Category: ADVERTISING

  • Omnicom rolls out precision marketing platform, Omni

    By A Correspondent

     

    Omnicom Group, Inc. announced the roll-out of Omni, its people-based precision marketing and insights platform, designed to identify and define personalised consumer experiences at scale across creative, media, CRM as well as other Omnicom practice areas.

     

    Said Omnicom Media Group CEO Daryl Simm: “When we launched Annalect seven years ago, we dedicated ourselves to transforming the effects of data and analytics on media. With Omni, we’re extending everything we’ve learned to transform the entire marketing process.” “Omni connects our talent around a single view of the consumer and inspires them to create the best integrated ideas that drive success for our clients.”

     

    Added Omnicom Digital CEO Jonathan Nelson: “Until now, the idea of mass personalization was more of an aspiration than a reality.  Omni changes that.  This is precision marketing at scale and in action.  And the new platform can be leveraged by all Omnicom clients across multiple disciplines.”

     

    Said Tony Harradine, CEO of Omnicom Media Group Asia Pacific: “’In keeping with our vision at OMG, Omni’s launch represents another significant step towards our ambition to create best-in-class data infrastructure and capability for our agency brands. We are hugely excited by this global innovation and are already realising its incredible impact for our agency brands and clients.”

     

    The broad roll-out of Omni comes after several months of implementing the platform on select creative, media and CRM business engagements. Deployment of Omni will continue across Omnicom’s leading agencies in the coming months.

     

     

  • Monte Carlo appoints Publicis India as its creative agency

    By A Correspondent

     

    Leading apparels brand, Monte Carlo Fashions Ltd. has announced the appointment of Publicis India as its creative agency. The agency won the account following a multi-agency pitch and will handle the business out of its New Delhi office.

     

    Monica Oswal

    Commenting on the partnership, Monica Oswal, Executive Director, Monte Carlo Fashions Ltd. said: “Monte Carlo is an iconic lifestyle brand that celebrates fashion in its true sense and we want to leverage its inherent strengths. In Publicis India, we have found the right partner to do this and we are looking forward to their contribution on our brand.”

     

     

    Srija Chatterjee

    Add Srija Chatterjee, Managing Director, Publicis India: “With a series of wins like Cera, Pearl Academy, Ralson Tyres and now Monte Carlo under its belt, our New Delhi office is turning to be a hot favourite on the consideration set of clients. We are delighted that our communication idea found resonance with what Monte Carlo has in mind for the Indian market and hope to establish the brand as a favourite of Indians.”

     

     

    Ravpreet Ganesh

    Said Ravpreet Ganesh, Executive Director, Publicis India: “Monte Carlo is the definitive Indian brand. To reinterpret a brand’s strength is once-in-a-lifetime opportunity and we are looking forward to working on it. Our objective will be to engage the audience in a fresh, surprising and rewarding manner. We are very proud to be associated with Monte Carlo and together we hope to create path breaking work.”

     

     

  • Motilal Oswal’s next addresses volatility in stocks

    By A Correspondent

     

    Motilal Oswal has launched a new ad campaign to address current stock market volatility. The company has been playing an instrumental role in being the finance partner of choice among its consumers. Over a period of three decades, it has provided products and advice to help create wealth through equity investing.

     

    Said Ramnik Chhabra (Director Marketing MOFSL): “Volatile markets test patience and reward conviction. In times like these, it is important to invest in quality stocks and hold on to them even during tough market conditions. It’s what we focus on with our “Buy Right: Sit Tight” investing philosophy. The TVC tries to demonstrate this through the vivid metaphor of the bull ride.

     

    Added Garima Khandelwal, Executive Creative Director, Mullen Lintas: “Motilal Oswal wanted to make an industry point to stay invested when the market is rough, we wanted to continue the brand tonality of saying it laterally, thus the metaphor of a mechanical bull, also using the same track, some properties we have now built for the brand.”

     

     

  • Scarecrow M&C Saatchi bags creative duties of 7 FMCG brands

    By A Correspondent

     

    Scarecrow M&C Saatchi has bagged the creative duties of seven FMCG brands, two of which are global. Of the seven, four belong to the Emami Group.
    The complete range of Boroplus (Face Wash, Fairness Cream, Body Lotion, Prickly Heat Powder and  Antiseptic Cream), Emami Kesh King Hair Oil & Shampoo, Emami 7 oils in one hair oil and Emami Diamond Shine Hair Colour are part of the Emami bouquet. Then there’s the Lactalis group’s Anik range (Ghee, Milk, Flavoured Milk, Buttermilk, Curd and Milk powder), the entire portfolio of German brand Baby Sebamed that is marketed in India by USV Pharma and Wagh Bakri’s Mili Tea brand.
    The accounts will be handled by Scarecrow M&C Saatchi’s Mumbai office.

