Cadbury Case
Cadbury Case
Cadbury Case
The founding of the Cadbury business dates back to 1831 when John
Cadbury first made cocoa products on a factory scale in an old malt house in
Crooked Lane, Birmingham.
In 1847 the business moved to larger premises in Bridge Street, which had
its own private canal spur linking the factory via the Birmingham
Navigation Canal to the major ports of Britain.
Business continued at the Bridge Street site for 32 years and by 1878 the
workforce had expanded to 200, so more space was needed. This heralded
the move to Bournville and the building of what is now one of the largest
chocolate factories in the world.
John Cadbury retired in 1861 handing over the business to his eldest sons
Richard and George. It is to their leadership that the success of the enterprise
is owed as the company prospered.
The origin of the group goes back over two centuries. Some of the most
loved international brands are from the stable of Cadbury Schweppes –
Cadbury Dairy Milk, Dr Pepper, Flake, Trebor Basset, Snapple, Motts and
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with the acquisition of Adams, brands like - Halls, Clorets, Trident, Dentyne
and Bubbas bubble gum range will now be part of the Group’s portfolio.
55,000 people populate the humming offices of Cadbury Schweppes across
the globe.
Cadbury Schweppes is the No.1 confectionery and third largest soft drinks
company in the world. They manufacture, market and distribute branded
chocolates, confectionery and beverages that bring smiles to millions of
consumers across 180 countries.
This passion for success led to the company expanding its business overseas
and thus briging the flavour of chocolate to people and tickling their taste
buds.
When Cadbury Dairy Milk chocolate was first introduced in the early 1900s
it made an immediate impact quickly becoming the market leader. The
success story has continued. It is still the top selling chocolate brand in the
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country and the Cadbury Mega Brand's broad family of products today has
an international retail value approaching US$1billion.
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ABOUT CADBURY INDIA LTD.
Cadbury India began its operations as a trading concern in 1947. Cadbury in
the Indian sub continent defined the first taste of chocolate. The company
today employs nearly 2000 people across India.
Cadbury India's four factories in India churn out close to 8,000 tonnes of
chocolate and the company sells a million bars every day.(locations of
factories.)
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PURPOSE AND VALUES
Objective:
Grow shareholder value…over the long term.
Strategy:
Create robust and sustainable regional positions in our core categories of
confectionery and beverages through organic growth, acquisition and
disposal.
Process:
They achieve this by Managing For Value.
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MANAGEMENT TEAM AT CADBURY
CHAIRMAN
C. Y. PAL
VICE CHAIRMAN
RAJIV WAHI
MANAGING DIRECTOR
BHARAT PURI
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ENVIRONMENT AND SOCIETY
At Cadbury India, it is believed that good values and good business go hand
in hand.
Cadbury India has a large factory in Malanpur, one of the most under
developed districts in Central India. In 1999, theylaunched the Cadbury
Community Initiative Programme under the banner: Nutrition, Education,
Security and Love.
Last year, the education programme supported the Indian Government’s Year
of Women Empowerment. Special focus was given to the rights and
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contribution of girls and to the counteraction of female infanticide through a
variety of initiatives, including awareness generation and gender
sensitization programmes leading to formation of women self help groups.
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MILESTONES OF CADBURY
The June 2003 issue of Business Today identified Cadbury India as one of
India's best-managed companies in 2003.
Cadbury India was lauded for its value creation, for its strategy of focusing
on power brands, and its aggressive foray into the low end market with
Chocki as well as launches at the top end.
Cadbury succeeded in reducing the impact of the slow down in the Indian
FMCG industry & was also recognized for its innovation and consistent
development of new products for consumers in India.
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NEW PRODUCT LAUNCHES
Cadbury launches Rich Dry Fruit Collection for gifting this festive
season.
Come Diwali and the gifting options for consumers just got better with the
launch of Cadbury Celebrations Rich Dry Fruit Collection a range of
premium chocolate gift boxes.
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Cadbury's Creative Launch A new after dinner' segment
The rich tastes of CDM combined with the unique crème center in exotic
flavors provide a special chocolate experience. CDM Desserts add delight to
the after-meal moments, especially with the consumers whose current choice
of sweets range from home made delicacies to fruits to meethai.
