Jayanthi Badrinath is the Principal Consultant for Bangalore-based Prayag Consulting Pvt.Ltd. Prayag Consultancy is a consultancy that provides strategic marketing and management solutions in the high technology market space. She spoke to Renuka Phadnis on how all Indian companies in the IT industry are streamlining their marketing and how big companies outsource marketing to save on costs. |
How big is the market for outsourced marketing in India and what is its growth rate?
Outsource marketing spend is increasing and the Indian market is estimated to touch $500 mn by 2011. Its growth rate is on par with the growth of IT and ITeS Industries. And the IT + ITeS industries will grow at 30% in the next four years. Marketing spend could be assumed conservatively to be 2% of the revenues during this period. The outsourcing budget will be 100% of marketing spends.
What is the cost difference between in-house and outsourced marketing? It is touch to quantify that.
How does your company cater to the marketing requirements of IT companies?
Prayag Consulting provides marketing consultancy specifically targeted at IT/BPO industries. Prayag partners with emerging and established IT/BPO firms at a business level to provide practical, market and business oriented solutions designed to achieve specific sales/ marketing objectives.
What services do you offer?
We offer marketing related services to technology companies. A company may want to set up a marketing strategy, marketing plan or may be planning marketing presence. We researching opportunities available to the company, the market for its products, and track its competition
Who are your customers?
We have 15 clients. These range from well-established large companies such as Wipro, Microsoft, IBM, and Intellinet, to startups such as Gradatim, Lifetree India, and young telecom companies that need marketing help. Large companies like Microsoft, Wipro and IBM outsource a lot of their marketing work if they find right partners. What are the changes you see in the way companies market their products?
Over the last seven years, Indian companies have become more appreciative of the markets. They have realised it is not enough to simply deliver the best products. Till 2000, business came effortlessly to Indian technology companies. Most of the companies never bothered to market themselves. There were exceptions, ofcourse, like Infosys - who were already aware of marketing. But after the dotcom bust, the scene changed. |