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Capturing the world’s emerging middle class

Multinational companies need new “scale at speed” approaches to penetrate the developing world’s increasingly prosperous consumer markets.

The rapidly growing ranks of middle-class consumers span a dozen emerging nations, not just the fast-growing BRIC countries,1 and include almost two billion people, spending a total of $6.9 trillion annually. Our research suggests that this figure will rise to $20 trillion during the next decade—about twice the current consumption in the United States (Exhibit 1).

These new spenders offer an opportunity for early winners to gain lasting advantages, just as companies in Europe and the United States did at similar points in their development. In 17 product categories in the United States, for example, we found that the market leader in 1925 remained the number-one or number-two player for the rest of the century. These companies include Kraft Foods (Nabisco), which led in biscuits; Del Monte Foods, in canned fruit; and Wrigley, in chewing gum.

Despite having strong global brands, multinational companies face challenging competition in emerging markets, as these economies already boast aggressive local players that have captured a significant portion of spending. Chinese beverage maker Hangzhou Wahaha, for example, has built a $5.2 billion business against global competitors such as Coca-Cola and PepsiCo by targeting rural areas, filling product gaps that meet local needs, keeping costs low, and appealing to patriotism.

Further complicating matters is the fact that the multinationals’ business models are based on practices established in the markets of the developed world, where the game is won slowly by finding cost savings and making product improvements that capture single percentage points of market share over time. Among emerging markets, perhaps only China can provide enough short-term growth to justify that strategy. Meeting the needs of most consumers in emerging markets requires a different course, which often elicits anguished cries in the corridors of the multinationals: “You want me to change my business model and go across the world for $50 million in revenue?” It’s an understandable lament for executives who not only fear ending up with little to show for their efforts but also are wary of the battles already under way among emerging-market champions.

While there are multiple approaches to capturing emerging-market consumers, the two critical factors are speed and scale. Our experience suggests that one way multinationals can quickly gain the scale they need is to identify clusters of similar consumers across multiple markets. That approach allows these companies to build revenue and profit streams that are collectively material and justify significant, ongoing capital investments to fuel growth. Another tack is to work at a more local level, gaining scale in specific regions and categories by teaming up with deeply knowledgeable on-the-ground partners. They can help not only in product development but also in distribution and market positioning—the crucial final steps to reaching highly local consumer markets.

All of this is easier said than done, of course, because consumers in emerging markets are extremely diverse. In some ways, they resemble those in developed nations: they are aware of and have a fondness for brands and want access to a variety of products at different prices, including products they aspire to but can’t currently afford. Yet their tastes are often localized, and while they are middle-class in regional terms,2 they are still not wealthy enough to replace products regularly, because their percentage of truly discretionary income is lower: in China and India, for example, about 40 percent of average household income is spent on food and transportation, compared with 25 percent in the United States.

The best way to make sense of this picture is to take a granular view using product categories. For individual categories, multinationals should first identify whether consumer needs in emerging markets are fundamentally global or local. A good proxy for this issue is the similarity of product offerings across geographies, as shown on the horizontal axis of Exhibit 2. Second, multinationals can assess the consumer’s ability to afford a given product. Useful approximations include category penetration and product availability in key developing markets, as well as the willingness of consumers to “stretch” to buy less-affordable products. By developing a perspective on whether and to what extent consumer tastes are global or local and combining that with a clear view on the affordability and accessibility of a given product, multinationals can go a long way toward determining the strategies and business models that will allow them to gain scale quickly.

Identifying consumers with similar needs across markets

The first category, at the top right of the matrix, comprises products and services for which consumer needs are quite similar across geographies and affordability is not a constraint. There is little need to create marketing plans to roll out such products in different countries, one after another: we’ve found that it’s most efficient to identify similar consumer segments across countries and to build scalable business models for each cluster. Examples of products in this category include personal banking, mobile communications, consumer electronics, and pharmaceuticals, which have similar industry structures, rates of consumer adoption, and socioreligious factors across geographies.

