, I feel the message has already drilled down. It's going to be the Tier 3 or 4 cities that are going to be the new IT havens of India. Come on Tirupati, Kolhapur, Gangtok and Jammu-your days in the sun are here now.




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