Category: ADVERTISING

  • SMBs: Transforming Businesses, Transforming Advertising

     

    By Brian Wieser

     

    We review key trends related to small and medium-sized businesses (SMBs) during the pandemic. The shifts these marketers are taking to survive now and, ultimately, thrive in the future are a window into the business transformations larger businesses will also take, if they haven’t done so already.

     

    Small businesses have been hit hard during the pandemic.

    It has often been said that small businesses are the lifeblood of an economy. While the reality is that small businesses have generally been losing share of economic activity to larger ones over time, they retain a significant amount of importance. In the United States, small businesses – defined here as companies with fewer than 500 employees – account for approximately 40% of total payrolls and 47% of total employment, according to our analysis of U.S. Census Bureau data.

    With the pandemic disproportionately hurting small business because of their relative lack of capital, policies designed to help ensure they are positioned to quickly recover are particularly critical in preventing long-term disruption to the economy. In the United States and countries around the world, hundreds of billions of dollars of loans have been authorized specifically to address this issue. Whether or not policies will be successfully administered or sufficient in scale remains an open question.

     

    Companies with less than $50 million in revenue average $10k in ad spending, account for greater than 20% of total ad spend and a greater share of digital and print.

    How small businesses fare is not only important for the general economy; it is important for the health of the advertising industry and marketers as well.  According to our analysis of 2014 data from the IRS in the United States, the most recent year data was available, companies with less than $5 million in annual revenue—and average spending on advertising amounting to $5,000 annually—accounted for 10% of total ad spending. Companies with less than $50 million in revenue, where average ad spend was $10,000 on average accounted for 21% of economy-wide ad spending. Our guess is that that share likely rose in subsequent years.

    Most importantly, these companies accounted for substantially higher shares of spending on print and digital media given the relatively low price points at which advertising can be purchased in most instances. Their presence matters to larger advertisers because the capacity of many of their media channels to thrive is at least in part also dependent upon the health of smaller businesses.

     

    The ongoing economic driven downturn appeared ready to pulverize the media owners that small businesses depend on, but their spending may not have declined by as much as we might have expected. 

    However, something somewhat unexpected happened during April: they evidently did not cut their spending by as much as we might have expected. Data provided during Facebook’s recent earnings results indicating “approximately flat” trends during the first three weeks of April represented an approximate reduction of around -20% to -25% from the pace of growth observed during the first couple of months of the year. Spending trends were similar between large and small advertisers alike.

    By contrast, other digital media owners whose revenue bases are more heavily skewed away from small businesses, appear to have experienced more significant rates of deceleration or decline.  While depth and breadth of data and targeting capabilities undoubtedly helps to capture a large share of performance-advertising budgets from marketers of all types sizes, it is hard to ignore that Facebook is a primary seller of media for many small businesses (along with Google, which also saw a similar pace of deceleration during March at least).  To the extent that small businesses make up a larger share of Facebook’s revenues than other digital media owners, we have at least one indication that small business have been disproportionately resilient as advertisers during the pandemic, at least on digital media.

     

    The expansion of e-commerce activities by small businesses reflected in Shopify data probably helps to explain this trend.   

    E-commerce has plainly expanded at an accelerating clip around the world. For example, Amazon’s online stores saw growth of +25% during the first quarter, ahead of the fourth quarter’s +15% pace. Comments from most of the world’s largest marketers have generally reinforced this view in comments on their own e-commerce sales. Was it also true that the same trends occurred for small businesses?

    Anecdotally, most people can probably describe a favorite local store that closed but who made their products available for sale online in some form. And, as it turns out, data from Shopify – whose customer base is heavily skewed toward small businesses – supports this notion. While smaller than Amazon – whose total global GMV (including its own sales and marketplace sales) was well above $300 billion last year – Shopify’s base of GMV last year of $61 billion is primarily small businesses.

    During the first quarter of 2020, Shopify GMV accelerated to grow by +46%. While GMV through point-of-sale channels using Shopify declined by -71% between March 13 and April 24 relative to the comparable six-week period immediately prior, retail merchants managed to replace 94% of lost point-of-sale GMV with online sales over the same period. A range of other notable statistics provided by the company provide additional snapshots of the transition in commercial activity during the six weeks following the middle of March, illustrating some of the changes in the economy since that time, including:

    • New stores created on the Shopify platform grew 62% between March 13, 2020 and April 24, 2020 compared to the prior six weeks.

