Category: ADVERTISING

  • Creativeland Asia partners Mood Indigo

    By A Correspondent

     

    Creativeland Asia has partnered with IIT Bombay’s Mood Indigo as the creative competitions partner. The event is scheduled from December 22 to 25 2017 at the IIT Bombay campus in Mumbai.

     

    The competitions will include 18 categories divided under Design and Digital Arts, Fine Arts, Literary Arts, Travel Blogging, Journalism & Communication. Winners will get a chance to meet with Sajan Raj Kurup, Founder & Creative Chairman, Creativeland Asia Group, and will be eligible for an internship at Creativeland Asia.

     

    Sajan Raj Kurup

    Commenting on the partnership, Sajan Raj Kurup, Founder and Creative Chairman, Creativeland Asia Group said: “Creativeland is a creative ecosystem that exists to collaborate and inspire creativity in everyone. We found the right fit in partnering IIT Bombay’s Mood Indigo as it gives us an opportunity to identify and nurture young creative minds. I’m looking forward to the competition and interacting with the participants.”

     

    Commenting on the partnership, Karan Trichal, PR Head, IIT Bombay Mood Indigo said: “Mood Indigo is the largest college cultural festival in Asia and brings with it a lot of excitement and great talent. It is an honour for us to partner with a renowned and credible firm like Creativeland Asia. Their work has inspired us for years and through this association, we hope to imbibe their creativity and culture. It is a fantastic opportunity for all the participants to learn and grow with their guidance.”

     

     

  • McD appoints Sagar Kargutkar as Director – Mktg & Comms

    By A Correspondent

     

    Sagar Kargutkar

    Hardcastle Restaurants, master franchise of McDonald’s restaurants in West and South India, has announced the appointment of Sagar Kargutkar as Director, Marketing and Communications.

     

    He joins McDonald’s from The Times of India group where in his last assignment was National Lead, Marketing for Times of India’s metro supplements.

     

    Commenting on his appointment, Seema Arora Nambiar, Senior Vice President – Strategy, Innovation & Capability, McDonald’s India (West & South) said: “We are delighted to welcome Sagar to the McDonald’s family. Having successfully led various big-ticket campaigns, he is a perfect fit for this role. His immense knowledge and strong capabilities in brand building and marketing communication will add tremendous value to our ambitious growth strategy.”

     

     

  • Columbus wins digital duties for baddie league PBL

    By A Correspondent

     

    Columbus India, the digital agency from Dentsu Aegis Network, has won the digital media mandate for Premier Badminton League (PBL). The league goes live in this season from tomorrow, December 23 2017 till January 24, 2018.

     

    Speaking on the association, Prasad Mangipudi, Founder, Sportzlive said: “This relationship will help Sportzlive and PBL to get media engagement services from Columbus’ unique ‘Media Engagement Framework’, enabling the event to reach millions of digital audiences in India & abroad”.

     

    Added Nitin Sabharwal, CBO, Columbus India: “We look forward to this chapter of PBL with great enthusiasm and have deployed a dedicated team for media measurement & data driven media buying. Our audience engagement framework will ensure that PBL gets to reach maximum badminton and sports enthusiasts across the globe.”

     

     

  • Lowe Lintas creates new campaign for Fastrack

    By A Correspondent

     

    Said Shiv Parameswaran, Executive Creative Director, Lowe Lintas Bangalore: “Sometimes, the product itself can lead to an idea. In this case, it was the perforated design pattern of the watches. The typography we created for “Loopholes” also became the escape route for all our characters. After all, every situation has a loophole. You can get away if you spot them.”

     

    Added Ayushman Chiranewala, Head of Marketing –Fastrack:  “The Loopholes collection is inspired by perforations on sports apparels blended with the unique Fastrack design language. It’s made for the youth who is always on the move. The campaign highlights the ‘holes/ perforations’ on the watches and adds a quirky and fashion forward touch which depicts how the consumer is on the look out to get out of sticky situations by finding out loopholes. The collection has 36 Watches sporting various functions like day date feature and multifunction feature, split equally between guys and girls.”

     

    Speaking on the agency’s work produced for the brand, Hari Krishnan, President (South) – Lowe Lintas said: “When Fastrack showed us their new range of perforated watches, we saw the quirk right there. Every perforation is a loophole and every loophole, an opportunity.”

     

    The campaign will be visible in the online media on YouTube and social media platforms. A series of outdoor communication augmenting the design idea will also bolster the campaign’s visibility.

