Category: PRODUCTS

  • Digital campaign with #AtHomeWithOreo

    By A Correspondent

     

    Biscuit brand Oreo introduced a digital campaign titled #AtHomewithOreo to help consumers spark their innovative plugs and drive creativity with Oreo cookies. Commenting on the campaign, Sudhanshu Nagpal, Associate Director – Marketing (Biscuits), Mondelez India, said: “As concerns around the spread of COVID-19 continue to increase, we realised how the new normal was taking a toll on people’s lives amidst the pandemic gloom and the monotony of the homebound life. With Oreo our goal has always been to bring families closer through playful moments, and the current scenario proved to be fitting to reinvent our strategy while infusing a sense of normalcy and fun with the country’s favourite cookie. #AtHomeWithOreo was yet another attempt to bring people together and support families by breaking them away from the tedium of isolation through an array of engaging activities. As the lockdown continues, we only aim to amplify our connect with the consumers through the campaign and provide them avenues to keep their innovation plug sparking at all times.”

     

    Added Mark Mcdonald – Executive Vice President And Head Of Creative, India, Digitas: “Despite the Covid-19 pandemic and the subsequent lockdown, it’s clear that peoples’ desire to connect, share and innovate, has not dampened. If anything, it’s on the rise.

     

    Said Rajdeepak Das, Chief Creative Officer – South Asia and Managing Director – India, Leo Burnett: “Work From Home has created a major imbalance between work and home. Although we are spending more time at home, we are actually spending less time with our kids because of all the added house work and office work. Children on the other hand feel that since parents are at home they should be spending more time with them playing. With our ‘At Home With Oreo’ campaign we want to encourage parents to consciously take time out and have some playful moments with their kids cooking, creating and playing inside their homes.”

     

     

  • It’s Just A Period, says Stayfree to families across India

    By A Correspondent

     

    With nearly two million girls experiencing their first period during the lockdown, a new digital film encourages families to talk more openly about periods and support them in this journey

     

    On the occasion of World Menstrual Hygiene Day on May 28, Stayfree unveiled a new digital video that invites families to change the way they approach the period conversation.

     

    Said Manoj Gadgil, Vice President Marketing, Johnson & Johnson Consumer division: “This World Menstrual Hygiene Day is a reminder to us all that the onus of normalising the first period experience for every young girl lies with all of us. And during pandemics when she doesn’t have access to her teachers for information, families can and must play the most important role in this. Today is just a first step towards creating that awareness and Stayfree® commits to help young girls and their families in this journey.”

     

     

  • McCann releases new campaign for Dabur

    By A Correspondent

     

    McCann has released a new TV and digital campaign for Dabur that, as a communique notes, “reaffirms its 135-year-old legacy of protecting the health and well-neing of every Indian household.

     

    Said Mohit Malhotra, CEO, Dabur India: “As a brand, Dabur evokes feelings of Trust, Health and Well-Being in the minds of our consumers. This campaign reflects our Ayurvedic and Indian heritage, and our strong sense of pride about ‘Made in India, by Indians, for Indians’. As India now moves forward on the mission to rebuild and emerge from the challenges and uncertainties of COVID-19, Dabur also reaffirms its commitment of being ‘dedicated to the Health and Well-being of every household’.”

     

    Added Prasoon Joshi, Chairman, McCann WorldGroup: “With the legacy and the trust that brand Dabur enjoys, it is best poised to deliver the attributes New India needs on its journey to become a leader of this new era. This sentiment has been expressed in “Mitti se judey hum, Barsoon se saath khadey hum” campaign.”

     

     

  • Max Life appoints Geetanjali Bhatia Nehru to head comms

    By A Correspondent

     

    Max Life Insurance Co Ltd has announced the appointment of Geetanjali Bhatia Nehru as Corporate Vice President and Head – Corporate Communications. She will report to Aalok Bhan, Director and Chief Marketing Officer, Max Life.

     

    Speaking on the appointment, Aalok Bhan, Director and Chief Marketing Officer, Max Life said: “We are happy to welcome Geetanjali to the Max Life family. These are unprecedented times that require innovative ways of communicating with empathy and intent. We believe Geetanjali, with over 18 years of diverse experience will contribute towards narrating our story with creativity and depth. We wish her a successful journey ahead with the Company and look forward to her valuable insights and expertise.”

     

    Before joining Max Life, Nehru worked with Ingersoll Rand as the Head of Corporate Relations.

     

     

  • Clients get the Creative they Deserve

     

    By Sanjeev Kotnala

     

    Each one of us is has a belief system. It defines our actions and reactions. It is based on our experiences, work culture, observations and expectations. It is fluid in the initial part of life and becomes a bit non-negotiable after some time. In fact, we start selectively searching and seeking examples to further reinforcing our beliefs. We slowly develop these biases and refer to them as mindset filters. As humans, we suffer from selective knowledge that we have anyway interpreted through Generalisation, Distortion and Deletion of experiences and information.