    • The number of consumers estimated to have made a purchase for the first time from any Shopify merchant grew 8% between March 13, 2020 and April 24, 2020, compared to the six-week period immediately prior.

    • Over the same period, the number of consumers estimated to have purchased from Shopify merchants they’d never shopped at before grew by 45% compared to the six-week period immediately prior.

     

    Small businesses finding ways to survive via e-commerce will change their media skew and illustrate business transformation at a small scale.

    Our takeaway from all of these data points and observations is that small businesses are generally going to get hurt much harder than others during the current environment, and larger businesses will probably take shares in every given sector. At the same time, though, smaller businesses that have been able to find ways to adapt to a digital-first orientation by virtue of necessity are positioning themselves to thrive for the economic recovery that will eventually follow.

    And while many of the familiar commercial activities that took place before this year will return as if a pandemic never occurred, it seems hard to image we won’t see a permanent shift for others. The coffee roaster who newly discovered shipping beans in bulk to consumers directly, or the yarn store that found the benefits of a strong online presence outweigh the costs of maintaining a retail environment may very well continue doing so well after social restrictions have been eliminated. These simple illustrations of “business transformation” will inevitably lead to an increased emphasis on digital marketing to support the e-commerce activity that will drive growth in small business sales.

     

    Implications follow from these takeaways for marketers and media owners alike.

    Marketers who depend even in part on small businesses for distribution of products will need to increasingly adapt their own commercial activities to reflect this shift of orientation. Similarly, media owners who historically depended on small businesses will also need to evolve to reflect the evolving needs of the marketers they work with as well. Otherwise they will lose a more significant share of revenue than they already have.

    Small businesses are not likely to be the lifeblood of the economy in the near-term, but the bigger picture transformations the most successful ones will go through are illustrations of changes that large brands will be well-served to emulate, if they haven’t already done so themselves. The implications that follow for the media owners that large brands generally work with are far from clear, in part because larger media owners still have time to adapt their own offerings to anticipate changes that will become more pronounced for their customer base over time.

     

    Brian Wieser is Global President, Business Intelligence, GroupM. Republished from https://www.groupm.com/smbs-transforming-businesses-transforming-advertising/

     

  • Vogo vrooms with Orchard for personal mobility

    By A Correspondent

     

    Vogo, the scooter sharing company, has partnered with Leo Burnett Orchard to build the personal mobility market in India over the course of 2020. The agency will develop the long-term brand strategy, brand identity, the relaunch campaign for Vogo. The account was won through a virtual pitch and will be handled by the Bengaluru office.

     

    Said Anand Ayyadurai, Chief Executive Officer, Vogo: “At Vogo, we truly believe that this is the inflection point for personal mobility solutions like ours and are building new products to ensure safe, reliable commute for all consumers – be it office commute, leisure or errands. In a post lockdown world, brand trust and salience are both key competitive advantages. Given the unique and heightened relevance of our service in these times, we looked for a partner that understands how to build new markets. In Leo Burnett Orchard, we found the perfect fit. We are very excited to work with them in the long term on seizing the opportunity in personal mobility. Their deep experience in building some of the most beloved brands in India is a key advantage as we set off to build India’s best and most reliable personal mobility brand.”

     

    Added Dheeraj Sinha, Managing Director – India & Chief Strategy Officer, Leo Burnett South Asia: “At Leo Burnett we are always excited about opportunities where we have to build new markets and change behaviour. The Vogo proposition is extremely exciting and very timely. We are looking at a sharp rise in areas of personal transport in the post-COVID world, and propositions such as that of Vogo sit right there. This is also an exciting win as the entire process, right from the inquiry to the pitch to the closure has happened virtually. We look forward to bringing our strategic thinking, technology-led creative approach and our understating of platforms to help Vogo succeed.”

     

    Said Gaurav Dudheja, EVP & Branch Head, Leo Burnett Orchard: “We are absolutely thrilled with this win. Vogo is perfectly poised to take the Personal mobility category to the next level in the country and we look forward to partnering them in this journey with our new age and data driven thinking approach. At Leo Burnett we have built success for many technology first brands, especially in our Bangalore office and we are confident of carrying on the show with Vogo. Watch out this space for some exciting work to follow.”

