Author: mxmadmin

  • Snapdeal launches Korean inspired beauty brand Miyuki

    By Our Staff

     

    Snapdeal, the online shopping store, has launched beauty brand, Miyuki on its platform. Introduced under the Power Brands program, Miyuki offers a Korean beauty inspired makeup range.

     

    Said Saurabh Bansal, Chief Merchandising Officer, Snapdeal Limited: “Customers have high awareness about the latest trends in beauty and personal care products.  Value-conscious consumers look for products that are trendy, good-quality and also are priced as per their spending comfort. The Miyuki range of products by Snapdeal sellers serves this requirement of premium-quality, trendy and innovative products that are priced right.”

     

  • Chennai Super Kings promote TVS Eurogrip Tyres

    By Our Staff

     

    TVS Eurogrip, the two- and three-wheeler tyre brand, rolled out its new brand campaign – ‘Whistle Through Every Turn’- building on its association with Chennai Super Kings. The campaign includes a set of three new advertising films that accentuate the positioning of the brand as The Bike Tyre Specialist.

     

    The films feature M S Dhoni as the main protagonist, narrating his gripping biking adventures to his teammates. The stories are woven with suspense and light-hearted humor, crafted to connect with the millennials.

     

    Commenting on the new campaign, P Madhavan, EVP – Sales & Marketing, TVS Srichakra Limited, said: “Our last campaign ‘Tame The Turns’ was received well amongst our audience. We are happy to have woven this insight in an interesting way to create a set of #GrippingStories with CSK players. Apart from TV and Digital advertising, the campaign includes on-ground activations and channel partner programmes.”

     

     

  • Bajaj Auto rides to Pitchfork Partners from Ketchum Sampark

    By Our Staff

     

    In what is a significant move in the world of communications, Bajaj Auto, the motorcycles and three-wheeler company, has assigned the mandate for handling its communication initiatives to Pitchfork Partners. The appointment is significant as the account has been with Ketchum Sampark with years. There have been rumours of the account moving nearly around the same time that it was known that former CEO and promoter NS Rajan was exiting the agency.

     

    Speaking about the appointment, Narayan Sundararaman, Head of Marketing, Bajaj Auto Ltd, said: “The market for two- and three-wheelers is changing and so is the communication landscape. Pitchfork Partners’ strong credentials clearly indicate their expertise in this changing landscape, and we are pleased to join hands with them. We are positive that Pitchfork’s expertise will play a key role in the success of our communication goals. We see a huge opportunity for the company and Pitchfork has the best credentials to support us in the coming years.”

     

    Added Jaideep Shergill, Co-Founder, Pitchfork Partners: ‘’We are delighted to partner with India’s largest two-wheeler exporter. Bajaj Auto plays a pivotal role in the automobile sector and has a strong presence across the globe. The company is truly ‘The World’s Favourite Indian’, and we understand its ethos. It is a great opportunity to join hands with Bajaj Auto and work towards building the vision through strategic and insights-driven communication.”

     

  • Thomas Cook rolls out leadership campaign in forex space

    By Our Staff

     

    Thomas Cook Group, global travel company, has launched a campaign to reinforce the company’s leadership position in the foreign exchange space.

     

    Notes a communique: With a clear intent to leverage the opportunity of India’s rapidly growing digital ecosystem and drive scale and speed, Thomas Cook India’s Forex business embarked on a journey of digitalisation pre-pandemic; and leveraged the lockdown to accelerate its digital transformation. The Forex business pivoted to enhanced digital models to deliver on the imperatives of contactless and safe transactions: launched the Virtual Forex Branch equipping its teams with VPN telephony/auto-diallers to stay connected and assist customers from the safety of their homes; the innovative FXMate digital tool to support B2B partners with virtual Foreign Exchange services; online remittances and card top-ups that proved invaluable for students stranded overseas with quick/seamless and secure transactions.

     

    Today, the Company’s unique Omnichannel model empowers customers with choice and convenience: simple, secure and quick bookings via its Online Forex Store; support through its call centre or by walking in to their closest forex outlet to transact with an in-store expert.:

     

  • Good Friday holiday tomorrow. We’ll be back on Mon, April 18

    By Our Staff

     

    Our offices in Mumbai, Delhi and Bengaluru are closed tomorrow, April 15, on account of Good Friday. Hence there will be no scheduled update or newsletter edition tomorrow.

