44-Ankita Jadhav2
Name : Ankita Sahebrao Jadhav
stream- finance
bachelor in pharmacy.
Undertaking
I declare that this essay is my own creation which is organised by dabawala.enterprises Title and rights of this essay goes to dabawala. They can use this content in any way .
Mumbai Dabbawalas
Mumbai’s dabbawalas are an interesting aspect of the city’s economy and culture. They are a bunch of delivery boys who go from people’s houses to their places of employment with freshly prepared meals, then they bring the empty containers back to their homes. Even though this complex system is run without the use of sophisticated technology, it is well known for its accuracy and efficiency.
System Efficiency: To make sure that every meal gets to the right place, the dabbawalas employ a very well-organized coding system. To sort and deliver the dabbas (lunchboxes), they make use of a combination of colors, numbers, and letters. This technique has an astounding accuracy rate of 99.9999% since it is so effective.
The dabbawala system is an intriguing concept because of its excellent logistical design. Even without cutting-edge technology, the system is renowned for its remarkable accuracy and dependability. The special coding and sorting .
Coding System: A complicated code consisting of a mix of characters, numbers, and colors is written on each Tiffin box. The destination, the pick-up location, and the return route are all indicated by this code. This code is used by the dabbawalas to route and sort the dabbas. With its straightforward yet incredibly efficient design, the coding system enables dabbawalas to oversee thousands of meals every day.
Difficulties and Opportunities for the Future
The dabbawalas are successful, but they still have to deal with a number of issues that could affect their business in the future.
Infrastructure and Urbanization: The dabbawala system faces issues due to the swift changes in infrastructure and urbanization. Mumbai’s population growth makes it more difficult to manage delivery routes and vehicles. Their operational paradigm must be continuously modified to accommodate new infrastructure and changing metropolitan settings.
Technological Disruptions: There are advantages and disadvantages to the development of digital platforms and technology. Technology may improve business operations, but it also brings in new rivals in the form of food delivery applications and services. The dabbawalas’ continued importance will depend on how well they manage tradition and technology.
Dynamics of the Workforce: The majority of dabbawala workers are men from particular areas.
Mumbai Dabbawalas, who were established in 1890, are the guys who serve daily home-cooked meals to Mumbai residents from their homes to their offices while wearing traditional white attire and Gandhi caps.
They are a formidable force of about 5,000 individuals who make sure that 2,00,000 people arrive at their workplaces for lunch on time.
A Parsi banker in Fort Branch desired home-cooked meals in his office over 125 years ago. Thus, he designated a young Gurgaon resident to pick him up for lunch every afternoon at his house.
That’s how the first Dabbawala’s job came to be. At that time, a Mumbai dabbawalla cost around two annas.
Mahadeo Havaji Bacche’s imaginative efforts soon began to pay off as the company began to pick up steam and acquire recognition. Seeing this as a perfect opportunity, he made the decision to turn it into a business.
That translates to almost 2,60,000 transactions completed error-free in roughly six hours on six days a week, 52 weeks a year. Unexpectedly, the dabbawalas have accomplished that degree of performance in an economical and environmentally responsible way—all without the use of digital or IT platforms or even cell phones. According to a Harvard Business School study, it received a “Six Sigma” rating, indicating that there were fewer than 3.4 errors made by the dabbawalas per million transactions. Less than 212 Dabbas go missing or are delayed in a year, out of approximately 2,00,000 deliveries made six days a week. You must be wondering how a decentralized, ill-educated team can function flawlessly in such a demanding setting.
.One of the most intricate, extensive, and frequently used urban commuter lines in the world, the Mumbai Suburban Railway, is essential to the Dabbawalas’ business operations.
Due to its basic design, delivery personnel must travel between the railway stations and the homes and offices of their clients on bicycles and handcarts.
Every day, a Dabba travels through multiple hands before arriving at its final destination. A dabbawalla comes to the customer’s house in the morning and takes it to the closest train station. After that, it is arranged according to its destination on a wooden carte.
Process
For the Dabbawalas, having the proper procedure signifies much more than just implementing effective workflows. It also involves everything in the organization, including how information is collected, using built-in buffers, and strictly following the standards.
SWOT Analysis Strength
- Teamwork, honesty, and discipline
- Ownership, time management
- Low cost, customer satisfaction
- A service commitment, process consistency
Weakness
- It depends on Mumbai’s local train service
- Restricted access to education limits
Opportunities
- Have a tie-up with caterers to serve varieties of food
- Expanding to other cities
Threat
- During high alerts in the city, Dabbawalas face a lot of issues
Awards & Recognition
- Varkari Prabhodhan Mahasmati Dindi Sohala
- Invitation from CII for conference arranged in Bangalore
- Documentaries made by UTV, BBC, ZEE TV, and MTV
- World record in time management
How COVID-19 affected the Dabbawalas
The COVID-19 Pandemic has dealt a cruel blow to the men in white. Thousands of dabbawalas retreated to their original homes in rural locations as the virus raged across Mumbai, a city of over 20 million people, crippling the century-old food supply chain.
