Guesstimate in The Indian Context
Guesstimate in The Indian Context
Guesstimate in The Indian Context
The START BIG approach & The START SMALL approach ....................................................... 2
Estimate the market for bicycles India. ................................................................................................... 3
Estimate the litres of cola sold in Delhi per day ..................................................................................... 3
Estimate the number of denims sold in India in a year. .......................................................................... 4
Estimate the amount of petrol used in Delhi per day .............................................................................. 4
Estimate the market size of paint industry in India ................................................................................. 5
Estimate the amount of water that can fill an aircraft ............................................................................. 6
Estimate the number of red lights in Delhi ............................................................................................. 6
Estimate the number of leather balls sold in India in a year ................................................................... 7
Estimate the number of light bulbs used in St. Stephens in a year. ........................................................ 8
Estimate the number of one rupee coins that would fit in a normal size room ....................................... 9
Estimate the number of vehicles crossing the road in front of FMS. ...................................................... 9
Estimate the number of number of subscribers of Economist in India ................................................. 10
Estimate the number of cars sold by Maruti in India. ........................................................................... 10
Estimate the number of beers sold in Goa every day. ........................................................................... 11
Estimate the market for air conditioners in Bangalore in 1 year........................................................... 11
Additional Examples............................................................................................................................. 12
Useful Data Sources.............................................................................................................................. 13
THE START SMALL APPROACH: Take a town of 27,000 (about 1/10,000 of the
population). If you use the same assumption that half the town lives in houses in groups of
three, then there are 4,500 houses, plus another 10 percent, which makes 5,000 houses.
Painted every 10 years, 500 houses are being painted in any given year. If each house has
2,000 square feet of wall, and each gallon of paint covers 100 square feet, then each house
needs 20 gallons so 10,000 gallons of house paint are sold each year in your typical town.
Perhaps 8,000 of those are white. Multiply by 10,000 you have 80 million gallons.
Reference :
http://www.bc.edu/clubs/bcfa/docs/vault/Brainteasers%20and%20Guesstimates.pdf
India has a population of 1.2B; India has ~30% population living below the poverty
line. It would be fair to assume that a negligible proportion of poor population owns
bicycles.
Of the remaining 0.84M, approximately 50% fall in the age group of 8-40, the core
bicycle using population. This amounts to ~0.42M people.
Of these, assuming equal distribution between sexes, there are ~0.21M males and
~0.21M females.
Here we assume that 75% of men buy at least single cycle in their lifetime and at least
20% women buy single cycle at some point. That makes a total of ~0.2M.
Lets divide the population further into high users, middle users and low income
groups. Assume high income is 10%, middle income is 60% and low income is 30%
Assume that the high income group buys a cycle every 5 year; middle usage buys a
cycle every 10 year, low usage buy 1 during their lifetime
Calculating, cycles bought in a year = 0.2 (0.1/5 + 0.6/10 + 0.3/30) = 0.2 (0.02 + 0.06
+ 0.01) = ~0.02M
Assume the average price per denim to be 1000Rs. Thus, market size = Rs. 20B
India has a population of 1.2B; India has ~30% population living below the poverty
line. It would be fair to assume that a negligible proportion of poor population wears
denims.
Of the remaining 0.84M, approximately 50% fall in the age group of 6-35, the core
denim wearing population. This amounts to ~0.42M people.
Of these, assuming equal distribution between sexes, there are ~0.21M males and
~0.21M females.
Here we assume that 80% of men buy atleast single denim in a year and atleast 50%
women buy single denim.
Lets divide the population further into high income, middle income and low income
groups. Assue high income is 10%, middle income is 60% and low income is 30%
Assume that the high income group buys 3 denims per person per year; middle
income buys 2 denims per person per year, low income buy 1 denim per person per
year.
Calculating, male denims bought = 0.8*0.21*(0.1*3 + 0.6*2 + 0.3*1) =
0.8*0.21*0.18 = 0.03M; calculating female denims bought = 0.5*0.21*(0.1*3 + 0.6*2
+ 0.3*1) = 0.02M. Thus, total = 0.05M
Assume the average price per denim to be 1000Rs. Averaging for branded products in
the 1800Rs pus range and non-branded in the ~500Rs. range. Thus, market size = Rs.
5B
India has a population of 1.2B, India has 70% population living in rural India. It
would be fair to assume that a negligible proportion of rural population uses paints.
Given an urban population of 36M and an assuming a average family size of 5,
number of households in urban India are 7.2M
Assume that only 75% of urban houses use paint or related products. Some houses in
India still use lime (chuna) to paint walls. Thus, relevant households are 5.4M
Assuming an average wall space in every household to be 5000 sq.ft, the amount of
wall space painted in Indian urban households is = 27*109
Further, one gallon of paint can be used to approximately paint 200 sq.ft area. Thus,
the number of gallons required to paint these urban household walls is ~ 14*107
gallons of paint
Using this figure to represent 70% of the volume of paint used, we can estimate the
remaining volume of paint used by industrial sector, this would amount to ~6*107
gallons of paint
Considering that a household gets painted once in every 2 years, annual volume of
paint required = 10*107 gallons of paint
Considering industrial sector gets painted once in 4 years (average), annual volume of
paint required = ~3*107 gallons of paint
Hence, the total annual consumption is approximately 13*107 gallons of paint across
all segments.
