Category: Media Agencies

  • AdStrat: Survive the World by Contract Advtg

    [youtube width=”400″ height=”300″]http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=vcts1imOOuk&feature=related&noredirect=1[/youtube]

    The campaign:

    Survive the World

     

    The client:

    American Tourister

     

    The agency:

    Contract Advertising

     

    The brief:

    Created in the rough territory of Jodhpur, ‘Survive the World’ captures a roller coaster ride. Conceptualized by Ravi Deshpande, the new brand campaign depicts the regular travel woes in a typical congested city anywhere in the world.

     

    The film showcases a tourist, who is caught in a traffic frenzy on the way to the airport. With his trusted 4-wheeler American Tourister luggage in tow, the tourist sets off on an enthralling escapade across the city to reach his destination in time.

     

    Any specific advisory from the client:

    The specifics given by the client to the agency was to focus on the ‘four wheel’ feature of the brand and create a creative revolving around the same

     

    Research insights:

    The agency already had an idea which came from the success of ‘Survive Mumbai’ and ‘Survive Istanbul’. The idea was to take that a step ahead and hence the creation of ‘survive the world’ took place. The main focus of the sagency was to tell a story based on  this particular theme.

     

    Media vehicles:

    The main media focus was extensive television and cinema coverage, and some OOH innovations.

    Key issues kept in mind while executing the ad:

    In the words of Ravi Deshpande, Chairman and Chief Creative Director, Contract Advertising: “The most pertinent question before us was, how do we make sure that the emphasis is on the product while we also tell an entertaining story to the consumers? The second issue was to look into the safety aspect of the person on roller skates in a place like Jodhpur, which was ultimately managed well.”

     

    The differentiating factor about the ad:

    The differentiating factor (as per the agency) about the campaign is that it is unlike other campaigns of similar products, it’s a seamless journey told in a span of 60 seconds. Other than this, the ‘Survive the World’ campaign is being innovatively marketed with it being  released as a music video on television on September 24 following a release in cinemas nationally in the second week of October.

     

    Market and client feedback and follow-ups:

    Ravi Deshpande: “The client is extremely happy with the final product and we have received amazing feedback from them.”

     

    Credits:

    Music: Ashutosh Phatak

    Creative team: Ravi Deshpande, Malobi Dasgupta

    National Creative Director: Ravi Deshpande

    Production House: Far Commercials

    Director: Jeff Balameyer

  • The Anchor: CVL Srinivas on 5 reasons all media agencies need to be creative

    CVL Srinivas

    By CVL Srinivas

     

    #1 Media is part of the overall creative product – media agencies cannot be divorced from ideas and creativity. While a great amount of number-crunching and accountability measures can be brought into play, ultimately it is the power of the idea that makes a brand. Media agencies need to contribute to these ideas and not come in their way.

     

    #2 The role of a media agency is changing from managing throughput to creating experiences. To be able to create experiences and not just deliver exposure for brands, media agencies have to think creatively about their business and their future. Otherwise media agencies will remain throughput engines and soon lose their relevance.

     

    #3 Digital is bridging the gap between media and creative. If digital media solutions are to be effective, media agencies need to contribute as much to the creative as to the digital media strategy.

     

    #4 The explosion of content is fuelling media solutions of a different kind. Today there are numerous opportunities to ride on existing content or create a solution through a piece of entertaining content. Media agencies are equipping themselves to deliver on this front. It’s like having a mini creative agency within a media agency.

     

    #5 Given the high level of fragmentation and the mushrooming of specialist agencies, be it in digital or analytics or content, media agencies need to creatively tap into the ecosystem and work with partners to ensure that they stay ahead of the game. Media agencies can no longer live in their own siloed world.

     

    CVL Srinivas is the Chairman, SMG India and Managing Director, LiquidThread – APAC

     

  • MPG India appoints Kavita Vohra to head buying for North

    By A Correspondent

     

    MPG India, the media planning and buying network of Havas Media, has announced the appointment of Kavita Vohra as Associate Vice President Investments, MPG India.

     

    Ms Vohra’s mandate will include heading buying for MPG Delhi with additional responsibility of Bangalore and Kolkatta. She joins with an experience of over 10 years in media planning and buying, having worked with several key accounts across categories.

     

    Commenting on the appointment Anita Nayyar, CEO, Havas Media, India & South Asia said, “MPG India has always been a growth leader in the region as we continue to expand our footprint and offerings to our clients. Kavita’s appointment will further strengthen our buying offering.”

     

    Mohit Joshi, Managing Director, MPG India said, “We are very happy to have Kavita with us. Her strong understanding of the planning function makes her an ideal candidate for heading the buying function.”
    “We are confident that with her wide and varied experience she will be able to bring in significant value to all our clients”, added Uday Mohan, Executive Director-North, MPG India, whom she will report into.

