Contrary to the gloomy economic
picture painted by the financial
pundits at the end of 2008, the reactions
to the global economic slowdown are
mixed in the survey equipment industry
in India. The growth in the survey
industry has been fuelled by the spate
of infrastructure projects in the country
and may well ride out the economic
slowdown wave without feeling the pinch
much feel the players in the industry.
What will really happen in the coming
months remains to be seen, but we do
have a picture of the current scenario of
the digital survey equipment industry in
India. One could have as many views as
the number of people one speaks to and
we did indeed speak to a wide section of
players in the industry to get the entire
spectrum of views. The discussions and
interactions with the dealers and users
focussed on getting a deeper perspective
about mindsets rather than just gather data.
The growing industry
Across the board everybody agreed that
the digital equipment business has been
growing, especially in the last few years.
Dealers said they have been selling more
instruments, and business has been good.
Many have moved completely from
dealing in conventional instruments to
now dealing only in digital equipments.
Several new players have entered the
market and competition is also growing.
Users said they have been buying
more instruments to meet the demand
of increased projects. Most projects
now are time bound and have delay
clauses, and with the use of these
equipments users have been able to
adequately address the survey needs
of their projects. Also, acceptance and
use of this technology is seen not only
in large projects but also small ones.
The government and private sector both
seem to be contributing to this growth.
Dealers said they sell equally to both
sectors and users said they undertake
projects for both. But, considering
that a large number of government
projects are further sub-contracted to
private organisations, it could just be
that the government sector is ultimately
driving the growth in the industry.
When users were asked about the
application areas where they work, ‘infrastructure’ was the most ubiquitous
area including projects related to road
construction and railway alignments.
Another offshoot of the infrastructure
projects was the heavy machinery
alignment using digital survey equipment.
Additional application areas included
projects in irrigation and command area
development; forestry; environment,
urban development; land records and
cadastral mapping; mining; police;
hydrography; various topographic
surveys; education and others.
Country wide spread
It thus emerged that there are now a
growing number of application areas
where digital survey equipments
like Total stations, GPS, levels and
Distometers are being used. The presence
of dealers and users of the equipment
even in small obscure towns of the
country indicate the percolation to the
technology to the ground level so to say.
The distributors and big dealers are no
doubt based in the metros, but many now
have regional offices and or representation
in terms of sub-dealers at the regional
level. This spreading network speaks
volumes for the support structure that is
being slowly created and will ultimately
benefit the industry as a whole.
As of today, the smaller town dealers
do face issues about access to service
centres, product information flow from
distributors, and availability of spare parts;
but hopefully as the networks improve
these issues will also be addressed.
Therefore an interesting factor that
emerged during the discussions is that
though they are based in a particular
city, the region of operation of both
dealers and users seems to be spread
well beyond that city. Many users
also said they have teams who can
undertake projects across the country.
The growing awareness
According to the dealers most of
the customers are quality conscious.
This point tallies with another dealer
observation that most of the customers
today have good awareness, since one
could infer that an aware customer
would care about quality. Though, a
distinction was drawn between being ‘aware’ about products, especially because
of the internet; and being ‘educated’
about the potential of the products.
Since the technology is evolving
continuously, it was felt that constant
efforts have to be made to educate
the customer. This brought into focus
the need for capacity building among potential users. Training of people who
buy equipment is being addressed by the
dealers, but there definitely seems to be a
gap in trained manpower being available
to the survey industry in general.
A focussed government-industryacademia
effort seems to be needed to
address this lacuna. The industry could
initiate steps like introduction of ‘trial
versions’ of equipment in academic
institutions so that up-to-date equipment
is available for training courses. New
specialised courses need to be introduced
as well. For the industry to truly grow,
it will have to be driven by the users,
with maybe just the right push from
the government and the dealers.



The price debate
When dealers say that the price of a
product is important to some of the
customers, and the users also say price is
an important factor guiding the purchase
of a product, then the emphasis on
quality seems to take a beating. If we go
with the perception that a good quality
product will cost more than other inferior
quality products – then the assumption
that if quality matters then price should
not matter and vice versa should hold
good. Following this logic both quality
and price cannot be important. But if
we question this perception itself – that
a high price does not necessarily mean
good quality and a lower price does not
necessarily mean inferior quality then the
whole ‘price-quality’ debate falls flat.
Another way to look at this debate is
from the small and large projects point
of view. A view emerged that on smaller
projects the funds are limited and therefore
the investment made on equipment
is limited and ‘price’ automatically
becomes a focus. While on larger
projects ‘quality and ‘durability’ become
the focus and price is not an issue.
The user speaks
The users unanimously wanted to be
properly informed about a product.
Demonstrations and case studies
were appreciated, sales pitch was
not. So, it seems the industry is
evolving with the user becoming
more demanding about his needs.
The evolving mindset of the user
is reflected in the emphasis that
was laid by the users on the
appropriateness of a product
for the application at hand.
This is significant also because
today there are a variety of brands
and products available to choose
from. Understanding which product
is suitable for his needs is a big step
towards the user driving the market.
Most users agreed that though digital
equipment was highly technical, its
ease of use had definitely helped them
to improve their work processes.
Brand loyalty by itself may not be a
concept well embraced by the Indian user,
but a very practical aspect of retaining a
brand emerged during the discussions. As
the users pointed out, when they continue
with the same brand, training, software
and servicing aspects are streamlined.
After sales service
When dealers said that after sales service
is important to most customers and
therefore they take special care to provide
that service, it seemed like shop talk.
Users also said after sales support was
an important factor for them, but when a
majority said they were satisfied with the
service they got it shattered a major myth.
The myth that the customer is always
unhappy with the after sales service.
Conventional
instruments market
Among all the positive talk about
digital instruments it emerged that
the conventional survey instruments
manufacturing in the country has been hit
hard by the influx of digital instruments.
Though conventional instruments are still
being used in the country, especially in the
academic institutions, there are few takers
for these instruments in the industry.
The emerging picture
As the survey technology develops
the Indian survey industry is accepting
this technology with open arms. This
acceptance comes from a growing
understanding about the technology and its
benefits. As mindsets change, identifying
problems and working towards solving
them becomes easier. Though the dealers
and users seem to be in tandem, the
technology seems to be vendor driven
as of now. But, once a technology is
introduced and takes root eventually it
is the users who will have to push it.
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