From putting puja online to making airplane parts, the entrepreneurial spirit of the third generation of the NR Group, makers of Cycle agarbattis, is taking it in various directions. But the incense stick remains at the heart of it all
(L to R): Vishnu Ranga, Guru Ranga, Anirudh Ranga, Pavan Ranga, Arjun Ranga and Kiran Ranga. The scions of the NR Group have been branching into new businesses rather than dividing the existing pie
Image: Nishant Ratnakar for Forbes India
We are sitting in Arjun Ranga’s office on the top floor of the ₹1,500-crore NR Group’s headquarters in Mysuru and he opens a box of sambrani cups, a readymade version of the charcoal and sambrani (a benzoin resin that emits a fragrance when burnt on charcoal tablets) that is ritually used during prayers. “In traditional homes, mothers would put coal, and then they would put sambrani powder on it and light it. What we’ve done is used modern technology and encapsulated it into a charcoal cup and it becomes an instant havan. It’s become a huge hit for us,” says Arjun, 43, MD, Cycle Pure Agarbathies, the group’s flagship that accounts for around 70 percent of revenues.
Cycle Pure Agarbathies plans to be a one-stop shop for everything in the puja room, not just physically, but also virtually. “We are already the biggest in agarbattis (incense sticks), so this is a natural extension for us,” he says, adding, “we decided to also get into services, we are going to launch purepuja.com, which is a one-stop solution for all your puja needs, you know, if you want to teach anybody in your family or you want to do some puja today, some aarti…”
The website and app not only list pujas with instructions to conduct them, but also provide all the ingredients required as kits. “With our app and kit, I have each and every item numbered, say, one to thirty, so item number one this is what it is, so the pujari actually says put item number two, put item number three, so the entire puja can be done with the app, and there’s a recipe for the prasad to make with the puja as well,” he says.
“ The brand has been built by relentless focus on a narrative (prayer) and an association with cricket.”
(This story appears in the 02 March, 2018 issue of Forbes India. To visit our Archives, click here.)