Hence CDM Desserts positions itself as the perfect after meal, with the idea
“Khaane Ke baad Kuch Meetha Ho Jaye”.
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THE WORMY CONTROVERSY
RISE OF THE CONTROVERSY
Marve then contacted the FDA and gave them the sample. FDA Joint
Commissioner Hindurao Salunkhe said Cadbury's Talegaon plant will also
be inspected.
Bharat Puri, managing director of Cadbury India will never forget the batch
of Dairy Milk chocolates numbered 28F311 manufactured last year at the
company's plant in Thane, near Mumbai.
That was the worm-infested batch that triggered a crisis for the company that
had always prided itself on its squeaky clean image.
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EFFECTS OF THE CONTROVERSY ON CADBURY
The state Food and Drug Administration has ordered seizure of Cadbury's
Dairy Milk chocolates from all over Maharashtra after worms were found in
two of them in Mumbai.
Cadbury India, whose chocolates had ridden into controversy late last year
during the festival season because worms were discovered in some stocks of
its Dairy Milk chocolates is probably hoping the association with Bachchan
will help consumers forget the bad press the company got on account of the
discovery.
The Food and Drug Administration had then seized the company's stocks
and the Cadbury India management had explained it was bad storage
practices by retailers and distributors that had led to the worms. Cadbury
India's sales fell following the discovery. And even the government got into
the act with the central health ministry asking for a report on the
controversy.
The timing of the controversy couldn't have been worse. Festival season
sales (Cadbury sells almost 1,000 tonnes of chocolates during Diwali)
plummeted 30 per cent.
Until then, in the country's FMCG sector plagued by slow, low single digit
topline and bottomline growth, Cadbury was a sweet exception. But its net
profit in 2003 dipped 37 per cent to Rs 45.6 crore (Rs 456 million) as
compared to a 21 per cent increase the previous year.
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ROLE OF THE PUBLIC RELATIONS
After being struck with the Worm Controversy it was not possible to create a
very good impact on consumers who trusted the company the most. But
through the efforts and a good PR team Cadbury’s managed to wriggle its
self out of the controversy with a clean chit.
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STEPS TAKEN TO SOLVE THE CONTROVERSY
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• TAKING PRECAUTIONS
"What you see now is the most over-engineered packaging for a Dairy
Milk chocolate anywhere in the world. Even our festival packs come
with a tamper-proof outer sealing and improved packaging inside,"
explains Purohit.
The new double packaging even for the smallest offering, the 13 gm
Rs 5 Cadbury Dairy Milk, had the bar wrapped in aluminium foil and
enclosed in a polyflow pack, which was sealed on all sides.
The company also carried out quality checks at its facilities as well as
its carrying and forwarding warehouses and distributor warehouses
and found products free of infestation.
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• GAINING BACK TRUST
With the help of its Public Relations Dept. and advertising agency
O&M, it created a campaign which aimed for both rational and
emotional appeal.
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Cadbury stepped up it’s advertising spend significantly this year to
nearly Rs 40 crore (Rs 400 million). With a turnover of Rs 729 crore
(Rs 7.29 billion) in 2003, Cadbury has a 70 per cent market share in
chocolates and Dairy Milk chocolate has 30 per cent market share,
despite competitors like Nestle and Amul.
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• BENEFITS OF A GOOD CAMPAIGN
The company bounced back soon after the campaign hit the screens.
Between October 2003 and January 2004, Cadbury's value share
melted from 73 per cent in to 69.4 per cent. The recovery began in
May 2004 when Cadbury's value share went up to 71 per cent.
Cadbury's Indian operations are not just the largest in Asia but also the
cheapest. In India, Cadbury has the largest market share anywhere in
the world and has been the fastest growing FMCG Company in the
last three years with a compound annual growth rate of 12.5 per cent.
So, despite the bitter moments of the last year, the company is hoping
that the future will be much sweeter.
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CONCLUSION
• PR is a very vital tool for management, but the top leaders and policy-
makers must also be involved in the strategy.
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