Adding 10% to this for rural consumption and another 10% for painting of newly
constructed households, we get a total consumption of 16*107 gallons of paint
Assuming an average price of Rs 1000 per gallon of paint, the market size of paint
annually in India is approximately Rs. 16*109
Answer: Market size of paint in India is approximately Rupees 1600 crores or 1.6B
Let us assume the length of the plane to be ~70m, internal width of the plane can be
calculated taking into consideration the seat and gallery space, given a 3*3
configuration of seats, each set of 3 seats would approximately be 2.5m wide. Thus,
internal cabin width is approximately 6m. Similarly, the height of cabin can be
estimated the cabin allows a 6ft. man to stand comfortably, cabin height is
approximated at 7ft. or 2m
The cabin space represents a cuboid with rounded edges. Estimating the volume of the
cuboid, we arrive at 840 cu.m
Correcting for loss of volume due to rounded edges, decrease this by 10%, arrive at
cabin volume of ~760 cu.m
Assuming cockpit, food gallery, washroom areas cumulatively account for ~10% of
cabin area, estimated volume of plane is ~830 cu.m
Assuming cargo space to be of dimension of 2m (height), 8m(width) and 10m
(length), cargo space volume is ~160 cu.m
Adding up, approximately 1000cu.m of water can fit in a Boeing 747
India has a population of 1.2B. Assuming almost equal distribution between both
sexes, India has 0.6B males. Here we assume that a very small fraction of girls play
cricket and can be ignored for this calculation.
India has 50% population below the age of 25 years. Applying this ratio to male
population, there are 0.3B men in India below 25 years of age.
Assuming equal distribution of people in the age 0-24, there are approximately 0.2B
males in the age group 10-25.
According to the World Bank, ~50% of Indian population lives on less than US 2$ per
day, or approximately less than 100Rs per day. Given the approximate cost of a
cricket leather ball is 150-200 Rs, we can assume that a very small fraction of leather
balls are bought by this segment.
o This reduces our target set of potential customers to 0.1B males in the age
group 10-25
In a cricket crazy nation like India, let us assume 75% of these have played cricket at
some point in time. This gives us 75M cricket players in India.
Of these, let us assume 10% have played with leather balls and 5% have bought a
leather ball ever in their lives. Thus, approximately 3.8M Indians have ever bought a
leather ball.
Of these, we can further assume that 50% are one-time purchasers, 40% are sporadic
purchasers and 10% are regular purchasers.
Of the one-time purchasers (~2M) , distributing over 20 years of life at an average,
yearly purchase is equal to 1,00,000.
Of the sporadic purchasers (1M), assume they buy a single leather ball every 2 years.
Thus, every year they buy 5,00,000 leather balls.
Of the regular purchasers (0.8M), assume they buy 2 leather balls per year. Thus, they
buy 16,00,000 leather balls yearly. (These include the professional players and team
members of various cricket clubs assume, at an average, the association/club buys 2
balls per payer per year)
Accounting for all kinds of purchasers, total leather balls bought in india in a year =
22,00,000
Adjustments:
o Adding 5% of this number to account for balls used in national/international
cricket matches = 1,10,000
o Also, adding 2% for balls bought by those with income below $2 per day and
for girl cricket enthusiasts = 44,000
o Total = 22,00,000 + 1,10,000 + 44,000 = ~ 23,50,000
Estimate the number of one rupee coins that would fit in a normal size room
Working assumption The room is empty, i.e bare, without any furniture/person/object.
Answer: Number of coins that would fit a normal size room are 7.5 * 107
Answer: Total Maruti cars sold in India in a year= 60,000 + 72,000= 1,32,000
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Answer: The number of sales of air conditioners in Bangalore in a year = 15/5 = 3 lakh.
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Additional Examples
1. Estimate the number of working ATMs in NCR?
2. How many Maggi packets are used in the FMS canteen in a week?
3. Estimate weekly revenues of the FMS canteen (Assume normal week and no seasonal
variations)
4. Estimate the number of males who get a haircut in Delhi in 1 day?
5. How many people in India will be in flight at any given point of the day?
6. What is the number of flights leaving the Mumbai terminal each day?
7. What is the market size of disposable diapers in India?
8. Estimate the total number of chairs in the Delhi University North Campus
9. What is the total number of cars sold in Delhi per year?
10. Estimate total rail-line network in India
11. Estimate the number of vehicles crossing the road in front of FMS.
12. Estimate the number of popcorns sold in PVR Saket everyday.
13. Estimate the market for Pepsi in India.
14. Estimate the number of number of subscribers of Economist in India.
15. Estimate the market for Iphone4 in India
16. Estimate the number of Macbooks sold in India per day.
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