     

     

  • Laqshya Media report shows opportunity for economy to make a comeback

    By A Correspondent

     

    Laqshya Media Group has published a report by looking at the data of the human resources available in the green and orange zone districts. The report shows that there is opportunity for the Indian economy to make a comeback from a different starting point.

     

     

    Said Alok Jalan, Managing Director, Laqshya Media Group: “The Laqshya Group always believes in the power of data. Even in these unprecedented times we see how data can show us a way forward. In the report published by Laqshya we see a lot of opportunity in the Green and Orange districts for the brands and media owners. With the opening up of the districts and the restart of production and commerce, hyper-localised advertising that are most suited to these districts needs to be looked at in earnest. So, even though major towns and cities will still take time to return to their original productive capabilities, the Green and Orange districts can start contributing to the economy.”.

     

     

  • Mirum India wins social media mandate for WileyNxt

    By A Correspondent

     

    Mirum India has announced it has bagged the mandate for social media management and online query management for WileyNxt, a learning solution from John Wiley and Sons. WileyNxt has collaborated with institutions like IIM Lucknow to bridge the ‘education to job and job to job’ skill gap.

     

    Mirum India will assist WileyNxt in developing a distinct positioning and building brand awareness in an already cluttered professional-learning market. Mirum India will be responsible for brand communication, social media management and an always-on paid media campaign. The account will be serviced from Mirum India’s Delhi office.

     

    Commenting on this association, Jagriti Goyal, Marketing Head, WileyNxt, said: “WileyNxt is a transformative solution that’s set to build a talent pipeline for the jobs of tomorrow.  In an advertising clutter generated by competing companies, the need for WileyNxt is to stand out with clear cut messaging that allows the learners to distinguish between real learning and otherwise. We were looking for a strong agency who would be able to see through the honesty and the strong credible legacy that WileyNxt originates from and do true justice to the communication developed to present the various programs launched for the end audiences. We are launching some extremely relevant Industry driven, Executive Education Programs in Analytics across domains and Dream Jobs Placement Guaranteed Solutions for technology students. Mirum came to us with a strong pitch, client case studies and an interested team that I look forward to with work as true partners in this endeavor. “

     

    Added Sanjay Mehta, Joint CEO, Mirum India: “Digital learning will play a crucial role in building the future skilled workforce. We are excited to be associated with WileyNxt to bring their knowledge driven offering to the Indian market. We at Mirum, understand WileyNxt’s aspirations and believe in their goal to transform education and skilling for individuals and organizations alike. We have a very talented team which brings to the table, a decade of experience in building brands on digital and we look forward to creating a distinct position for WileyNxt in the minds of the consumers.”

     

     

  • Havas Creative joins Lionsgate to raise funds Covid-19

    By A Correspondent

     

    Global content studio Lionsgate India has launched an initiative to bring the community experience of watching movies in movie theatres to live streaming, in partnership with Facebook India. Havas Creative Mumbai will be executing the India communication with local flavour further enhanced by celebrity collaborations.

     

    Said Rohit Jain, Managing Director of Lionsgate South Asia: “In these unprecedented times, Lionsgate has launched this global initiative to support families of millions of people who have been impacted by COVID-19. For this initiative in India, we have partnered with Facebook to create a fundraiser, the proceeds for the same will be contributed to reputed NGOs helping fight this pandemic. This will be a unique opportunity for viewers to extend their support and donate for this charitable cause. Moreover, we are delighted to rope in Ananya Pandey for this cause who will support us to spread awareness on this property.”

     

    Added Arindam Sengupta, Managing Partner – West & South, Havas Mumbai: “We are honoured to collaborate with Lionsgate to extend their global initiative in India for such a noble cause. In such unprecedented times, we all should do our bit, and LionsgateLIVE is a one such opportunity for Havas.’’

     

     

  • Hill+Knowlton appoints Abhishek Gulyani as CEO

    By A Correspondent

     

    Abhishek Gulyani

    WPP-owned public relations firm Hill+Knowlton Strategies (eka IPAN) has appointed Abhishek Gulyani as Chief Executive Officer to lead its operations in India.