    Said Vikas Srivastava, Sr. GM (Marketing), Emami Limited, confirmed the development by adding, “Scarecrow has been evolving over the years and now, with their tie-up with M&C Saatchi we expect our communication will become sharper with new ideas that will help break clutter.”DPS Advertising & Marketing, Kolkata, has been associated with Emami on the above brands for years, and the association will continue.

    Commenting on the decision to choose Scarecrow M&C Saatchi, Executive Director of Wagh Bakri Tea Group Parag Desai said: “Wagh Bakri Tea is the leader in Gujarat and very popular brand in Rajasthan and Madhya Pradesh wherein in Mili Tea is second choice for masses. We are now targeting newer territories such as North India, South India, Maharashtra and Goa. Scarecrow M&C Saatchi presented us a compelling creative strategy to gain significant market share in these regions.”

    On Sebamed, Farida Hussain, Director for Splendore Business, said: “We are very upbeat about taking Baby Sebamed to the next level. Its unique formulation with pH 5.5 makes it effective and extremely safe for the little ones, right from day one. We are sure the association with Scarecrow M&C Saatchi will support Sebamed to meet its aspirations.”

    And this is what Manish Bhatt, Founder-Director, Scarecrow M&C Saatchi said:

    On the Emami win: “Some of the brands like Boroplus are truly iconic brands that every Indian has grown up with. Creating memorable work for such a memorable brand is indeed a matter of great pride for us at Scarecrow M&C Saatchi. Raghu and me have already worked on beauty, skin care and hair care brands like Parachute, L’Oreal, Lakme Elle 18, Vaseline, Dabur Vatika and more in our earlier days, and would love to provide the necessary expertise to create some ground-breaking work for these brands as well.”

    On Wagh Bakri’s Mili Tea: “It’s a special feeling. Scarecrow M&C Saatchi has been handling Wagh Bakri for over three years now. The group has ambitious plans for Mili Tea and has always evolved with times and focused on expanding reach. We are thrilled to partner with them in this exciting journey.

    And on Sebamed: “It’s always a pleasure to work on a brand where you are one of its target audiences. The Group has shown faith in Scarecrow M&C Saatchi by giving us the mandates of its Baby skincare range. Baby skin care is a tough category and USV private limited has a very ambitious plan for it. Team Scarecrow is really excited to contribute to Sebamed’s growth.”

     

     

  • Creativeland Asia wins Excitel mandate

    By A Correspondent

     

    Excitel Broadband has picked Creativeland Asia as its creative partner. As part of the mandate, the agency will be responsible for creative communication strategy, planning and execution for the brand in India.

     

    On appointing Creativeland Asia, Vivek Raina, CEO Excitel Broadband said: “Innovation and unique business model combined with our zest for achieving new heights has helped Excitel become one of the top players in the wired broadband segment. We have ambitious growth plans and belief that Creativeland Asia is aligned to our vision of taking the brand to the next level. They demonstrated a clear understanding of our business and have a proven track record of creating remarkable campaigns and out of the box communication for their clients. We look forward to working with them.”

     

    Manas Lahiri

    On winning the account, Manas Lahiri, Branch Head, Creativeland Asia Delhi, said: “With the digital revolution in India going full steam ahead, Excitel has managed to break barriers and climb to the top of the ladder in terms of broadband connectivity and speed. We are delighted to work with Excitel, a brand that’s fast-paced and create truly exciting campaigns which break the clutter and help grow their business.”

     

     

  • MSL India appoints Rachna Sharma as Director Citizenship and Chief Mentoring Officer

    By A Correspondent

     

    Rachna Sharma

    MSL India has announced the appointment of Rachna Sharma to two newly created roles Director Citizenship and Chief Mentoring Officer. Reporting to Amit Misra, CEO of MSL India, Sharma will head the Citizenship practice in India, which includes leading and developing mandates in the sector of social purpose, sustainability and community development. In addition, as Chief Mentoring Officer, she is tasked with contributing to career planning and growth initiatives.

     

    Said Misra: “We are thrilled that Rachna chose team MSL to join. With her superb credentials, leadership skills and keen sense of culture and values, she will be a great addition to our executive leadership team. We understand our clients’ growing need for c-suite counsel on Citizenship and Sustainability, as well our internal need to consistently nurture the next line of leaders, this strategic appointment will bridge both needs.”

