Page 1
17 July 2023
riginated in the last quarter of the
19
th
century, the Indian cooperative
movement registered smooth and
impressive progress until the 1970s. Certain
issues started crippling the whole movement, and
policy makers and planners slowly reduced their focus
on cooperation-led socio-economic development.
O
The inherent growth potential of cooperation needed
an immediate and renewed policy attention. At this
juncture, for Sahakarita se Samriddhi, the Ministry
of Cooperation was formed with a renewed focus
at cascading the movement down to the grassroots
through acts of cooperation. This aims to realise the
dream of Atmanirbhar Bharat. and to enable the
Dr manisha paLiwaL the author is Professor, Sri Balaji University, Pune, Maharashtra. email: mnpaliwal@gmail.com
Cooperation is entrenched in the philosophy of India. The clarion call of
India’s Prime Minister – Sahakarita se Samriddhi witnessed creation of the
Ministry of Cooperation on 6 July 2021 to provide a distinct administrative,
legal, and policy agenda for reviving, reorganising, and modernising
cooperatives. The need of the time is to empower cooperatives to compete
on par with corporate business entities. In order to remain relevant and
competitive, cooperatives from the community level to the national level
need to diversify their businesses.
strategiC DiversiFiCatioN
oF Cooperatives aND
BusiNess Competitive Ness
FOCUS
Page 2
17 July 2023
riginated in the last quarter of the
19
th
century, the Indian cooperative
movement registered smooth and
impressive progress until the 1970s. Certain
issues started crippling the whole movement, and
policy makers and planners slowly reduced their focus
on cooperation-led socio-economic development.
O
The inherent growth potential of cooperation needed
an immediate and renewed policy attention. At this
juncture, for Sahakarita se Samriddhi, the Ministry
of Cooperation was formed with a renewed focus
at cascading the movement down to the grassroots
through acts of cooperation. This aims to realise the
dream of Atmanirbhar Bharat. and to enable the
Dr manisha paLiwaL the author is Professor, Sri Balaji University, Pune, Maharashtra. email: mnpaliwal@gmail.com
Cooperation is entrenched in the philosophy of India. The clarion call of
India’s Prime Minister – Sahakarita se Samriddhi witnessed creation of the
Ministry of Cooperation on 6 July 2021 to provide a distinct administrative,
legal, and policy agenda for reviving, reorganising, and modernising
cooperatives. The need of the time is to empower cooperatives to compete
on par with corporate business entities. In order to remain relevant and
competitive, cooperatives from the community level to the national level
need to diversify their businesses.
strategiC DiversiFiCatioN
oF Cooperatives aND
BusiNess Competitive Ness
FOCUS
18 July 2023
proFit multiplier through BusiNess DiversiFiCatioN
members of the cooperatives to make their own
decisions and destiny without fear or influence from
any outside party. The movement has witnessed the
registration of 8.54 lakh cooperative societies with
29 crore members in the country. The need of the
time is to empower cooperatives to compete on par
with corporate business entities. India’s cooperative-
led economic model suffered due to several limiting
issues, viz. accountability and governance aspects, in-
house vested interests, lack of coordination, political
interference, and lack of diversification.
need for Business Diversification
Any business to remain commercially viable, has
to look beyond its primary customers and markets.
It has to explore potential markets for new products
and services. Without diversification, stagnation
sets in, which impedes the business’s future growth.
Further, strategic diversification forces a business to
take steps that can ensure its relevance in the market,
as investments made in research and development,
marketing, product development, etc., can cause
a business to identify customers whose needs are
not fulfilled yet and to identify blue ocean markets,
enabling it to earn profit and wealth in the long run.
