Currently, we at IppStar are doing an electronic and phone call survey to know the effect of the Covid-19 lockdown in India on the printing and packaging industry and the perception of the industry’s emergence from this disruption. So far, we have received excellent cooperation and have received close 140 responses in the last ten days.
In the past ten days, there have been six holidays, including Mayday and BudhPurnima and the weekends. Still, the IppStar research team of two has persisted in pestering and cajoling responses from what seems to be a reasonably stratified sample of the industry, notably including suppliers.
While we had planned to make the results public on 10 May 2020, not only was it a Sunday, but we were busy with other work and now are planning to release the results on Thursday, 14 May 2020.
To share a partial glimpse of the answers so far, many printers are expecting a significant decline in turnover this year, which was expected. Book printers have reported that not only is there no support from the government, but even due payments have not been forthcoming. The full results later this week will share the response percentages.
The feeling that we are getting is that this is a pretty good survey, based on the respondents sharing all kinds of information with the IppStar researchers. It seems that the questions are both relevant and easy enough to answer. And with over 20 years of face to face research, both the organization and the team are trusted because of their domain knowledge and their confidentiality.
By Wednesday, we hope to surpass our original goal of 200 responses and to deliver the results to each of the respondents as well openly on our website on Thursday evening.
Are you an optimist or a pessimist or a realist?
From the two webinars that I have participated in concerning the print and packaging industry, I have found, on the one hand, wild optimism and the usual stuff about the bright future. There has also been some realism based on how little we know about the potential spread of Covid-19 and its social and economic implications in India.
Overall, many in the packaging sector are looking at their work as a mission. Whether they are optimists or realists, despite the difficulties, they see their partial return to operations as a contribution to the national mission of necessity and revival. There are all kinds of undercurrents such as financial help from the government, the costs of hygienic precautions in the workplace, the health and safety of workers, and the rate at which the economy will come back to what is being called “the new normal.”
Give us three minutes of your valuable time. Here is the link to the quick digital survey – https://forms.gle/kzZPvYrYQoT6a9Lb6
IppStar (IPP Services Training and Research Pvt. Ltd) is the leading market research company that provides on the ground and face to face research, training and consultancy to the printing, packaging and publishing industry in India. From time-to-time, we do small web-based surveys supported by our research executives to understand the current scenarios and upcoming industry trends. Since we have probably talked to you numerous times over the past 20 years and asked you many questions in confidence, you can expect a call from our two full-time researchers who may have even met you in the past and visited your plants. This is the first time that they cannot actually travel across the country and come and see you, so it would be good if you can answer our questions online.
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Naresh Khanna – 10 February 2025
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