A leading multinational retail bank’s marketing team, for example, used longitudinal consumer data to identify five clusters across multiple Asian countries. These segments included one of conservative users very loyal to their local banks (in India, Indonesia, the Philippines, and Taiwan) and another of remote-channel users who were highly price sensitive (in Hong Kong, Singapore, and South Korea). The bank successfully designed and implemented a specific product and channel strategy for each of these five segments across countries.

Targeting premium consumers in product niches

The category on the bottom right of Exhibit 2 comprises emerging-market consumers who have the means to buy products and services that are widely available or even mass market in the developed world. (For the vast majority of the emerging middle class, however, these products and services are neither affordable nor accessible—they are premium items.) While we forecast that less than 3 percent of total emerging-market households will be in this bottom-right category in 2025, their prosperity and the fact that their behavior resembles that of consumers in the developed world has historically made this category appealing to multinationals.

Capturing the loyalty of these consumers and, as they develop new needs, upgrading them is the key. Since emerging-market consumers want value—even in this category—companies should offer products at “mass premium” price points. Consumer electronics manufacturer LG has found that people in many developing markets are more willing to pay for better service than are their counterparts in the developed world. The company launched a premium offering that not only gives consumers a full-time contact person who acts as a go-between with LG and monitors the health of products but also guarantees maintenance visits within 6 hours (compared with the normal 24-hour commitment).

Shaping the market by localizing

The third category, on the top left of the matrix, comprises affordable and accessible products, such as low-cost snacks and highly localized baby-care hygiene products. In this category, there’s clear merit in evaluating how companies can scale up across markets, even if needs are local. One approach is to shape the market through minor product enhancements and sharper positioning that encourages consumers to shift toward more globally convergent offerings over time and allows companies to enjoy greater economies of scale and lower delivery costs. In India, for example, PepsiCo successfully shaped the snack market by creating a new platform, called Kurkure, for younger consumers. The product feels entirely local, though it is packaged and distributed by Frito-Lay.

Other strategies for penetrating this affordable, accessible, and local market are to use celebrity endorsements and to leverage local knowledge, either selectively, in areas such as distribution, or through more comprehensive alliances. The partnership between Norwegian telecommunications company Telenor and Bangladesh’s Grameen Telecom, for example, resulted in the creation, in 1997, of Grameen Phone, now the country’s largest mobile operator.

Reinventing the business model

The final category, on the bottom left of the matrix, represents products and services for which needs are (and will probably remain) very local and affordability is a challenge. In this segment, the potential available market share is high, though the market looks small, since consumers often substitute cheaper products, from adjacent categories, that satisfy similar needs rather than buy a higher-priced global product. The first step for multinationals is to define the market by measuring current total consumption, examining product alternatives that satisfy similar needs, and studying potential spending likely to be unlocked once incomes grow. Companies then need to make their products more affordable and accessible, looking at everything from capital expenditures to product features to distribution. There’s real value in working with local players to drive product, distribution, and sales innovations in that “last mile” before reaching consumers.

Beer manufacturer SABMiller, for example, decided it could not achieve price points that would spur demand in Africa without changing its business model. It retooled its factories for cheaper, locally sourced ingredients (such as cassava and sugar rather than barley and maize) and used local distributors to ensure the availability of its products. The result: lower prices, growing demand, and significant increases in market share across several African countries.

Traditional approaches in which companies enter markets one by one and focus on a handful of brand and market combinations will not meet the challenges of the developing world’s large and growing body of middle-class consumers. Companies need to become adept at building and sharing customer information across markets and more willing to work with others to gain scale quickly. In some regions, such as Africa, multinationals may even need to work with the public and social sector to ensure that consumers have adequate income to generate demand.

Structural changes might also be required. Because multinationals may have to adopt different business models by market, category, and brand, they need flexible and responsive organizations. Cisco, for example, has created a second world headquarters, in India, to spearhead its push into the country, while other companies are establishing centers of excellence to identify, recruit, and develop staff that can be deployed locally. Using local vendors is critical to running a lean operation: many multinationals have found, for example, that capital outlays in emerging markets are often only 30 percent of those required for a factory in the West if they use local resources for plant and process engineering and to execute projects.