     

    Commenting on her appointment, Sharma said: “MSL has built a market leading reputation as a great place to work and create exceptional work and it will be my privilege to join the team as a catalyst of our collective growth to take the firm to newer heights. I am looking forward to collaborate with my colleagues to build the next level of social purpose expertise and bring strategic and impactful communications skills to organizations focused on meeting challenging development goals.”

     

     

  • Utterly Fifaly Russilicious!

     

    By A Correspondent [updated]

     

    There are few better ways to chronicle the just-concluded FIFA World Cup than the Amul topicals. We bring you all the ads released for the Russian edition. Perhaps every edition of the World Cup sees the creators of the Amul ad at Mumbai-based da Cunha Advertising see their creative juices flowing better than ever before.

     

    We still fondly remember the ‘Maradonatohaisa, butter hona toh Amul hona’ from 1989, though couldn’t locate the image for the 1982 super-ad ‘Pau lo roz hi’ on Paolo Rossi.

     

    There have been as many as 13 ads released just in the duration of the FIFA World Cup 2018 in Russia, with, we are sure a few more could follow. For instance, how about one on the Croatian president who, like the team, won our heart.

     

    We will update this story when there’s more. Meanwhile, here’s the collection. Enjoy.

     

     

     

     

     

     

     

     

     

     

     

     

     

     

  • Ad Club announces inaugural digital event – D-CODE

    By A Correspondent

     

    The Advertising Club has announced the debut edition of its India Digital Review – D-CODE. The review will be held on August 1 in Mumbai.

     

    Thirteen industry leaders will speak for 10 minutes each on a piece of work that they are proud of, a piece of work another brand has done that inspires them and three pieces of advice for marketers for winning in digital

     

    The advertising stalwarts speaking at the review include: Agnello Dias, Chairman & Co-Founder, Taproot; Ajit Mohan, CEO, Hotstar; Anupriya Acharya, CEO, Publicis Media; Anuradha Aggarwal, CMO, Marico; Arun Iyer, Chairman & CCO, Lowe Lintas; Juhi Kalia, Head of Creative Shop – India & Indonesia, Facebook; Rahul Johri, CEO, BCCI; Ravi Desai, Marketing Director, Amazon; Sam Singh, CEO – South Asia, GroupM; Sapna Chadha, Marketing Director – India & SEA, Google; Shoumyan Biswas, Vice President, Marketing, Flipkart; Siddharth Banerjee, EVP Marketing, Vodafone; Tanmay Bhat, Co-Founder, AIB. The review will be moderated by President, The Advertising Club – Vikram Sakhuja.

     

    Speaking about the maiden edition of the review Vikram Sakhuja, Group CEO, media and OOH, Madison Communications & President, The Advertising Club said: “Brands are today operating in a globally competitive landscape making it imperative to ensure clutter breaking conversation and presence across dynamic digital mediums. With knowledge platforms like the Digital review, The Advertising Club endeavours to create awareness, facilitate ideas exchange and enable the Indian media and advertising fraternity to stay ahead of the curve on digital innovation and engagement.”

     

     

  • Creative Antenna appoints Amrita Bhattacharyya as Business Head

    By A Correspondent

     

    Creative Antenna has announced the appointment of Amrita Bhattacharya as its Business Head, Mumbai.

     

    Speaking on the appointment, Rahoul Bhaargava, Founder, Creative Antenna said: “We are confident that Amrita will provide the kind of leadership that nurtures and builds on the spirit of Creative Antenna. She brings with her rich experience in telecommunications and VAS, and will therefore be well placed to contribute meaningfully to our client’s needs.”

     

    Added Bhattacharyya: “It’s an honour for me to work with India’s leading audio content company and cater to the industry which certainly needs this kind of ‘snack content on the go’. Rahoul with his visionary leadership had already set the ball rolling and I intend to further solidify this working with the enthused team at Creative Antenna.”

     

     

  • Wadhwa promotes upcoming realty project

    By A Correspondent

     

    The Wadhwa Group has unveiled a new campaign for its upcoming integrated Township Living project, Wadhwa Wise City @Panvel.

     

    Said Priyansh Kapoor – Head Sales, Marketing& CRM at Wadhwa Group: “This project is very important to us. We are known for our strong focus on planning and design aesthetics, and the same values form key pillars of this township. Located in emerging hotspot of Panvel, it offers quality affordable homes to ease the travails of first-time home buyers, for whom owning a quality home is a distant dream. So the communication challenge was to position Wadhwa Wise City as a massive and integrated project that delivers tremendous value with an incredible lifestyle, redefining what a budget home includes.”

