Mrs Bectors is that bakery aunty who turned her kitchen experiment into an ₹8,500 Cr empire. From Cremica biscuits that once survived every school tiffin to English Oven breads stacked in Swiggy Instamart, this company runs on carbs and compounding. With 1,907 Cr sales, 139 Cr profit, and an insane 71% capacity utilization, Mrs Bectors is literally kneading dough – both in ovens and on Dalal Street.
2. Introduction
Picture 1978. While Bollywood was still disco-dancing and Maruti 800 wasn’t even born, Mrs. Rajni Bector was whipping ice creams and biscuits in Punjab. Fast forward: today her brand is feeding McDonald’s, Domino’s, KFC, Subway, and half the QSR world that pretends buns are gourmet.
The company now runs on two engines:
Cremica (biscuits) – everything from butter cookies to those weird animal-shaped “Teddies” kids throw but never eat.
English Oven (breads & bakery) – sliced bread, buns, pav, muffins, brownies, and zero-maida woke bread for gym bros who still end up ordering pizza.
They’ve gone global too: exports to 70+ countries, supplying Walmart shelves and tweaking recipes for MENA uncles who like their crackers spicy.
But don’t confuse this with Britannia or Nestlé-level scale. Mrs Bectors is still a mid-cap challenger trying to jump from your local Big Bazaar shelf into institutional kitchens and Instagram reels.
The growth formula? Capex + capacity expansion + QSR tie-ups + Q-commerce hustle. In short, they’re selling bread and biscuits, but pitching it like SaaS.
Question: Is bread really recession-proof, or do we desis switch back to plain roti when inflation bites?
3. Business Model (WTF Do They Even Do?)
It’s simple. They make biscuits & breads. Sell in India and abroad. Make money. Repeat.
Biscuits (59.5% of revenue) – Cremica creams, cookies, digestives, Marie, crackers, bourbon, party crackers, and “NaturBaked” guilt-free stuff nobody buys twice.