Close X
Saturday, November 30, 2024
ADVT 
International

Madurai Man's Spicy Success Story In Moscow

IANS, 14 Jun, 2015 12:34 PM
  • Madurai Man's Spicy Success Story In Moscow
At P. Jeevanantham's chain of retail outlets selling Indian spices and other food items in Russia, Russians are his major customers and not Indians.
 
No, his Russian customers are not cooking Indian food at their homes, but buy the spices for their medicinal properties.
 
"When I started the Indian Spices Shop in early 1990s, my customers were largely Indians-students and others-who bought the items for cooking. But with the reduction of Indian population due to economic reasons, the ratio of Indian-to-Russian customers reversed," Jeevanantham told this visiting IANS correspondent.
 
"The Russians do their research on the internet on the natural remedies for some ailments and come here to buy the spices. Recently, a Russian asked for gymnema leaves having anti-diabetic properties which were shipped to him from India," he added.
 
Born and raised in Madurai, Jeevanantham owns and runs a chain of seven Indian Spices Shop outlets-five of them in Moscow, one each in St. Petersberg and Tver.
 
He has also promoted a hotel by name Amil in Rajapalayam in Tamil Nadu.
 
"The retailing business growth is good. We clock around 20 percent annual growth. The Indian hotel is also picking up business with occupancy going up at a steady pace," he said.
 
Jeevanantham landed in Moscow then the capital of undivided Soviet Union for a masters in agriculture.
 
"As the education was in Russian language we had to study the language for a year and then join the main course," he recalled.
 
According to him, vacations were spent in London working in retail outlets there.
 
"I used to see many Indians in London buy spices and other things at the retail outlets. Though at that point of time there were many Indians living in Moscow and in other parts, there was no outlet catering to our needs," Jeevanantham said.
 
During early part of the 1990s there used to be around 12,000 Indians in Moscow. Indians also lived in other parts of the then Soviet Union.
 
"It was then I wondered about the business opportunity for selling Indian spices and other food items for the Indian community in Russia. In order to cook our food we used to bring the ingredients in bulk from India. At that time there were other Asian nationals in Russia apart from Indians and other foreigners," he said.
 
According to him, at that time India mainly shipped pepper and curry leaves to Russia for industrial/bulk users and not for retail customers.
 
The idea of starting an Indian store started gaining roots in his mind and partnering with his friend M. Athimoolam set up his first store in Moscow at the People's Friendship University in 1994.
 
The initial investment was around $300 and the outlet catered to the Indian and other Asian students.
 
While the break-up of the Soviet Union impacted the business initially with the size of the Indian community in Russia going down, the sales started to pick up after some period.
 
"Russians turned out to be our major customers now. Post the break-up of the Soviet Union, many Russians started going out to other countries and started tasting different cuisines. And on their return to Russia they started looking out for ingredients," Jeevanantham said.
 
But life was not easy for Jeevanantham after the Soviet Union break-up, the following ruble devaluation in 1998.
 
"My bank collapsed and along with that went my savings. I also suffered a big loss due to burglary at my home," he said.
 
His partner had gone back to India and settled there much earlier.
 
In face he contemplated quitting Russia.
 
"I even went to London and saw a store. But the locality did not promise good business. I was also advised by my close friends to come back here," he said.
 
Focussing his energies he stabilised the operations and started expanded his product range by including items bought by Chinese, Japanese, Thai, Mexicans and others.
 
Along the line the number of outlets too started to increase.
 
Looking back, Jeevanantham recalls fondly his first full container load import from India that got sold out immediately.
 
"That was a big event in my life. I was bit tense," he recalls.
 
While he imported assorted items earlier, today at times he imports a container load of single item.
 
After selling third party brands, Jeevanantham last year started selling products under his own brand called Amil.
 
Speaking of business dynamics, Jeevanantham who is cagey in sharing financial figures said an outlet similar to his would need an investment of around $300,000 and would break even in around three years time.
 
Agreeing that there further growth potential, he is bit reluctant to expand his chain or opening a departmental store.
 
Jeevanantham follows a strange policy of being debt free and expanding the outlets through internal accruals and own funds.
 
"Somehow I do not like to borrow from the banks. I had to resort to borrowing only for the hotel project in Rajapalayam as the cost exceeded the expectations," he said.
 
The 52 room star hotel in Rajapalayam a field that is entirely new to him.
 
"I hired a consultant who chalked out the path. I wanted to have a hotel and decided to venture into this segment," he remarked.
 
The hotel involving an outlay of around Rs.20 crore opened last December and is fast picking up.
 
Jeevanantham is married to Karina a Russian by birth and the couple now takes care of the business.

MORE International ARTICLES

Pakistan Court Orders Lakhvi's Release; Outraged India Summons Envoy

Pakistan Court Orders Lakhvi's Release; Outraged India Summons Envoy
A Pakistani court on Friday declared the detention orders of Zakiur Rehman Lakhvi, the alleged mastermind of the 2008 Mumbai attack, as illegal and ordered his immediate release, triggering strong reaction from India which summoned the Pakistan envoy in New Delhi to convey its outrage.

Pakistan Court Orders Lakhvi's Release; Outraged India Summons Envoy

Tamils In Canada Urge Modi To Pressure Sri Lanka

Tamils In Canada Urge Modi To Pressure Sri Lanka
Welcoming Indian Prime Minister Narendra Modi’s visit to Colombo, a leading Tamil group in Canada - home to the largest Tamil diaspora outside Sri Lanka - has urged him to put pressure on new President Maithiripala Sirisena to resolve the dragging ethnic issue.

Tamils In Canada Urge Modi To Pressure Sri Lanka

Satnam Singh, Racially Asbused Indian Man In New Zealand, To Get Damages

Satnam Singh, Racially Asbused Indian Man In New Zealand, To Get Damages
An Indian-origin liquor store owner and manager in New Zealand have been ordered to pay an Indian employee NZD45,000 ($32,881) in damages over racial harassment, media reported on Tuesday.

Satnam Singh, Racially Asbused Indian Man In New Zealand, To Get Damages

Apple Watch unveiled: lots of features, functions, price tags. So... Do you want it?

Apple Watch unveiled: lots of features, functions, price tags. So... Do you want it?
SAN FRANCISCO — Make calls, read email, control music, manage Instagram photos, keep up with your workout, pay for groceries, open your hotel room door. CEO Tim Cook says you can do it all from your wrist with Apple Watch — for 18 hours a day. That's how long the battery will last on an average day.

Apple Watch unveiled: lots of features, functions, price tags. So... Do you want it?

Canadian official 'strongly refutes' Kurdish account of friendly-fire death

Canadian official 'strongly refutes' Kurdish account of friendly-fire death
OTTAWA — A senior Canadian government official says he adamantly rejects a Kurdish account of a friendly-fire incident in Iraq that saw peshmerga fighters kill one Canadian soldier and wound three others. Sgt. Andrew Joseph Doiron was gunned down in the night-time darkness Friday when his special forces unit was surprised by a hail of gunfire from a group of their Kurdish peshmerga allies.

Canadian official 'strongly refutes' Kurdish account of friendly-fire death

IS releases 19 abducted Christian Assyrians

IS releases 19 abducted Christian Assyrians
The Islamic State (IS) militants on Sunday released 19 Christian Assyrians they had kidnapped last month, a monitoring group reported.The 19 people are the first batch of 29 Assyrians the sharia court of the IS exonerated on Saturday, the Syrian Observatory for Human Rights said, Xinhua reported.

IS releases 19 abducted Christian Assyrians