     

    Sharing details of his new role, Gulyani said: “To join an agency with H+K’s credentials is very exciting. They have a brilliant reputation for innovative and creative communications around the world. In this global time of uncertainty, I have never been more certain of the relevance of our industry. Businesses will look to communications experts to ensure they remain at the heart of the conversation as they seek to build brand purpose and showcase impact. I look forward to joining the team in India and collaborating with them to continue delivering great work for our clients.”

     

    With over two decades of experience in India and Asia, Gulyani’s has run his own agency, Facio Communications, and worked as senior counsel in leadding agencies including Avian ME and Genesis BM.

     

    Said Bashar AlKadhi, CEO for H+K in the Middle East, Turkey, India and Africa (METIA): “India is one of H+K’s high growth potential markets with clients across many sectors. With his track record of driving business and vision for collective success, Abhishek’s appointment as CEO is not only exciting for our colleagues in India, but for H+K’s leadership across the wider region,” adding “I look forward to working closely with Abhishek and our leadership team, and on behalf of everybody in India, we welcome him to the H+K family.”

     

     

  • Riding the Immunity Wave

     

    By Sanjeev Kotnala

     

    Immunity is a great business. In a coronavirus-led world of anxiety and fear, expect immunity predators to demonstrate the highs and lows in marketing. How the consumer reacts to their offerings depends upon how their reality is adulterated with perceptions.

     

    We can’t lead a quarantined life forever. At some stage, lockdown will be reclamped, relaxed or completely lifted. Though the last normal is left behind and the new is yet to take shape. Pressed for productive economic activities, we will step out of our bubbles and cautiously interact.

     

    We all know that the fittest will survive. The situation demands high Immunity levels, and that is the only way out. Immunity is not the barrier against infection, it is the force available to fight the virus infection. Each one of us wants to be loaded with it.

     

    Covid-19 Redefined World

     

    We are entering a redefined world. We need to realign, refocus on every part of life. With or without the vaccine, containment or herd Immunity, individual will have to invest in immunity build-up as a defensive measure.

     

    Health, hygiene and insurance brands and services will do well in the caution, precaution and sanitisation fuelled world. There is no doubt that the demand for fortified food and beverages will be on the up. And in that case, some brands and product with unqualified promises will also move in.

     

    Not sure if Starbucks has plans for a Golden-Coffee and McDonald’s for Ginger-Nuggets. However, we will see a wave of immunity solutions addressing the anxiety loaded audience with tea, milk and other food variants. The audience is primed for such offerings and services. It is natural for everyone to be interested in anything that promises protection against the virus.

     

    Too much Confusion about Self-immunity Boosters

     

    The consumers will experiment with self-immunity boost-up. If you scan the world for it, you will find that one should increase the intake of oxidants, enhance vitamin C, B, D and E levels, and keep our gut healthy. We are informed of the possibilities with the wonderful world of superfoods

     

    There is a long list of possible warriors. Almonds, Amla, Apple, Basil leaves, Berries, Black pepper, Broccoli, Cabbage, Cardamom, Carrots, Chia seeds, Cinnamon, Clove, Coconut oil ( organic), Flax seeds, Garlic, Ginger, Green Tea, Lime, Moringa, Mulethi, Neem, Onions, Oranges, Pumpkins, Saffron, Spinach, Spirulina, Turmeric, Walnut, Yoghurt etc.

    The whole narrative in the web is layered with high sounding words like Anti-inflammatory, Antimicrobial, Antiviral, Ascorbic acid, Oxidants, Beta carotene, Good bacteria source, Omega 3, Hydrating agent etc.

     

    The articles and available public domain wisdom advice to Eat properly, Exercise regularly Sleep well and Keep Stress Away & Stay positive. Avoid, better still stop smoking/vaping/e-cigarettes, non-essential travels and alcoholic drinks. Now if you do that anyway, you will be healthy. However, it is no guarantee against the virus.

     

    It is enough to confuse anyone. There is too much to read, understand, decide and to follow. However, there is no time for experimentation. Hence, when trusted brands claim and assure us of building Immunity, we take the easy way out, we blindly believe them. Moreover, some brands rightly reading the situation lead us with false promises.

     

    Our immunity towards advertising and such information is low. We believe what the brands tell us. WE follow their advice. And we have no way to differentiate between what is right and what is wrong.

     

    Could Immunity Boost Work?