Finally, companies need to be aware of perhaps the biggest bottleneck to seizing the emerging middle-class opportunity: talent. Relying excessively on expatriates is likely to stifle an organization’s ability to scale up adequately across markets—there simply won’t be enough staff. We believe that building talent academies inside companies to accelerate leadership development is a good step. Yet the rapid growth in many emerging markets may make traditional “grow your own” or “hire from within” approaches manifestly inadequate to meet staffing needs. By addressing these structural and operational imperatives and identifying the best approaches to achieve the scale needed to serve the growing middle class, multinationals can meet their high expectations for international growth.

About the Authors

David Court is a director in McKinsey’s Dallas office, and Laxman Narasimhan is a director in the Delhi office.


The authors would like to acknowledge the contributions of Georges Desvaux, Vinay Dixit, Martin Elling, John Forsyth, Prashant Gandhi, Trond Riiber Knudsen, Vikram Vaidyanathan, and Ireena Vittal to this article.

Notes

1 Brazil, Russia, India, and China.

2 We define emerging middle-class consumers as those with yearly incomes of $13,500 to $113,000, in purchasing-power-parity terms.

Recommend (107)
  • 29 SEPTEMBER 2010
    Michelle Liu
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    Beijing, China

    ...I am in the education industry, and provide premium overseas education to Chinese students. My experience tells me that the high-end market in China is worth more investment.

    .
    Michelle Liu
    Deputy Director
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    Beijing, China

    Great in-depth analysis of middle-class consumption in emerging economies. I would like, though, to add some of my thoughts on the China market. China’s middle-class population is highly controversial, China official stats show 10% of the whole population, while the World Bank estimates of 46 million.

    I am in the education industry, and provide premium overseas education to Chinese students. My experience tells me that the high-end market in China is worth more investment.

    .
  • 29 SEPTEMBER 2010
    Jaypal Nambiar
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    ...Global consumer spend is around USD 18 trillion. Women account for 66% of this spend. That is a whopping USD 12 trillion! Somehow we seem to ignore this power gender....

    .
    Jaypal Nambiar
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    The emerging market is not defined by geographics but demographics. Global consumer spend is around USD 18 trillion. Women account for 66% of this spend. That is a whopping USD 12 trillion! Somehow we seem to ignore this power gender.

    The success of a brand/product will largely depend on creating the complete eco system. Apple as a brand has been successful in satisfying the satisfied need in a more appealing way. The salient feature of their success is simplicity. They have built the complete eco system (service, content creation) without advertising. It is considered a cool brand.

    As consumers we always want to trade up and as long as we do that there will be plenty of demand.

    .
  • 28 SEPTEMBER 2010
    Samuel Lieberman
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    I miss in this article references to products which emphasize quality and predictability in content and availability.

    .
    Samuel Lieberman
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    I miss in this article references to products which emphasize quality and predictability in content and availability.

    .
  • 15 SEPTEMBER 2010
    Pankaj Galdhar
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    ...Though Google is the world’s best search engine, they have implemented lots of things in local languages such as Hindi and Chinese. Volkswagen entered into the Indian market with low-cost models by understanding the potential consumers....

    .
    Pankaj Galdhar
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    It’s true that every organization is very keen to rule the world in their respective sector. Google would love to have a monopoly on the search engine, Toyota as the world’s leading car maker, and so on for others. Most of them have got success up to certain level. And all of them have one thing in common: they have global vision but at the same time they have adopted themselves to local while implementing things. For example, Though Google is the world’s best search engine, they have implemented lots of things in local languages such as Hindi and Chinese. Volkswagen entered into the Indian market with low-cost models by understanding the potential consumers.

    At the end, any organization with a strong global vision that can successfully bridge the gap between local customers and organization vision, will emerge as the true and strongest global organization. In other words, that organization will capture the biggest chunk of middle-class consumers.

    .
  • 14 SEPTEMBER 2010
    Ranjeet Kate
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    MNCs may be surprised with the latent demand for quality products and services among middle-class consumers in the emerging markets. Sometimes this aspect of the demand is ignored.

    .
    Ranjeet Kate
    Director
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    MNCs may be surprised with the latent demand for quality products and services among middle-class consumers in the emerging markets. Sometimes this aspect of the demand is ignored.

