Category: MARKETING

  • Bandhan Life unveils new brand identity

    Bandhan Life, formerly known as Aegon Life Insurance, has announced its new identity along with a fresh tagline ‘Bharat Ki Udaan, Bandhan Se’.

    Said Akhil Almeida, Head of Marketing, Bandhan Life: “The launch of our new brand identity is a pivotal moment in how we communicate the value of life insurance. Moving away from traditional narratives that focus solely on life’s uncertainties, we choose to celebrate and elevate the aspirations of Bharat. We envision an India where every individual feels empowered to secure their future and pursue their aspirations. This vision is encapsulated in our new tagline, “Bharat Ki Udaan, Bandhan Se.”, which promises to lift the nation through strengthened relationships. The new logo features a budding flower, symbolizing potential, and new beginnings. The choice of colours was carefully considered – while the red is adopted from the Bandhan Group conveying commitment and a sense of protection. The blues convey stability, trust, and dependability and together these make an ideal combination for a new life insurance brand.”

    Added Satishwar B., MD and CEO of Bandhan Life: “This transition sets the stage for an amazing new chapter for us. Looking ahead, our vision for the next five years is set: transforming Bandhan Life into a leading multi-channel insurance company. We will be expanding our presence across all relevant product categories. We believe that the strength of a bond can propel one to greater heights— As we fortify the bonds of trust with our customers, our collective ambitions soar. Bandhan Life will enable all stakeholders to soar higher, because we believe that every dream fortified by Bandhan is a flight towards a brighter tomorrow.”

  • Air India Express launches campaign for elections

    Air India Express, the low-cost sibling of Air India, has launched its #VoteAsYouAre campaign, an initiative aimed at “empowering and encouraging the nation’s youth”.

    Speaking about the campaign, Siddhartha Butalia, Chief Marketing Officer, Air India Express, said: “As a brand that champions connectivity and inclusivity, Air India Express is committed to empowering the youth and fostering active citizenship. With a fifth of the world’s youth demographic, India’s demographic dividend can also be the world’s democratic dividend. The fact that #VoteAsYouAre trended organically across India on the eve of the first phase of the world’s largest democratic exercise ever, in the midst of a myriad topical conversations, is a tremendously gratifying validation of the movement capturing the imagination of an aspiring India seeking a voice of representation and the power of their collective voice.”

  • Dabur launches campaign for Chyawanprash

    Dabur has launched a campaign for its Chyawanprash brand. The ad focussed on its commitment towards some of the fastest-growing sports in India, with the “AndarSeStrong” refrain.

    Conceptualised by The Bridge, the campaign features a variety of top athletes from kabaddi, athletics, hockey and boxing were a part of this campaign, sharing their lives and routines while Dabur Chyawanprash was integrated seamlessly to emphasise the theme of “AndarSeStrong”.

    Said Rakesh Tahiliani, AGM Marketing – Health Supplements, Dabur India Limited:  “We are committed to supporting the aspirations of Indian athletes at all levels. The ‘AndarSeStrong’ campaign, featuring Olympic athletes and Pro Kabaddi League players is a testament to our belief in the power of inner strength and resilience. By bringing organisations like One Thousand Hockey Legs and Bridges of Sports Foundation into the spotlight, we aim to inspire individuals to unleash their potential and pursue their passion for sports.”

    Added Arshi Yasin, Founder & CEO, of The Bridge: “We are proud to conceive & execute this campaign that aims to celebrate diverse sports like Kabaddi, Hockey, Athletics, Boxing, etc. As a responsible media house, we must educate the masses & raise awareness by bringing out such stories to the forefront. There wouldn’t have been a better brand than Dabur to collaborate with on this idea. Since this is an Olympic year, it becomes imperative for us to strengthen such storytelling to garner interest & engagement among the audience.”

  • White partners with Rohit Tugnait

    White, the media marketing agency, has announced its partnership with Rohit Tugnait, former Commercial Director of Vice Media Group, to launch ‘White Label’ division to start a new content solution division with the company.