     

    Starting her career at Lodestar working on Whirlpool, Ms Vohra moved to Cheil Communications and handled Hyundai and Samsung. Thereafter, her role involved TV buying for Nokia Mobiles at Group M, followed by buying for Nestle and a host of other clients at Zenith Optimedia. Commenting on her move, she said, “Heading the buying arm of MPG Delhi is a natural progression towards handling a bigger and more challenging portfolio of clients. I look forward to working with the team as the journey ahead surely looks very exciting.”

     

  • DDB Mudra Delhi bags Marico’s Livon

    By A Correspondent

     

    DDB Mudra Delhi has added Marico’s Livon brand to its slew of accounts. The size of the account is pegged at Rs 40 crore. The incumbent on the account ‘Cut the Crap’ had been working on the brand before Marico acquired the brand from Reckitt Benckiser earlier this year. DDB Mudra Group won this mandate after a rigorous multi-agency evaluation process.

     

    Sonal Dabral

    Sonal Dabral, Chairman & CCO, DDB Mudra Group, said, “Livon presents us with a wonderful opportunity to take the DDB ideology of social creativity forward. A brand that talks to audiences that live in a connected world, we look forward to creating ideas that have an inherent ‘talk value’ that drives the brand forward. Besides, with Marico, we are really excited about partnering with one of the most professional Indian multinationals.”

     

     

    Vandana Das

    Commenting on this big win, Vandana Das, President, DDB Mudra Group, Delhi, says, “It’s a great starting point and very encouraging for all of us to be associated with a brand from Marico’s stable. Having won Livon, we are all really delighted and geared to have a long innings together. We look forward to doing some path-breaking and exciting work on the business in months ahead.”

     

  • Madison Media wins Maxx Mobiles AOR

    By A Correspondent

     

    Madison Media has just acquired another account, Maxx Mobiles. The account will be handled by Madison Media Sigma in Mumbai.

     

    Madison Media has recently won several new businesses including McCain Foods, Ruchi Soya, Max India’s corporate account, Cafe Coffee Day, Radikal Rice and Crompton Greaves.

     

    Vanita Keswani

    Said Vanita Keswani, COO, Madison Media Sigma, “We are delighted to add Maxx mobiles to our roster of clients and are looking forward to a long and mutually beneficial partnership”. Maxx Mobile, a provider of mobile handsets and accessories in India, made its entry in the year 2004.

     

    Ajjay Agarawal, Managing Director, Maxx Mobiles, said, “We were looking to partner India’s top agencies to help us in our mission to make Maxx Mobile one of the leading handset brands in the country. We found Madison, with rich expertise in Media, to be ideal choice and are sure they will add tremendous value in our efforts.”

     

  • Maxus wins Redbus media business

    By A Correspondent

     

    Maxus has the won the media business on Redbus.in in a recently conducted pitch process. Redbus.in, an online bus ticket-booking site, recently started advertising on television and other mass media. It was a highly contested pitch which saw the participation of Mindshare, Madison, ZO and Mudramax.

     

    Sanchayeeta Verma, GM, Maxus South who is the key lead in the pitch, said, “Redbus is a highly reputed name in the travel space. We are very excited with this win and believe our role is to help our clients navigate and maximize the opportunities of change in an always-on, fully digitized media world. And we’re looking forward to partnering Redbus in their exciting journey towards exponential growth.”

     

    Commented LK Gupta, Chief Marketing Officer, Redbus, “As an ecommerce travel brand launching in mass media for the first time, we were looking for the right blend of aggressive presence, yet delivering efficiently for the business. In Maxus, we found a partner that showed innate understanding of what our business needs are, and complementing it with sound planning and buying capabilities in media. We’re excited to embark on this exciting journey during which we’re sure Ajit and his team will be big contributors. ”

     

    RedBus.in started in 2005, with a personal experience of the founder members. During Diwali of 2005, one of them wanted to spend the festival in his hometown. Since he didn’t know his schedule till the end, taking a bus was the only choice. He ran around town hunting for a ticket, but they were all sold out minutes before he reached the travel agents. That’s when he thought of the possibility of providing consumers the convenience of booking a bus ticket over the internet. The objective was two-fold – to ensure that they don’t have to leave the confines of their comfort to book a ticket, and to help them get a ticket when they need it the most.

     

  • Starcom Mediavest India announces two key hires

    By A Correspondent

     

    The Starcom MediaVest Group has announced the appointments of Gerald Roche and Sameer Kapoor as Vice Presidents at Gurgaon and Bengaluru respectively.

     

    Mallikarjunadas CR

    “The appointments of Sameer and Gerald reflect SMG’s commitment to attracting the best and brightest talent to our agency,” said Mallikarjunadas CR, CEO of Starcom MediaVest Group, India. “Sameer and Gerald are reliable leaders with robust backgrounds in business development and client relationship management. They will fit very well within our strongly established client-driven culture and we are sure they will continue their successful runs with us.”