Business Diversification by Cooperatives
An entity is stated to be in business if it is
engaged in commercial, industrial, and professional
activities with the objective of making profits. A
cooperative being a legally incorporated structural
entity, follows the in-built principles of cooperation
and serves the interests of its members. Cooperatives
as business entities, can be profit-sharing enterprises
or non-profit entities. They serve their members
by providing goods and services that may be
unavailable or too costly to access as individuals. A
cooperative society needs funds to function. It has
In Sittilingi – a tribal village of Dharmapuri district of Tamil Nadu, 500+ members joined hands to form
Sittilingi organic Farmers Association (SoF A) as a cooperative society in 2004. With a per capita minimum
size of 2.5 acre land holdings, members cultivate ragi, bajra, little millet, foxtail and pearl millet, and cash
crops, viz. cotton, turmeric, sugarcane, groundnut, and vegetables. To ensure financial and economic
viability of member farmers, SoFA advises crop production as per market demand, ensures that no
member grows the same crops, guarantees variety for the end-customers. The members have diversified
into production and marketing of millet-based cookies, health-mixes, roasted powders, papads, etc.,
which is sourced by 40 retail outlets, enabling an outlet turnover of a minimum of rs 50,000/month.
SoFA has diversified into ancillary agri-business too, viz., organic fertilisers and are running plant
nurseries and bio-compost units with a collective turnover of rs 25 lakh a year.
Source: Sittilingi Organic Farmers Association (SOFA, available at https://www.sofasittilingi.org)
Page 3
17 July 2023
riginated in the last quarter of the
19
th
century, the Indian cooperative
movement registered smooth and
impressive progress until the 1970s. Certain
issues started crippling the whole movement, and
policy makers and planners slowly reduced their focus
on cooperation-led socio-economic development.
O
The inherent growth potential of cooperation needed
an immediate and renewed policy attention. At this
juncture, for Sahakarita se Samriddhi, the Ministry
of Cooperation was formed with a renewed focus
at cascading the movement down to the grassroots
through acts of cooperation. This aims to realise the
dream of Atmanirbhar Bharat. and to enable the
Dr manisha paLiwaL the author is Professor, Sri Balaji University, Pune, Maharashtra. email: mnpaliwal@gmail.com
Cooperation is entrenched in the philosophy of India. The clarion call of
India’s Prime Minister – Sahakarita se Samriddhi witnessed creation of the
Ministry of Cooperation on 6 July 2021 to provide a distinct administrative,
legal, and policy agenda for reviving, reorganising, and modernising
cooperatives. The need of the time is to empower cooperatives to compete
on par with corporate business entities. In order to remain relevant and
competitive, cooperatives from the community level to the national level
need to diversify their businesses.
strategiC DiversiFiCatioN
oF Cooperatives aND
BusiNess Competitive Ness
FOCUS
18 July 2023
proFit multiplier through BusiNess DiversiFiCatioN
members of the cooperatives to make their own
decisions and destiny without fear or influence from
any outside party. The movement has witnessed the
registration of 8.54 lakh cooperative societies with
29 crore members in the country. The need of the
time is to empower cooperatives to compete on par
with corporate business entities. India’s cooperative-
led economic model suffered due to several limiting
issues, viz. accountability and governance aspects, in-
house vested interests, lack of coordination, political
interference, and lack of diversification.
need for Business Diversification
Any business to remain commercially viable, has
to look beyond its primary customers and markets.
It has to explore potential markets for new products
and services. Without diversification, stagnation
sets in, which impedes the business’s future growth.
Further, strategic diversification forces a business to
take steps that can ensure its relevance in the market,
as investments made in research and development,
marketing, product development, etc., can cause
a business to identify customers whose needs are
not fulfilled yet and to identify blue ocean markets,
enabling it to earn profit and wealth in the long run.
Business Diversification by Cooperatives
An entity is stated to be in business if it is
engaged in commercial, industrial, and professional
activities with the objective of making profits. A
cooperative being a legally incorporated structural
entity, follows the in-built principles of cooperation
and serves the interests of its members. Cooperatives
as business entities, can be profit-sharing enterprises
or non-profit entities. They serve their members
by providing goods and services that may be
unavailable or too costly to access as individuals. A
cooperative society needs funds to function. It has
In Sittilingi – a tribal village of Dharmapuri district of Tamil Nadu, 500+ members joined hands to form
Sittilingi organic Farmers Association (SoF A) as a cooperative society in 2004. With a per capita minimum
size of 2.5 acre land holdings, members cultivate ragi, bajra, little millet, foxtail and pearl millet, and cash
crops, viz. cotton, turmeric, sugarcane, groundnut, and vegetables. To ensure financial and economic
viability of member farmers, SoFA advises crop production as per market demand, ensures that no
member grows the same crops, guarantees variety for the end-customers. The members have diversified
into production and marketing of millet-based cookies, health-mixes, roasted powders, papads, etc.,
which is sourced by 40 retail outlets, enabling an outlet turnover of a minimum of rs 50,000/month.