     

     

  • Elephant brings out #BoldlyBritish in Witlinger’s new packaging

    By A Correspondent

     

    Pune-based Elephant has created a new visual language on the bottle to communicate Witlinger beer’s British personality. The new design with ‘British Bulldog’ as a mascot characterises Witlinger’s British origin.

     

    Speaking about the brand’s new design, Anuj Kushwah, Managing Director and Founder said: “This is an exciting time for Witlinger as we are showcasing our true identity and characteristics of being very British and honest with what we do i.e. making sincere and honest craft beer. This definitely adds fun in drinking good craft beer with the great bold design.

     

    Added Ashwini Deshpande, Co-founder, Director Elephant: “While many craft beers try to keep their origins ambiguous , here was a brand that wanted to convey its British origin unabashedly. We decided to leave the cliched British iconography and found a true hero in British bulldog! The idea is to bring various facets of the persona to life on align with each of the crafted brews.”

     

     

  • Religare Health Insurance to catch them young with YouTube ad

    By A Correspondent

     

    Religare Health Insurance has gone live with its first ever YouTube ad video.

     

    Commenting on this launch, Sachin Maheshwari, Business Head- Digital and Business Development, Religare Health Insurance said: “We have observed that even first time buyers of health insurance are usually of relatively progressed age. This is because customers believed that they would not encounter any serious medical condition in their younger years. This campaign is part of our sustained efforts to apprise customers with facts that would enable them to secure themselves with a health insurance as early in their lives as possible.”

     

     

  • Dentsu Webchutney gets Avinash Joshi to head social advocacy

    By A Correspondent

     

    Dentsu Webchutney, the digital agency from Dentsu Aegis Network, has announced the appointment of Avinash Joshi as VP and Head of Social Advocacy. He will report to Anil Kumar, EVP and Head- Delhi NCR, Dentsu Webchutney. His last stint was at Reliance Jio where he was AVP and Head of Social.

     

    Commenting on his assignment, Joshi said: “Social has fundamentally changed the consumer decision process and purchase path. Today, consumers have access to an exponentially growing number of opinions, tastes, and preferences via social connections. The days of strictly controlled brand messaging are long gone and without a clearly defined purchase path, word of mouth marketing (WOMM) has become more critical than ever. As marketers, we know that it’s virtually impossible to duplicate the level of credibility that comes with a personal endorsement from a friend. Personally, I’m on an adventure—uncovering what people are thinking, feeling and doing—with a mission to connect brands with consumers in more meaningful ways and there couldn’t be a better breeding ground than Dentsu Webchutney, an agency that always speaks with consumers instead of at them.”

     

    Added Anil Kumar, EVP and Head- Delhi NCR, Dentsu Webchutney: “Today, a brand enjoys the option of being more human than it could earlier. It’s no longer just about fans, but also friends. With Avinash joining us, we can now enable the brands that we partner, to harness the complete power of social media and their communities. We are very bullish on Avinash and the Social Advocacy vertical he’s setting up, we are also backing them all the way with our talented tech, creative, content and data intelligence teams.

     

     

  • Paritosh Srivastava named COO of Publicis Beehive

    By A Correspondent

     

    Publicis Communications has announced the appointment of Paritosh Srivastava as the COO of Publicis Beehive. Srivastava steps into the role in place of Sanjit Shastri, who passed away in September 2017.The appointment is effective immediately.

     

    Srivastava will take over the reins of the agency apart from continuing to lead Publicis Ambience as its COO. He will report to Srija Chatterjee, Managing Director, Publicis Worldwide India.

     

    Publicis Beehive is the advertising agency under Publicis Worldwide, India and is focused on serving startups and entrepreneurial ventures, and manages media buying, creative, PR and activation to drive growth for clients. Some of the clients it serves include Games24x7, Stovekraft, Xseed Education, e-Seva (MoPNG), UBS, MAAC, Tourism Malaysia, DSK Benelli, UIDAI, Pitaara Namkeen, Chambor Cosmetics, Sangeetha Mobiles among others.

     

    Commenting on the appointment, Srija Chatterjee said: “Publicis Beehive is what it is because of the relentless drive by Sanjit Shastri, whose untimely demise shocked one and all. Luckily, he has placed the agency on a pedestal that compares it to some of the best in the country. We are excited to have Paritosh Srivastava take over the reins and bring in his dynamism, astute business sense and ability to connect well with clients to drive the next phase of growth for the agency. I wish him all the luck for the role ahead.”