     

    We’ll back on Monday, April 18.

     

  • Manauti Walecha launches agency Communication Casa LLP

    By Our Staff

     

    Manauti Walecha, a PR and communication specialist, has started a public relations and communication agency, called Communication Casa LLP. Walecha has 15+ years of experience under her belt and proven expertise in the field, spanning 80+ clients. Prior to founding Communication Casa, Walecha has worked as an independent consultant supporting brands across verticals like insurance, banking, hospitality, real estate, lifestyle, education, FMCG, and retail.

     

    Said Walecha: “We wanted to build a PR firm that led the way with transparency, where deliverables are not over-promised and under-delivered, but rather exceed client goals. With Communication Casa, we finally give this long-awaited venture a formal name. The vision is to become the trusted PR partner that brands come to when they need to be visible in the right places at the right time.”

     

  • 3 Big & Coming Shifts in Market Research

     

     

    By Ashoke Agarrwal

     

    Ashoke Agarrwal

    I have been a purveyor and user of market research for a little more than four decades now. At 26, I co-founded Francis Kanoi (Kanoi is my family name). I worked with my partner, the legendary Francis Xavier, in designing and executing what was then the most extensive market research study in the country. An all-India, 70,000 sample size study using the Bass Epidemiological Model to forecast the demand for household durables like refrigerators and TVs. The study found 33 subscribers in the first year, and four decades down the line is still going strong.

     

    In the 90s, I directed research and planning at Ulka, with perhaps the strongest strategy team in the advertising world. Anil Kapoor, the MD and his handpicked team, genuinely believed in accessing and acting upon consumer research and insights. That was one of the reasons why Ulka, those days, sat at the high table in strategy sessions with clients’ marketing teams that went beyond advertising and creative strategy.

     

    In the new millennium, I run, in partnership with other veterans of the marketing and marketing services industry, a marketing advisory service with market research as a core input.

     

    Over the decades, market research has been slow to change. However, I have noticed an incipient change in this otherwise conservative industry over the past few years that will snowball into a paradigm shift over the coming decade.

     

    Shifts in socio-economic and technological forces are driving this change.

     

    The following key trends are powering the shift:

    Hyper-individualisation: Sampling lies at the heart of traditional market research. At its most fundamental, sampling methodology is based on an assumption. Sampling assumes that a market divides into a finite number of segments usually defined by simple demographic parameters like age, gender, education, income and pop strata. Further, consumers in each segment behave homogeneously concerning their usage and attitudes towards the focus product or service category. On the strength of this assumption, traditional market research makes do with samples in the hundred and the thousands to assess and forecast markets with tens and hundreds of millions of entities. In essence, this ability is at the heart of the business model and viability of the market research industry. Unfortunately, this assumption has started failing, and doubts have started creeping into traditional market research methods.

     

    The spectacular failings of one aspect of market research that gets frenzied media attention – election forecast polling – have further fuelled these doubts. The core assumption of homogenous demographic segments no longer holds because of the hyper-individualisation of opinions, attitudes, behaviour and lifestyles that the emergence of the digital world has wrought. In the old world, socio-economic forces, including mass media, lead to conformity among people of the same age, gender and social class groups. Today, with a proliferation of career and lifestyle choices, ever-increasing choices in products and services, and the ability to create a curated stream of media-based, every individual is a segment of one.

     

    Big Data & Machine Learning: If market research is to survive, it will need to replace the traditional demographic segments-based sampling (this applies to both quantitative and qualitative market research). To my mind, the answer lies in the realm of Big Data coupled with machine learning. All commercial organisations will need to invest in the collection, warehousing, and analysis of Big Data covering all aspects of their business, including consumers. Big Data and its informed use are becoming critical to any organisation’s competitive strength.

     

    In the age of hyper-individualisation, factors other than demographics drive attitudes, behaviour and lifestyles. For example, a twenty-five-year-old today might have more commonalities in attitudes and lifestyles with a forty-year-old than with any of the individual’s age cohorts. When applied to Big Data on consumers, machine learning can unearth such patterns and build a market segmentation map beyond demographics to actual behaviour. This shift gives back market research its predictive power. For example, in micro-lending, a growing fintech area, such analysis has led to factors like the day of the week an individual applies for a loan being an indicator of his creditworthiness.

