Author: mxmadmin

  • Ayushmann Khurrana to promote Cipla’s Maxirich multivitamin

    By Our Staff

     

    Maxirich, the flagship multivitamin supplement brand of Cipla Health, in association with Taproot Dentsu, has launched a new television commercial, featuring its brand ambassador Ayushmann Khurrana. It is conceptualised and executed by Taproot Dentsu.

     

    Commenting on the new Maxirich TVC, Shivam Puri, CEO, Cipla Health said: “With Ayushmann, we have found the perfect fit for the brand as he exudes the qualities that the brand intends to deliver to our consumers. Through this commercial, our endeavour is to increase the adoption of multivitamins among the masses and make it a part of their daily diet. Maxirich Gold promises max energy & max immunity so that we are all ready for every challenge in life.”

     

    Added Abhishek Deshwal, Executive Creative Director, Taproot Dentsu: “The energy demonstrated by Ayushmann Khurrana in  the campaign feels truly infectious and aptly demonstrates how the world can be a better place when you are full of energy and noble intentions.”

     

     

  • Reliance-backed Fynd Platform launches ad campaign

    By Our Staff

     

    Reliance-owned startup Fynd has rolled out an ad titled ‘Retail ka Naya address!’ to promote the Fynd platform. The ad campaign is conceptualised and produced by agency EmotionalFulls.

     

    Said Ragini Varma, Growth Lead at Fynd Platform: “Covid-19 has made the traditional business method obsolete. It has opened the doors for embracing the digital route and online transactions. As a result, it became challenging for small retailers to continue their survival as they lacked resources, proper understanding, and knowledge for starting their business online. Witnessing such a backdrop, we have helped these retailers to start their online businesses to cater to the changing customer preferences with the right guidance and support. We have helped these brands undergo a digital transformation by solving various problems related to delivery assistance, payment gateway integration, data insights with tracking and analytics, etc. We have launched our latest ad campaign to further extend our support to businesses in need and urge them to integrate with us.”

     

     

  • Flipkart unveils three new ad films

    By Our Staff

     

    Flipkart has rolled out three new ad films under its ongoing campaign #BachonKaKhel to highlight the industry-first benefits and policies introduced for 4.2 lakh sellers. The campaign is conceptualised by Art-E MediaTech.

     

    Said Jagjeet Harode, Senior Director and Head – Marketplace, Flipkart: “As a homegrown e-commerce marketplace, we are constantly innovating and bringing new solutions to empower our seller partners from across the country. In this digital commerce era, we want to handhold and nurture MSMEs from Tier-2 and Tier-3 cities, who are ambitious and are looking to unlock their growth potential. Through the ‘Bachon Ka Khel’ campaign, we aim to educate the seller community about the ease of doing business with Flipkart in a simple and efficient manner.”

     

    Added Rohit Sakunia, Co-founder and Chief Business Officer, Art-E MediaTech: “For us, the task at hand was to retain the impact and relevance of the characters and their roles as portrayed in the first two series of Bachon Ka Khel campaign. At the same time, we wanted the viewers to feel the air of change in not only the e-commerce platform but also in the way it positively impacts the sellers. With a fresh set-up and more new characters than the previous ones, these films are a whole new story of the way the Flipkart Seller Hub is changing the dynamics of online selling in India, by placing the seller and entrepreneur community in the centre of focus of these innovations.”

     

  • Ikea rolls out new campaign for home furnishings

    By Our Staff

     

    Swedish conglomerate Ikea has launched a new integrated campaign in India across television, OOH, and digital channels. The campaign focuses on Ikea’s wide range of home furnishing solutions. Under this campaign, Ikea has released two TVCs, featuring two of its iconic products for the living room and bedroom.

     

    Commenting on the new campaign, Kavitha Rao, Country Commercial Manager, Ikea India said: “At Ikea, we understand the need of having a home that truly resonates with how our customers feel, and therefore, we have designed our offerings to suit our customers’ needs. We aim to bring great design that is functional and affordable into the lives of our customers and make their everyday better. We offer a wide range of over 8000 products that enable customers to furnish their homes to cater to the diverse needs of the family.”

     

  • Wondrlab acquires performance marketer Neon

    By Our Staff

     

    Wondrlab has acquired Neon, a performance marketing agency. The Neon acquisition follows the WYP acquisition and the Opportune acquisition.

     

    According to a communique, Neon uses data, creativity, and deep platform understanding to successfully deliver bottom-of-the-funnel campaigns. Since its inception, the agency has helped more than 100 brands grow, by delivering on conversions and leads.

     

    Said Saurabh Varma, Founder & CEO at Wondrlab: “Meher and his team share our passion for building incredible solutions that straddle both products and service. As the teams come together, it will help us deliver a seamless full-funnel experience for our clients. Super exciting.”