     

    So, an article in vice.com, says, ‘For the human body to work optimally, you need these vitamins, minerals… However, having an overabundance of these vitamins or minerals has never proven to shorten the duration of any kind of virus, bacteria, or cold’, additionally it warns; ‘loading up on products packed with “immune-boosting” ingredients is, at best, a waste of money. At worst, flooding your body with excessive amounts of fat-soluble vitamins (like vitamins D and A) could lead to vitamin toxicity, a condition that brings its own serious health risks like skin issues, nausea, liver damage, or even death, depending on which vitamin is consumed in toxic amounts‘. Now should I take this at face value? I am not sure, but to me, it sounded logical. 

     

    Immunity Boosters – Initial Arrivals

     

    It is a different thing when medically approved brands and products talk of immunity supplementing or boosting. The problem is when brands try to ride the immunity wave. Don’t be surprised to find ‘Immunity boosters and fortified products’ as a stand-alone category in e-commerce sites.

     

    ITC launched sanitiser sachets for Rs 0.50, making it easy for the price-sensitive segment in smaller towns, rural area and even the cities. It is absolutely right, a defendable and believable a functional benefit is offered. But, then there are brands which are trying to rewrite their story.

     

    Immunity Booster v/s Immunity Provider v/s Immunity Predators

     

    Amul, the biggest dairy brand of the country, for all practical purpose, branded Amul milk- Immunity Milk. Staying at the edge where technically it may be difficult to find fault. However, after watching the communication, the customer will see Amul Milk as Immunity Milk and not something that is helping immunity development. Exactly the way the brand would want.

     

     

    Horlicks, a supplement and one of the reasons kids end up drinking milk take drama to the other edge. It now takes the ‘husbands of a doctor’ route in getting the association. No, no doctor is endorsing it. Clever. You have to give it to the brand, they only talk about Immunity boosting capabilities.

     

     

    As reported in BFO by The Ken, in Indonesia, the Ministry of Agriculture is selling something as Coronavirus cure. It launched a series of three products, an inhaler stick, an oil, and a powder, to be used for inhalation and diffusion in the room. It claims this “Anti Coronavirus” kills 80-100% viruses! That sounds like Immunity Predators in action but if it is backed with research- wow let’s all get it here. 

     

    Traditional Immunity Boosters

     

    Golden Milk for immunity build-up is a piece of traditional knowledge. The dominant immunity building agent is Turmeric, and milk aides the process. Now, it will be accepted and appreciated if some brand takes this knowledge and launch Golden Milk premixes, sachet, concentrates, coffee..

     

     

    Traditional knowledge suggests that the right kind of tea can also help in Immunity boosting. Here is a communication promoting tea as an immunity booster.

     

     

    Expect more brands to take on the immunity provider and enhancer role. Sometimes rightly and most of the times because it is the thing that works and they can get away with.

    I agree with VICE.com, such Immunity enhancing claims sound harmless in the normal that does not exist. However, they are like medical advice in the era of coronavirus. Brands try taking advantage of such vulnerabilities. And truly, sincerely, there is no more vulnerable time than during a pandemic’.

     

    ASCI has a role here. It must issue a guideline for the use of IMMUNITY in communication. Just naming these ads as misleading will not be good enough.

    …………………………………………………..

     

    While writing this, I read a few articles which further confused me.  Immunity Boosters to make you #coronasafeEat Right: 8 Immunity-Boosting Foods You Should Have This Monsoons4 Magical Foods That Could Help Boost Your Immunity, Boosting Your Immune System Against Coronavirus: How To Minimise The Risk Of Infection? , 30 Best Immune-Boosting Foods and 15 Foods That Boost the Immune System. And there is enough and more to confuse you.

     

  • MxM Live with Maheshwer Peri…

     

    Red hot chatter with Maheshwer Peri, Chairman and Founder, of Careers360. An entrepreneur, dreamer and worker. And may we add an activist and do-gooder.

     

    A Top 25 rankholder in CA, he joined SBI Capital Markets and moved to join the Rajan Raheja business group. He moved to Raheja’s foray in the media with Outlook in 1995. In this interview, Peri looks back at his beginnings in the media, why he refused to have his name on the masthead for some years, his view on Vinod Mehta and Outlook – then and now. And more.