     

    Commenting on his additional role within Publicis Worldwide, Srivastava added: “I’m honoured to be given the mandate of leading Publicis Beehive. Unfortunately, the void left by my friend Sanjit Shastri is too big to be filled but I’m glad to be stepping in and look forward to further building on the legacy. Beehive is uniquely positioned in the market with its integrated offering and I see a huge potential for it in current business scenario. We have a solid team at Beehive and can expect some great momentum on both new business and work in the months to come.”

     

     

  • IAA Olive Crown Awards calls for entries

    By A Correspondent

     

    The India Chapter of the International Advertising Association (IAA) has called for entries for its prestigious Olive Crown Awards. There is no entry fee.

     

    Said Ramesh Narayan, President, IAA India: “The Olive Crowns are very close to my heart. This is the ninth edition of this unique award which salutes creative excellence in communicating sustainability. It is the only one of its kind in Asia.” This year efforts are being made to attract entries from across Asia. This award is endorsed by the Asian Federation of Advertising Associations (AFAA).The Olive Crown awards signify all that is good about our industry. This time the creatives for the Call For Entries campaign have been created by Raj Nair and his team at Madison BMB. They are based on Hollywood hits and provide a nice touch to the awards.”

     

    Added Megha Tata, Vice President, IAA India: “I have been closely associated with these awards over the last two years. We will spare no effort to deliver a great show on March 6, the day these awards would be presented. A great jury will judge these awards and we will announce the names shortly.”

     

    Along with the creative awards these are two special Olive Crowns, one for a Green Crusader, and the other for a Corporate Social Crusader. For entry forms and rules, visit iaaindiachapter.org. The last date for submission of entries is January 31, 2018.

     

     

  • Can IT consulting majors gobble up communication giants?

     

    By Prabhakar Mundkur

     

    Prabhakar Mundkur

    Steve Jobs is once known to have said, “We do no market research. We don’t hire consultants”.

     

    So obviously Steve Jobs didn’t have much faith in either but for some time now marketing trade magazines have been publishing articles on what might be described as a face off between the consultancy firms and the communication groups like WPP and Publicis.

     

    The latest salvo came from WPP’s third quarter earnings report where WPP dismissed the threat from management consultants as “overhyped”. Analysts may tend to have agreed.

     

    And yet just last month, Jerome Bodin, an analyst at Natixis shocked the communication group community by saying that WPP and Publicis were potential take over targets. He seemed to suggest that consultancy or IT services companies like Accenture or Capegemini could be shopping.

     

    Bodin said that WPP and Publicis were potential take over targets and that Accenture could be a possible buyer. “Amid strong pressure on advertising agencies’ business models, a consolidation deal is a credible scenario,” Jerome Bodin, an analyst at Natixis, wrote in his research report. Bodin said a merger was one possibility, but more likely were acquisitions by a consultancy or IT services company like Accenture or Capgemini. Brian Whipple an ex-ad agency executive from Accenture Interactive said, “We don’t believe brands are built from advertising anymore. “They are built from an amalgamation of customer experiences, so that is what we are focused on.” That statement unveiled the possible threat on the horizon for communication groups. Cognizants buy out of Zone Digital in the UK just two weeks ago perhaps was a good example of what Bodin might have been alluding to.

     

    In their third quarter earnings report this year WPP accused AdAge of carrying “wildly inaccurate” estimates of the consultancies’ digital marketing revenue in comparison with the industry’s agencies or holding companies. (Earlier Ad Age had reported that four consultancies have already cracked Ad Age’s ranking of the 10 largest agency companies in the world.)

    “Where the consultancies may have made some inroads is their focus not so much on the digital area, but more importantly on client concerns about cost,” WPP said.

    So WPP seems to have gone to great lengths to justify that the consultants were indeed no threat to WPP. They seem to have won more pitches and the more important ones in terms of size.

     

    Do services of the communication group and the consultancies really overlap?

    If one looks at it objectively there is no real overlap. Communication groups have mostly focussed on communication and creativity and the consultancies have been focussing on business expertise and advice to clients. This has often been alluded to as the consultancies being more left brained and the communication groups being more right brained. Why then this furore over the consultancy and the communication group face off? One of the reasons perhaps that there is some degree of overlap is the new field of ‘digital’ that has attracted both the consultancy and the communication groups, which considered it a natural extension of their earlier services since main media like TV and print have been slowly down and giving in to digital media, that is in some countries taking over a lion’s share of the market. For example, when it comes to news, digital media because of the penetration of phones and tablets and computers has been catching up with TV and newspapers in developed countries like the UK and others.