     

    Added Meher Patel, Founder of Neon: “We are excited to be a part of the Wondrlab family. The ambition to build India’s first Network is exciting to say the least. The singular focus on delivering on the full-funnel seamlessly is exciting. What is even more exciting is the ability of the Group to have real skin in the game. Our journey at Neon gets new wings.”

     

    Said Rakesh Hinduja, Co-founder and Managing Partner at Wondrlab: “The only way to deliver on the full-funnel promise is to have incredible leadership and deep specialization. The balance between great storytelling and delivering performance has to go hand-in-hand. Beyond that, the chemistry and the human connect is critical. That is what we have focused on through the acquisition phase. Wondrlab wishes a warm welcome to the entire Neon family.”

     

    Added Yesha Shetty, Co-Founder of Neon: “As a creative leader focused on performance, I look forward to learning how Wondrlab teams create magic.”

     

  • Bajaj Allianz Life ‘Superstar After Retirement’ video

    By Our Staff

     

    Bajaj Allianz Life has launched a  music video tilted ‘Superstar After Retirement’, created by retired seniors showcasing their creativity and fulfilling their life goals.

     

    Commenting on the initiative,  Chandramohan Mehra, Chief Marketing Officer, Bajaj Allianz Life, said “Aligned to the brand purpose of enabling LifeGoals, we launched Superstar After Retirement initiative to encourage retired senior citizens to rediscover their talents and explore a world full of possibilities and freedom. Financial security provided through a regular stream of income, post-retirement, allows individuals to pursue their earlier unfulfilled passions.”

     

  • Priyanka Wadhwa joins CommsCredible

    By Our Staff

     

    Integrated communications agency CommsCredible  has announced that Priyanka Wadhwa has joined it as Head of Strategy & Growth. She will be leading the company’s international expansion plans, and developing its business strategy in alignment with the organization’s overall goals.

     

    Talking about her joining, Aman Dhall, Founder of CommsCredible, said, ”We are delighted to onboard Priyanka in our core team. Her rich experience of scaling up early stage ventures in the international markets, creating distribution networks for global brands, as well operational experience of creating strong frameworks to lead market development for a niche sector player would help us accelerate our next phase of growth.”

     

  • Remembering my friend, Pradeep Guha

     

     

    By Indrani Sen

     

    Indrani SenPradeep Guha would have been 70 today, had he not passed away last year on August 21 after a short battle with cancer which unfortunately was detected at the last stage. As I was not aware about his disease, the news of his death was a big shocker for me. The MxMIndia editor asked me then if I would like to do a piece on Pradeep and I declined.

     

    I met Pradeep Guha in Mumbai in 1976, when I was a rookie media planner in Ulka Advertising and he, a fresh graduate from St Xavier’s College, Mumbai, was a trainee in media sales with TOI. Pradeep was a few years younger than me, but we hit it off very well from our first meeting. He had been a left-leaning student leader in his college days and I had been actively involved with leftist student politics during my college and university days in Kolkata, yet both of us were disillusioned with the state of left politics in India. In our own ways both of us we were eager to explore the roles media can play in advertising and marketing industry. We had a lot to share and much to discuss. Gradually we became sounding boards for reviewing each other’s ideas.

     

    We discussed about how to use readership research more effectively for media planning and selling; we debated the scope of value additions and innovations in newspapers and speculated about the possibility of rate negotiations when the word was a taboo in the industry. Pradeep had an ability to think laterally ahead of his time and never failed to amaze me with his zest for new and innovative ideas and his energy for planning and executing their implementations. These inborn traits, which I found in him in his mid-twenties, later helped him to excel in his career and become a larger-than-life personality.

     

    I still recall visiting the Colaba office of ‘Centre of Education & Documentation’, Pradeep’s dream project where he had started to build a library, a resource and research centre based on clippings from published news and articles. He firmly believed that reports in print media had the latest information which published books did not have. Before the internet age, Pradeep was able to think out of the box and visualize the importance of having latest information at the fingertips. After Larry Page and Sergey Brin conceived Google in a dorm of the Stanford University and subsequently marketed Google Search in 1998, I recalled about Pradeep’s CED which had the same seed of idea minus the new media technology.