     

    Gerald Roche who joins at Bengaluru previously headed media buying for Madison Media Infinity and Platinum Media. On his appointment he said, “I’m truly delighted and encouraged that SMG, anchored by its analytics resources, has digital (and not just television) at the front and centre of its media planning and I look forward to contributing to this team effort in no small measure.”

     

    Sameer Kapoor has joined Starcom from Madison Media Plus where he was heading the Airtel Business. He will be heading Samsung for Starcom at the Gurgaon office. On his appointment, he said, “I look forward to working with a great organization and a great client like Samsung. Starcom is going from strength to strength; I’m excited to be a part of this growth-oriented organization and being present while we achieve greater heights of success.”

     

  • Carat Media wins Vistaprint AOR

    By A Correspondent

     

    Vistaprint India has appointed Carat Media Services as its media agency. Vistaprint is an online provider of professional marketing and gifting products, for SMBs and self-employed professionals, which offers consumers a whole new range of high-quality customized products. Already well established in this space across US, Europe, and Australia, Vistaprint’s India foray is part of its strategy to enter new markets in Asia. This business will be handled out of Carat’s Mumbai office.

     

    Commenting on the appointment, Bipin Narang, Director Marketing, Vistaprint India, said, “India is a significant market opportunity for us with its rapidly increasing internet penetration and huge base of small businesses as well as a large consumer base under the age of 25 years that is net-savvy. We understand that India is an extremely cost-conscious market, and with our remarkable technology backbone, Vistaprint not only offers an amazing price-quality proposition, but will drive a fundamental change in the way small businesses and consumers will order printed products and services in India. We are happy to partner with Carat Media Services for our business challenges.”

     

    Himanka Das

    Commenting on the win, Himanka Das, Sr Vice President, Carat Media Services said, “It’s a special win for us as we will be part of the Vistaprint growth plans in India. The team at Carat is very excited to design Integrated Media Ecosystems for Vistaprint’s business challenges in India. It gives us an opportunity to go beyond looking at people just as a demograhic and instead deliver media solutions based on consumer’s relationship with different media, the brand and the way printing business exists in India.”

     

  • Havas Media Group acquires MFG Labs

    By A Correspondent

     

    MFG Labs, a mathematics think tank specialising in digital strategy, data science and mathematical research, will join the Havas Media Group.

     

    Founded in 2009 by a team of world renowned mathematicians, MFG Labs established itself as a leader in its field using advanced mathematics and algorithms to build decision support solutions that make sense of “Big Data”. The company’s teams of senior mathematical researchers are led by Pierre-Louis Lions – a Fields Medal holder, the highest recognized award for mathematics and Professor at the prestigious College de France – and Jean-Michel Lasry, Professor at the University Paris-Dauphine with a renowned career in quantitative finance. They have created and pioneered the development of the MFG “Mean Field Game” theory and its application to the world of finance and business. MFG Labs recent work includes the conception and implementation of Warner Bros France’s digital strategy, ‘My Warner’, their social relationship management programme.

     

    Dominique Delport, Global Managing Director of Havas Media Group, remarked, “As the data revolution continues there is no doubt that these guys are at the top of their field. Two years ago we identified their impressive capabilities in the social data world. The next stage for us was to make sure we were able to bring them into the group to reinforce our solid foundations in data… and this driving force to integrate data and content is paying off well. With the increasing importance of consumer engagement platforms pushing brands beyond traditional media, the two disciplines are totally interconnected. We were the first communications company to win an Emmy award for content creation and we are now the first communications company to move into the mathematics space. We are delighted that our genuine passion for data has won the support of two of the greatest mathematical minds in the business and their talented team. We have been working with the MFG teams for many months to expand and extend our leading data and content services to our clients around the world and the feedback we have had has been outstanding.”

     

    MFG co-founder Pierre-Louis Lions said, “We join the Havas Media Group at a unique moment where quantitative methodologies and Big Data analytics are becoming the key to media performance. For an intrinsically quantitative and programmatic spirited team like us these are exciting times.”

     

     

     

  • Amin Lakhani to head Mindshare Fulcrum

    By A Correspondent

     

    Amin Lakhani

    Mindshare has announced the elevation of Amin Lakhani as Leader, Team Unilever South Asia. In his new role Amin Lakhani will head Fulcrum, a unit of Mindshare that manages the media planning and buying for the Unilever business in South Asia, including India, Pakistan, Bangladesh and Sri Lanka. He will replace Anupriya Acharya who is moving on from the organization reportedly for personal reasons.

    In his experience of over 15 years, Mr Lakhani has worked as a product manager with an Indian pharmaceutical company and in media agencies. In his stint with GroupM India, he handled various roles starting with Maxus as the Head of Trading for West region, moving on to GroupM as Trading head for West and then on to Mindshare where he played the architect of The Exchange function in 2008, finally leading up the Trading Lead for the Unilever business.