SoFA has diversified into ancillary agri-business too, viz., organic fertilisers and are running plant
nurseries and bio-compost units with a collective turnover of rs 25 lakh a year.
Source: Sittilingi Organic Farmers Association (SOFA, available at https://www.sofasittilingi.org)
19 July 2023
to identify ways and means to finance its activities.
To make societies commercially viable and vibrant,
strategic diversification is a must. ‘Strategy’, in the
context of corporate entities, refers to its stated
‘visions’ and ‘Missions’ . Strategic decisions are usually
in congruence with the visions and missions of the
organisation, and they flow downward towards the
base levels of the organisation. Thus, in order to
remain relevant and competitive, cooperatives from
the community level to the national level need to
diversify their businesses.
viable Cooperative Business Strategies
Cooperatives carry out businesses in all sectors.
They need to firm up their vision and mission
statements and frame the objectives and purposes
for which these entities are formed. This information
can help develop tactics for object diversification of
businesses. Figure1 examines how a cooperative can
diversify itself strategically by analysing five facets of
strategic management.
? y Initially, a cooperative should decide the exact
nature of the goals it has and the various purposes
behind which the goals will be outlined for their
accomplishments.
? y Post-identification of the goals, a tactical
understanding of the local situation would be
required, followed by an internal and external
environment assessment to conduct a Strength,
Weakness, opportunity, and Threat (SWoT)
analysis.
? y The next step is to formulate a strategy through
which the goals can be achieved by means of
reflection, prioritisation, and development of
options for decision-making purposes. Then
alternative options should be evaluated in order
to form a strategy.
? y once the strategy is formulated, the person
responsible for its achievement will be given
charge of the available and allotted resources,
personnel, and ways and means for achieving
the strategy. They will have to put the chosen
plans into practice, marshal the resources, and
identify tactics through which the strategy can
be implemented successfully.
? y The last step is to monitor the strategy against
the agreed timeline/verification pattern to
carry out a mid-term/periodic review about
the success of activity intervention and take up
corrective actions, if any.
Figure-1: Five facets of Strategic management
monitoring
of the
Strategy
Goal
Setting
Goal
a nalysis
Formulation
of the
Strategy
implementation
of the Strategy
Page 4
17 July 2023
riginated in the last quarter of the
19
th
century, the Indian cooperative
movement registered smooth and
impressive progress until the 1970s. Certain
issues started crippling the whole movement, and
policy makers and planners slowly reduced their focus
on cooperation-led socio-economic development.
O
The inherent growth potential of cooperation needed
an immediate and renewed policy attention. At this
juncture, for Sahakarita se Samriddhi, the Ministry
of Cooperation was formed with a renewed focus
at cascading the movement down to the grassroots
through acts of cooperation. This aims to realise the
dream of Atmanirbhar Bharat. and to enable the
Dr manisha paLiwaL the author is Professor, Sri Balaji University, Pune, Maharashtra. email: mnpaliwal@gmail.com
Cooperation is entrenched in the philosophy of India. The clarion call of
India’s Prime Minister – Sahakarita se Samriddhi witnessed creation of the
Ministry of Cooperation on 6 July 2021 to provide a distinct administrative,
legal, and policy agenda for reviving, reorganising, and modernising
cooperatives. The need of the time is to empower cooperatives to compete
on par with corporate business entities. In order to remain relevant and
competitive, cooperatives from the community level to the national level
need to diversify their businesses.
strategiC DiversiFiCatioN
oF Cooperatives aND
BusiNess Competitive Ness
FOCUS
18 July 2023
proFit multiplier through BusiNess DiversiFiCatioN
members of the cooperatives to make their own
decisions and destiny without fear or influence from
any outside party. The movement has witnessed the
registration of 8.54 lakh cooperative societies with
29 crore members in the country. The need of the
time is to empower cooperatives to compete on par
with corporate business entities. India’s cooperative-
led economic model suffered due to several limiting
issues, viz. accountability and governance aspects, in-
house vested interests, lack of coordination, political
interference, and lack of diversification.
need for Business Diversification
Any business to remain commercially viable, has
to look beyond its primary customers and markets.
