THE
TELESHOPPING BUSINESS IN INDIA
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continued from : BACKGROUND NOTE
Teleshopping is another name for Direct Response Television (DRTV) shopping, a
concept that originated in the US in the mid-1980s. It is one of the direct
response marketing techniques. Other major direct response marketing techniques
included catalog and direct mail retailing, and interactive/online home
shopping. While in catalog/direct mail retailing, product details are
communicated to the customer through a catalog or mailer (letters, brochures,
pamphlets), in interactive/online shopping, product details and pictures are
sent directly to the customers through an electronic medium such as the
Internet.
Since the 1990s, two types of infomercials have
been used. Some featured people from various walks of life, using the
product and benefiting from it. These were scheduled between TV programs.
At the end of the infomercial, the teleshopping networks provided their
telephone numbers (usually toll-free), prompting viewers to call for
further enquiries or place orders. Other infomercials were 'in-studio'
productions with a live audience. The companies attempted to convince
viewers that it was a regular show and not a mere commercial aimed at
luring them to buy their products. Some teleshopping networks designed
30-60 minute programs, wherein they introduced their product range and
carried out in-depth product demonstrations.
In countries like the US and Australia, teleshopping
networks had dedicated 24-hour home-shopping channels that offered extensive
information regarding their product range such as product details and price.
Though the concept received a lukewarm response in its early years, in the
mid-1990s, it started gaining popularity. By 2000, the teleshopping market in
the US was valued at around $2 billion. Presently, there are two major
teleshopping networks in the US - the Home Shopping Network and QVC, which have
their own, exclusive 24-hour teleshopping channels. |
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These channels offer
products aimed at specific customer groups at different time slots to enable
viewers to plan their viewing time accordingly. In 2000, the teleshopping
market in the US was valued at around $ 2 billion.
However, teleshopping was not as successful in other parts of the world as it
was in the US. This was due to several problems, which included low penetration
of television, lack of innovative offerings, poor promotion and advertisement
techniques, and lack of awareness among the customers.
But with the growing
popularity of satellite and cable television in the late 1990s, changes in
lifestyle and a general improvement in the standard of living, teleshopping
picked up momentum. By 2001, the total teleshopping network business in the
world amounted to over $ 5 billion (Refer Table I for major teleshopping
networks in various countries).
TABLE I
MAJOR TELESHOPPING NETWORKS IN VARIOUS COUNTRIES
COUNTRY |
MAJOR TELE-SHOPPING CHANNELS |
US |
Home Shopping Network,
QVC, Telebrands, TSN |
Belgium |
L.T.A, Shopping |
Germany |
H.O.T., QVC
Deutschland GmbH |
Italy |
HSN-SBS Italia,
Shopping America |
Japan |
Shop Channel |
Europe |
TV-Shop |
Israel |
C.E.D. |
Australia |
TVSN |
Korea |
LGHS, CH. 39, TV Home
Shopping |
China |
China Shopping
Network |
Brazil |
Shop Time |
UK |
QVC |
India |
Telebrands (India),
Asian Sky Shop |
THE INDIAN SCENARIO
HOW THE INDIAN TELESHOPPING MARKET WAS WON
TELESHOPPING TRAUMAS
QUESTIONS FOR DISCUSSION
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