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Production and Operations Management




                    Notes            looked bright. Generations of kids learned how to ride on elegant BSA or Hercules bikes.
                                     A good bike enters the life of a child like a good friend, and many of these kids grew up to
                                     be parents—parents who wanted their kids to ride these bikes.
                                     However, over the 1970s and 1980s, the market for bicycles was changing but TI Cycles
                                     seemingly did not quite understand what was happening. In Ludhiana, Hero Cycles grew
                                     from its origin as a small producer of bicycles to the largest manufacturer of bicycles, right
                                     under the nose of TI Cycles. At the heart of Hero Cycle’s success lay a different value
                                     creating logic. Hero Cycles developed their cycles to meet specific Indian needs. They
                                     designed a cycle that could carry two people plus a heavy load at the cheapest price. They
                                     were not elegant products like BSA or Hercules, but they were designed for farmers to
                                     carry heavy load of vegetables to the village market.
                                     In 1944, four Munjal brothers, headed by Shri Brijmohan Lal Munjal, came to Amritsar
                                     from a small town called Kamalia, now in Pakistan. They decided to start a business of
                                     bicycle spare parts in Amritsar. This business  evolved into Hero Cycles.  The  Munjal
                                     family created a local component infrastructure by inducing friends and family members
                                     to set up ancillary units. They developed a policy of supporting these units with both
                                     funds  and technical assistance. Much  before Just-in-Time  production became popular;
                                     they adopted  the system, leading to extremely low costs that allowed them to cut  TI
                                     Cycles prices by 15 to 20 per cent even on the cheapest models. Over the years, it became
                                     active in both standard and speciality bike segments. In 1989, it launched Hero ‘Ranger’ to
                                     satisfy the need that TI had overlooked—cycles for peddling on rugged terrain.  It created
                                     a new category of Mountain Terrain Bikes (MTB). Hero had further built its market position
                                     by introducing fitness bikes under the brand name Hero ‘Allegro’.
                                     One executive at TI Cycles remarked, “Since our company had started the industry in
                                     India, the general psychology inside TI was that the leadership position would continue
                                     owing to the technical sophistication of the product. Hero Cycles intuitively learned to
                                     make the cycles on its own and offered value for money. It competed on price and tapped
                                     the price conscious segment”.

                                     TI Cycles had failed. Its failure illustrates two facets of the business environment. The first is
                                     the phenomenon called ‘customer disconnect’. This company had fallen so deeply in love
                                     with what it had been that it no longer listened to what its customers and the bicycle market
                                     wanted. TI Cycle’s greatest failure was that it no longer understood its customers’ values.

                                     Secondly, TI Cycles failed to see the disruptive forces that were changing its industry. The
                                     values of its customers were changing. TI Cycles could not fathom the changing values.
                                     New bicycle firms were assembling a wide range of products, often using highly engineered
                                     components made by others. TI Cycles took pride that it made all of its components. It
                                     could not see the merits of buying components from outside suppliers. But the new breed
                                     of cyclists started to buy  lower cost  bikes through  the same marketing channel  that
                                     heretofore had sold TI Cycles.

                                     In 1994-95, the family dominated board of directors had to wake up to the problem. The
                                     total loss from operations of TI Cycles was ` 2.98 crores on a sale of ` 208.28 crores. It had
                                     slipped to the number three position in the industry. Its sales in the domestic market had
                                     flattened out. The management had to admit  that they needed to totally rethink their
                                     concept of the markets, customers and competitors. They had to change their supply chain
                                     philosophy, and follow a different path.
                                     This led to the initiation of a series of measures at TI Cycles in product development and
                                     manufacturing. In early 1995, TI Cycles introduced the first bike with front shock absorbers

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