     

    Ravi Rao

    Announcing the appointment, Ravi Rao, Leader South Asia, Mindshare said, “Amin was our unanimous choice and we know he will turn a new chapter in Mindshare Fulcrum by raising media excellence in strategic planning and world class execution backed up with award winning innovations for Unilever. We wish Anupriya all the best and thank her for a short but great stint at Mindshare Fulcrum”.

     

    Commenting on his new role, Mr Lakhani said, “It is an exciting opportunity especially in challenging times. Mindshare Fulcrum has been a centre of excellence. I am looking forward to building on our strong base and continuing to provide delight to India’s most esteemed client, Unilever.”

     

  • Anil Thakraney: An open letter to Katrina Kaif

    By Anil Thakraney

     

    Katrinaji is quite pissed off these days. No, not because Salman Khan pooped another one of her parties, but because a filmy mag carried pictures of her in a bikini, as she holidayed with boyfriend Ranbir in Ibiza. The actress has shot off an open letter to the media, and it’s printed below. Within the letter, in brackets, is my open letter to Ms Kaif.

     

    I am writing this to say that I feel most upset, distressed and invaded at my pictures published in a film magazine and which were carried by other media. (Er, Kats, you should feel thrilled. You look hot, happening and desirable in the bikini, the only thing the pictures do is sex up your already sexy image. Enjoy them, in fact, thank the photographer and the magazine. Careers of female stars in Bollywood are short-lived, so make the most while the Ibiza sun shines on your sexy bod.)

     

    The pictures were taken while I was on holiday by someone who, in an act of cowardice, has shot without permission and then used the pictures for commercial gain. (Er, Kats, the photographer would be a fool AND a coward if he failed to click. Had he been working for me, I would have sacked him without notice. The chap’s done a super job and deserves a huge pat on the back. Permission? Would you and lover boy Kapoor have granted your happy consent? Confession: I would have shot even more ‘revealing’ pictures.)

     

    There is a breed of journalism that preys on celebrities in the worst possible manner crossing all lines of privacy and decency. Running these pictures shows support for this school of journalism. (Er, Kats, the breed of journalism that raises my blood pressure is the one that prints/broadcasts puff pieces on you and your films. And that, sadly, is happening in plenty. As for privacy, the pictures were shot in a public place, so you guys asked for it. Instead of canoodling with RK on a beach, you should have chosen one of the unused studio rooms inside RK Studios in Chembur. Lots of privacy there.)

     

    I request that all media running these pictures please refrain from doing so. I have a wonderful relationship with the media and have been accessible to the media at all times. There is no reason for this furtive and invasive behaviour. (Er, Kats, you make yourself ‘accessible’ to the media only when a movie release is coming up, otherwise the poor reporters have to run around in circles to get that piddly sound byte. And yes, if you have chosen to be a movie star, furtive and invasive journalism becomes par for course. Don’t like it? You can return to your quiet life back in London. As a bonus, Sallubhai won’t be able to poop your party there, poor guy can’t get himself a UK visa.)

     

    PS: Hehehe. So this is how creative agencies actually function. Must-read for all clients before they sign up one.

     

    Link: http://www.mcsweeneys.net/articles/we-are-a-creative-agency-specializing-in-all-your-branding-needs

     

    Anil Thakraney is a senior journalist and commentator. He is also Editor-at-Large, MxMIndia. The views expressed here are his own. He can be reached via Twitter at @anilthakraney

     

  • Leadership In A VUCA World

     

    Over 300 members of the media, advertising and marketing fraternity are to be in attendance at the global CEO conference being organized by The Indian Society of Advertisers (ISA), the apex body of advertisers in the country, tomorrow (that’s October 30, 2013) at the Leela in Mumbai. The theme is ‘Navigating a VUCA World’ and a galaxy of speakers including Unilever’s global CEO Paul Polman are scheduled to speak.

     

    Other speakers at the event will include R Gopalakrishnan, Director, Tata Sons; Manu Anand, President – India & South Asia, Cadbury India; Marten Pieters, CEO, Vodafone India; and Ravi Kant, Vice Chairman and Former Managing Director, Tata Motors, Pawan Munjal, MD & CEO, Hero Motocorp, Shantanu Khosla, MD, Procter & Gamble India and Prabha Parameswaran, MD, Colgate-Palmolive, Ashok Venkatramani, CEO, MCCS amongst many others. One of the goals of the conference is to find out how organizational processes and practices need to be recast to deliver to this new VUCA (Volatile, Uncertain, Complex and Ambiguous) world.

     

    Hemant Bakshi, Executive Director, Home & Personal Care, Hindustan Unilever who is Chairman, Indian Society of Advertisers and Paulomi Dhawan who is Chairperson, Events Committee and Treasurer, ISA are putting finishing touches to the event as you read this.

     

    Interestingly, Leadership in a VUCA World was the subject of the speech delivered by Haresh Manwani, Chairman, Hindustan Unilever Limited, at the company’s Annual General Meeting held on July 26, 2013. 

