From bazaar to Big Bazaar: Environmental influences and service innovation in the evolution of retailing in India, c. 1850-2015
Abstract
Purpose – This paper aims to understand the factors affecting the evolution of retailing in India since the
mid-nineteenth century.
Design/methodology/approach – This paper compares the trajectories of four distinct retail stores
in India – Spencer’s pan-Indian retailing empire since 1863, Akbarallys’ department store chain in
Mumbai since 1897, Apna Bazar’s consumer cooperative chain in Mumbai since 1948 and the Future
Group’s pan-Indian retailing chain since the 1980s. Historical sources include firm biographies and
newspaper archives.
Findings – This paper proposes a systems theory linking environmental influences and service innovation,
to explain the evolution of retailing in India since the mid-nineteenth century. The key environmental
influence on retailing has been state patronage – colonialism and high-end department stores until the 1940s,
socialism and cooperative stores until the 1980s and liberalisation with restricted foreign direct investment in
retailing until 2015 associated with indigenous corporate large retail format stores. Service innovation in
terms of home delivery and recreation of the bazaar atmosphere due to norms on gender and community have
also interacted to shape individual success in modern retailing and the dominance of small shop retailing over
the long run.
Research limitations/implications – This paper questions standard accounts of retailing history in
India that began with the late-twentieth century by showing the scale of a pan-Indian retailing chain in the
early-twentieth century. It also provides an account of retailers that is missing in the current literature on the
history of consumption in India.
Practical implications – Findings of this study will be useful to marketing professionals and teachers
who wish to learn more about the history of retailing in India. It also shows how retailers navigated changes
in the regulatory and business environment.
Originality/value – Through a comparative study, this paper outlines the environmental influences on
retail formats and service innovation strategies that are required to serve the Indian market. It also brings to
fore the significance of retailing chains in colonial India.
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