     

    It becomes tough to remain open to new ideas and thinking which are not as per our belief system. So, we keep reminding ourselves to remain open to ideas, try to think outside the box, not to be biased and importantly evaluate the idea, not the person.

     

    I too have my belief system, which I strongly endorse. I know, it is not meant to be perfect, but it has worked for me. I am trying to question this statement which is a part of my belief systems and would love hearing your point of view. 

     

    CLIENTS GET THE CREATIVE THEY DESERVE.

    How many times we have heard it agency people saying it. Yes, the client gets the creative they deserve. I have been on the agency side, client-side and now am an independent brand and marketing advisor/consultant, and I have reason to believe that clients get the creative they deserve.

     

    Creative is merely not a function of getting the best talent to work on a sharply defined probortunity or the funds available for development and production. It is more about the freedom the agency enjoys, the culture of ownership and innovation at the client ends and the degree of empowerments within the teams.

     

    I don’t know how many from the younger generation consider the Client-Agency relationship to be like a marriage based on shared values and outlooks, and not on the retainer fee. In an idealistic framework of client-agency relationship, it should promote co-existence, mutual benefits, acceptance and adaptability of thoughts. The agency can and should be able to influences the client’s approach to communication. However, people in the industry know the reality. It has only been deteriorating with time.

     

    Agencies were business partners and advisors. They were like a doctor. They were prescriptive and recommendatory in their approach. The agency participated in the strategic discussion. Now, they rarely get treated like business associate and mostly as a vendor. Exceptions to the rule exist…

     

    Here is a classic Mohammed Khan anecdote. In meeting with a large automobile client, Mohammed Khan re-presented the campaign that was rejected in the last meeting. He was convinced that was the campaign client should run. The client pointed out that the campaign was already rejected it. Then Mohammed Khan said: “you know how to make the best cars, and we don’t tell how to make them, you hired us as an agency, because, we are expert in our field and you should not be telling us how to make a campaign”. Those were the days, and those were the agency people. The situation has changed.

     

    Today, agencies act as a tailor. The customer dictates the type and style of the dress. Many agencies now serve creative options on a menu card and expect the client to evaluate and buy.

     

    Yes, few agencies are still trying to do excellent work on their terms. And these are small set-ups.

     

    Yet, clients are not to be blamed completely. It is also about the level of engagement and involvement the agency has the conviction in their work. The confidence to passionately go for what they believe is right. The filed work to really understand the market, competition and the customer.

     

    There is another anecdote, this time from a copywriter who has won many CAG awards. When a client suggested that the ‘,’ in the copy should be changed to ‘.’. The copywriter refused and said, if the campaign goes, it goes with the ‘,’ otherwise I am happy to present a new campaign tomorrow. That ownership is hard to find nowadays.

     

    Another case. In one meeting, the copywriter presented a Golden Sheaffer pen, to the client. This client was known for taking out a ballpoint pen and start marking copy changes on the layouts. While gifting the pen, the copywriter said, we write copy passionately. We evaluate and think of every word there. We think how the syntax should be and how the consumer thinks. And yet, if you have to do the changes and mark ruthlessly on the layout, it will be appreciated if you use a Sheaffer.

     

    THE COUNTER ARGUMENT.

    Then there is another counter-argument, best reflected by the quote often attributed to Walter Saldhanha of Chaitra and shared by Ambi Parameswaran. “We will recommend what we think is right. But if the client insists on doing bad ads, we will do them. Simply because, if they are going to waste their money, they might as well, waste it through us.” This does make business sense.

     

    In the late nineties, I remember Denis Joseph reacting to a Lintas campaign that the client has rejected. Dennis said, ‘Don’t be disappointed. He is a mere client and must have his reasons to believe this campaign won’t work. Pity he does not know to advertise. So we will first present what we think is best for the brand. And if the client fails to see the truth, we will do what he thinks should be done, but, still, we will do Okay but not a mediocre job.’. 

     

    IT TAKES TIME.

    Remember, relationships take time to build up. Confidence and Trust take much longer. Willingness to support each other’s initiative still much longer. And hence, a longer relationship mostly shows polarised results: absolutely brilliant work or run of the millwork.

    Many times, change of CMO or the agency trigger a shift in approach and the type of work happening on a brand.

     

    Great or Excellent or even Good work happens when the client and agency’s thinking resonates. When both are in it for a long haul. When innovation and experimentation are accepted and encouraged. When people listen to disruptive ideas. And, when Idea is owned collectively. 

     

    HINDU LONG COPY ADS.