Some of them were surviving on state rations and charities. They neither had electricity nor mobile connectivity in their homes.
Till now, the government did not give permission for the dabbawalas to travel in local trains, which makes it difficult for them to reach their final destinations.
Growth of Dabbawalas
However, the world of Dabbawalas is challenging, showing the spirit and grit of Mumbai, a city with millions of people from different parts of the world.
Many dabbawalas have had to overcome challenges like floods and railway strikes. Also, they have had to advance their skills in recent times, like learning to speak English and embracing technology.
In October 2020, an official website for the dabbawalas, digitaldabbawala.com, was launched. It is an official website that includes details of all the delivery organizations.
In November 2020, they launched a Dabbawala app to make food delivery accessible and uncomplicated. The app helps you find food and order food from where you are.
You type an address, and the app tells you the restaurants that can deliver to your area. Also, you can search restaurants by cuisine, menu, and name.
Once you find what you want, you can place your order online without extra charges. The app also offers access to coupons, special deals, and a customer care team with 24/7 assistance.
Soon, the deliverymen started growing their services from delivering lunchboxes to delivery of digital services like electronic registration of marriages and property.
Customers can now place their lunch orders through the website. In addition, they can choose between a monthly or annual subscription for payment.
The dabbawalas partner with 14 local restaurants to deliver food to clients. Recently, they have been encouraging customers to order directly from the hotels and receive nearly 25% discount and free home delivery.
In August 2021, the dabbawalas launched their digital operation known as Central Kitchen, which lets customers place orders for a wide variety of food for delivery.
The idea behind these new creativities is to think outside the box and to expand the Mumbai Dabbawalas business, starting from lunch delivery to a wide range of other services that will help to protect their source of income and trade after the Pandemic is over.
The men in white continue to deliver lunch and protect the future of the world’s oldest and most respected Mumbai dabbawalla system.
The men in white will still be delivering lunch, though, safeguarding the future of one of the world’s oldest and most respected food delivery systems.
The dabbawalas show that an organization doesn’t need extraordinary talent to achieve outstanding performance with the right system.
In today’s modern age, when we are addicted to the latest technologies, the example of Mumbai Dabbawalas shows that sometimes the best plan is the “simplest.”
In July 2005, Mumbai was battered by unusually heavy monsoon rains. In just 12 hours, more than 25 inches deluged India’s business capital. That, combined with record high tides, wreaked widespread havoc, bringing the city to a virtual standstill. As the water rose waist-high in many areas, people found themselves stranded at railway stations, in trains, and on roads and sidewalks.
Among them were many of Mumbai’s dabbawalas, who deliver meals prepared in customers’ homes to their offices and then return the empty dabbas (metal lunchboxes) the same day. Nevertheless, on the second day of the flooding, even before the city had limped back to life, the dabbawalas were back on the job, wading through the water. They quickly became a symbol of gritty resilience.
The 5,000 or so dabbawalas in the city have an astounding service record. Every working day they transport more than 130,000 lunchboxes throughout Mumbai, the world’s fourth-most-populous city. That entails conducting upwards of 260,000 transactions in six hours each day, six days a week, 52 weeks a year (minus holidays), but mistakes are extremely rare. Amazingly, the dabbawalas— semiliterate workers who largely manage themselves—have achieved that level of performance at very low cost, in an ecofriendly way, without the use of any IT system or even cell phones.
The dabbawala service is legendary for its reliability. Since it was founded, in 1890, it has endured famines, wars, monsoons, Hindu-Muslim riots, and a series of terrorist attacks. It has attracted worldwide attention and visits by Prince Charles, Richard Branson, and employees of Federal Express, a company renowned for its own mastery of logistics.
How can a poorly educated, decentralized workforce perform so beautifully in an environment that can charitably be described as unpredictable and challenging? The answers hold lessons not only for companies seeking to expand in emerging markets but also for all developed-economy enterprises whose ranks are dominated by unexceptional talent. Even firms that can afford to hire stars typically depend on a cast of average people to support them. The dabbawalas’ success is proof that with the right system in place, ordinary workers can achieve extraordinary results.
