Virat Kohli has built a Rs 100 crore-plus celebrity brand in quick time. Can he emulate his new-found success as India's most successful Test cricket captain in entrepreneurship?
Early August, 2018. It’s the second day of the first Test match between India and England at Edgbaston. The conditions are overcast, with the swinging cherry making the Indian batsmen sitting ducks for the slip cordon. Two wickets fall cheaply in a little over a dozen overs. The prospects for India in the inaugural Test of the keenly followed five-match series appear bleak.
Enter skipper Virat Kohli, who is welcomed to the crease by hooting home spectators firmly behind their team. Standing far down the 22 yards is a belligerent and purposeful James Anderson, who had dismissed Kohli four times during India’s last tour of England four years ago. Ten innings with scores of 1, 8, 25, 0, 39, 28, 0, 7, 6 and 20, and an average of just 13.50 in 2014 are fresh in most minds at Edgbaston. Kohli finds himself hemmed in by a bunch of chatty close-in fielders. The setting looks ominous.
By the end of day’s play, however, it was anything but that. Kohli played a gritty captain’s knock of 149, setting the tone for the series; he finished the five Tests with 593 runs at an impressive average of 59.3, emerging the highest run scorer in the series.
Since then, there’s been no stopping Kohli, who last fortnight became India’s most successful Test skipper after the 2-0 sweep against the West Indies in the Caribbean. His winning record of 58 percent takes him past accomplished leaders MS Dhoni (45 percent) and Sourav Ganguly (43 percent).
For Kohli, going where few have ventured before is a way of life—off the field, too. Some 10 months before the England series began, Kohli was readying to make a major splash in business. Brands weren’t alien to him, after establishing youth fashion label Wrogn with fashion startup Universal Sportsbiz in 2014. He was also endorsing a slew of big-ticket brands from Audi and MRF to Uber and Hero. Now, though, was the time to push the entrepreneurial envelope.
“Around 2016 is when I felt that I am entering a phase of my career that is the right time to establish my own brand,” Kohli told Forbes India in an interview at the Four Seasons Hotel in Mumbai in end-July, a day before leaving for the tour of West Indies.
The idea of launching one’s own brand in collaboration with a sportswear maker may appear fairly straightforward; after all basketball legend Michael Jordan did just that with Nike in 1984 with the launch of Air Jordan. Still, there was no precedent in India.
What is more, Indian sportspersons—cricketers, in the main—tend to dabble in business towards the twilight of their career. “Around 2016, I would easily have had 10-12 years of cricket left in me. So I thought that’s a great time to grow the brand. I didn’t want to do it at the fag end of my career and not have the time and opportunity to grow it further,” says Kohli. Listen
When Kohli joined hands with Puma for One8, with footwear, backpacks, caps, training bags and, more recently, kidswear, there were enough sceptics. Although Indian sports is littered with celebrity brands, the concept of co-creating a label in partnership with a sportswear firm was virtually alien. Among the icons, there’s Sachin Tendulkar who has a joint venture with clothing brand Arvind for the True Blue label. Dhoni has lifestyle brand Seven, which has been created by a firm promoted by Rhiti Sports, a company backed by the former captain himself. For most other sports celebrities, individual endorsements is the name of the game, off-field.
It’s early days yet, but almost two years after its launch, the cash registers are ringing. In June, One8 crossed ₹130 crore in revenue, and the projection is that it will touch ₹185 crore by the fiscal year ended June 2020. Ahead of Kohli is actor Hrithik Roshan’s HRX, launched with Exceed Entertainment in 2013, which is estimated be worth over ₹300 crore. And there’s Mandhana Retail Ventures, which sells superstar Salman Khan’s Being Human label, which reportedly closed fiscal 2019 at ₹219 crore.
Kohli has these labels in his sights. The frenetic pace of growth he has set isn’t alien to a cricketer with a rash of ‘fastests’ and ‘firsts’ under his belt. He is the quickest to reach 10,000 one-day international (ODI) runs, in 205 innings; the fastest to score 1,000 ODI runs in a calendar year, in just 11 matches in 2018; and the first batsman to score 20,000 international runs in a decade.
(This story appears in the 27 September, 2019 issue of Forbes India. To visit our Archives, click here.)