     

    There are many sources of Big Data. Governments and social organisations put out public sources. In addition, companies and organizations collect private first-party data from their operations. In fact, for an organization like Facebook and Google, this data is the lifeblood of their business. Finally, a fast-emerging source of Big Data is voluntary disclosures by individuals. In industry parlance, such Big Data collected through voluntary disclosures by individuals is called Zero-Party Data. Heightened privacy concerns and more stringent regulations will herald a new age of Zero-Party Data. I believe this will become the backbone of a new paradigm in market research.

     

    Zero-Party Data, Data Vaults and Active Research: The market research agency of tomorrow will be a collector, storer and analyser of Zero-Party Big Data. The agency will partner with every individual whose data it collects and stores. The collection will be permission-based. The usage will be transparent, and, using blockchain technology, the individual will get a share of all revenues generated from using their data.

     

    The agency will invest in machine learning to unearth patterns and, based on these patterns and directed probes will run market research projects and forecasts for its clients. In addition, the agency will anonymise all data used in such research projects.

     

    Beyond market research, Zero-Party Data and Data Vaults opens up a whole new arena to marketing. I call this arena Active Research. With the individual’s permission, the agency opens up a one-on-one conversation between the individual and brands to unearth needs and desires, customize and test products and services and make relevant offers. The agency mediates and adds value by using state-of-the-art probes and is informed by the ongoing learnings across the database. Since the agency’s Zero-Party Big data covers a substantial part of the market, Active Research becomes a real-world test marketing option and even a viable Route-to-Market (RTM).

     

    Beyond Zero-Party Big Data, Data Vaults and Active Research, other tech-driven significant shifts are likely to drive change in market research over the coming decades. The two technologies that drive this change will be

    :: The emergence of NLP-driven custom-framework-based fourth-generation search engines to generate curated reports will transform secondary research.

    :: Research in the metaverse will take ethnographic research to the next level.

     

    I hope to discuss the above two horizons in market research in later columns.

     

    Ashoke Agarrwal is a veteran advertising professional with around four decades in advertising and marketing services. Agarrwal, a chemical engineer from IIT Mumbai and a postgraduate from IIM Bangalore, is a pro-entrepreneur with past and current ventures in market research, advertising, CGI, e-learning and brand consultancy. He writes on MxMIndia every other Thursday. His views here are personal.

     

  • Das ka Dum with Dr Bhaskar Das | If you were given the choice of being a cheerleader for two IPL 2022 teams, which one would they be?

    Bhaskar DasOnly our Wizard with Words can philosophise on a simple ‘fan moment’ question. Here’s Dr Bhaskar Das for his views in the April 14 edition of Das ka Dum. Read on…

     

    If you wish to access the archives, please go to the Das Ka Dum tab on the website’s top navigation bar.

     

    Q. If you were given the choice of being a cheerleader for two IPL 2022 teams, which one would they be?

     

    A. It is very difficult to take sides at this juncture of the league matches. The twist in the tale in most of the matches makes any prediction a hazardous guess. Having said that, I feel very strongly that the KKR and Gujarat teams are on paper very balanced and their performance have shown potential of being strong contender for the title this year. As a professional, I am a supporter of a performance culture and not to cheer lead on emotional or regional considerations.

     

  • Philips launches campaign to encourage breastfeeding

    By Our Staff

     

    Philips India has launched a campaign, #ParentYourWay, to create conversations around the importance of breastfeeding and how parenting is about trusting your instincts.

     

    Commenting on the campaign Vidyut Kaul, Head, Personal Health, Philips Indian subcontinent said: “When it comes to parenting, we only rely on the information that we have received from our parents and family. We are often skeptical about our methods as nobody is sure which is the right way to bring up their child. There is no textbook which has shown you the correct pathway, but it is important to adopt and adapt to whatever works for you. Our campaign #ParentYourWay is there to encourage and empower all the parents to be confident of their own methods and believe that as a couple, they are doing whatever is best of their child. The notion and thought behind this campaign focus on the importance of breastfeeding while reassuring that we at Philips believe in you as a parent. Philips Avent thrives to support all the parents in their parenthood journey through meaning innovations that enables to bring out their best version as a parent.”

