Differentiated paint products have allowed the company to grow faster than the industry
Hemant Jalan claims attrition at Indigo Paints is down to zero
Image: Gaurav Thombre for Fores India
Ask Hemant Jalan why he started a paint company and the answer is, “I wasn’t looking to start one; it started out as a joke.”
In 2000, the now-60-year-old IITian was in Jharkhand running his family-owned chemical unit. The area around his plant had several cement paint manufacturers and Jalan thought they didn’t have a lot of business sense. “If they could make a business out of it, why not forward integrate and start making it myself?” he remembers telling himself.
Jalan then set up his own cement paint plant in Jodhpur and started Indigo Paints the same year. According to him, although large parts of the paint industry in urban India have moved to emulsions, there is still a big market for cement paints where the binder is white cement. This is one level above lime wash paints or chuna.
He spent the first decade scaling up operations to ₹10 crore in revenue and describes the period as extremely challenging. There was nothing to distinguish his products from those of his competitors and Indigo’s size made advertising impossible. Scaling up the business was a slow and painful grind. Why would a paint distributor want to sell a me-too product unless he was offered a higher margin?
That was when Indigo embarked on a differentiation strategy that has formed the core of everything it does. After 2009 it started making metallic finish paints and while the company was too small to advertise the product, “there was a lot of enthusiasm among dealers”, says Jalan. Since then Indigo has introduced a special paint for ceilings, for tiles and for driveways—all products that have allowed it to expand its dealer network, which now straddles all of India except Jammu & Kashmir, Himachal Pradesh and Delhi.
(This story appears in the 03 August, 2018 issue of Forbes India. To visit our Archives, click here.)