    Expressing his enthusiasm about the partnership Tugnait, who is designated Chief Executive Officer of White Label, said: “Vishesh Sahni (Founder – White) has a clear vision of where he wants to take White as an organisation and what it needs to stand for; which resonates perfectly with what I envision for White Label, so it is a great collaboration together for us. We have got most of the Vice team aboard and are ready to create magic for clients.”

    Speaking on the strategic partnership, Sahni added: “We have grown rapidly as an organisation, by creating some of the industry’s most talked-about experiences. Our profound understanding of culture equips us to offer meaningful, new-to-the-world thinking for our partner brands. Amidst some conscious, strategic moves as an organisation; the next organic step was to round out the integrated marketing approach by bringing Rohit and the team on to start White Label.”

  • Sociapa bags digital mandate for Tennishub

    Sociapa has bagged the digital mandate for Tennishub, an online Tennis store.

    Said Dheeraj Raj, Founder of Sociapa: “We are truly elated to join hands with Tennishub, a brand that exemplifies excellence in its field,” adding: “The prospect of embarking on this journey with Tennishub fills me with immense happiness and optimism.”

    Added Ronak Sachdeva, Founder, Tennishub: “We are equally thrilled to partner with Sociapa, recognizing the agency’s expertise and innovative strategies in the digital marketing landscape.”

  • Is Marketing coming Full Circle?

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    Ashoke AgarrwalTime was when marketing was confined to the bazaar. Goods and services were sold in one-to-one transactions between a buyer and a seller. More often than not, the buyer and the seller had a relationship, if not of trust, then at least of familiarity.

    Then, the eras of mass manufacturing and mass media dawned. After World War II, the industrial age shifted into high gear, leading to a proliferation of products and services. The prosperous 1950s and 60s, driven by the economic boom in the USA, marked the birth of the consumer era.

    Marketing underwent a significant transformation, shifting from the traditional model of building one-to-one relationships to a new era of mediated one-to-many brand-building. Modern media made this shift possible, revolutionizing how mass audiences could be reached.

    Marketing and media forged a symbiotic relationship, each playing a crucial role in the other’s success. With its ability to attract and retain audiences, media provided the platform for marketing to communicate its messages. In turn, through advertising, marketing financed the accumulation of these audiences, ensuring the continued viability of media.

    In the initial days of mass media marketing, brands were the pegs through which information about the product or service was conveyed. In the early days of the consumer age, many products and services had differentiated features, and advertising was then the art of conveying unique selling propositions (USPs) memorably.

    A few decades into the consumer age, as categories matured, competition heated up, investment flowed into consumer businesses, contract manufacturing emerged, and brands in many categories didn’t have differentiating features to hang their stories.

    Brands morphed away from information providers to signalers of personas and lifestyles. For example, the Nike user was a never-say-die enthusiast, while the Adidas guy strived for perfection.

    Brands’ dependence on mass media increased. Signaling a persona or a lifestyle on mass media allowed the entire market–loyal users of your brand, potential users of your brand, and, as importantly, loyal users of your competition–to know what your brand stands for. Brand equity was built on what the brand stood for and what it did not. The acceptance among loyal users complimented the rejection by the faithful users of the other brand. Pepsi’s equity depended not just on its persona but as much of the persona of Coke.

    While mass media might have been primarily financed by marketing, its importance went well beyond its role as a vehicle for advertising.

    In its heyday, mass media offered society a shared cultural arena that builds societal cohesion. Most religiously read the same one or two newspapers in the morning covering the same news, watched the same prime-time TV programs and went to the same movies.

    The arrival of Facebook and the subsequent social media juggernaut fractured this cohesion. Today, the average person gets his information, views, entertainment, and cultural content from various social media and OTT sources that may have little in common with those in his family, his colleagues, or his neighbors. The cohort that shares his principal information, entertainment, and cultural sources is not a community in the traditional sense – they might not reside in the same city or even country, they might not share the same profession or educational level, and they may not be even in the same age group. The only thing they have in common is the echo chamber of partisan views and attitudes they share. They are the modern tribe – divorced from the shared everyday space and civic responsibility that defined traditional communities.

