atOptions = { 'key' : '1d688eecd47db3b7b074e38dabfd19e3', 'format' : 'iframe', 'height' : 600, 'width' : 160, 'params' : {} }; Skip to main content

Posts

Casetify

“Brewing Value and Voice: A Comparative Case Study of Low-Cost Tea Branding, Gender Narratives, and Women Empowerment in India’s FMCG Sector”

  “Brewing Value and Voice: A Comparative Case Study of Low-Cost Tea Branding, Gender Narratives, and Women Empowerment in India’s FMCG Sector”   Abstract This study explores how leading tea brands in India—particularly Brooke Bond Taaza and Tata Tea —balance affordability, profitability, and social messaging. It investigates how gendered branding and women empowerment narratives are integrated into marketing strategies while examining whether these narratives translate into real socio-economic benefits for women workers in the tea value chain. Using a mixed-method approach combining pricing analysis, campaign review, and secondary data, the study argues that while low-cost tea brands rely on scale economics for profitability, empowerment messaging primarily operates as symbolic differentiation unless supported by structural interventions. Keywords FMCG, Tea Industry, Gender Branding, Women Empowerment, Consumer Behavior, Pricing Strategy, India Market, Social Marke...
Recent posts

Engineered Consent and Managed Power: A Comparative Study of Leadership Strategies in the United States, Russia, and India

  Engineered Consent and Managed Power: A Comparative Study of Leadership Strategies in the United States, Russia, and India                                                         Abstract This paper examines how contemporary political leaders combine social engineering and political management to sustain authority, mobilize support, and shape institutional behavior. Through a comparative analysis of Donald Trump (United States), Vladimir Putin (Russia), and Narendra Modi (India), the study argues that while political management is universal, the depth and tools of social engineering vary significantly across regime types. The United States reflects constrained institutional management, Russia demonstrates coercive elite control, and India illustrates electoral mobilization combined with narrative-driven social transformation. The stu...

Invisible Price Wars: A Comparative Case Study of Local Retail vs Online Platforms in India

  Invisible Price Wars: A Comparative Case Study of Local Retail vs Online Platforms in India Abstract This study explores the real cost differences between local wholesale/unorganized retail and online organized retail in India. While online platforms often display attractive discounts, local wholesale and neighborhood kirana stores frequently provide lower effective prices due to minimal overhead costs, flexible pricing, and absence of logistics expenses. Through a comparative analysis of selected products across categories, this paper demonstrates that local retail remains more economical for daily-use goods, whereas online retail becomes competitive only during promotional periods. The research emphasizes the importance of evaluating total cost rather than visible price. Keywords: Local wholesale retail, Unorganized retail, Online organized retail, Price comparison, Consumer cost, FMCG pricing, Kirana stores, E-commerce India, Retail pricing strategy, Logistics cost, Dis...