As Nokia advanced into rural areas, there were several innovations that Nokia did based on understanding consumer challenges – understanding the size of the opportunity by working with external consultants to do a fact-based market study, making products available far & wide by getting on-board micro-distributors - guys who would buy phones and go on a bike to neighbourhood villages & towns to place products & collect cash, joint campaigns with mobile operators & distributors via mobile vans to educate users & recruit retailers, reducing the size of packaging box by half so more boxes could be carried by the motor-cyclist distributor etc. But all along, we maintained a few things – making phones aspirational in designs, bringing new innovations, maintaining the highest quality and working closely with our partners & building our service network ceaselessly.
More than just ethnographic studies - "building new revenue streams and loyalty"
At Nokia, we saw ethnographic research as a unique opportunity to interact with customers and prospects, to come up with new device and service concepts and strengthen the brand in local markets. In one of our next village trips in India, we were joined by our global CMO. As she patiently listened to the focus groups in the scorching 45 degrees in a make-shift research centre in a school, a translator was busy telling her about what each respondent was saying. We learnt how the lack of infrastructure between Delhi and this village barely 65 kms away was preventing progress and inclusive growth. E.g., a cooking gas cylinder took 2-3 days to reach the village unless the village folks got it by themselves after changing 3 vehicles including walking to reach the village. There was one school within a cluster of villages and farmers had to really bargain with the middlemen to get better prices. So, while we were listening to the challenges that the lack of infrastructure had created, outside a queue of young kids had formed to catch a glimpse of my boss, the first foreigner to visit their village.
The lack of infrastructure and information connectivity inspired us to dig deeper and come up with the idea of “emerging marketing services” – services that could be made available on a mobile phone. We created a series of services called Nokia Life Tools(NLT) with agriculture, education and entertainment content and optimized the user experience with location-sensitive content (local prices, area-based farming tips etc.), better UI and local languages. Launched in 2009, the award-winning NLT service (http://nokia.ly/17GYeEz ) is now available in multiple markets and has a 100 mn + user base. http://bit.ly/1bkBQot . Nokia Life Tool services helped Nokia build a lasting relationship with consumers month on month and generate a new revenue stream by purely focusing on existing base of consumers and genuinely creating a proposition that these consumers needed.
Looking back, who knew that a watermelon trip could reap billions of dollars in returns over the years. But, there are not that many tech companies that allow their employees literally farming to sow, reap and grow business ultimately! My advice to companies - foster new ways of learning. And to employees - go out and experience it for yourself. Innovation will follow.
Did you experience new ways of learning about your category consumers? Share yours...