     

    Watch on…

     

     

  • Anant Goenka bags IAA 2020 Young Leader Compass Award

    By A Correspondent

     

    The International Advertising Association (IAA) has named Anant Goenka Executive Director- The Indian Express Group, and Mancom Member IAA India Chapter as ecipient of its 2020 “Young Leader Compass Award”.

     

    Says Punit Goenka, President of the IAA India Chapter: “It is a matter of pride for us in the India Chapter and in the Marcom industry in India that our member has been selected for this signal honor. I wish Anant all the best”.

     

    The award was to be presented at the IAA World Congress St.Petersburg, but since that has been postponed, the presentation details will be communicated soon.

     

     

  • Chimp&z Inc bags AceTute mandate

    By A Correspondent

     

    AceTute, an EdTech startup by Theseus Global (Education) Ltd, has awarded its branding, creative and digital mandate to Chimp&z Inc, post a multi-agency pitch. The agency will act as a launchpad for the product in India by providing technology and digital marketing solutions. The account will be handled from the agency’s headquarters in Mumbai.

     

    Angad Singh

    Commenting about the partnership, Angad Singh Manchanda, CEO & Co-founder of Chimp&z Inc said: “AceTute is not just another win for the agency. Here’s a chance for Chimp&z Inc to build a brand for a digital universe. It is an opportunity for us to think holistically for a brand and get it ready for a digital-first economy. Together with the visionary team at Theseus Global (Education) Ltd, we aim to create a product which not only delivers to the objective but also leaves a memorable experience behind for its consumers. We plan to create a strong player in the education sector of the country and look forward to launching the product on a global platform soon.”

     

     

  • Philips Avent & Carat India pay tribute to ‘Mothers’

    By A Correspondent

     

    Philips Avent, in association with Carat, the media agency from the house of Dentsu Aegis Network (DAN) India, has launched its latest digital campaign, #ToughTimesTougherMoms.

     

    Said Gulbahar Taurani, Vice President, Philips Personal Health, Indian Subcontinent: “Mothers make life better for all of us, everyday. We at Philips Avent wanted to celebrate this spirit of motherhood that has shone brighter than even before during the COVID lockdown and so we created this short film as a token of our gratitude. The beauty of this whole campaign is in its authenticity – the film cast are real mothers living everyday moments at their homes. Entirely self-shot, this film is our way of saying thank you to all the mothers who make life better for us, everyday.”

     

    Added Rajni Menon, CEO, Carat India: “The one-of-a-kind film captures unsung heroes of these times – the ‘Moms’. It is a slice-of-life of how mothers have been keeping their families secure and happy in such times. Indeed, moms are the true warriors. Hence, there was no better way to thank them than by capturing real moms in daily life.”

  • SBI General Insurance awards mandate to Rediff

    By A Correspondent

     

    SBI General Insurance has assigned its creative duties to Rediffusion.

     

    Shefali Khalsa

    Said Shefali Khalsa, Head- Brand, Corporate Communication & Website Sales, SBI General Insurance: “The brand affinity for SBI General is high amongst Indians. Completing a decade of operations in the industry, we believe it is the right time to re-focus on the brand identity and align with our digital focused infrastructure & outlook. Basis a defined brief, backed by detailed research, Rediffusion came up with a beautiful concept that resonated with our brand and was the  best, of a good lot of pitch presentations. We are glad to have  such an expert team onboard, backed by strong leadership, to manage this brand exercise from planning to execution.”

     

    Navonil Chatterjee

    Added Navonil Chatterjee, Joint President & Chief Strategy Officer, Rediffusion Brand Solutions on the appointment: “Winning SBI General Insurance is a triple treat for us! Firstly, General Insurance is a severely under-penetrated category in India, which makes it a planner’s delight. The barriers to adoption are many and it is something that is sold and not bought. Eventually when one buys, it is still a grudge purchase. It’s perceived as a waste of hard-earned money that is going to go needlessly down the drain, because nothing bad will ever happen to me and my valuable things! We not only have the challenging task of building the brand, but also the formidable onus of growing the category.

     

    Rahul Jauhari

    And this is what Rahul Jauhari, Joint President & Chief Creative Officer, Rediffusion Brand Solutions said on the appointment: “”SBI General Insurance combines the maturity and wisdom of SBI with the agility and energy of a young industry player. Their passion is infectious and we look forward to working with them in this exciting space.”