It has to explore potential markets for new products
and services. Without diversification, stagnation
sets in, which impedes the business’s future growth.
Further, strategic diversification forces a business to
take steps that can ensure its relevance in the market,
as investments made in research and development,
marketing, product development, etc., can cause
a business to identify customers whose needs are
not fulfilled yet and to identify blue ocean markets,
enabling it to earn profit and wealth in the long run.
Business Diversification by Cooperatives
An entity is stated to be in business if it is
engaged in commercial, industrial, and professional
activities with the objective of making profits. A
cooperative being a legally incorporated structural
entity, follows the in-built principles of cooperation
and serves the interests of its members. Cooperatives
as business entities, can be profit-sharing enterprises
or non-profit entities. They serve their members
by providing goods and services that may be
unavailable or too costly to access as individuals. A
cooperative society needs funds to function. It has
In Sittilingi – a tribal village of Dharmapuri district of Tamil Nadu, 500+ members joined hands to form
Sittilingi organic Farmers Association (SoF A) as a cooperative society in 2004. With a per capita minimum
size of 2.5 acre land holdings, members cultivate ragi, bajra, little millet, foxtail and pearl millet, and cash
crops, viz. cotton, turmeric, sugarcane, groundnut, and vegetables. To ensure financial and economic
viability of member farmers, SoFA advises crop production as per market demand, ensures that no
member grows the same crops, guarantees variety for the end-customers. The members have diversified
into production and marketing of millet-based cookies, health-mixes, roasted powders, papads, etc.,
which is sourced by 40 retail outlets, enabling an outlet turnover of a minimum of rs 50,000/month.
SoFA has diversified into ancillary agri-business too, viz., organic fertilisers and are running plant
nurseries and bio-compost units with a collective turnover of rs 25 lakh a year.
Source: Sittilingi Organic Farmers Association (SOFA, available at https://www.sofasittilingi.org)
19 July 2023
to identify ways and means to finance its activities.
To make societies commercially viable and vibrant,
strategic diversification is a must. ‘Strategy’, in the
context of corporate entities, refers to its stated
‘visions’ and ‘Missions’ . Strategic decisions are usually
in congruence with the visions and missions of the
organisation, and they flow downward towards the
base levels of the organisation. Thus, in order to
remain relevant and competitive, cooperatives from
the community level to the national level need to
diversify their businesses.
viable Cooperative Business Strategies
Cooperatives carry out businesses in all sectors.
They need to firm up their vision and mission
statements and frame the objectives and purposes
for which these entities are formed. This information
can help develop tactics for object diversification of
businesses. Figure1 examines how a cooperative can
diversify itself strategically by analysing five facets of
strategic management.
? y Initially, a cooperative should decide the exact
nature of the goals it has and the various purposes
behind which the goals will be outlined for their
accomplishments.
? y Post-identification of the goals, a tactical
understanding of the local situation would be
required, followed by an internal and external
environment assessment to conduct a Strength,
Weakness, opportunity, and Threat (SWoT)
analysis.
? y The next step is to formulate a strategy through
which the goals can be achieved by means of
reflection, prioritisation, and development of
options for decision-making purposes. Then
alternative options should be evaluated in order
to form a strategy.
? y once the strategy is formulated, the person
responsible for its achievement will be given
charge of the available and allotted resources,
personnel, and ways and means for achieving
the strategy. They will have to put the chosen
plans into practice, marshal the resources, and
identify tactics through which the strategy can
be implemented successfully.
? y The last step is to monitor the strategy against
the agreed timeline/verification pattern to
carry out a mid-term/periodic review about
the success of activity intervention and take up
corrective actions, if any.
Figure-1: Five facets of Strategic management
monitoring
of the
Strategy
Goal
Setting
Goal
a nalysis
Formulation
of the
Strategy
implementation
of the Strategy
20 July 2023
t able 1: Diversification Decisions of Cooperatives
t ypes Ways of Diversification
product
Diversification
Cooperatives can diversify their product/service offerings to meet
the needs of new markets or due to change in customer tastes and
preferences. For example, Amul – one of India’s largest and most
successful dairy cooperatives, introduced ice creams and other
frozen milk confectionaries in 1996, to spread its businesses.
