Can Papa Johns take on big daddy Domino's?
A slow start, a cheesy first innings and an abrupt ending. Can Papa Johns be second-time lucky and get a bigger slice as it gets ready to reopen its Indian account with a new partner and a revamped strategy?
June 2006, Noida, Uttar Pradesh. Let’s look at four easy-peasy steps to make a pizza. First, place each dough ball on a heavily floured surface. Second, use fingers to stretch it. Third, use your hands to shape it into a square, round or whatever shape you want. And last, top and bake it. Simple. Isn’t it? It is indeed for the rookies. But for experts like Papa Johns—the third-biggest pizza player in the world, which has a brand topping aka tagline of ‘Better ingredients, better pizza’—making a debut in India was not all that simple. It was 2006, the American pizza giant was a decade late in opening its account, and rival Domino’s had a massive head start by rolling out its first store in New Delhi way back in 1996. The odds were heavily stacked against the challenger brand, which trailed Domino’s and Pizza Hut.
The late comer, though, was confident of making a dent. "The middle-class here is growing at a fast rate, and this is the right time for us to enter the Indian market," the then chief executive Nigel Travis reportedly remarked in 2006. The brand was brought to India by Om Pizza & Eats, backed by TVS Capital and Jawad Group of Bahrain, and the idea was to scale up at a feverish pace. The ambition, in fact, was to open 100 stores in a decade.
A year later, Domino’s had become the biggest pizza player in the country and had close to 160 outlets. In 2008, in contrast, Papa Johns opened its fourth outlet in Mumbai in June, taking the overall Indian store count to nine. Though the pizza maker was painfully slow in kneading the dough, it remained hyper bullish in its intent, and planned to open 100 stores over the next four years.
Fast forward five years. Papa Johns was getting a new shape in India. In December 2013, Om Pizza & Eats—the Indian master franchisee of Papa Johns—sold a majority stake to Atulya Mittal-led Avan Projects. Back then, globally Papa Johns had 4,296 restaurants across 35 countries. In India, though, the brand managed to open just 20 outlets in seven years! Compare this with Domino’s, which had 576 stores by the end of March 2013, had expanded its footprint across 123 cities, and sold over 66 lakh pizzas per month in FY13! It had become clear that Papa Johns could not even master easy-peasy steps: There were not many dough balls on a heavily floured surface; it failed to use fingers to stretch it; forget round, the brand was badly out of shape; and it just couldn’t top and bake it.
The brand, though, stayed stubborn in its optimism. "India is a key growth market for us, and with Avan Projects we are optimistic that we can continue to grow the brand,” Tim O'Hern, the then chief development officer of Papa Johns, reportedly underlined in 2013. To be fair, Avan brought in a sense of urgency. A year later, in November 2014, Om Pizza & Eats acquired bigger local rival Pizza Corner, which had some 50 outlets across South India. “The merger provides us the opportunity to penetrate the market at a much more rapid pace, and increase our scale in a shorter period," John Schnatter, the founder and CEO of Papa Johns, reckoned. A new partner, a new beginning and a new vision was what Papa Johns needed. Right? Wrong. Nothing much changed. In three years, by 2017, Papa Johns exited India.
Also read: Why are Indians ordering less pizzas, burgers and fried chicken
In fact, the summer of 2018 threatened to bake ‘papa’—John Schnatter—and the brand. In May, the founder reportedly used the ‘N’ word in a conference call, and a month later, the racial slur took a toll and the founder had to resign. Over the next two years, the brand and the ousted founder got mired in a public slugfest, and sales dipped alarmingly. It was not until March 2019 that the peace pipe was smoked. Though operations in the home country managed to grow, the brand stayed orphaned in India and didn’t have a presence for at least five years.
Papa Johns’ second innings comes with a new play. Vaidya explains. While the brand promise of better ingredients and better pizza remains, what has changed is the approach in sourcing the raw materials from the country. “We are going to appeal to the Indian palate as well as the Indian pocket,” he says. The second learning, and strategy, is around positioning. “We will not overprice ourselves,” he says, adding that the brand will exclude red meat from its menu. “We will have white meat,” he says. Ask him if the brand can take on the might of Domino’s, and the CEO dishes out a confident byte. “One would think that their size might be intimidating but we have a strategy,” he beams.
Agrees Amanda Clark, chief International and development Officer at Papa Johns. She starts the conversation by underlining what the brand won’t do in India. “We are not going to think about the product from a US point of view, which I think perhaps could have been a mistake in the past,” she confesses. When American brands, she reckons, go into different countries, they can make the mistake of thinking that the product has to be the same in every country. “This can sometimes lead to failure,” she says. “McDonald’s India is certainly not the same as McDonald's in the US, but it is very successful here,” she says. The products, she lets on, have to be made for local consumers and taste.
Also read: Delivery is on: Can Pizza Hut grab a bigger slice?
The branding gurus too contend that Papa Johns would face the heat. “They must learn from the past but also need to strike a balance between being aggressive and conservative,” says Ashita Aggarwal, marketing professor at SP Jain Institute of Management and Research. While being too slow did the damage in the past, taking an extreme approach of going too fast to make up for lost time can be counter-productive. “The best way to approach India is to play one’s own game,” she says. The moment Papa Johns tries to take on Domino’s, it would be playing into the hands of the much bigger and the biggest player. “There is enough space for Papa. But it must not try to become Daddy,” she says.
Vaidya, for his part, is up for the challenge. “It's challenging, but it's doable,” he says, commenting on the target to open 650 outlets in India. “If we focus on execution and customers then we will win the battle,” he says.