RURAL MARKETING An Overview Trends indicate that the rural markets are coming up in a big way and growing twice as fast as the urban as many ’middle income and above’ households in the rural areas as there are in the urbanareas.The share of FMCG products in rural markets is 53%‚ durables boasts of 59% market share. The number of middle and high income households in rural India is expected to grow from 80 million to 111 million by 2008. In urban India‚ the same is expected to grow from 46 million
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Asian Journal of Agriculture and Rural Development‚ 1(1)‚pp.1-20 2011 A Need For Paradigm Shift to Improve Supply Chain Management of Fruits & Vegetables in India Abstract Author Piali Halder Assistant Professor (Marketing) in AsiaPacific Institute of Management‚ New Delhi‚ E-mail: piali@asiapacific.edu Mobile : 9350203111 Simayan Pati PGDM(Marketing & Operations) student in Asia-Pacific Institute of Management‚ New Delhi‚ E-mail: pati.simayan@gmail.com‚ Mobile : 8802296665 As the
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A Seminar Report On “RURAL MARKETING” Submitted in the partial fulfillment of the award of PG Degree of Master of Business Administration Session 2008-09 Submitted To: Department of Management Studies‚ Submitted By:Ravi MBA 4th sem. (Marketing) Jaipur 1 Executive Summary A debate continued for a long time amongst the Indian marketers‚ both practitioners & academicians‚ on the justification for the existence of the distinct discipline of rural marketing. Consequently‚ two schools
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RURAL AGRI- MARKETING IN INDIA - WITH SPECIAL REFERENCE TO AGRICULTURAL PRODUCE IN INDIA ABSTRACT Around 700 million people‚ or 70% of India’s population‚ live in 6‚27‚000 villages in rural areas. 90% of the rural population is concentrated in villages with a population of less than 2000. Rural marketing is as old as the civilization. Surplus of agro - products are exchanged in earlier days in the barter system. The introduction of currency‚ transport‚ and communication has increased the scope
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qualitative research: interviews and focus groups P. Gill‚1 K. Stewart‚2 E. Treasure3 and B. Chadwick4 IN BRIEF • Interviews and focus groups are the most • • common methods of data collection used in qualitative healthcare research Interviews can be used to explore the views‚ experiences‚ beliefs and motivations of individual participants Focus group use group dynamics to generate qualitative data PRACTICE This paper explores the most common methods of data collection used in qualitative research: interviews
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Research Abstracts on Rural Development DWCRA Nair‚ Tara S. (2000). Towards mainstreaming poor women in development : the DWCRA experience in Gujarat. Ahmedabad : Gujarat Institute of Development Research. 72 p. Key Words : 1.RURAL DEVELOPMENT 2.DWCRA 3.POOR WOMEN 4.RURAL WOMEN 5.MAINSTREAMING WOMEN 6.ROLE OF NGOS 7.ROLE OF VOLUNTARY ORGANIZATIONS 8.PROBLEMS OF RURAL WOMEN 9.INCOME GENERATION 10.SELF HELP GROUPS. Abstract : During the Sixth Five Year Plan period (1982-83)‚ development
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tingRURAL MARKETING By: Kumar Gaurav Rastogi. ( MBA‚ CUIM) Rural India 740 million people 24 languages… 1642 Dialects 6‚38‚691 villages and 5‚164 towns 70% population still rural & agrarian 41% are illiterate 56% HH - no access to electricity 70% HH have no bank account 96% have no telephones 7% have two wheelers & 1.3% have 4 wheelers By: Kumar Gaurav Rastogi. ( MBA‚ CUIM) Rural Market Structure Demographic Environment
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and markets these products in India and across the globe. Coromandel is the second largest manufacturer of Malathion and only the second manufacturer of Phenthoate. Coromandel has also ventured into the retail business setting up more than 640 rural retail centers in the States of Andhra Pradesh and Karnataka. The Company clocked a turnover of Rs.9‚ 823 crore during FY 2011-12. lt was ranked among the top 20 best companies to work for by Business Today and was also voted as one of the ten
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UNIT: 1 RURAL MARKETING Definition:Rural marketing can be defined as a function which manages all those activities in asserting‚ stimulating and converting the purchasing power of rural people into an effective demand for specific products and services and there by achieving the goals of the organisation. Rural areas:Rural areas are large and isolated areas of an open country with low population density a country side refers to rural areas that are open. Q1. Explain the nature and scope of rural marketing
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RURAL AGRI – MARKETING – WITH SPECIAL REFERENCE TO AGRICULTURAL PRODUCTS ABSTRACT: India is basically an agrarian society‚ mostly dependent on agriculture‚ since times immemorial. Rural marketing is as old as civilization. Surplus of the agro-products were exchanged in earlier days by barter system. Gradually‚ the scenario has changed with the introduction of currency‚ transport and communication. This has relatively increased the scope of rural marketing. There are networks of co-operative societies
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