Geographic
Diversification
Cooperatives diversify their product offerings to reach new markets
and customers to satisfy their needs. For example, ‘Nandini g oodlife’ ,
a milk brand owned by the Karnataka Milk Federation, has been
made available across various states in India in leading retailers as
part of the strategic objectives of the entity to make its presence felt
in various parts of the country.
Service
Diversification
Cooperatives offer new services, apart from their primary products
and services, to meet the needs of their members and customers.
For example, the Anjarakandi urban Cooperative Bank in Kerela,
apart from their primary products and services based on banking,
sells coconut-based products such as copra, coconut water/milk/oil.
Joint ventures
Cooperatives can form Joint ventures (Jvs) to pool resources and
expertise. For example, a cooperative that produces agricultural
products could constitute a joint venture with a technology company
to develop new precision farming technologies. Indian Farmers
Fertiliser Cooperative Limited (IFFCo) – a fertiliser-producing
cooperative, formed a Jv with Spain’s Congelados De Navarra to set
up a food processing plant at Ludhiana in Punjab.
vertical
integration
Cooperatives can vertically integrate by including upstream or
downstream activities from their current operations. For example, a
dairy cooperative could start producing animal feed. It can be seen
in Jvs such as the Amreli District Cooperative Milk Producers union
entering into a Jv with IFFCo Kisan Sanchar for the supply of high-
quality animal feed.
horizontal
integration
Cooperatives can horizontally integrate their operations by merging
with or acquiring other cooperatives or companies operating in the
same industry, which can result in the achievement of significant
economies of scale giving various benefits to their customers and
stakeholders. For example, the Mumbai based Non-Bank Finance
Company (NBFC) firm, Centrum Finance Ltd. acquired the Punjab
and Maharashtra Cooperative Bank, to tap into the markets covered
by the Bank.
Figure-2: Competitive a dvantage through Strategic Diversification
Page 5
17 July 2023
riginated in the last quarter of the
19
th
century, the Indian cooperative
movement registered smooth and
impressive progress until the 1970s. Certain
issues started crippling the whole movement, and
policy makers and planners slowly reduced their focus
on cooperation-led socio-economic development.
O
The inherent growth potential of cooperation needed
an immediate and renewed policy attention. At this
juncture, for Sahakarita se Samriddhi, the Ministry
of Cooperation was formed with a renewed focus
at cascading the movement down to the grassroots
through acts of cooperation. This aims to realise the
dream of Atmanirbhar Bharat. and to enable the
Dr manisha paLiwaL the author is Professor, Sri Balaji University, Pune, Maharashtra. email: mnpaliwal@gmail.com
Cooperation is entrenched in the philosophy of India. The clarion call of
India’s Prime Minister – Sahakarita se Samriddhi witnessed creation of the
Ministry of Cooperation on 6 July 2021 to provide a distinct administrative,
legal, and policy agenda for reviving, reorganising, and modernising
cooperatives. The need of the time is to empower cooperatives to compete
on par with corporate business entities. In order to remain relevant and
competitive, cooperatives from the community level to the national level
need to diversify their businesses.
strategiC DiversiFiCatioN
oF Cooperatives aND
BusiNess Competitive Ness
FOCUS
18 July 2023
proFit multiplier through BusiNess DiversiFiCatioN
members of the cooperatives to make their own
decisions and destiny without fear or influence from
any outside party. The movement has witnessed the
registration of 8.54 lakh cooperative societies with
29 crore members in the country. The need of the
time is to empower cooperatives to compete on par
with corporate business entities. India’s cooperative-
led economic model suffered due to several limiting
issues, viz. accountability and governance aspects, in-
house vested interests, lack of coordination, political
interference, and lack of diversification.
need for Business Diversification
Any business to remain commercially viable, has
to look beyond its primary customers and markets.
It has to explore potential markets for new products
and services. Without diversification, stagnation
sets in, which impedes the business’s future growth.
Further, strategic diversification forces a business to
take steps that can ensure its relevance in the market,
as investments made in research and development,
marketing, product development, etc., can cause
a business to identify customers whose needs are
not fulfilled yet and to identify blue ocean markets,
enabling it to earn profit and wealth in the long run.