    .
  • 18 AUGUST 2010
    Mrinal Somani
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    ...one end of the market aspires to trade up and the other end of the market may have to (for economic reasons) trade down. Hence capturing the midfield becomes all the more critical....

    .
    Mrinal Somani
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    Insightful article. The middle class represents the middle of the market; one end of the market aspires to trade up and the other end of the market may have to (for economic reasons) trade down. Hence capturing the midfield becomes all the more critical.

    Toyota for instance, captured the US mid segment with its Camry, but it continued to increase its market share in the other segments with luxury cars for the rich and low-end cars for the lower class.

    Emerging economies throw a plethora of opprtunities e.g., trading and brokerage. The middle class is now financially literate and investing in the markets more often. Companies who serve middle-class customers well will have their assets grow to the point that they’ll need more sophisticated services and advice for more customers with more evolved needs, thus growing in terms of segments.

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  • 10 AUGUST 2010
    Pooja Kadian
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    An alternative pathway to enter and grow in the middle class market is to provide a service to introduce a product into the market and ingrain that into people’s lives....

    .
    Pooja Kadian
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    An alternative pathway to enter and grow in the middle class market is to provide a service to introduce a product into the market and ingrain that into people’s lives. This will grow a “need” for that product and create a market. For example, library services provide books/CDs/cassettes to middle class consumers, who then find the “need” to own these and start buying when their financial siutation improves. Similarly, car rentals will precipitate the “need” for ownership of a car and therefore create a market for the product. The same principle applies to sports equipment, computers, etcetera.

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  • 25 JULY 2010
    Phi Nguyen
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    ...If a brand is aspirational now, it will surely be embraced whole-heartedly by the time the second generation of middle-class consumers grow up to it, and I am talking about 5 to 6 years, not even 10 years down the...

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    Phi Nguyen
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    The road to profitability and success in emerging markets is a long and winding road. One needs to persevere to get there. There is no quick fix and there is absolutely no quick bang for the buck. Aspirations are at the heart of brand offerings to appeal to the emerging markets, yet affordability paves the way for building a consumer base. Don’t forget the second generation of teenagers and young adults who will be moving into the middle-class consumer category in a few more years. The market size of that second generation is even more significant to an MNC’s revenue contribution, globally. If a brand is aspirational now, it will surely be embraced whole-heartedly by the time the second generation of middle-class consumers grow up to it, and I am talking about 5 to 6 years, not even 10 years down the track.

    .
  • 23 JULY 2010
    Somnath Mitra
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    ...Lack of accountability is leading to “leakage” in the trickling effect. The bottom of the pyramid has to be leveraged both as supplier, and as consumer....

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    Somnath Mitra
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    India needs inclusive growth in terms for health, education, water, power, and roads for both urban and rural India. Lack of accountability is leading to “leakage” in the trickling effect. The bottom of the pyramid has to be leveraged both as supplier, and as consumer. Corporates will have to focus on CSR initiatives to translate the local populace into suppliers and consumers.

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  • 12 JULY 2010
    Anuj Kumar
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    I would like to add the following: Create products “Global in Outlook and local in pricing.” This is the key as the focus has to be on capturing the imagination of the consumer....

    .
    Anuj Kumar
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    I would like to add the following.

    Create products “Global in Outlook and local in pricing.” This is the key as the focus has to be on capturing the imagination of the consumer. Affordability is a key, as has been shown by the success of sachets and lower priced smaller bottles of Pepsi in rural India.

    Affordable Purchase Schemes. As a majority of consumers are upwardly mobile young professionals, good schemes with easy and affordable installments will drive the sales.

    Good network of after-sales services. This is very critical as majority of the people in India see purchases (especially consumer goods as long time purchase). This is also one of the ways by which we communicate the consumer that we value you.

    Connect with the consumer; build a brand loyalty; don’t cultivate a customer, cultivate a generation. This is very true in the case of India and is reflected in purchase behavior. The decision to purchase is influenced by the goods that are currently being used in the family. As family bonds are strong, it becomes more so important. With the majority of players, especially in the electronic appliance section, producing multiple goods like TVs, refrigerators, music systems, etcetera, it’s important that brand loyalty is developed.

