When we
think of big fat Indian weddings what comes to our minds is the mouth-watering
food, jazzy outfits, sparkling diamonds, the pomp and show-off, the band-waalas, the beautifully decorated mandaps and the ever smiling bride! The
aunties dancing away to the dhols,
the uncles overstuffing themselves with food, the glitzy glamour of the kudis, the kids scurrying around
plucking off flowers- it’s an extravagantly overwhelming affair! In spite of
the fluctuations in the economic conditions, the increasing disposable income,
the recession going on, this is one industry which remains unaffected! People
are always ready to spend extravagantly on weddings- it is one time where they
don’t think before spending for the best and this is what the retailers take
advantage of. The wedding season which kick starts in October is one of the
most colorful, expensive and buzzing with activity. Everyone from the phool-walas to the mithai
walas, the shaadi cards to the photography, the lehenga-sherwanis to the dhols,
mehendi-walas to the bridal make up, the themes to the planners, the
destinations to the décor- it’s all booked months in advance!
Marriages
in India thrive primarily on the notion that it is the single high point in an
individual’s life and they want to make it special. People are ready to spend a
fortune to get married in a unique atmosphere, fulfilling their dreams through
it. Every girl dreams about marriage and how they would like it to be- the
wedding industry revolves around transforming those dreams to reality. Weddings
are no longer a household affair where the relatives troop into the house a
month in advance and plan it out in a ceremony, they are now a well planned,
organized and publicized affair where everything needs to be perfect. Wedding planning as a retail jig
started off in 2002 gaining appeal and popularity at a later stage around 2006.
“BAND BAAJA BARAAT” in 2010 further endorsed the concept of wedding planners
planning small budget weddings to destination weddings, organizing star studded
affairs to the maholle-ki shaadi, the
local mithai- wala to the mehendi -walas-the lighting to the
decoration; it covered all aspects with equal precision and dhamaal. E-portals like shaadi.com and
jeevansaathi.com are fast developing with prospective brides and grooms
registering to find their perfect match.
Today, a
lot of avenues have conceptualized in this industry, making it bigger, better
and easier to ride on. There are wedding malls which are destination stores for
the brides and grooms with designer stores as well as the local designers
making it affordable for all classes. Softwares like Shaadi-e-khaas which helps
manage RSVPs, guest's travel dates, accounts, hotel reservations, providing
directions to the venue, and uploading wedding pictures and videos.
They are commonly used by the wedding planners and retailers who have to
manage a lot of weddings at once. Australian based Rio Tinto is eyeing the
wedding gifts business in India which is another part of this booming sector.
It plans to tap the wedding gifting market of INR 10,000 Crores by opening Nazrana outlets selling diamond
jewellery.
The wedding gifts business is growing from the traditional Haldiram
boxes of sweets to luxury chocolates. The demand is high and people like Alka
Gupta, a Delhi based confectioner, who specializes in wedding chocolates sells
them at INR 900 a kilo in weddings- a fortune spent and a fortune earned!
Aunties and grand-moms have this tradition that benarasi sarees, rajasthani mehendi, Mathura pedes, lucknow chikankari,
Sabyasachi trousseau, Kanjeevaram sarees and Benarasi paan are a must in all weddings. All this and more is being
fulfilled by the new age of wedding planners. At one Delhi wedding
the groom arrived in a top-of-the-range German sports car flown over from
Europe specially for the occasion. Lavishness is infectious. High flying
couples in Bangalore, India’s booming IT hub in the southern state
of Karnataka are abandoning the south's spartan traditional marriages
and turning instead to the theatrics of their northern cousins. A typical
traditional Bangalore wedding costs around 500,000 INR. A Delhi couple could
easily spend this much on flowers alone.
Today,
people in lieu of making their weddings special and different from the ones in
the past, are ready to spend and innovate. They have their set of fantasies to
be converted to realities which range from wild beach weddings to traditional haveli weddings, from hydraulic and
revolving stages to LED lighting, star studded weddings to chateau weddings
English style, the desi beats to the
church violins, weddings in mid air (hot air balloons) to wild forest weddings
(Katie Perry married in the Ranthambore National Park.)- All are a reality! The
charms of Indian weddings have caught the attention of Hollywood stars like Liz
Hurley who celebrated celebrated her wedding in the royal havelis of Rajasthan amidst tradition.
Marriage
retailing is fast catching up with the fantasies of young couples and taking
the load off the parties who can now concentrate on pretty dresses and
stilettos while the organizing is taken over by the marriage retailers striving
to make the perfect moments.
BAND, BAAJA, BARAAT is a BIG BOOMING BUSINESS today.


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Nice article
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