     

  • Max Life Insurance elevates Rahul Talwar to CMO

    By Our Staff

     

    Rahul Talwar
    Rahul Talwar

    Max Life Insurance has announced the appointment of Rahul Talwar as Chief Marketing Officer. In his elevated role, Mathur leads the marketing (brand, channel, customer), corporate communications, consumer insights and customer obsession agenda of the Company. He will be instrumental in enabling consumer and brand connect for all stakeholders, delivering on the promise of making Max Life the most admired life insurance brand. As the Chief Customer Officer of Max Life, Rahul continues to drive the customer strategy and governance to execute on company’s customer centric vision.

     

    Said Prashant Tripathy, Managing Director & Chief Executive Officer, Max Life Insurance: “Rahul has been an exceptional peoples leader, a brand evangelist and a keen change advocate within the organization. His sharp marketing acumen, deep consumer insights and strategic focus has strengthened the goodwill and reputation of the brand amongst our customers. Rahuls experience and expertise will be valuable in shaping the next level of our brand journey aligned with our business objectives. I also thank Aalok for his invaluable contribution to the organization and wish him well for the future.”

     

  • Das ka Dum with Dr Bhaskar Das | Just as an unsuccessful team leader in a company cannot be its CEO, with a 100% loss rate in its IPL 2022 outing, does Rohit Sharma deserve to be Team India captain?

    Bhaskar DasThe Mumbai Indians streak of losses has led to many tongues wagging about the leadership of skipper Rohit Sharma. So we asked Dr Bhaskar Das for his views for the April 18 edition of Das ka Dum. Read on…

     

    If you wish to access the archives, please go to the Das Ka Dum tab on the website’s top navigation bar.

     

    Q. Just as an unsuccessful team leader in a company cannot be its CEO, with a 100% loss rate in its IPL 2022 outing, does Rohit Sharma deserve to be Team India captain?

     

    A. I understand from where you are coming. First, the formats of the two games are different. So, one can’t transpose the performance of one on the other. Secondly, even if one takes a cue from the corporate sector, there is no conclusive proof that removal of the CEO is the only panacea available for sub-optimal performance of a company. The corporate world (globally) is replete with examples of the success and failure of the suggested step. In fact, studies have shown that such steps have harmed more than doing good to the company.

     

    Coming to cricket, bad patches are a part of every player’s life. And it’s not the captain who has failed only (incidentally the captain has taken the responsibility of the poor performance of the franchise), the full playing unit could not rise to the demands of the situation. As in corporates, issues like the Board’s role in guiding the CEO is debated, one might wonder if assumptions during the auction have gone awry. Cricket is a collective game and proceedings may not follow calculations.

     

    Anyway, when it comes to the short form of the game, the matches, proverbially, never get over till the last ball is bowled. Mumbai Indians might also surprise all of us. One win can change the habit of the whole team.

     

  • Kunal Jeswani moves to Singapore

    By Our Staff

     

    After 17 years with the India office, Kunal Jeswani, CEO, Ogilvy India will be moving to Singapore as Group Chief Executive, Ogilvy Singapore and Malaysia. Effective June 1, 2022, VR Rajesh will be elevated to Group President, Ogilvy India.

     

    As Group President, he will lead the integrated Ogilvy India P&L across all our offices and will be responsible for the acceleration of all our core capabilities in India – Advertising, Brand & Content; Experience; Health; PR & Influence and Ogilvy Consulting.

     

    Said Piyush Pandey: “I am delighted that after a stellar performance at Ogilvy India, Kunal is moving to head Ogilvy Singapore & Malaysia. This important responsibility will add international exposure to Kunal’s rich experience across the many aspects of the communications business. I am sure he will be successful in his new role. VR Rajesh, who takes on the baton from Kunal, is an Ogilvy stalwart and I am confident he will take Ogilvy India and our clients to greater heights. On behalf of the Ogilvy India Board, I welcome VR to this new responsibility.”