After hearing about the dabbawalas, I traveled to Mumbai to uncover what they might teach us about managing a superior service organization. With the support of Harvard Business School’s India Research Center (IRC), I reviewed the literature on the dabbawalas, interviewed workers and supervisors in their organization, and accompanied them during a typical delivery day. I analyzed their operation and its inner workings.
The dabbawalas have an overall system whose basic pillars—organization, management, process, and culture—are perfectly aligned and mutually reinforcing. In the corporate world, it’s uncommon for managers to strive for that kind of synergy. While most, if not all, pay attention to some of the pillars, only a minority address all four. Culture, for example, often gets short shrift: Too few managers seem to recognize that they should nurture their organizations as communities—not just because they care about employees but because doing so will maximize productivity and creativity and reduce risk. The takeaway: Managers shouldn’t think of themselves merely as leaders or supervisors; they also need to be architects who design and fine-tune systems that enable employees to perform at optimal levels.
To understand how to accomplish that, let’s explore the ways in which each of the dabbawalas’ pillars contributes to a system that is focused on achieving one simple goal: on-time delivery.
Organization: A Clockwork Design
A key to the dabbawalas’ operations is the Mumbai Suburban Railway, one of the most extensive, complex, and heavily used urban commuter lines in the world. Its basic layout allows delivery people with bicycles and handcarts to travel short distances between the stations and customers’ homes and offices.
It is partly the railway system that creates demand in the first place. Crowded trains make carrying dabbas difficult, and office workers don’t regularly eat out—because of the expense, a preference for home-cooked food, and the poor quality of the few office cafeterias that exist. So office employees have their lunches prepared at home and delivered by the dabbawalas after the morning rush hour.
On any given day, a dabba changes hands several times. In the morning a worker picks it up from the customer’s home and takes it (along with other dabbas) to the nearest train station, where it is sorted and put onto a wooden crate according to its destination. It is then taken by train to the station closest to its destination. There it is sorted again and assigned to another worker, who delivers it to the right office before lunchtime. In the afternoon the process runs in reverse, and the dabba is returned to the customer’s home.
To perform their work most efficiently, the dabbawalas have organized themselves into roughly 200 units of about 25 people each. These small groups have local autonomy. Such a flat organizational structure is perfectly suited to providing a low- cost delivery service. (Dabbawala customers pay only about 400 or 500 rupees, or $7 to $9, a month.) There are other delivery services that charge more and cater to local groups, but as far as I know, the dabbawalas have no significant rivals at their price point and scale. Even though the service has been in business for more than a hundred years, no one has been able to replicate it.
A regulatory mechanism.
The railway system sets the pace and rhythm of work. The daily schedule determines when certain tasks need to be done and the amount of time allowed for each. For instance, workers have 40 seconds to load the crates of dabbas onto a train at major stations and just 20 seconds at interim stops.
Workers have 40 seconds to load the crates of dabbas onto a train at major stations and just 20 seconds at interim stops.
The tight schedule helps synchronize everyone and imposes discipline in an environment that might otherwise be chaotic. In addition, it provides clear feedback when performance slips. If a worker is late dropping off his dabbas at a station, his delinquency is immediately obvious to everyone, and alternative arrangements then have to be made for transporting his dabbas on another train. Problems can’t be swept under the rug and must be dealt with promptly.
Many service businesses lack a built-in mechanism like a railway. But they can adopt a system that confers similar benefits. For example, many product development teams set up a schedule in which they cycle repeatedly through the design-build-test process, rather than doing each step once and waiting until late in the game to perform testing. This allows them to get quick feedback on work and find problems early. A comparable mechanism in manufacturing is takt time, which involves matching the rate of demand with the rate of production to synchronize the entire operation. (A takt time of one minute means that a widget is produced every minute because there is demand for one widget a minute.) A faster pace generates waste, and a slower one doesn’t meet demand. This rhythm drives everything and exposes deviations from the norm.
Management: A Self-Organized Democracy
The dabbawalas essentially manage themselves with respect to hiring, logistics, customer acquisition and retention, and conflict resolution. This helps them operate efficiently and keep costs low and the quality of service high. All workers contribute to a charitable trust that provides insurance and occasional financial aid—for example, when a worker needs to replace a bicycle that’s been stolen or is broken beyond repair.
Each dabbawala is an entrepreneur who is responsible for negotiating prices with his own customers. However, governing committees set guidelines for prices, which take into account factors such as the distance between a customer’s residence and office and the distance between that office and the closest railway station. Because dabbawalas own their relationships with customers and tend to work in the same location for years, those relationships are generally long-term, trusting ones. The dabbawalas within a group don’t have a monopoly over any particular area; they’re encouraged to seek out new customers, even in a building that is served by a colleague. However, once the relationship is established, no other dabbawala is permitted to go after the same customer and “steal” him. The dabbawalas take advantage of their more-relaxed afternoon schedule to interact with customers to share information about upcoming changes, collect monthly fees, and discuss any issues.
