Having earned a name in the handbags space, the company is now looking to become a lifestyle brand across categories like footwear and eventually, apparel
One look at Dilip Kapur and you will know he wears his brand proudly on his sleeve: Or, in his case, carries it on his arm. “It’s like carrying a story, an emotional bond,” says the 67-year-old, pointing to his Hidesign handbag which, he tells us, is at least 20 years old.
The promoter’s sentiment also speaks of the Rs 160-crore company’s ultimate goal—to emerge as a lifestyle brand that touches all aspects of a customer’s life. And its efforts over nearly four decades have been trained towards that. The last two years have been particularly busy as it delivered several ‘firsts’. For instance, the Puducherry-based leather firm unveiled its footwear collection for men and women; it launched sunglasses and also started offering discounts for the first time ever.
It has also set in place plans for the next five years, says Kapur, the effervescent founder of Hidesign, adding that the brand has to go beyond bags, the product group with which it is most closely associated. “We realise that the biggest hurdle in the development of a brand is to get stuck on one product. Gucci, Louis Vuitton… they all went beyond bags. I don’t want Hidesign to be just a bag brand, it has to extend into a lifestyle brand,” he says. Over the next two years, the footwear line is expected to contribute 12-15 percent of the company’s turnover. Hidesign clocked revenues of over Rs 160 crore in FY2015. It has also posted year-on-year revenue growth of 20-30 percent over the last four years. At over 60 percent, bags are the biggest contributor to its revenues.
This growth spurt, perhaps, is linked to the involvement of Louis Vuitton (LV) with the company. In 2007, the French luxury giant chose Hidesign to tap into the leather products space in India and acquired a five percent stake in the firm. While LV does not generally speak to the media about its investments, in 2007 it told Financial Times that “it liked the homegrown nature of the brand”. LV has been advising Hidesign on branding, marketing and training.
Hidesign’s products are currently offered across over 60 exclusive retail stores; it has a distribution network in more than 20 countries. Its leather collection includes handbags, clutches, briefcases, laptop cases, wallets and belts. Apart from the flagship brand, Hidesign launched Holii, a brand aimed at bringing distinct Indian design aesthetics to bags and accessories along with high production standards, in 2009, in a joint venture with the Kishore Biyani-led Future Group. The Hidesign group also runs two hotels in Puducherry: The Promenade and Le Dupleix. In 2012, Hidesign forayed into the luxury segment and launched its range of ‘Ciaschini’ bags named after Italian designer Alberto Ciaschini who joined Hidesign as lead designer in 2004.
The person behind it
For Kapur, it all started in 1978 as a hobby from a thatched shed in Puducherry. He had just returned to India from the US after earning a PhD in international affairs from the University of Denver. He seed-funded his ‘hobby’—designing bags—with Rs 25,000, using the money to buy a sewing machine and leather.
Since then, an adherence to quality has defined Kapur’s approach to the retail business. And his persistence seems to have paid off. For instance, Hidesign is the only firm in the country in which Louis Vuitton has invested directly and not through its PE arm, L Capital. But that’s not enough for Kapur, for he has another milestone to cross. “An IPO will happen for sure, but not right now. We will consider it when we have a top line of Rs 400 crore,” he says. In any case, Hidesign is in for the long haul, he adds.
(This story appears in the 18 September, 2015 issue of Forbes India. To visit our Archives, click here.)