| Domino's India Logistics Management |  | 
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 Case Details:
 
 Case Code : OPER005
 Case Length : 10 Pages
 Period : 1999 - 2003
 Organization : Domino's
 Pub Date : 2003
 Teaching Note : Available
 Countries : India
 Industry : Food, Beverage and Tobacco
 
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 << Previous "We are more a logistics company than a food service 
chain."
 "Supply chain management is the factor that differentiates the winners and the 
losers in this business."
 - Pawan Bhatia, former CEO, Domino's Pizza India. Introduction
	
		| 
In early 2000, Pawan Bhatia (Bhatia), the CEO of Domino's Pizza India (Domino's) 
was a man in a hurry. Ever since Bhatia took over as the CEO of Domino's in 
November 1999, he had been frantically reworking the pizza chain's India 
strategy. Bhatia was planning to open 150 new outlets by the end of 2002 
covering 23 cities,1 including 
Bhubaneshwar (Orissa) and Jamshedpur (Bihar). 
 In late 1999, Indocean Chase, the private equity fund bought a 25% stake in 
Domino's operations in India from the Delhi-based industrial family, the Bhartias, who held Domino's franchise in India.
 |   
 |  
 Domino's told investment bankers at the fund that it planned to go in for an 
	initial public offering (IPO) in the next two years. Indocean Chase advised 
	Domino's to go beyond its 16 outlets in Delhi to exploit the potential in 
	the pizza delivery business. Unless a well-thought-out expansion plan was 
	put into place, the IPO was unlikely to find too many takers. 
	
		|  | As part of 
		its expansion plans Domino's revamped its entire supply chain 
		operations, from sourcing raw materials to shipping them for processing 
		at a central location to delivering it to the customer's. Initially, 
		Domino's had a simple model. 
 It had three self-contained commissaries in New Delhi, Mumbai and 
		Bangalore which bought their own wheat, tomatoes and other ingredients, 
		processed them, then delivered them in refrigerated trucks to each 
		outlet. However, volumes were expected to increase when Domino's planned 
		to open new outlets. Therefore, the existing model had to be revamped.
 |  Bhatia said, "It's crucial for us to build a low-cost supply 
chain operation which takes costs out of the system and in turn gives us greater 
pricing flexibility in the marketplace." Analysts felt that Domino's had to 
rethink its supply chain operation because it was the biggest area of costs. 
Since 75% of Domino's customers ordered either from office or home, it did not 
have to lease large plots of land in prime locations to attract traffic. 
Instead, it needed an efficiently managed call centre to bring better returns 
(Refer Exhibit I). 
Domino's India Logistics Management
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