     

    We reproduce here the entire speech by Mr Manwani as it offers an excellent backgrounder to the ISA event on October 30.

     

     

    Section One: Introduction

    We are living in a world where volatility and uncertainty have become the New Normal. The Arab Spring saw a change of government in countries like Tunisia, Egypt, Libya and Yemen. Once powerful countries in Europe are now fighting bankruptcy. We have taken growth in the developing part of the world for granted, but economic growth in China and India – growth engines for the world economy – has begun to slow.

     

    Companies  that  were  synonymous  with  their  product categories just a few years ago are now no longer in existence. Kodak, the inventor of the digital camera had to wind up its operations. HMV, the British entertainment retailing company and Borders, once the second largest US bookstore, have shut down due to their inability to evolve their business models with the changing times.

     

    Section Two: A VUCA World

    What does this all mean for business and for a company like Unilever?

     

    The dynamic and fast-changing nature of our world today is best described by VUCA, a term coined by the US Army War College. VUCA stands for Volatility, Uncertainty, Complexity and Ambiguity.

     

    A few years ago the Lebanese American scholar Nicholas Taleb introduced the concept of black swans – events that are difficult to predict because they are low probability outliers so the past provides no reliable precedent. And yet these black swan events have a huge and profound impact. Think of the September 11 terrorist attacks or the rise of the Internet.

     

    We live now in a VUCA world surrounded by black swans. This is the New Normal. But even within this unpredictably changing world, there are a few important underlying megatrends that will shape our future.

     

    Section Three: Megatrends

    Digitisation

    The first of these megatrends is digitisation.

     

    It is worthwhile to step back and look at the recent history of human invention. The first telegraph machine was invented in 1838. Forty years later Alexander Graham Bell invented the telephone. It took over another forty years for us to invent the television and yet another forty to invent the silicon integrated circuit chip in the 1960s.

     

    But it has taken less than forty years since the silicon chip to put all of those things – a telegraph, a telephone, a television, a computer chip, and much, much more – into one device that fits into the palm of our hand, the smart phone.

     

    As a high school student in 1969, I remember listening on the radio (Yes, radio!) as Neil Armstrong took the first step on the moon. One small step for a man, a giant leap for mankind. I remember thinking to myself then, how amazing it was to be able to put a man on the moon! The height of human technological accomplishment.

     

    But today, NASA’s own website says, “Your cell phone has more computing power than the computers used during the Apollo era.”

     

    Today, there are almost as many mobile phones in the world as there are people. More than one-third of the world is online – a fivefold increase over the last decade. Facebook now has more than 1 billion active users; YouTube gets more than 100 hours of video content added every minute; and over 175 million tweets are added to Twitter timelines every single day. Interestingly enough, Facebook, YouTube and Twitter did not exist a decade ago!

     

    We are increasingly living in an interconnected world and this has changed how we interact with each other, and with governments and companies. Supported by social media, our Dove Sketches campaign in 2013 became the most viewed video advertising of all time with more than 200 million views on YouTube in just one month. At a societal level, this connectivity has also brought dramatic changes. Wael Ghonim, the Egyptian Internet activist & Google ex-employee described the Egyptian Revolution in 2011, saying: “We used Facebook to schedule the protests, Twitter to coordinate them and YouTube to show the world”.

     

    Digitisation is now advancing even more rapidly and fundamentally changing the way business and society works. It presents both opportunities and challenges and the companies that adapt to this reality will succeed in the future.

     

    Rise of the developing world

    At the same time, there is another megatrend happening. The world order is changing as economic power shifts from West to East. According to a 2012 McKinsey study, it took Britain more than 100 years to double its economic output per person during its industrial revolution and the US later took more than 50 years to do the same. More than a century later, China and India have doubled their GDP per capita in 12 and 16 years respectively. Significantly, China and India accomplished this while having about 100 times the population base as the US and Britain did during their industrial revolutions. The report goes on to state that “the two leading emerging economies are experiencing roughly ten times the economic acceleration of the Industrial Revolution, on 100 times the scale – resulting in an economic force that is over 1,000 times as big.” And we are just at the beginning of this massive transformation.

     

    For the last century, the developing world produced for the developed world to consume. But by 2020, emerging Asia will become the world’s largest consuming block, overtaking North America. This changing balance of power is redefining the world of business. China is poised to be the world’s largest market for luxury cars and luxury goods. At the same time, Asian multinational companies, including several from India, are expanding outside of their traditional markets and bringing innovations for bottom-of-the-pyramid consumers from the developing world to consumers in the developed world.

     

    Narayana Hrudayalaya Hospital right here in India is a great example of these trends. It is the largest heart surgery hospital in the world, doing 6,000 operations a year. Its efficiency and innovations allow it to perform world-class heart surgeries for $2,000 – a fraction of what it would cost in the US, yet at the same levels of safety. Now it is looking to export its expertise and business model to serve American patients by opening a hospital in the Cayman Islands – a one hour flight from Miami.