     

    In 1982, Sameer Jain took charge of BCCL and Pradeep Guha became one of his trusted lieutenants. During the eighties and nineties, Pradeep continued with BCCL was responsible for executing the vision of Sameer Jain and transformed the Times media sales department to Times Response, he mentored a formidable salesforce well trained in concepts of media planning, advertising and marketing. Under his guidance the rate cards for BCCL publications morphed to “Mastermind” encouraging advertisers and agencies to buy space in various newer/ smaller editions along with the main editions at reasonable prices ensuring no loss to the marginal editions. The concept of “Invitation Pricing” was also Pradeep’s brain child. He literally gave a new lease of life to the print media industry of India. He was the real architect behind the “Samir Jain Years” (ref Indian Media Business by Vanita Kohli Khanderkar) in print media.

     

    It is difficult to decide if Pradeep’s contribution was greater in space marketing or in brand building. He changed TOI and other BCCL publications to well defined brands supported by multiple branded properties. The Bombay Times Annual Party, Filmfare Awards, Femina Miss India, Femina Look of the Year, the Economic Times Entrepreneurship Awards all were turned from mere events into branding properties by Pradeep which built the brands individually and collectively built the group. He was also credited with conceptualizing the Page 3 Culture through TOI’s metro editions.

     

    Pradeep’s efforts behind lifting up the standard of the Femina Miss India show led to India’s successes at Miss World and Miss Universe. These branding properties built by him in turn accelerated the growth of other industries like beauty, modelling and Bollywood. Driven by his passion for advertising, he was responsible for associating BCCL with Cannes Lions and creating India’s visibility at Cannes Lions Festival. He was its first Country Representative from India and held that position for 10 consecutive years at Cannes. I became an ardent admirer of Pradeep as I watched his exponential growth over three decades in BCCL. I salute his other friends and admirers who took the initiative to name the lane before the Times of India building in Mumbai as “Pradeep Guha Chowk” earlier this year. A fleeting tribute to his monumental leadership.

     

    Meanwhile, I had come back to Kolkata for family reasons in mid-eighties. Pradeep was heading the Kolkata office of BCCL at that time, but he returned to Mumbai shortly to take charge of Times Response. Till mid-nineties I had opportunities to meet and catch up with Pradeep during either his visits to Times Kolkata office or my official trips to Mumbai. In 1996, Pradeep helped me to pull off a media coup when he agreed to publish and distribute the Official Handbook of Wills World Cup with TOI’s Mumbai and Delhi editions free of cost against the right of selling ad space in the handbooks. It was a copy book case of a win-win negotiation.

     

    After nearly 30 years, Pradeep left BCCL when he was President of the Times of India Group and a member of the Board of Directors to join as CEO of Zee Entertainment and launched the English daily DNA in 2005.  However, he left Zee after a short stint of 3 years and became an entrepreneur by purchasing 10% stake in 9X Media (where he remained as the MD till his last days) and launching his own consultancy firm. Pradeep had produced two films earlier, Fiza in 2000 and Tehzeeb in 2002; his third production Phir Kabhi was released in 2009 after his exit from the Zee Group.

     

    There were lot of speculation in the industry about his exit from BCCL and many predicted that Pradeep Guha’s best years were over. His critics were blissfully unaware that he continued to support our Ad Industry at large by dawning various hats during his tenure with BCCL as well as after his exit from BCCL. He was the President of the Advertising Club Bombay, President of the Indian Newspaper Society, Chairman of the National Readership Studies Council, Chairman of Ad Asia (Jaipur), Chairman of the Asian Federation of Advertising Associations (AFAA), the Vice President and Area Director of the International Advertising Association (IAA), Asia Pacific region and the first Chairman of the Broadcast Audience Research Council (BARC) which was launched in 2014 and started reporting TV ratings from 2015. Pradeep Guha was the Chairman of the Steering Committee of the successful World Congress of the International Advertising Association held in India for the first time in February 2019 at Kochi. At the time of his death in 2021, he was affiliated to the Board of Directors of Raymond Ltd, Pritish Nandy Communications Ltd and Whistling Woods International.  The Ad Industry had never before seen such a versatile leader who always delivered the desired result and many times exceeded the expectations!

     

    After the nineties, Pradeep and I had gradually drifted apart, meeting only in certain big industry dos where Pradeep used to be super busy with organising the shows. Whenever I could manage to snatch a few minutes with him for a chat, he was always the same old Pradeep with the same twinkle in his eyes and the same warmth in his smile. His wife Papia Guha recently requested me to write a few lines on him for inclusion in the coffee table book on him. However, in the small write up, I could not express all my thoughts, so here is my tribute to my old friend Pradeep Guha, an extraordinary man who walked tall during his life time and left a long tail of unforgettable impressions on many other men and women who were fortunate enough to come in contact with him.

     

  • Das ka Dum with Dr Bhaskar Das | If you had an opportunity to reconnect and exchange notes on what’s been happening ever since he’s left us, what would it be?

    Bhaskar DasLet’s hear it from Dr Bhaskar Das in the June 6 edition of Das ka Dum. Have a safe week ahead.

