Vighnaharta Nano Ganesh
Superbug and Suresh Kalmadi notwithstanding, there is some good news as Independent India begins its 64th year. Face to face with a crisis, this country often comes up with a creative solution.
Four not-so-well-known and randomly selected examples from diverse fields show that “cheap” is not always crass or conniving. Each case has an element of “disruptive innovation” — a term coined by Harvard academic Clayton M. Christensen. Each has, at its core, a simple, transformational idea that improves a product or a service in ways that the market does not expect. And each holds out hope for millions at a time when that commodity is in short supply.
After Tata’s Nano, there is the peoples’ fridge. For a little more than Rs 3,000, India’s poorest households can now have a refrigerator. Manufactured by corporate group Godrej, “Chotukool” has already been test marketed in parts of Maharashtra. The formal launch will take place during the festive season later this year. Chotukool is designed for places which have erratic power supply and for those who have never had a fridge and who want to have cold water, store vegetables, milk and left over food. This portable, top-opening unit weighs only 7.8 kg, uses high-end insulation to stay cool for hours and can work on battery as well as inverter. Sanjay Lonial, a Godrej official involved with the project, told me that those who have bought Chotukool are using the product not only at home but also to make money. The tiny fridge is helping owners of paan shops, vada pav centres, wayside grocery stores and flower vendors to sell additional items like cold water. In the countryside, villagers — the potential buyers — will also act as marketers, earning a commission per fridge sold.
Erratic power supply has inspired another innovation — the Nano Ganesh. Brain child of Santosh Ostwal, a Pune-based entrepreneur, Nano Ganesh allows farmers to use mobile phones to remotely monitor and switch on irrigation pumps. In many parts of India, farmers have to walk miles to switch on the pumps that water their fields. The idea of the Nano Ganesh struck Mr Ostwal while watching his octogenarian grandfather trudge every night for a mile to switch on the pump to ensure that his oranges were ready to ship the next morning. Since the water and electric supply were erratic, he was forced to make several such trips a night.
Nano Ganesh won the Grand Prize in the Emerging Markets category of Nokia’s Calling All Innovators contest last year and is being used by thousands of farmers in several states across India.
Mr Ostwal, an engineer, whose father was also a farmer, calls it a “techno-commercial success”. The project, he hopes, will lead to employment of 5,000 rural technicians who will be tasked to take the technology to the farmers. “People tell me they are saving on petrol, electricity and also getting more sleep. It is good for family life”, Mr Ostwal told me over the phone.
The third instance of turning a problem into an opportunity is Yes Bank’s partnership with Nokia to create the Mobile Payment Service which establishes a platform enabling transfer of money using the mobile device in a secure manner. More than half this country’s population still lack a bank account. Yes Bank has tied up with Nokia to allow consumers to send and receive money using their mobile phones without even owning a bank account. The best thing about this innovation is that it helps the poor to tap financial products and services even if they can’t physically reach a bank.
The last inspirational story is unfolding right here in Delhi. In a west Delhi neighbourhood, an Indian company, Koenig Solutions, is training techies from across the world, shoring up not only their own bottomline but also the profitability of corporations overseas who need to demonstrate that their staff continuously upgrade their IT skills and have the necessary certificates as evidence in order to bag lucrative contracts in an increasingly competitive market. The global cash crunch has helped Koenig become a leader in offshore IT training and certification, as corporates increasingly want more bang for the buck. Value for money is the phrase you hear everywhere. On offer in their Delhi centre are globally-recognised training and certification programmes on software like Oracle, Cisco, Red Hat and Microsoft among others at almost half the price of what it would be in a Western country.
Last week, I met two techies from Greenland and one from Britain at the Koenig training centre. Talking to them it was clear that lower price alone was not the draw. John Alexander, a British techie, was doing an IT course at Koenig’s training centre for the second time: “This would cost a lot more in UK but price alone was not the attraction. The greatest appeal of this package is its flexibility. You can get personalised training and start whenever is convenient to you.” Paul Gronvold and Lars Molgaard, who had arrived in Delhi from Greenland, were hoping for promotions after they went back to work having completed the training. Paul and Lars said they chose India because they could get personalised, one-to-one IT training here, at a relatively low cost.
One of the students I met is doing a course called the Certified Ethical Hacker. It is perfectly legit, and apparently helps folks equip themselves for work in Internet security. With more and more hackers on the prowl, that sort of knowledge can only add to one’s bank balance.
The takeaway message in all four cases is the same. India can be the engine of innovation, ushering in a better tomorrow for millions that can’t afford conventional solutions. The frugal innovator sees a crisis as an opportunity for creative solutions. India can take the lead in innovation that revolutionises the lives of those at the bottom of the pyramid. But will it? That is the million-rupee question.
Patralekha Chatterjee writes on development issues in India and emerging economies and can be reached at patralekha.chatterjee@gmail.com
Comments
Good.
gautampreeti
19 Aug 2010 - 16:48
Good.
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