     

    Added Virendra Saini, Executive Director – Mumbai, Triton Communications: “It’s been a privilege working closely with the Wadhwa marketing team on a project as prestigious as Wadhwa Wise City. There are multiple housing projects mushrooming in Panvel that claim to be affordable but demand over-the-roof prices. The resulting campaign redefines advertising for value homes. It dispels the myth that communication for affordable housing needs to look ‘less premium’ and shout for attention with large fonts and loud colors.”

     

     

  • Lodestar UM strides for a clean and better world

    By A Correspondent

     

    Lodestar UM celebrated Impact Day on July 19. It was a day when the agency network turned off emails and shut the office to come together to help our surrounding communities.

     

    Notes a communique: “Plastic has been a huge point of discussion in the country. We adopted the theme of “Say No to Plastic” across all offices except Mumbai. We roped in a client, Borosil, who has very nice glass water bottles costing roughly Rs 300.  We created a vibrant ‘save marine life’ series of glass water bottles that could be customised for individuals with their names. Our employees approached their client partners to participate in our initiative by replacing the plastic water bottles on their tables with our specially designed glass ones. Large corporates across two cities Delhi and Bengaluru participated in our programme – Whirlpool, IndusInd, Viacom , BMW, Times of India , SAIL , IOCL , McCann,  Cheil, FCB, Wipro, Exide Life Insurance, Air Asia , Duroflex, Amante. In fact, individuals were even willing to pay for the bottles!  The enthusiasm was unbelievable. The demand for our glass bottles was way beyond what we had anticipated. We ended up ordering three times the original quantity of glass bottles, all bought by individuals. The creative and art was done by FCB Interface.”

     

    And in Mumbai, there was a very different activity. Adds the communique: “Saki Naka in Andheri is an industrial area and generates a lot of garbage. And every little stretch of road has a garbage dump. We moved into the area about a year back. Initially, we tried very hard to get the landlord of our building to remove a large garbage dump outside our premises and clean up the surrounding area. It’s an uphill task given the multiple stakeholders that are involved, permissions required and the sheer staff that would be needed to take on an activity of this scale. Since it didn’t happen for many months we decided to make it our UM Impact Day theme and execute the whole project from start to finish ourselves. But the cleaning up would be just the beginning… since this was a public road it required a lot more than just cleaning up. It meant changing the behaviour of people from all the offices, restaurants, hospitals, housing societies etc in the locality to sustain the clean-up. It meant that the whole community had to think different and act differently. For a cleaner, greener surrounding.  We had to not only ensure that we provided an alternative method for garbage collection but we also had to align everybody who was dumping garbage on the street to the new way. We reached out to the authorities, restaurants, other commercial buildings, hospitals and housing societies and enrolled them in our plan. We then distributed dustbins to individual organisations and worked with the authorities on method, timings, location etc. on how the garbage will get collected.  All this took months of effort.  July 19 was the culmination of all the hard work. While the initiative was being driven by Lodestar UM, seeing the energy and enthusiasm around this mission all the other offices in the building including FCB Ulka, FCB Interface, Initiative, Rapport wanted to be part of it. Yesterday, we had over 200 employees of Lodestar UM and all the other companies come together, on the street, to transform the area.  They swept the roads, scraped the walls of fungus and painted them with paint provided by our client Nerolac Paints who also became our beautification partner. And we didn’t just paint the walls, we made it a learning opportunity. An open classroom! While at one end of the wall we had the Marathi alphabets painted in bold vibrant colours on the other end we created a large blackboard where people could doodle to learn and play. The final brushstroke was green – 120 plants in colourful pots.  The creative and art done by FCB Ulka.”

     

    Lodestar employees had a field day, literally and figuratively, adds the release. “They picked up different tools to clean up the area – sweeping, picking up the garbage, covering drains, putting paver blocks, cementing the road, painting, gardening, watering the plants… And the highpoint of the day was a pledge that they took individually and collectively by passing a sapling in a recycled Nerolac can “I pledge to keep the environment clean and plant more trees”.  This for us was not just one day, it was a whole new beginning. And a fulfilment of a very different kind.”