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  • 11 JULY 2010
    Satheesh Ramanna
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    ...the potential of social media in identifying local groups interested in product/service offerings is being tried out....

    .
    Satheesh Ramanna
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    The reason for Bangalore’s growth was driven by the IT workforce—a structured target group for any marketing activity involved in targeting customers having disposable incomes. The transformational change that affected other sectors is a salivating aspect for any executive on the prowl having access to a structured clientbase.

    The emerging markets only get bigger with rapid urbanisation, increased income levels, and raised aspirations.

    Even companies like Audi are targeting customers from a tier II city like Mysore. While the absolute numbers at this stage may be small for products in the niche target group, a local Eco development effort, for instance, to categorise and deliver ‘lastmile’ solutions in reaching out to customers is on at www.mysorecity.net, a city portal that provides B2B, B2C, and G2C solutions on the net/mobile phone. Even the potential of social media in identifying local groups interested in product/service offerings is being tried out.

    Service delivery variations of the above are developing in most parts of the emerging markets and makes it easy to create a platform, shape or localise offerings, reinvent business models, or identify niche customers.

    Earlier reports of harrowing times faced by executives in establishing market presence and identifying potential customer groups may turn out to be easier than earlier times with structured market knowledge available on hand.

    .
  • 11 JULY 2010
    Pranav Kale
    Student (MBA Finance)
    SJMSOM, IIT Bombay
    Mumbai, India

    The key to success in emerging markets is commitment. MNCs have to keep in mind that their emerging market ventures might not be profitable for many years....

    .
    Pranav Kale
    Student (MBA Finance)
    SJMSOM, IIT Bombay
    Mumbai, India

    The key to success in emerging markets is commitment.

    MNCs have to keep in mind that their emerging market ventures might not be profitable for many years. It is at this point—say 5 years after entering the market—that many companies chicken out and freeze further investments (at best) or exit the market (at worst). This usually turns out to be the worst possible time to exit.

    Case in point: Many MNCs exited the Indian telecommunication market in the early part of this decade citing problems with government regulation and foreign ownership limits, among other things.

    Warburg Pincus had investments of US$300 million in Bharti Airtel. They maintained their commitment and held on. They realized US$1900 million when they exited 5-6 years later.

    Meanwhile Vodafone paid US$11 billion to re-enter the Indian market by buying out Hutchison Telecom’s Indian business in 2007. In March 2010, Vodafone wrote-off a third of the value of the acquisition.

    The committed investors (Warburg Pincus and Hutchison) made loads of money, while the Vodafone was left holding the baby.

    .
  • 11 JULY 2010
    George Hazapis
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    Dubai Chamber of Commerce & Industry
    Dubai, United Arab Emirates

    To capture the world’s emerging-market consumers one needs to go beyond scale and speed....

    .
    George Hazapis
    Senior Executive, Business Support Services
    Dubai Chamber of Commerce & Industry
    Dubai, United Arab Emirates

    To capture the world’s emerging-market consumers one needs to go beyond scale and speed. In a changing economic environment and economic uncertainty, firms are unable to scale service operations in order to develop viable services capability. For businesses to undergo the required transformation, there is a need to think creatively and innovatively about the business model(s).

    Services are expected to achieve double-digit growth rates and capture new markets. This fundamental disconnect is the primary reason why firms are not able to scale their services business. Services groups stay in a defensive mode, offering only a product-centric services portfolio with minimal value added. Services require a different business model with different selling skills, and a different value proposition often to a different buying audience, with different buying triggers, cycles, and pricing.

    Companies that introduce an entirely new approach to business, one that diverges from industry norms in terms of who is targeted as customers, what is offered to those customers, and how that offering is provided, succeed thru business model innovation. Business models present a challenge as business should focus on one business model to ensure that it resonates with customers. Different business models exist and foster an understanding of the size, scope, and risks of the business opportunities. A business model could mean a sales redesign in transforming the organization. Companies struggle to operationalize growth strategies because they need to understand the competency gaps and major points of integration within their organization and product and service lines and the culture of the market they aim to access.

    .
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