     

    This megatrend also presents both opportunities and risks to business. Companies reorganizing their resources and leadership development towards the new economic centre of gravity will benefit. Others will fall behind.

     

    Sustainability

    The third megatrend is the changing relationship between humanity and the planet we inhabit. Scientific evidence has proven beyond any doubt that today we are living beyond our means. Living beyond our means not just in a financial sense (which has already led to the 2008 financial crisis), but also in an environmental sense. You can see the impact already in the loss of bio-diversity, unpredictable weather patterns and natural disasters.

     

    Today, according to the World Wildlife Fund, we are consuming the resources of 1.5 planets. The human population took more than 250,000 years to reach the 1 billion mark in the 1800s. It took a century more to reach 2 billion in 1927. It then took us only 32 years to reach 3 billion around 1960 and only 50 years since then to add another 4 billion to reach 7 billion in 2011. By 2050, there will be another 2.3 billion more people on earth sharing the same space we have today. Almost all of them will be in the developing world.

     

    If the developing world consumed in the future at the rate the developed world consumes today, we would need somewhere between 3-5 planets. Obviously, that is not sustainable.

     

    Section Four: Role of Business in Society

    Fundamentally, the confluence of these megatrends raises the bigger question of the rightful role of business in society. Even as over two billion more people become more connected and economically active consuming the scarce resources of our planet, we still have one billion people going to bed hungry every night, 2.8 billion people short of water and 2.3 billion people living without access to basic sanitation.

     

    These are huge challenges that can only be addressed by rewriting the social contract between business and society so that we align business growth with socio-economic progress in a sustainable way. The path forward is a new paradigm for growth called responsible growth.

     

    Businesses have traditionally focused on shareholder value and delivering the 3Gs of growth: consistent, competitive and profitable growth. By adding this fourth G of responsible growth, the new business model looks beyond shareholder value towards creating shared value.

     

    Michael Porter talks about creating shared value as different from sharing created value. Creating shared value is “creating economic value in a way that also creates value for society by addressing its needs and challenges”.

     

    For Unilever and Hindustan Unilever Limited (HUL), this is the key differentiating factor.

     

    To be clear, business still needs to deliver the 3Gs of growth – consistent, competitive and profitable growth. The 3Gs are important because without these, a business cannot create any value. But in this New Normal, these alone are not sufficient. The fourth G recognizes that it is the role of business to not just create economic value but also social value, and to do this in a sustainable way.

     

    Section Five: Winning in a VUCA World

    Putting the four dimensions of growth together is the key to unlocking not just how business can win in a VUCA world, but also to rediscovering its true role in society. To do this, businesses need to first put in place the right hardware.

     

    Foresight and agility

    Winning in a VUCA world requires the ability to simultaneously manage both the short-term and the long-term goals of a business. In turbulent and fast-changing times, businesses need to be anchored in a long-term destination while also dynamically managing the short-term.

     

    The role of leadership is to have a clear point of view about the future and build an organisation that can navigate towards that destination through good times, and importantly, also in bad times.

     

    Consumer centricity

    As the world changes, consumers are also changing. There is an emerging poor in the developed world and an emerging affluent in the developing world. The way people shop and consume is also changing. More than ever, businesses must have an insight into the changing needs and aspirations of their consumers to be successful.

     

    Unilever has long embedded a culture of putting consumers at the heart of our business. Employees across the business are encouraged to constantly engage with consumers and customers to understand their needs and preferences. This consumer centricity has allowed us to build new markets and categories. The success of HUL in serving low-income consumers and leading market development has come from a simple consumer insight of making our brands accessible through low unit-priced formats and a business model of reverse engineering our costs to support the price that consumers are willing to pay. This helped us pioneer the shift from laundry bars to powders in the Detergents category and from soaps to shampoos in the Hair-care category through single dose low-priced sachets.

     

    A similar approach of consumer centricity is allowing us to lead the development of categories of tomorrow like hair conditioners, deodorants and packaged foods.

     

    Think local and act global

    To consistently succeed in the VUCA world, one also needs to be globally leveraged and locally relevant. A very common phrase used by multinationals is ‘Think Global, Act Local’. At Unilever, we believe the reality is the reverse because there is no such thing as a global consumer. Our mantra is to think local but act global. At Unilever, we begin by understanding what local consumers and customers need or want. Then we leverage our global understanding, technology and knowledge to provide the best solutions to meet these local needs. Our strength is our ability to combine global scale with locally tailored solutions. The success of our global brands like Dove, TRESemmé and Knorr are just a few examples of this approach. Organisations of tomorrow need to be neither hopelessly local nor mindlessly global.

     

    Attracting great talent

    The ability to attract, develop and retain the best talent is what makes businesses successful in the long-term. Increasingly, young men and women want to work for a company that reflects their own values. If they believe in a common vision and the larger corporate purpose, they are motivated to deliver great performance. It is no longer enough to be working for a business that is doing well if it is not also doing good.