    This fracturing of societal cohesion has also fractured the rationale that drives modern brand-building.

    The core function of a brand as a widely accepted signal of a persona or a lifestyle is fast losing its potency, mainly because, in post-modern society, there is little that is widely accepted. In an era when even facts have alternate facts, what chance does a brand have as a widely accepted symbol?

    In light of failing mass media, brands have shifted their marketing resources to new media. However, the paradigm that drives their brand-building effort remains the same as in the modern era. By and large, they are yet to find a new paradigm that better suits the changed reality.

    Lately, I have heard murmurs from the marketing fraternity that perhaps digital and social media are better suited to “performance marketing” (another name for baiting someone to click on a link) than brand-building. And they must reweigh their mass media spending to strengthen their brands.

    Instead, the new reality calls for re-examining the very purpose of brands. Instead of brands being broad-based signalers of lifestyle or persona to a market, brands in the emerging new marketing era become builders of permission-driven one-to-one relationships with their consumers. Like the shopkeepers and the shoppers of the bazaar of the old days, a brand and its consumers must develop an interactive relationship of trust and constantly deepening understanding of each other.

    With the maturing of Big Data, a digital-immersed consumer, e-commerce, and the economies of scale of cloud computing, marketing can today shift to a paradigm where a brand can build and nurture a one-to-one relationship with consumers at scale.

    Given my current obsession with AI, as marketing reverts to building one-to-one relationships, the day is close when the one-to-one relationship will be between the brand’s AI avatar and the consumer’s AI avatar, as I have written in many of my MxM columns, starting with the first one.

    Marketers at the cutting edge, including many D2C start-ups, have started working on this new paradigm.

    Post-modern marketing could address another shift. The younger generation of consumers – Gen Z and, over the next decade, the Alphas (those born after 2010) – are opposed to marketing messages touting lifestyles and personas and, simultaneously, intensely devoted to a chosen cause. Can tomorrow’s brands be built based on a cause it espouses, not just in communication terms but through on-the-ground action? An exciting area to ponder in a MxMIndia column to come?

  • AbhiBus rolls our new campaign

    AbhiBus, an online bus-ticketing platform, has launched a new ad campaign featuring Tollywood superstar Mahesh Babu and comedian Rajendra Prasad. The ad highlights the last-minute booking that AbhiBus offers.

    Said Rohit Sharma, COO of AbhiBus: “We are thrilled to collaborate with the iconic Mahesh Babu who has been a long-standing brand ambassador of AbhiBus for the past eight years, and the immensely talented Rajendra Prasad for our new brand campaign. While RP is a legend with close to 50 years in the film industry, Mahesh is a household name and a star. The duo has created magic on screens every time they have appeared together and it is this chemistry and humorous energy that we have drawn on in our upcoming series of ads.  Their immense popularity and relatability make them perfect ambassadors to convey our message of celebrating travel and togetherness with your loved ones. Through this campaign, we aim to connect with our audience on a deeper level and reinforce our commitment to providing seamless and joyful travel experiences.”

  • Omaxe Chowk launches ‘Filmy’ campaign

    Omaxe Chowk, the wholesale and retail hub, has released a ‘film dialogue-based’ marketing campaign, which highlights the modern shopping experience in Delhi’s medieval heart, Chandni Chowk.

    Said Jatin Goel, Managing Director, Omaxe Group: “Through this campaign, we aim to highlight the fusion of modern shopping experiences in Delhi’s traditional heart, Chandni Chowk. Through Omaxe Chowk, we aim to re-ignite the magic that Chandni Chowk is known for while imparting it with modern flourish. The eye-catching headlines in the backdrop of uncluttered red background aim to reinforce Omaxe Chowk’s strengths and its relevance for the present and future generations.”