     

     

  • ‘If we approach clients from a view of learning, we will end up learning’

     

    A hundred and seventy-seven pages and a few more for introductions, contents, acknowledgements and suggested reading make ‘Sponge: Leadership Lessons I Learnt From My Clients’ a must, and uputdownable read. Though it actually it deserves more than a rapid read. For, other than the very readable anecdotes written in an easy, now trademark Ambi Parameswaran style, there are nuggets of wisdom that he has added on to each of the chapters. The extract that we carry will give you a better idea of the format of the book. Great read. Non-discounted cover price: Rs 350. This interview with MxMIndia was done a day before the formal launch of the book in Mumbai. Read on…

     

    It’s an unusual title for a book title, but then so appropriate for what you are trying to say. Evidently they were etched deep in your memory for you to recall all of them for the book. Did you ever alter the course of your career or the way you work post any of the lessons you learnt?

    The 25 stories I have narrated in ‘SPONGE – Leadership Lessons I Learnt From My Clients’ are stories that have stayed fresh in my mind. Some of the stories date back to 1980 and some are from the 2000s. They cover a gamut of clients I have had the privilege of dealing with. I don’t think any of these interactions made me make a career change but may be they did play a hidden role. For instance, my move from advertising to marketing, in 1982 was probably a result of the terrific brand managers I got to deal with as an account executive. Other than for that, I don’t think there was any major career ‘Pivot’ driven by a conversation.

     

    Something/someone that you are happy you didn’t learn from? And something that you absorbed and decide you’ll never ever do the same?

    I have had my share of tough clients and demanding clients. I have had clients who were rude and at times unreasonable. So I have realised that when I deal with my associates, professionals like film makers, photographers, designers, I will not be unreasonable and definitely not rude. As a client told me many years ago, ‘You can disagree, But don’t be disagreeable’. I hope I have been able to live up to that goal.

     

    In your 40-year career, you’ve obviously met a host of clients. From pedigreed, well-educated captains to johnny-come-latelies. And in the course of your meetings, you would’ve also met a host of people you wouldn’t have learnt much from. So is there a certain kind of professional/owner you would learnt from more? Did you learn more when you became a CEO or even when you were a rookie?

    I think advertising is a unique industry, at least it was. As a rookie AE I got to interact with business leaders. So learning as a beginner was indeed very vast. But as you rise up in your job, your level of interactions also go up. I got to meet Chief Ministers, Finance Secretaries and people of that ilk much later in my career. And I did learn from them. So as you go up the organisational hierarchy you can continue on your learning journey. Now as a consultant, brand coach, I meet a whole new set of clients. And there are lessons that I am continuing to learn.

     

    Would you say that you were privileged to were able to ‘sponge’ these learnings better than others would have over the years? Did the fact that you are educated at IIT and IIM plus you are academically inclined help corporate and marketing leaders to open out to you or share their thoughts with you?

    I don’t think my education had a big role in my learning or getting business leaders to open up to me more. Somewhere I think I did use the S.P.O.N.G.E Framework to absorb new ideas. The framework is so simple you don’t need an IIT / IIM Degree to use it. Often we don’t listen carefully enough, we don’t question and we don’t understand what is unsaid. All this leads to shallow learning. If we are keen on learning, chances are the party on the other side will open up even more.

     

    How would you rate the current lot of captains (head of business or head of marketing) versus from say 15-20-30 years back? Is there is a shift in the method to the madness then and now? Is there much to learn from the current crop?

    It is a pity that advertising and I suppose a lot of marketing services decisions are getting pushed down the food chain. Prof John Philip Jones wrote about this in HBR and he called Advertising as the ‘Cinderella of Business’. I think if business leaders, I mean CMOs and CEOs can find the time to engage with their agency partners, both creative, media and strategy, they will benefit a lot more. The whole business of second-guessing the boss could be destroying a lot of good ideas.That said, I think we do have some excellent CEOs and CMOs in Indian business. May be they are preoccupied with other things. That is a pity.

     

    Any word of advice to young advertising professionals on how they can ‘sponge’ from great minds just as you did

    Young people in advertising and media need to ‘reframe’ the way they look at clients. The relationship cannot be about transaction and making a quick sale. If we approach clients from a view of learning, we will end up learning.

     

    Lastly, this is your ninth book at the bookstores. And along with an active consulting practice and the time you spent in academia, here’s a question that we’ve asked you in the past: how do you manage to do it? Also, what’s the next book going to be on?

    Reading, writing and teaching are all various sides of a coin. If you do two you can do the third with not too much effort. I have the habit of writing something or the other every weekend. That habit has stayed with me for the last twenty years. Now that I don’t have intense client pressures, I am able to write a bit more and read a lot more. So it is simply a matter of discipline, I think. May be that is too simplistic. But I don’t have any complicated mantra for writing. Regarding the next book, it still some distance away.