Avita has made heady progress in India over the last two years. Can it take on the heavyweights of the country's personal computer market with its odd and colourful strategies?
Seema Bhatnagar, regional business director (South Asia & MEA) of Nexstgo, the parent company of Avita
Two years and two percent market share. Too young but itching to take on the big boys like HP, Dell and Lenovo. Bright laptops—blazing brown, flaming copper, delightful pink, sunflower yellow and traveller green—in a market dominated by the age-old black, grey and dark blue. Sounds odd and outrageous, right?
This is what Avita has done. A sub-brand of Hong Kong-based PC maker Nexstgo, Avita has grown at a brisk pace since its debut in India in 2019. Though its market share might look pony when compared to the giants, what makes Avita a serious player and definitely a threat to the established ones is its bold and differentiated strategy. While its vibrant laptop colours woo millennials, its price point—neither too premium nor falling in the budget segment—suits the pockets of a wide set of consumers. A differentiated marketing approach has also helped it scale.
Industry experts have started taking note of the brand. “Avita happened to be in the right place at the right time,” reckons Bharath Shenoy, lead analyst for personal computing devices (PCD) at IDC India. Avita clocked a market share of 1.6 percent in 2020, and the growth continued last year as well. What helped it grow, he says, are two factors. First is pandemic tailwinds. As schools, colleges, and offices went into a virtual mode post the first lockdown in March 2020, demand for consumer notebooks surged. The pandemic gave a much-needed fillip to the category, and PC (personal computers) became a necessity with demand outstripping the supply, explains Shenoy.
The second big factor pushing Avita’s growth was its distribution strategy. In 2020, it partnered with Ingram Micro, one of the big PC distributors in the country. “It gave the brand an increased reach across the country,” says Shenoy. The portfolio, he underlines, has a clutch of aggressively-priced products that have helped them grow. The brand is also not entirely dependent on ecommerce and has been increasing its presence in offline channels too. “This helped and might help them further in their progress,” Shenoy says. India, he adds, provide immense headroom for growth for brands like Avita.
Seema Bhatnagar, regional business director (South Asia & MEA) of Nexstgo, the parent company of Avita, is making the most of the opportunity. “We are likely to corner around 10 percent market share by March this year,” she says. “We do not do what big brands do,” she says, alluding to huge marketing budgets of the rivals. Avita, she explains, has a very effective marketing programme helping it to reach out to millennials and other target users.