New Project Development (Small, Medium & Big)

What We Do ?

  1. Market Research & Viability Report
  2. Budgeting and Financing, Capital Formation & Loaning of the Project
  3. Dairy Plant Design
  4. Business Planning, Project Management, System & Packaging Development
  5. Equipment Sourcing, Process Description & Capacity Assessment
  6. Staff Training & Product and People Flow
  7. Commissioning of the Plant, QMS, HACCP, GMP, GHP, ISO and other certifications
  8. Sales, Marketing & Subsidy Approvals

Sales and Marketing

  1. Idea Generation
  2. Idea Screening 
  3. Concept Development and Testing
  4. Business Analysis
  5. Technical Implementation
  6. Commercialization
  7. New Product Pricing

All these steps are required for sales & marketing of new project development Most industry leaders see new product development as a proactive process where resources are allocated to identify market changes and seize upon new product opportunities before they occur Many industry leaders see new product development as an ongoing process in which the entire organization is always looking for opportunities.

Subsidy Approval

Financial assistance, either through direct payments or through indirect means such as price cuts and favorable contracts, to a person or group in order to promote a public objective. Subsidies to industries have been instituted on the grounds that their preservation or expansion is in the public interest. Subsidies to the arts, sciences, humanities, and religion also exist in many nations where the private economy is unable to support them. Examples of direct subsidies include payments in cash or in kind, while more-indirect subsidies include governmental provision of goods or services at prices below the normal market price, governmental purchase of goods or services at prices above the market price, and tax concessions. Although subsidies exist to promote the public welfare, they result in either higher taxes or higher prices for consumer goods. Some subsidies, such as protective tariffs, may also encourage the preservation of inefficient producers. A subsidy is desirable only if its effects increase total benefits more than total costs