    Ofcom’s report in 2014 for the UK first showed a trend that would soon catch up in other countries as well.

     

    Andy Main, Chief Executive of Deloitte Digital which is entering India says ” We are transformation partners for our clients, while an advertising agency is a communication partner offering only creative solutions and talking only to marketers. Through our work, we try to impact the business of a company by bringing a change in its balance sheet quickly. I don’t think a television ad has ever transformed a business. We can work with the brand’s chief executives, supply chain, sales, finance and even human resource managers.

     

    Deloitte Digital brings capabilities like digital technology, experience design and linkage to back office systems. We can manage the company’s data leveraging new-age technologies like artificial learning and cognitive technology apart from connecting with the brand’s consumers through advertising”.

     

    So there is no doubt that the consultancy groups are taking the high ground with clients by claiming to be transformation partners for clients. Once upon a time, agencies also claimed to be transformation and business partners for clients, but it might be something the communication group has forgotten along the way. After all who would deny that Bill Bernbach transformed the Volkswagen business in the United States with the launch of the VW Beetle. Or deny that Ogilvy transformed the business for Rolls Royce and many others?

     

    Unfortunately that may no longer be true. Declining margins in the advertising business, have forced agencies to do just that much and no more. They have also enveloped themselves into the comfortable cocoon of ‘creativity’, thereby limiting their transformational abilities.

     

    Sometime ago Sir Martin Sorrell posed a rather rhetorical question when he said that consultancies can’t buy culture. He added that one is a science and the other is an art. I agree with that. But communication groups have not been happy with art and all the recent additions to their portfolios have been in the area of science. In fact, WPP boasts that less than a fifth of their revenues come from mainline advertising. The rest is data, media, research and digital which probably falls under ‘science’. So it is justified perhaps that the time has come for the consultancies to chase art as well.

     

    On the question of buying culture, my piano teacher used to say that it is easy to buy culture. She once pointed out that the easiest way to buy culture for the nouveau riche was to buy a piano and study classical music!

     

    Veteran adperson Prabhakar Mundkur now blogs at prabhakarmundkur.com. This comment first appeared here

     

  • Dentsu X India appoints Arabinda Ghosh as Chief Strategy Officer

    By A Correspondent

     

    Arabinda Ghosh

    Dentsu X, the Dentsu Aegis Network media agency, has roped in Arabinda Ghosh as Chief Strategy Officer. He will report to Roopam Garg, Chief Client Officer, Dentsu X India and will be based out of Delhi.

     

    Commenting on the appointment, Divya Karani, CEO, Dentsu X India said: “Having worked with Arabinda on the Tata Group media mandate in the past, I am elated, once again to have him aboard, at Dentsu X. In these intervening years, Arabinda has grown tremendously with his rich experience on BAT, Coke and other business. He brings immense value to the company’s capabilities. We are increasingly bringing on board senior talent who can carry forward the learnings of seamless integrated consumer and brand interaction to bear on our clients’ business.”

     

    Speaking about the new role, Ghosh said: “I find Dentsu X to be the most cutting edge and innovative media company, which enables me to pursue my dream. I am excited because dentsu X’s vision of ‘Experience over Exposure’ encapsulates the future of the entire communication eco-system in a pithy way. I look forward to both, being able to contribute and learn as we move forward.”

     

     

  • Lowe Lintas bags mandate for Xiaomi

    By A Correspondent

     

    Xiaomi India has appointed Lowe Lintas Bangalore to handle the creative mandate for the brand. Xiaomi.

     

    Speaking on this new business win, Raj Gupta, CEO, Lowe Lintas commented: “It is a proud privilege for us at Lowe Lintas to be chosen by Xiaomi, a brand that has such a huge fan following. We will strive to reinforce this love and get more consumers to fall in love with Xiaomi”

     

    Added a Xiaomi spokesperson: “Xiaomi is the No 1 smartphone brand in India. And what has helped us reach there is the constant innovation that is at the core of the brand. In just under three years, Xiaomi has won immense love and innumerable fans in this country. We now aim to establish our vision of ‘Innovation for everyone’ firmly and bring relevance through our products to every Indian. In Lowe Lintas, with its irrefutable experience and expertise in building lasting brands, we have found a perfect partner for the task at hand.”