Future Group's Kishore Biyani wants to get to Rs 100,000 crore in sales by 2020. He's chalked out an ambitious push, one that will change the face of his company
At the age of 54, Kishore Biyani is ready for change. The founder and CEO of Future Group, one of India’s largest retail conglomerates, is dramatically altering the way he does business. “By 2020, we need to transform Future Group into a technology company. We will be more of an analytics company than a retail one,” he tells Forbes India. This doesn’t mean that he has lost sight of his customer. Just the opposite: Biyani wants to know more about each and every person who visits his stores, including 38-year-old Chandrakant Dhawan (name changed).
Every month, Dhawan and his family visit the Big Bazaar outlet in Mumbai’s Vile Parle to stock up on groceries and other household commodities. During the festive season, his shopping basket includes a few gifts, and at the start of the academic year, he buys stationery for his children. In all, he spends about Rs 60,000 a year at Big Bazaar, which is owned by the Future Group. Biyani, however, is not satisfied with Dhawan’s spends. He wants more.
He’s determined to get the one crore loyal customers—whom he already has—to spend at least Rs 1 lakh annually in either one or across all 14 retail formats that the Future Group owns. If he succeeds, he would end up making revenues of Rs 1 lakh crore, a more than six-fold jump from what his retail businesses earn today.
Biyani spent the last two decades building a sprawling empire across India with millions of square feet of retail space. Through his Big Bazaar format, he has created the country’s best-known hypermarket, and has enjoyed success with affordable apparel labels like Pantaloons (since sold) and Central. The group has also developed smaller brands that retail everything from electronics (eZone) to furniture (Home Town).
Now, he is seeking to take his company in a direction that many traditional international retailers like American giant Target and Tesco in the UK have already adopted: First, using customer analytics to predict what consumers want even before they realise it themselves. And second, taking a bite out of the ecommerce pie.
Both moves, say experts, is a natural step in the conglomerate’s evolution to stay on the top. Biyani’s vision for the Future Group as an analytics company is hardly surprising; he has continuously upended the rules of the game and challenged conventional wisdom. In the early 2000s, for instance, he started the Sabse Sasta Din campaign, which promised the lowest prices in all Big Bazaar outlets across the country for three days around January 26 (Republic Day) and August 15 (Independence Day). They became, and remain to date, some of the most important sales days in the country.