In little over a decade, the 55-year old founder and chairman and managing director of Symphony, Achal Bakeri, has managed to spin a dream turnaround story. From a loss making company in 2002, named after the brand of coolers it sells, Symphony clocked an operating profit of Rs 164 crore in 2014-15. Also the company claims that more than 80 per cent of Indian customers ask for Symphony by name when they go to a store and the bran enjoys 52 per cent share of the organised air coolermarket in India.
The journey has been far from smooth. After the initial success, (it was launched around 1988) post which the company decided to go public in 1994, it was all downhill. Symphony hit rock bottom when it listed with the Board of Industrial and Financial Reconstruction (BIFR) in 2002. Debt had climbed up to Rs 26 crore and share price had dropped to as low as Re 1 per share. Symphony had become a penny stock. No one, not even perhaps the founders, gave the brand much of a chance. How did Symphony change the story?
Sharpening the focus
Bakeri says, “In 1994 we went public. The market and customers were advising us to expand our product range. The argument was that we cannot focus on only one product that is seasonal in nature. So we got into products that were either counter-seasonal, or sold around the year, such as geysers, room heaters, exhaust fans, flour mills, washing machines and water purifiers. However, those products spelt doom for the company.”
The company eroded its net worth and the value of the brand dipped sharply. Symphony lost its unique position with customers. “It was really a nightmare. Some of my friends advised me to declare bankruptcy, others told me to join my father’s construction business, while some suggested I should leave the country,” Bakeri says. However he says he had complete faith in his products. Symphony had been developed as an eco-friendly and energy saving air-cooler, which Bakeri believed was the future, not air-conditioners. He decided to exit from all products except coolers and geysers and by 2007, the company was debt·free; by 2008 it started making profits.
Keeping the brand alive
Bakeri says branding is a continuous activity. The company invested in brand building and advertising even during the tough times. Bakeri says, the advertising budget is not a function of the turnover. “We sense the pulse of the market at the time and decide accordingly. It’s not like a fixed percentage of the revenues or profits,” he says
When he first launched Symphony in the summer of 1988, he had managed to sell his entire stock of 1,000 air-coolers in Ahmedabad. Smart pricing and attractive designs had helped at the time. While a conventional air-conditioner cost about Rs 30,000 and a locally assembled air-cooler, about Rs 2,500, Symphony priced its products (sleekly designed like air-conditioners) at Rs 4,300.
The single minded focus on quality and looks has paid off even in its later years. The domestic air cooler segment is largely fragmented with about 70-80 per cent of sales accounted for by unorganised players. Symphony is the leading player in the space followed by Kenstar (Videocon Industries Limited). Other players include Bajaj Electricals, Khaitan, Maharaja and Usha.
[“source -financialexpress”]