  • JSW Paints unveils digital campaign

    JSW Paints has unveiled a digital-first campaign to celebrate “crickets’ colourful spirit resonating across the country”. JSW Paints has partnered with six teams across the Indian Premier League (IPL) and its Women’s Premier League (WPL) franchisee.

    Said AS Sundaresan, Joint MD & CEO of JSW Paints: “Cricket is a sport that’s the heartbeat of India; it’s a way of life, a celebration of colours. By partnering with renowned teams in both the IPL and WPL, we not only expand our brand presence but also wish to be integral to the sport’s legacy. The JSW Paints anthem is our tribute to the way colours come together to make Cricket Spectacular – Rango ka Khel hai, Rangon ka Mel hai.”

    Govind Pandey, CEO, TBWA\India added: “The Anthem celebrates the unity in passion and love for the game of cricket in the diversity of the colours of fans and players of IPL and WPL. All colours are equal. Yet another beautiful thought from JSW Paints.”

    “Our anthem’s lyrics encapsulate the kaleidoscopic spirit of cricket, mirroring the vibrant range of JSW Paints. Just as cricket brings together players and fans of different teams, each having their unique colours, our diverse range of colours unites homes across India, infusing them with vibrancy and life. It’s a beautiful synergy that reflects the essence of both cricket and JSW Paints.” Russell Barrett, CCExpO, TBWA\India.

  • Crescent launches film for Jaquar hybrid touch shower

    Jaquar, the bathroom and lighting company introduces, Jaquar Qloud, the hybrid touch shower. The ad film is conceived and executed by Crescent Communication.

    Said Sandeep Shukla, CMO of the Jaquar Group: “Behind the elegant interface of Jaquar Cloud lies a robust system engineered to withstand tough Indian operating conditions and provide dependable performance. From hardy sensors to super-responsive electronic valves, every aspect of Sloud is designed to enhance your showering pleasure.”

    Added Rajesh Laikh, Executive Vice President, Crescent: “Touch is not just a sensation; it’s a gateway to our world. It connects us, empowers us, and makes the virtual tangible. With Jaquar Qloud, this power is harnessed to redefine your showering experience. Imagine stepping into your shower and effortlessly controlling your showering environment with just a gentle touch.”

  • L&K Saatchi & Saatchi creates IPL TVC for Greenpanel

    Greenpanel, the manufacturer of wood panels, has unveiled a TVC in collaboration with L&K Saatchi & Saatchi.

    Speaking on the latest campaign,  Rohit Malkani, Chief Creative Officer, L&K Saatchi & Saatchi said: “After the hilarious and hugely popular Greenpanel IPL film last year, the pressure was back on to do another winner. We had Greenpanel toss us a product (Greenpanel Water resistant HDWR) that started off an explosion of fun ideas. But finally, we honed in on a film-in-film technique that uses Delhi Capital players to do what they’re best at – bloopers!”

    Added Arvind Joshi – VP & Head Marketing, Greenpanel: “In collaboration with L&K Saatchi & Saatchi, our creative partners, we’ve unveiled a fresh perspective on Greenpanel’s dedication to quality in our newest TVC. Showcasing the unique attributes of our water-resistant HDWR boards through a behind-the-scenes approach, we’re reinforcing Greenpanel’s industry leadership and furthering our evolving brand story.”

  • Lemonn launches its first brand campaign

    Lemonn, a fintech company that offers a brokerage infrastructure for stock trading, has rolled out its inaugural campaign aimed at first-time investors. The campaign underscores Lemonn’s dedication to empower investors to make informed and prudent investing choices.

    Talking about the campaign, Devam Sardana, Business Head, Lemonn said: “The essence of this campaign is to arm investors with the tools to make calculated and informed choices.  We believe that high-performing companies often operate quietly; their CEOs focus on solid execution rather than hype. To identify such companies, investors need a tool like Lemonn, that can simplify discovery and decision-making without the unnecessary noise”