     

    Many talented young people join us for this reason. In Unilever, we have always believed that we do not just sell soap and soup. Instead, we are committed to helping our consumers enhance their standard of living through our brands and improving the livelihoods of millions of people engaged across our value chain.

     

    An example is Lifebuoy. Lifebuoy is more than a bar of soap. It has a profound impact on raising the hygiene standards of millions of people and helps save lives. Similarly, our food brands provide nutrition and fortification to millions across the world. That is how we make a difference in the lives of more than 2 billion people every day across more than 190 countries. Equally, our value chain provides a huge opportunity for uplifting lives by bringing indirect benefits, including to hundreds of thousands of smallholder farmers, suppliers and small retailers. For example, an independent NGO study in Indonesia showed that beyond the 5,000 people directly employed in the business, our value chain indirectly provides the equivalent of full-time employment to 300,000 others.

     

    This is the reason why we attract some of the finest talent from around the world. Unilever is among the Top 3 Employer Brands in 37 countries. We are now the No.1 Employer in 21 countries, and this figure continues to increase. For us, building an Employer Brand is as important a driver of business as any of the financial measures. Successful global leaders of tomorrow must build commitment from their employees rather than just demand blind loyalty. This is only possible if businesses take a long-term and holistic view of our role in society.

     

    Section Six: Leadership in a VUCA World

    However, winning in a VUCA world is not just about the hardware. It is also about having new software – a new kind of leadership that is values-led and purpose-driven and leaders who can redefine the role of business in society.

     

    To be values-led is more than simply putting your values down on a piece of paper. It is about living and breathing those values every day.

     

    As a business leader, it is about having a true north – an internal compass with non-negotiables. It is also about being clear what those non-negotiables are, and most importantly, it is about sticking to them in good times and in adversity.

     

    More than 100 years ago, William Hesketh Lever captured the essence of what it means to be values-led and it continues to define how we at Unilever do business today. He said: “I believe that nothing can be greater than a business, however small it may be, that is governed by conscience; and that nothing can be meaner or more petty than a business, however large, governed without honesty and without brotherhood.”

     

    Today at Unilever, we are anchored in this VUCA world by much the same values that he espoused – values of integrity, responsibility, respect and a pioneering spirit. These are non-negotiables in Unilever.

     

    Being values-led is about the foundation that underpins the Company. Being purpose-driven is about the common objective we work towards that is larger than the Company itself.

     

    At Unilever, we are unified by a shared belief in the purpose of our business. Our purpose is very simple – “To make sustainable living commonplace. We work to create a better future every day, with brands and services that help people to feel good, look good and get more out of life.”

     

    This common purpose has remained largely the same since the 1890s and it unites all our employees across the Company so that no matter which part of the world we work in, we are working towards a common goal. From the worker on the assembly line making Lifebuoy soap or Pureit water purifiers, to our marketers and brand managers, from our newest recruits to our most experienced business leaders, this is the invisible glue that holds the Company together.

     

    We continue to invest in leadership development and building a pipeline of values-led and purpose-driven leaders to help us navigate through the VUCA world. In June 2013, we opened Four Acres in Singapore, our first-ever global leadership development centre outside the UK. This investment represents Unilever’s commitment to leadership development and building the next generation of leaders from the developing and emerging markets. It will double our capacity to train our pipeline of talent and bring our global curriculum to this part of the world. We are similarly investing here in India where we built a new state-of-the-art Learning Centre at the HUL campus in Andheri last year.

     

    Section Seven: Unilever Sustainable Living Plan

    The two ideas I’ve touched on – to be values-led and to be purpose-driven, are vital ingredients for leadership in this new world. They are the anchor that grounds us and the compass that helps us navigate the VUCA world.

     

    In late 2010, we launched the Unilever Sustainable Living Plan which embodies our values and purpose and underscores our commitment to grow our business responsibly. We have committed to doubling the size of our business while reducing our environmental footprint and increasing our positive social impact. Specifically, by 2020, we have committed to halving the environmental impact of our products across the value chain, to sourcing 100% of our agricultural raw materials sustainably and to helping more than 1 billion people take action to improve their health and well-being. We are proud that two years in, we have made significant progress towards achieving our targets.

     

    Let me give just a few concrete examples.

     

    Our progress in sustainable sourcing has been strong. We are concentrating first on our top ten agricultural raw material groups, which account for two-thirds of our volumes, and we are on track on these. By the end of 2012, 36% of agricultural raw materials across Unilever were sustainably sourced while HUL sourced more than 69% of agricultural raw materials sustainably. In palm oil for instance, 100% of our palm oil across Unilever is now from sustainable sources, which is three years ahead of schedule.

     

    We have also tied up with partners across our value chain, including smallholder farmers, entrepreneurs and governments to ensure sustainable production and responsible growth. By the end of 2012, through our supply partnerships, we have helped train 450,000 tea farmers in sustainable practices globally. In India, we have also expanded our network of Shakti ammas to 48,000 entrepreneurs covering 3.3 million households in over 135,000 Indian villages. This is the embodiment of our philosophy of doing well by doing good.