     

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

     

    Q. Pradeep Guha would’ve turned 70 today. While you’ve written a moving account in the book of memories released last evening, if you had an opportunity to reconnect and exchange notes on what’s been happening ever since he’s left us, what would it be?

     

    A. Boss : you are now a septuagenarian. Let’s party with all friends. Now that Covid has subsided, ek party toe Banta hai. I shall also join the club in a year’s time. So we shall have more fun.

     

    Meanwhile, how about learning a bit about how the world of M&E are changing fast. Your learning at Singularity University can be very handy. Let’s evaluate how Metaverse and Blockchain are going to change the media landscape.

     

    Incidentally, our alma mater is going strong in spite of all tectonic shifts that are shaking the media world and changing audience behaviour. Let’s meet soon.

     

  • BharatPe launches new campaign

    By Our Staff

     

    BharatPe, the payments app, has announced the launch of its new brand campaign -‘Hai Yakeen’. Conceptualised around the power of dreams and tenacity of offline merchants and SMEs, the TVC has been directed by the adfilm director, Anupam Mishra and voice over is by Naseeruddin Shah.

     

    Speaking on the launch of this new campaign, Parth Joshi, Chief Marketing Officer, BharatPe, said: “For us, ‘Bharat’ stands for the indomitable spirit, can-do attitude, and the tenacity to bring change. This is the reflection of millions of merchants who are silently marching forward to shape the nation and are the soul of Aatmanirbhar Bharat. Their dreams, aspirations, efforts, and innovative thinking can be seen everywhere, every street, every corner, every city- across the country. BharatPe was designed with the intent to empower these millions of offline merchants who play an integral role in building new India. With this campaign, we celebrate millions of untold stories and hope to inspire a whole new set of merchants to believe in the power of their dreams. We are grateful to our 8 million+ merchant partners who have put their faith in us. We are committed to build products that will empower millions of offline retailers and SMEs in the country.”

     

  • Das ka Dum with Dr Bhaskar Das | Freelance writers & columnists are paid horribly in India, and post-pandemic, the tribe has suffered more. Since you’ve managed print P&Ls, why is it non-staff contributors are considered the lowest common denominator?

    Bhaskar DasDetailed question, and a very detailed response as well. So, let’s hear it from Dr Bhaskar Das in the June 7 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. Freelance writers and columnists are paid horribly in India, and post-pandemic, the tribe has suffered more. Since you’ve run print P&Ls in the past, why is it non-staff contributors are considered the lowest common denominator?

     

    A. There is no doubt that it’s unfortunate, if that’s a dominant reality. I am sure you are more aware about the prevalent practices on the subject. But what surprises me is that how can there be a standard low level of payment irrespective of the subject and/ or the expertise that is required. For instance, for a food- or fashion-based contributor (text /video/ photograph), the charges are pretty high. In fact, the logic  of outsourcing (perhaps) is that inhouse expertise isn’t available to a media house. It a choice between ‘make’ or ‘buy’. And it happens due to either supply-side abundance, or demand-side shortage. And that influences the decision. I presume a  specialist writer may dictate the fees compared to a generalist writer. Media houses leverage (euphemism, though for exploitation) this demand-supply situation. I won’t be surprised to know that with the abundance of UGC and the so-called rightsizing in the media space the payment situation might have worsened.

     

    With the  scope of  journalism expanded from predominantly text to audio, video etc the stretch on capability expansion in journalists have gone up. Does your question subsume the demand supply of this emerged space? I have no idea. I instinctively feel the practitioners in these areas might not have started complaining as yet.

     

  • Ogilvy & Hindu launch platform for sustainability champions

    By Our Staff

     

    Ogilvy and The Hindu have been highlighting environmental causes through different campaigns for a couple of years now. This World Environment Day, the brand presented a unique take on the UN’s s theme of #OnlyOneEarth.

     

    Contrary to the usual narrative of being concerned about the planet, the campaign’s sarcastic narrative advocates for the entitled, least-bothered attitude that humanity has towards the planet. The ad drives home the point that if we are to be careless about how we take care of Earth, the only option would be to find another planet. The long copy ad was released through The Hindu’s Sunday edition on 5th June, and the digital version of the same went live on their social media channels the same day.

     

    Said Parvathy, Associate Creative Director, Ogilvy India (South): “The Hindu is a brand which has always believed in making the strongest impact through their campaigns. In lieu of our previous campaigns, we thought it best to adapt a tone that would hit the hardest, acting as a mirror to humanity’s lopsided approach to environmental concerns. The aim was to drive the realization home that we cannot treat Earth like a hotel room or holiday destination, as this is our only home.”