When someone wants to join a local dabbawala group, the group will assess whether there’s enough demand to add another person. New hires are trained on the job by the group. They learn to assist in all activities. After a probation period of six months, they can buy into the business with a sum equal to 10 times their expected monthly income. So, for example, if a new hire expects to make 7,000 rupees (about $126) a month at a particular unit, then he would need 70,000 rupees to become an equity partner who would share in the profits.
Workers with more than 10 years of experience serve as supervisors, or muqaddams. Every group has one or more muqaddams, who supervise the coding, sorting, and loading and unloading of dabbas and are responsible for resolving disputes, overseeing collections, and troubleshooting. They also pick up and deliver dabbas themselves. Members elect representatives from among the muqaddams to serve on two managing committees that meet monthly to tackle operational and organizational issues as well as problems that cannot be resolved at the local level.
Process: Simplicity, Flexibility, and Rigor
For the dabbawalas, having the right process in place means more than simply implementing efficient work flows. It also entails just about everything in the organization, including the way information is managed, the use of built-in buffers, and a strict adherence to standards.
Simple codes.
To convey information, the dabbawalas rely on a system of very basic symbols. The lid of a dabba has three key markings on it. (See the exhibit “Cracking the Dabba Code.”) The first is a large, bold number in the center, which indicates the neighborhood where the dabba must be delivered. The second is a group of characters on the edge of the lid: a number for the dabbawala who will make the delivery, an alphabetical code (two or three letters) for the office building, and a number indicating the floor. The third—a combination of color and shape, and in some instances, a motif—indicates the station of origin. Customers supply small bags for carrying their dabbas, and the variation in the bags’ shapes and colors helps workers remember which dabba belongs to which customer.
Cracking the Dabba Code
Simple symbols tell the dabbawalas where each lunchbox needs to go. Number for the district the dabba is …
The coding system contains just enough information for people to know where to deliver the dabbas, but it doesn’t allow for full addresses. The dabbawalas, who run the same route for years, don’t need all those details, and inserting them would clutter the lid, slow the sorting process, and possibly lead to errors.
This insight is applicable in many other contexts. People operate in a visual world. Whether you run an airline, hotels, or a university, how and what information is conveyed can make a huge difference. Less is often more because it can reduce confusion. Recognizing this, Delta Air Lines recently redesigned its boarding passes to make them less cluttered and to highlight key information such as the destination city. The simple coding system is crucial given the extremely tight tolerances of airline operations.
Buffer capacity.
Even with an efficient coding system, workers still have a tiny margin of error for certain tasks. The allotted time for picking up a dabba at a house, for example, might be only 30 to 60 seconds, and any number of small delays could easily have a cascading effect that slowed thousands of deliveries. So, to stay on schedule, each group has two or three extra workers who fill in wherever they are needed, and all members are cross-trained in different activities: collecting, sorting, transporting, finance, and customer relations.
Marriott Hotels takes a similar approach. About half its employees are cross- trained—so front-desk agents, for example, can quickly help guests with their luggage if a bellhop isn’t available. The company claims that such cross-training enabled its Cancun hotel to return to business quickly after Hurricane Wilma swept through the region in 2005.
As Zeynep Ton points out in “Why ‘Good Jobs’ Are Good for Retailers” (HBR January–February 2012), cross-training is one of the elements that allow successful retailers such as QuikTrip convenience stores, Mercadona and Trader Joe’s supermarkets, and Costco wholesale clubs to “not only invest heavily in store employees but also have the lowest prices in their industries, solid financial performance, and better customer service than their competitors.”
Many manufacturers, of course, rely on such built-in buffers, too. At Toyota, the group and team leaders are also reserve workers, ready to fill in quickly for any task or function.
The lesson: Especially in a highly variable environment, organizations can’t always run as leanly as they might like. They need just enough extra capacity to handle problems and emergencies but not so much that it bogs down the operation and becomes wasteful overhead.
Rigorous adherence to processes and standards.
This minimizes variations that might throw a wrench into the works. The dabbas, for instance, are all roughly the same size and cylindrical shape. To encourage customers to conform, containers incur an additional fee when, say, they are so large that they require special handling. Unusual containers that interfere with the delivery operation are simply not accepted. This uniformity allows the dabbas to be packed quickly onto crates, which are also a standard size so that they can be efficiently loaded onto trains.