    I am not really surprised at long copy ads that Hindu has released in recent past. Each of them is brilliantly written. It makes sense for a Newspaper brand to believe in written words and hence be extremely confident of long copy advertisements. However, it needs much more than mere conviction. Hindu has done it consistently and in recent times. It has also taken a tough stance and amplified a not so popular opinion. Here is the one they released on the world environment day.

     

    TCP- THAILAND AD.

    The other quoted statement and this time from the client-side, ‘Efficient and effective full-page ad is easy, creativity is when you can do it in 60 ccs’. I know it is loaded and can be debated until the cows come home. But there is some truth in it. There are ideas which need space and more, and there are ideas that cost almost nothing. However, opinion remains divided if creativity gets amplified when there are no constraints or when it is severely constrained.

     

    Here is another example of such creativity. And if one is to believe Wunderman Thompson, Thasorn Boonyanate, ECD in Thailand, cut the film after TCP Group (owner of Red Bull & other beverage brands) cancelled one of his most significant campaigns of the year. Okay, let us for a moment believe even that and that could be true. Then Boonyanate posted the film on his personal Facebook account and trust me it is going to be noticed and do a hell lot for TCP. The film is smooth and engaging, it takes a somewhat different route to present what TCP; the client is doing during the crisis listing many initiatives that are going to make you feel good about the brand TCP. And it then ends with ‘I am upset they quit of our advertising campaign, But what matters more is that they don’t quit on the millions of people they serve, so thank you, thank you.’ ( Thank you Campaign India– I saw this first here)

    This may or may not be client supported, but in either situation, it is good to work. 

     

    NEARER HOME- FEVICOL

    Nearer home, saw the Fevicol communication loaded with simplicity. It reaffirmed that to engage the audience, mega-production budgets is not a requirement. Don’t wait for perfection, just be on time.

     

    If the client and agency are on the same wavelength, they hit the target more often.

    I am not sure if this Fevicol film ( Zinda rehna hai aur aagey badna hai) would have been released in pre-COVID days. It may have remained as an in-house scratch production for client presentation. It is raw, and that is the beauty of it. Right now the audience understands and accepts some imperfection, till the idea strikes a chord. 

     

    It also reminds of the Fevicol initiative at the start of the COVID crisis. And the two link. It is easy when the brand remains contextual and speaks to leverage its long-standing promise.

     

    TOP OF THE HOUSE- AMUL

    It is the classic example of Trust and faith between the two parties, the client and the agency. The client totally trusts the agency, so much so that the client sees the OOH creative with the consumers. The creatives are considered approved. They usually are, not sent for client approval. It is not that such working has not resulted in issues and problems. The timely technical glitch with Twitter is an example. Yet, what we hear from the client a simple statement- Amul Girl will speak her mind!

  • Flite has a new logo

    By A Correspondent

     

    Footwear brand Flite has refreshed itself with a new visual identity. With actor Ranever Singh as the brand ambassador, the 15-year-old brand offers a range of footwear for men, women and children.

     

    Commenting on the same, Gaurav Dua, Executive Director, Relaxo Footwears Ltd: “Flite is a brand of semi-formal footwear from the house of Relaxo. Positioned as youthful, stylish and comfortable, the concept resonates well with the target group, which has high aspirations, is ambitious and believes in the idea of now is the time for me to soar high. What has been remarkable in the new identity is the fact that it ticks all the requisite dimensions of brand expression without diluting the essence that current audience was familiar with for decades”

     

     

  • Sleepwell launches new consumer interface

    By A Correspondent

     

    Mattress brand Sleepwell from Sheela Foam Ltd has rolled out a campaign titled Sleepwell@Home.

     

    Said Rahul Gautam, Managing Director, Sheela Foam: “The health of our consumer has always been a priority for the company. In these times, we wanted to ensure our complete support to consumers by enabling access to a hygienic mattress in the most hygienic way. Right from the manufacturing process to the well-being of our staff and customers, we are taking all the precautionary measures to ensure everyone’s safety. We encourage our customers to avail convenience and safety of doorstep services with Sleepwell@Home.”

     

  • Hamdard launches integrated campaign #StrongWithHamdard

    By A Correspondent

     

    Hamdard Laboratories (Medicine Division has launched a new integrated marketing campaign #StrongWithHamdard emphasising boosting the immune system to stay healthy amid the Covid-19 outbreak.

     

    Commenting on the campaign launch, Suman Varma, Chief Marketing Officer, Hamdard Laboratories (Medicine Division) said: “One of the key measures to stay safe amid the Covid-19 outbreak has been a strong immune system that safeguards us from various infections and the same has been emphasised by the Government and Ministry of AYUSH. As India enters the unlock phase, it becomes even more vital to have a strong immunity that will prevent us against the viral infection,” adding: “Our new campaign #StrongWithHamdard focuses on adopting an alternate medicine system to boost immunity and promote the uses of Unani medicine products to have a strong immunity system.”

