Parle Products

Parle Products is an Indian multinational food corporation, which makes biscuits and confectionery products.[2][3] Its biscuit brand Parle-G is the best-selling biscuit brand in the world, according to a 2011 Nielsen report.[4][5][6]

History

Parle Products was founded in 1929 in India by the Chauhan family of Vile Parle, Mumbai. The founder was Mohanlal Chauhan who hailed from Pardi near Valsad in Gujarat. He moved to Mumbai to make a living and at first, his profession was tailoring. However, it was not profitable, and so he moved into the food business by selling snacks. He ran a bakery making bread, buns, rusks, scones, nankhatai, turnovers, etc. He had five sons - Maneklal, Pitambar, Narottam, Kantilal and Jayantilal. The five brothers worked together under their father.

Parle began manufacturing biscuits in 1939, with a license to supply their biscuits only to the British Army. In 1947, when India became independent, the company launched an ad campaign showcasing its Glucose biscuits as an Indian alternative to the British biscuits.[7] The Parle brand became well known in India following the success of products such as the Parle-G biscuits. Much later, in 1977, the Morarji Desai government expelled Coca-Cola from India. The family saw an opportunity here and opened their own cold drinks business, which flourished because there was no competition. It minted money from selling cold beverages like Gold Spot, Thums Up and Frooti, all of which became household names.

The original Parle company was split into three separate companies owned by the different factions of the original Chauhan family, with a majority of it owned by Parle Agro products.[8] The separation was only that Jayantilal separated himself from his four older brothers. The reason was mainly because Jayantilal had a lifestyle different from his four older brothers. The four older brothers got the biscuits business as their share, and even to this day, they are all together with no further separation. Jayantilal took the beverages section as his share. This section was further divided between his two sons. The three companies today are as follows:

All three companies continue to use the family trademark name "Parle". The original Parle group was amicably segregated into three non-competing businesses. A dispute over the use of "Parle" brand arose when Parle Agro diversified into the confectionery business, thus becoming a competitor to Parle Products. In February 2008, Parle Products sued Parle Agro for using the brand Parle for competing confectionery products. Later, Parle Agro launched its confectionery products under a new design which did not include the Parle brand name.[10] In 2009, the Bombay High Court ruled that Parle Agro can sell its confectionery brands under the brand name "Parle" or "Parle Confi" on condition that it clearly specifies that its products belong to a separate company which has no relationship with Parle Products.[11]

  • Parle Products (1950s), led by Vijay, Sharad and Raj Chauhan (owner of the brands such as Parle-G, 20-20, Magix, Milkshakti, Melody, Mango Bite,[9] Poppins, Londonderry, Kismi Toffee Bar, Monaco and KrackJack).
  • Parle Agro (1960s), led by Prakash Jayantilal Chauhan (elder son of Jayantilal Chauhan). The company is run by his daughters Schauna, Alisha and Nadia (owner of the brands such as Frooti and Appy).
  • Parle Bisleri (1970s), led by Ramesh Jayantilal Chauhan, younger son of Jayantilal. He runs it with his wife Zainab Chauhan and their daughter Jayanti Chauhan.

Infrastructure

Apart from the original factory in Mumbai, Parle has manufacturing facilities at Kanpur (Uttar Pradesh), Neemrana (Rajasthan), Bengaluru (Karnataka), Hyderabad (Telangana), Kutch (Gujarat), Khopoli (Maharashtra), Indore (Madhya Pradesh), Pantnagar (Uttarakhand), Sitarganj (Uttarakhand), Bahadurgarh (Haryana), and Muzaffarpur (Bihar). The plants at Bahadurgarh and Muzaffarpur are some of the largest manufacturing plants of Parle in India. It deploys large-scale automation for manufacturing of quality biscuits. It also has several manufacturing units on contract.[12]

References

  1. Sagar Malviya. Parle crosses $2 billion in sales during FY22 The Economic Times, 27 November 2023, retrieved 5 February 2024^
  2. PARLE PRODUCTS PRIVATE LIMITED OpenCorporates, retrieved 17 September 2018^
  3. Parle Products Pvt. Ltd.: Private Company Information Bloomberg, retrieved 17 September 2018^
  4. Parle gets Happy Happy wooing the price-conscious The Hindu Business Line, 2012-02-02, retrieved 2012-02-13^
  5. Parle G becomes worlds largest selling biscuit brand - Exchange4media 14 March 2002^
  6. Ratna Bhushan. Parle-G world's No 1 selling biscuit: Nielsen Economic Times, 3 March 2011, retrieved 23 November 2017^
  7. Jill Didur. Unsettling partition: literature, gender, memory University of Toronto Press, 2006^
  8. Paramita Chatterjee & Ratna Bhushan. Chauhans lock horns over Parle brand, yet again The Times of India, 2009-08-10, retrieved 2011-10-12^
  9. Parle Mango Bite: খুচরো পয়সার ছেলেবেলা! মনে পড়ে সেই হারিয়ে যাওয়া '১ টাকার আমের সুখের' কথা? The Bengali Chronicle, 18 July 2022, retrieved 10 August 2022^
  10. Dev Chatterjee & Meghna Maiti. Chauhan siblings close to settling row over Parle brand Economic Times, 2008-09-15, retrieved 2011-10-12^
  11. Paramita Chatterjee & Ratna Bhushan. No sign of truce in battle over 'Parle' brand The Economic Times, 2009-01-13, retrieved 2011-10-12^
  12. Parle bakes a biscuit formula for TN, Kerala Economic Times, 2003-01-29, retrieved 2012-02-12^