Maggi unfazed by entry of Ramdev’s Patanjali noodles
11 Feb 2016
Nestle India on Wednesday said its Maggi brand of instant noodles is getting good traction in the market ever since it was reintroduced last November, and that it is ''not intimidated'' by yoga guru Ramdev's Patanjali noodles, which was introduced the time Maggi was off the shelves due to an official ban.
''Every competitor energises the market; they do not intimidate the existing players,'' Nestle India chairman and managing director Suresh Narayanan told reporters in Mumbai when asked about the entry of the Patanjali noodles.
''We have reintroduced Maggi across the country and the response has been overwhelming; we're truly humbled by the consumer response,'' he told said on the sidelines of the annual Nasscom summit.
Last month, the yoga guru had claimed that his Patanjali brand of noodles would soon oust Maggi as the top brand in the country. According to domestic brokerage IIFL, Patanjali is expected to clock sales of Rs20,000 crore by 2019-20, from a turnover of Rs2,000 crore in 2014-15.
When asked if the emergence of competition, especially something like Patanjali that claims to be a healthier alternative, would result in a change in the way Maggi is being manufactured now, Narayanan replied in the negative.
He said the company has also introduced a chicken variant of the popular noodles and is selling it over ecommerce major Snapdeal.
In the immediate future, the company is looking at introducing other variants of the noodles and introducing products in other categories like dairy, coffee and chocolates. The products that Nestle is planning to launch will be both high-end and mass-consumption.
Narayanan said Maggi used to contribute a fourth of revenues for Nestle India. ''With the coming back of Maggi, there'll be a revival of fortunes for us. I'm not unrealistic, it will be a process and it will evolve gradually.''
The company will look ''aggressively'' at opportunities of selling its products through e-commerce portals, which are used increasingly by the youth.
When asked about the marketing spends on Maggi's re-launch, he said it is ''significant'' enough to ''make a dent''.
Following the nationwide ban in June last year, the company had reported net losses for the first time in over three decades in the September quarter.