     

     

  • Nu-Shakti urges people to #PutImmunityFirst

    By A Correspondent

     

    Given the need to fortify one’s immunity, Nu-Shakti has launched its #PutImmunityFirst campaign urging people to “focus on boosting their immunity through adequate intake of nutrients”.

     

    Said Alok Kohli, Business Director – DSM India: “It is imperative to focus on the right habits and the right diet. With Nu-Shakti’s #PutImmunityFirst campaign, we are creating greater awareness about the role that key nutrients play in improving people’s immunity, health and well-being.”

     

    Nu-Shakti products included fortified rice, atta (flour) and a beverage mix.

     

     

  • Cadbury Dairy Milk Silk introduces new TVC

    By A Correspondent

     

    Cadbury Dairy Milk Silk has unveiled a new TVC based on its brand proposition of ‘How Far Will You Go For Love’ that was launched earlier this year.

     

    Commenting on the release of this heartwarming film, Anil Viswanathan, Director – Marketing (Chocolates), Mondelez India said: “Cadbury Dairy Milk Silk has long stood for the best taste of chocolate in India. This has manifested in our communication over the years as the expression of romance amongst youth. With the youth of the country and their meaning of love evolving, there is a higher emphasis on gestures and acts that keep the romance fresh and alive. This had led to conceptualizing of the new proposition ‘How Far Will You Go For Love’ which kick started with the Valentine’s Day campaign earlier this year and has now turned into a ritual of sparking new relationships, deepening the meaning of love, and standing for a feeling that can’t be purely expressed in words but best felt through acts of active expression. The aim is to continue to make Cadbury Dairy Milk Silk an integral part of expressing love for your special ones, through gestures big and small that go above the norm.”

     

    The film is conceptualised by Mondelez India and Ogilvy India. Said Ganapathy Balagopalan, Head of Strategic Planning, Ogilvy Mumbai:  “Chocolate and romance have always gone hand in hand, but no Indian brand has truly capitalised on the connection until now. While Cadbury Dairy Milk Silk stories often hinted at a romance, the hero was always the product. It was always about the melty-chocolate. We believe it is time for the brand to evolve from being just a bar of indulgent chocolate to something greater, more desirable – make sharing a Silk, a symbol of romance. It feels like a natural evolution for the brand and will give us a more relevant role in young people’s lives.”

     

     

  • Eris Lifesciences gets Boman Irani as brand ambassador

    By A Correspondent

     

    Eris Lifesciences has announced association with actor Boman Irani for its Circa range of devices. The association is aimed at highlighting importance of an accurate and validated BP monitoring device.

     

    The focus of the campaign is to encourage hypertensive patients to measure their blood pressure at home using a validated device while making an appeal to share their readings with doctor. The campaign theme #ShareYourPressure, urges users to stop worrying about getting false reading and trust the device to share their pressure.

     

    Said Amit Bakshi, Chairman and Managing Director, Eris Lifesciences: “Hypertension therapy is our second largest therapy and with cardiovascular being the No. 1 Chronic therapy, we are upping our ante by closing the loop with one of the most validated device for blood pressure management. We have world class data in the form of ‘India Heart Study’ conducted on the same ‘Circa’ device further validating our commitment to hypertension therapy. With Boman Irani on board, we feel this partnership with the brand will increase awareness around Home Blood pressure monitoring (HBPM) and bring more people to target Blood pressure.”

     

     

  • Jersey new campaign draws attention to building immunity with milk

    By A Correspondent

     

    Creamline Dairy Products Limited (CDPL), a leading dairy player in Southern India and a subsidiary of Godrej Agrovet, today launched a television campaign that highlights building immunity of the entire family with milk and milk products. The TVC is created in Hindi, Tamil and Telugu.

     

    Speaking about the campaign, Raj Kanwar, CEO, Creamline Dairy said: “A protein-rich diet is known to help in building immunity and dairy products are an easy and affordable way to add them in our daily diet. Health and wellbeing of the family is a top priority for everyone today. The TVC aims to highlight the wide range of dairy products available under brand Jersey and showcase multiple ways to integrate them as an important source of nutrition in our daily diet for building immunity.”

     

    Added V Seshagiri Rao, Sr. Partner, R K Swamy BBDO Advertising agency, Hyderabad: “Being a preferred dairy brand, especially for mothers, for over 25 years, it was imperative that JERSEY connect meaningfully with its consumers in these trying times. The campaign will help strengthen the brand’s diverse range and help build further equity in the health and immunity space, something that will remain a primary consumer concern for the foreseeable future.”