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Friday, 16 February 2018

NMIMS Assignments April 2018_Contact us for answers at assignmentssolution@gmail.com

NMIMS Global Access
School for Continuing Education (NGA-SCE)
Course: Brand Management
Internal Assignment Applicable for April

2018 Examination
Assignment Marks: 30
Instructions:
 All Questions carry equal marks.
 All Questions are compulsory
 All answers to be explained in not more

than 1000 words for question 1 and 2 and

for
question 3 in not more than 500 words for

each subsection. Use relevant examples,
illustrations as far as possible.
 All answers to be written individually.

Discussion and group work is not

advisable.
 Students are free to refer to any

books/reference material/website/internet

for attempting
their assignments, but are not allowed to

copy the matter as it is from the source

of
reference.
 Students should write the assignment in

their own words. Copying of assignments

from
other students is not allowed.
 Students should follow the following

parameter for answering the assignment

questions.
1. The competition in the Indian Dairy

sector suddenly seems heating up. With

many
private dairies also joining the

bandwagon. For the first time, India’s

largest global
player in this industry “AMUL” is facing

the heat. Can you suggest some Brand
Promotion strategies to AMUL? (10 Marks)
For Theoretical Answer
Assessment Parameter Weightage
Introduction 20%
Concepts and Application
related to the question
60%
Conclusion 20%
For Numerical Answer
Assessment Parameter Weightage
Understanding and usage
of the formula
20%
Procedure / Steps 50%
Correct Answer &
Interpretation
30%NMIMS Global Access
School for Continuing Education (NGA-SCE)
Course: Brand Management
Internal Assignment Applicable for April

2018 Examination
2. Flipkart now wants to venture into

making mobile phones by themselves under

the
brand name “Capture +”. Their branding

team is confused as to how do they go

about
building this brand and its elements. Can

you guide them on the same? (10 Marks)
3. Read the below given case study and

answer the questions below (10 Marks)
Good old khichdi has finally managed to

hog the culinary limelight. Long looked
down upon as the prescribed diet for the

aged and the infirm, it edged out more
aristocratic contenders such as melt-in-

the-mouth kebabs, aromatic biryanis and

exotic
confections to almost get designated the

‘national dish’. But in the end, what was
touted as the Big Bang turned out to be a

bit of a whimper. The storm in the social
media tea cup compelled the minister of

food processing to issue a statement that

no
such move was being contemplated. All

that was afoot was an effort to cook a

titanic
pot of khichdi that could find a place in

the Guinness Book: Just some innocent fun
and games to generate a buzz to attract

visitors to World Food India.
Still, we must thank whoever thought of

the tamasha for making our compatriots
aware of more than 10 avatars of the

khichdi — vegetarian and non-vegetarian —

that
are rustled up in India. Different

regional recipes as well as ritually and

culturally
significant variations were highlighted

much to the amusement of the audience.
However, the aborted coronation has left

in its wake some serious questions for us

to
grapple with.
Why are we Indians so obsessed with

prefixes ‘national’ and ‘international’?

And why
should the term ‘national’ be reserved

only for things sprouting out of the

native soil?
Some unfortunate souls who dared to raise

a dissenting voice contesting khichdi’s
claim to the throne became targets of

ultra-nationalist fury. What could be a

better
contender for a ‘national’ dish than a

satvik delicacy claiming a lineage dating

back
to Vedic times? Anyone with an iota of

political correctness among performing
celebrity chefs and their patrons must

have been aware of the hazards of

touching theNMIMS Global Access
School for Continuing Education (NGA-SCE)
Course: Brand Management
Internal Assignment Applicable for April

2018 Examination
‘alien’ biryani or kebab. From

architecture to language, costume to

cuisine, religious
zealots have polluted what is fashionably

referred to as the ‘dominant discourse’.

The
controversies that continue to smoulder —

from the national anthem and the national
song to national language and national

animal — leave us little time to

accomplish
anything truly remarkable at the

international level.
To return to matters culinary and our

resplendent intangible heritage in the

realm of
food, khichdi may be a deserving

candidate to represent the nation, but

there are other
signature dishes from diverse regions and

cities that too bear testimony to India’s
syncretic cultural ethos.
India has imbibed diverse influences

through millennia adopting and adapting
everything from costumes to cuisines. It

is ridiculous to associate delicacies,

attire, art
or music with a religion or insist that

only the parochially local can be truly

national.
Much before the birth of the ‘nation

state’ in Western Europe, great Empires

had
spawned globalisation of trade

encouraging cultural cross-fertilisation.

The historic
Silk Road(s) and the legendary Spice

Route connected Asia with Arabia and
Mediterranean Europe.
Food that many consider Indian today may

have come to this land from foreign

shores.
How easily we forget that the samosa, the

popular snack we gleefully gobble,
descended from the Central Asian samboosa

that is fried, boiled or baked from
Kazakhstan to Iran. It is mentioned in

Abul Fazl’s Ain-e-Akbari as samushak and

has
many regional variations. By the time it

travels from the Gangetic belt to the

borders
of Bengal both the name and the filling

change. The singhada here is prepared

with
finely chopped and differently spiced

stir-fried potatoes. The refugee Punjabi

Delhi
population insists on ‘enriching’ it with

paneer and nuts while in Bhopal and
Hyderabad the keema samosa challenges the

potato and peas filling. Luqmi in
Hyderabad seems to resurrect the original

recipe of delicate Iranian pastry best

that
had a pine-nuts and mince filling. Then

there is the sweet samosa that tantalises

us
with some intriguing questions: Is it the

Lobong Lotika that has inspired the

mawa-NMIMS Global Access
School for Continuing Education (NGA-SCE)
Course: Brand Management
Internal Assignment Applicable for April

2018 Examination
packed saffron laced meetha samosa or the

other way around? The misspelt ‘biff’
samosa, which we chanced upon in

Aurangabad last year, is the poor thing

that like
Oscar Wilde’s love, dare not utter its

name in these intolerant times.
The halwa set foot on Indian soil, most

likely on the Malabar Coast, when the

Arab
seafaring traders anchored their ships

here. The Habshi Halwa has an Abyssinian
connection. It has grown roots and spread

its branches in all directions. From

kesari
and badam halwa in southern India to

Karachi halwa, also known as Sindhi or

Bombay
halwa in Mumbai to lockjaws such as Sohan

halwa in Delhi to Gajar ka in Punjab, Seb
ka in Jammu and Kashmir to the ubiquitous

Suji ka and Dal ka halwa in the Hindi
Heartland, the regional and seasonal

variations are countless. The more exotic

recipes
are the Khus Khus ka (poppy seeds) halwa,

Ande ka halwa and yes, Gosht ka halwa.
The upma bears testimony to the fact that

not all halwas need to be sweet!
Not only khichdi but also halwa and

samosa, along with paratha and pulav

celebrate
our resplendent diversity and inclusive

pluralism. These dishes have never

recognised
man-made frontiers or political

boundaries reset by linguistic states.

Why then, waste
time contesting ‘ownership’? It’s much

better to enjoy what we have imported or
inherited from ‘others’. Isn’t it enough

that by improvising on ‘alien’ themes we
continue to experience ecstasy?
a. What according to you is the Brand

Personality of Brand Khichdi? (5 Marks)
b. Suggest Strategies to Position Brand

Khichdi in the World Cuisine Market?
(5 Marks)
**************

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