     

    Ultimately, our brands have to be agents at the forefront of social change. Diarrhoea alone claims the lives of 3,000 children below the age of five every day. Clinical trials show this is preventable. If we can persuade people to wash their hands with soap at key moments, we can make a big difference to reducing diarrhoeal disease and thus save lives. That is exactly what Lifebuoy soap aims to do. The Lifebuoy hand-washing education programme has already reached more than 119 million people in India and other developing countries. In addition, we have provided safe drinking water for 45 million people in India and globally through Pureit. India accounted for the largest part of the additional 10 million people that we provided safe drinking water to in 2012. Together, we aim to help more than a billion people to improve their hygiene habits and bring safe drinking water to 500 million people by 2020.

     

    Section Eight: Conclusion

    We are clearly living in a new reality characterised by Volatility, Uncertainty, Complexity and Ambiguity, and this new world is here to stay. For businesses to succeed in the future, leaders need to redefine the rightful role of business in society by pursuing responsible growth.

     

    At Unilever and at Hindustan Unilever Limited, we have a clear point of view about where we need to go and how to get there. We are building leaders who combine strategic foresight with agility; leaders who put consumers at the heart of the business; leaders with the ability to think local and act global; leaders who invest in building commitment in the organisation and developing others. Most important of all, we are building leaders who are guided by a shared set of values and sense of purpose. With these leaders in place, I am confident that we can overcome the challenges and seize the opportunities to win in this VUCA world. Together, we can fulfill our responsibility in society and in the words of Mahatma Gandhi, “be the change you wish to see in the world”.

     

    Unilever Sustainable Living Plan

    The two ideas I’ve touched on – to be values-led and to be purpose-driven, are vital ingredients for leadership in this new world. They are the anchor that grounds us and the compass that helps us navigate the VUCA world.

     

    In late 2010, we launched the Unilever Sustainable Living Plan which embodies our values and purpose and underscores our commitment to grow our business responsibly. We have committed to doubling the size of our business while reducing our environmental footprint and increasing our positive social impact. Specifically, by 2020, we have committed to halving the environmental impact of our products across the value chain, to sourcing 100% of our agricultural raw materials sustainably and to helping more than 1 billion people take action to improve their health and well-being. We are proud that two years in, we have made significant progress towards achieving our targets.

     

    Let me give just a few concrete examples.

     

    Our progress in sustainable sourcing has been strong. We are concentrating first on our top ten agricultural raw material groups, which account for two-thirds of our volumes, and we are on track on these. By the end of 2012, 36% of agricultural raw materials across Unilever were sustainably sourced while HUL sourced more than 69% of agricultural raw materials sustainably. In palm oil for instance, 100% of our palm oil across Unilever is now from sustainable sources, which is three years ahead of schedule.

     

    We have also tied up with partners across our value chain, including smallholder farmers, entrepreneurs and governments to ensure sustainable production and responsible growth. By the end of 2012, through our supply partnerships, we have helped train 450,000 tea farmers in sustainable practices globally. In India, we have also expanded our network of Shakti ammas to 48,000 entrepreneurs covering 3.3 million households in over 135,000 Indian villages. This is the embodiment of our philosophy of doing well by doing good.

     

    Ultimately, our brands have to be agents at the forefront of social change. Diarrhoea alone claims the lives of 3,000 children below the age of five every day. Clinical trials show this is preventable. If we can persuade people to wash their hands with soap at key moments, we can make a big difference to reducing diarrhoeal disease and thus save lives. That is exactly what Lifebuoy soap aims to do. The Lifebuoy hand-washing education programme has already reached more than 119 million people in India and other developing countries. In addition, we have provided safe drinking water for 45 million people in India and globally through Pureit. India accounted for the largest part of the additional 10 million people that we provided safe drinking water to in 2012. Together, we aim to help more than a billion people to improve their hygiene habits and bring safe drinking water to 500 million people by 2020.

     

    Section Eight: Conclusion

    We are clearly living in a new reality characterised by Volatility, Uncertainty, Complexity and Ambiguity, and this new world is here to stay. For businesses to succeed in the future, leaders need to redefine the rightful role of business in society by pursuing responsible growth.

     

    At Unilever and at Hindustan Unilever Limited, we have a clear point of view about where we need to go and how to get there. We are building leaders who combine strategic foresight with agility; leaders who put consumers at the heart of the business; leaders with the ability to think local and act global; leaders who invest in building commitment in the organisation and developing others. Most important of all, we are building leaders who are guided by a shared set of values and sense of purpose. With these leaders in place, I am confident that we can overcome the challenges and seize the opportunities to win in this VUCA world. Together, we can fulfill our responsibility in society and in the words of Mahatma Gandhi, “be the change you wish to see in the world”.