| It
is one of those funny stories that provoke a thought. The
story is about a beggar. That particular day, he had been
begging since the morning in front of the biggest place
of prayer in the city. His bowl was empty when the sun finally
called it a day. Tired, hungry, he slowly left the hallowed
precincts and started walking through the city. It was mid-evening
when he reached the gates of a prestigious social club,
and decided to take a breather. He saw a car coming out
of the club and out of sheer habit he uttered his lines
seeking alms. The car slowed down, a hand came out and a
few hundred rupee notes were thrown at him. The car whizzed
past leaving him stunned. He took a closer look at the cash
in hand. With tears in his eyes, he looked skywards and
muttered ? Ishwar, tumi thako kothay aar amare pathao
kothay (Almighty, you stay in one place and send me
to another).
Strangely, I was reminded of this
story when I read a report in The Telegraph last
week. The headline screamed ? ?Pay & Chappell way is
yours?. It was about The Australian International Sports
Academy (AISA) offering a patented package of a 14-day residential
cricket coaching conducted all year around at a resort near
Brisbane. The target group is boys of 12 to 20 years of
age. The package comes at a price of 2,500 Australian dollars.
There is another 400 Australian dollars added on as discounted
air-fare to and from Brisbane. The coaching package, the
story told us, ?involves running, swimming, games and cricket
training sessions peppered with sight-seeing and lectures?.
For less than a lakh of rupees, doting fathers could send
their sons for an Australian holiday, which is literally
fun and games. This is the product on sale that is branded
the Chappell way.
The journalist informed us that
AISA is a private company in which Greg Chappell , the current
Team India coach, has a stake. That is understandable as
the coaching method that lies at the heart of the brand
has been developed by him. Ian Frazer, the bio mechanist,
is his partner in AISA. Tony Dell, a director of AISA, was
quoted in the story saying: ?Right now, our focus is largely
India. The growing spending power of the middle class there
is a big draw? So far we have had two groups of 14 youngsters
from The Kiran More International Sports Academy. Kiran
has been here himself. He shares a special relationship
with Greg and it is great.?
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What do all these add up to? Greg
has a brilliant coaching product. Australian International
Sports Academy targets India. Equity of Greg Chappell as
a coach is not too high. Coaching an Australian regional
team does not allow you to make the greatest advertising
statement in India about the brand Chappell Way. So that
needed a marketing solution. Greg takes up, indeed wins,
the job of the cricket coach in India. He gets his partner
in AISA and a part of the Chappell Way product inducted
into the support team for Indian cricketers. He develops
a special relationship with More, the chief Indian selector,
who helps by sending the first batch of students.
For some strange reason, whenever
we think of marketing, we think of soaps and shampoo or
fridges and TV. In vain we look for instances of great marketing
strategy during the TV commercial break. The brilliant AISA
strategy reminds us that the beggar in the story at the
beginning of this column is not alone in his bewilderment.
Marketing, like Him, is omnipresent. |