Arogya Parivar Case Study
In 2004, the late CK Prahalad, an influential management professor and
author, published The Fortune at the Bottom of the
Pyramid, a book that urged companies to use a new
lens to view the poor. Prahalad advocated for envisioning those at the bottom
of the economic pyramid as producers and consumers of products, rather than
merely as philanthropic beneficiaries.
Ten years
later, several large companies have adopted Prahalad’s ideas and, in the
process, have demonstrated that serving the “base of the pyramid” consumer can
make good business sense. I analyzed several of these “base of the pyramid”
business models — what we call “Building a Marketplace” — in Model Behavior: 20 Business Model Innovations
for Sustainability, a report that I co-wrote and released earlier this
year.
In the
report, I showed that when companies deploy this model, they build new markets
for their products in innovative and socially responsible ways. Among other
things, this can include delivering social programs, adapting to local markets
and bundling with other services like microfinance and technical assistance.
Improving
healthcare in India
The
pharmaceutical company Novartis implemented the building a marketplace model
through its Arogya Parivar initiative, a for-profit effort to improve health in
poor, rural communities in India without access to affordable healthcare.
Using a “1
plus 1 education” strategy, Arogya Parivar employs health educators to instruct
villagers on a variety of health topics, thereby creating greater confidence in
medicine. An accompanying supervisor, the “plus one”, educates doctors, service
providers and pharmacies, and assesses an area’s needs.
Rather
than solely focusing on selling products to a market, Novartis has taken on the
challenge of empowering entire communities by educating potential customers –
along with those who assess health and provide medicine – about their community
health needs. To ensure the program’s success, Novartis has altered its product
pricing structure, making medications available in small packs at affordable
prices. In most cases, the cost doesn’t exceed $1.25 a week.
Arogya
Parivar started in 2007 as a pilot program in South India. Since then, it has
spread to ten Indian states and now reaches more than 40 million people. Novartis reports
that the program broke even within 30 months. Recently, the company expanded it
to Kenya and Vietnam, and plan to open in Indonesia.
The road
to scale has not been easy, and Novartis has had to invest in an entirely new
business ecosystem. However, by doing so, the company aims to earn trust, brand
allegiance and revenue from a new group of consumers who might have increased
spending power in the future.
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