Business Diversification by Cooperatives
An entity is stated to be in business if it is
engaged in commercial, industrial, and professional
activities with the objective of making profits. A
cooperative being a legally incorporated structural
entity, follows the in-built principles of cooperation
and serves the interests of its members. Cooperatives
as business entities, can be profit-sharing enterprises
or non-profit entities. They serve their members
by providing goods and services that may be
unavailable or too costly to access as individuals. A
cooperative society needs funds to function. It has
In Sittilingi – a tribal village of Dharmapuri district of Tamil Nadu, 500+ members joined hands to form
Sittilingi organic Farmers Association (SoF A) as a cooperative society in 2004. With a per capita minimum
size of 2.5 acre land holdings, members cultivate ragi, bajra, little millet, foxtail and pearl millet, and cash
crops, viz. cotton, turmeric, sugarcane, groundnut, and vegetables. To ensure financial and economic
viability of member farmers, SoFA advises crop production as per market demand, ensures that no
member grows the same crops, guarantees variety for the end-customers. The members have diversified
into production and marketing of millet-based cookies, health-mixes, roasted powders, papads, etc.,
which is sourced by 40 retail outlets, enabling an outlet turnover of a minimum of rs 50,000/month.
SoFA has diversified into ancillary agri-business too, viz., organic fertilisers and are running plant
nurseries and bio-compost units with a collective turnover of rs 25 lakh a year.
Source: Sittilingi Organic Farmers Association (SOFA, available at https://www.sofasittilingi.org)
19 July 2023
to identify ways and means to finance its activities.
To make societies commercially viable and vibrant,
strategic diversification is a must. ‘Strategy’, in the
context of corporate entities, refers to its stated
‘visions’ and ‘Missions’ . Strategic decisions are usually
in congruence with the visions and missions of the
organisation, and they flow downward towards the
base levels of the organisation. Thus, in order to
remain relevant and competitive, cooperatives from
the community level to the national level need to
diversify their businesses.
viable Cooperative Business Strategies
Cooperatives carry out businesses in all sectors.
They need to firm up their vision and mission
statements and frame the objectives and purposes
for which these entities are formed. This information
can help develop tactics for object diversification of
businesses. Figure1 examines how a cooperative can
diversify itself strategically by analysing five facets of
strategic management.
? y Initially, a cooperative should decide the exact
nature of the goals it has and the various purposes
behind which the goals will be outlined for their
accomplishments.
? y Post-identification of the goals, a tactical
understanding of the local situation would be
required, followed by an internal and external
environment assessment to conduct a Strength,
Weakness, opportunity, and Threat (SWoT)
analysis.
? y The next step is to formulate a strategy through
which the goals can be achieved by means of
reflection, prioritisation, and development of
options for decision-making purposes. Then
alternative options should be evaluated in order
to form a strategy.
? y once the strategy is formulated, the person
responsible for its achievement will be given
charge of the available and allotted resources,
personnel, and ways and means for achieving
the strategy. They will have to put the chosen
plans into practice, marshal the resources, and
identify tactics through which the strategy can
be implemented successfully.
? y The last step is to monitor the strategy against
the agreed timeline/verification pattern to
carry out a mid-term/periodic review about
the success of activity intervention and take up
corrective actions, if any.
Figure-1: Five facets of Strategic management
monitoring
of the
Strategy
Goal
Setting
Goal
a nalysis
Formulation
of the
Strategy
implementation
of the Strategy
20 July 2023
t able 1: Diversification Decisions of Cooperatives
t ypes Ways of Diversification
product
Diversification
Cooperatives can diversify their product/service offerings to meet
the needs of new markets or due to change in customer tastes and
preferences. For example, Amul – one of India’s largest and most
successful dairy cooperatives, introduced ice creams and other
frozen milk confectionaries in 1996, to spread its businesses.
Geographic
Diversification
Cooperatives diversify their product offerings to reach new markets
and customers to satisfy their needs. For example, ‘Nandini g oodlife’ ,
a milk brand owned by the Karnataka Milk Federation, has been
made available across various states in India in leading retailers as
part of the strategic objectives of the entity to make its presence felt
in various parts of the country.
