PC and printing
major HP Inc is witnessing tremendous growth in the Indian market across
product lines and, in 2019, the education sector will be the key pillar for the
company, says Sumeer Chandra, Managing Director, HP Inc India.
For fiscal 2018,
HP reported net revenue of $58.5 billion - up 12 per cent from the prior-year
period. The net revenue for the fourth quarter was $15.4 billion - up 10 per
cent - and the Asia-Pacific and Japan (APJ) region grew 17 per cent.
"In APJ,
India grew faster than expected in fiscal 2018. HP's India performance is in
line with the global and regional growth. We strengthened our presence in the
A3 printer space, introduced 3D printing and bet big on PC gaming in the
country," Chandra told IANS in a free-wheeling interview.
The Indian
economy, he added, is going through interesting dynamics at the moment --
especially on the exchange rate front -- amid some uncertainties such as the
general elections due next year.
"However,
we have our strategy areas ready for next year and providing digital education
to the masses will be a key growth engine. Technology, I believe, can truly
transform fundamental education in India," Chandra emphasised.
For him,
education intersects what is good for business as well as for society.
"Education
meets both the objectives. To empower students, we are driving new price points
in our products. We recently launched an affordable mini desktop to help
students learn and collaborate in schools and educational institutions across
the country," Chandra said.
Starting at Rs
19,990, the HP 260 G3 desktop is enabling schools and institutes set up or
upgrade computers at their science, technology, engineering and mathematics
(STEM) labs at a minimal cost.
When paired with
HP Integrated Work Centre and HP EliteDisplay, teachers can read and present
files effortlessly. With the wide range of input display connectors, documents
can also be shared across multiple monitors.
"The idea
is to help schools either refresh or create digital labs for students. We also
have back-to-campus programmes where we organise discounted sales for our
products so more schools can afford PCs," the HP India executive noted.
Another key HP
initiative is in the form of self-contained, Internet-enabled digital inclusion
and learning labs on wheels, to take digital literacy to every nook and corner
of the country.
Called "HP
World on Wheels" (WoW), the buses are already driving digital literacy in
rural India.
"There are
20-odd PCs in one solar-powered, Internet-enabled bus with a TV at the back,
helping students augment their education, driving youth to learn New-Age
digital skills and providing digital literacy to rural women," said a
beaming Chandra.
People in rural
India are also using the facility for Aadhaar and to access other
citizen-related services.
"We have 19
such buses that have reached over 50,000 people so far. We plan to launch
another 12 buses by March and will have a total of 48 buses soon. In the next
six years, we plan to reach 6,500 villages and empower close to 15 million
lives," Chandra told IANS.
Next on his
agenda is to reach many more students via HP's wide network.
"Affordability
and accessibility are on top of my mind. Via HP's widest network, 600 HP World
stores and tens of thousands of retailers selling HP products, we can reach
many more students," emphasised Chandra.
The company also
has "Smart Learning Hubs", in collaboration with Microsoft, at 600 HP
World stores that are engaging customers and non-customers with edutainment.
HP has organised
160 programmes covering 5,000 school-going children at these stores where they
take coding lessons, learn how to make a YouTube video or create a blog, etc.
"Parents
and children are excited and so are we. We will take this initiative to smaller
cities as well to impart digital literacy to many more children," said
Chandra.
Source – Published
in Economic times.
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