Service
Diversification
Cooperatives offer new services, apart from their primary products
and services, to meet the needs of their members and customers.
For example, the Anjarakandi urban Cooperative Bank in Kerela,
apart from their primary products and services based on banking,
sells coconut-based products such as copra, coconut water/milk/oil.
Joint ventures
Cooperatives can form Joint ventures (Jvs) to pool resources and
expertise. For example, a cooperative that produces agricultural
products could constitute a joint venture with a technology company
to develop new precision farming technologies. Indian Farmers
Fertiliser Cooperative Limited (IFFCo) – a fertiliser-producing
cooperative, formed a Jv with Spain’s Congelados De Navarra to set
up a food processing plant at Ludhiana in Punjab.
vertical
integration
Cooperatives can vertically integrate by including upstream or
downstream activities from their current operations. For example, a
dairy cooperative could start producing animal feed. It can be seen
in Jvs such as the Amreli District Cooperative Milk Producers union
entering into a Jv with IFFCo Kisan Sanchar for the supply of high-
quality animal feed.
horizontal
integration
Cooperatives can horizontally integrate their operations by merging
with or acquiring other cooperatives or companies operating in the
same industry, which can result in the achievement of significant
economies of scale giving various benefits to their customers and
stakeholders. For example, the Mumbai based Non-Bank Finance
Company (NBFC) firm, Centrum Finance Ltd. acquired the Punjab
and Maharashtra Cooperative Bank, to tap into the markets covered
by the Bank.
Figure-2: Competitive a dvantage through Strategic Diversification
21 July 2023
Strategic Diversification of Cooperatives
Cooperatives have to decide (as per the model
in Figure 1) about the ways for their diversification in
order to achieve their strategic objectives as decided
by the stakeholders by means of alternative ways of
diversification (Table 1). Cooperatives can attain their
goals regarding business competitiveness through
strategic diversification (Figure 2).
Conclusion
The Minister of Cooperation has repeatedly
emphasised the potential of the community-led
cooperative economic development model from
various platforms. The union government has
rightly displayed its noble intent to strengthen the
existing primary cooperatives, revive the defunct
ones, and create at least 2 lakh additional primary
level cooperatives in India during the next 4 to 5
years. The Ministry of Cooperation, under the able
guidance of the Minister, needs to ensure attaining
competitive advantage of cooperatives through
strategic diversification. This requires a careful
analysis of information about the strengths, mission,
and values, as well as involvement and support
from members throughout the process of strategic
management. By leveraging the unique strengths
and capabilities of cooperatives and aligning
diversification opportunities with its mission
and values, cooperatives can drive growth and
competitive advantage in new markets and product
lines. Strategic diversification can aid cooperatives
in India in growing their customer base, reducing
their dependence on specific markets, and better
serving their members’ requirements. If the
cooperatives can meet the demands of markets,
they will have a greater chance of being relevant
in the target market. In the long run, it may aid
in developing strategic advantage and position,
thereby helping cooperatives actualise business
profits with inclusiveness through strategic
diversification of their activities. ?
(Views expressed are personal)
WomeN empoWermeNt through CooperatioN
Mann Deshi – a women-centric micro-enterprise cooperative organisation headquartered at Mhaswad
of Maharashtra, was founded in 1997. The objective was to empower rural women by socially mobilising
them into women cooperative entrepreneurs through financial literacy, business skill-development. and
access to timely, adequate and affordable financial services. Since inception, it has provided loans worth
over rs 2,000 crore and training to over 4,00,000 women entrepreneurs in rural Maharashtra. Through its
mobile ATMs, over 300 villages in Maharashtra are now accessing timely credit services. To support women
entrepreneurs, it offers various programmes and services – microfinance, vocational training, business
development, and market linkages. It has expanded its operations beyond banking to include a rural BPo
with over 250 rural women, a community radio station with over 4 million listeners, and it has set up over
50 business schools and training centres. Mann Deshi’s impact extends beyond economic empowerment,
as it has increased social status and improved access to education and healthcare of its members. This is a
pioneering organisation helping to transform the lives of rural women in India by providing them with the
ways and means to become successful entrepreneurs and leaders in their communities.
Source: Mann Deshi Bank and Foundation (available at https://manndeshifoundation.org)
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