Category: Digital

  • Integrated e-commerce platform MyBorosil.com launched

    By A Correspondent

     

    Borosil Glass Works Ltd. has launched an integrated ecommerce platform – ‘MyBorosil.com’, which offers its entire range of consumer products. In the kitchenware segment in India, Borosil is a generic term for microwavable glassware. Borosil products are synonymous with elegance, dependability, safety and ease of use. Borosil has recently launched a range of 100 per cent pure melamine dinner-sets and servingware, and has also entered the small electronic home appliances space. These include products such as mixer grinders, induction cookers, digital cookers, toasters, sandwich makers, electric kettles, among others.

     

    “As our product range grew, there was no one store where you could see the entire product range under one roof. It was then that we decided that it was time to go online and launched MyBorosil.com,” shared Priyanka Kheruka, a third generation member and marketing consultant at the company.

     

    There is also a recipe section on the website that collates the best recipes and presents them in an easy to view format where one can save their favourite recipes in a recipe book for quick reference or share some recipes with the Borosil family!

     

    “Borosil was the first glassware brand to be sold online in India. When we decided to go online, many players refused to ship our products as it was too fragile. But we were so confident of our packaging that we decided to take on the liability in case of any breakages. And our breakage rate has been less than 1 per cent much lower than industry average. It is only after we proved that you can ship glass without a problem, that other ecommerce sites introduced that category too,” added Priyanka Kheruka.

     

    The company is betting big on its own e-commerce platform as well as other marketplaces for its consumer products.The Consumer Products division sells its microwavable and flameproof kitchenware and glass tumblers through over 5000 retailoutlets.

     

  • Google Forrester Report predicts online shopper base to reach 100 million by 2016

    By A Correspondent

     

    Consumer confidence to shop online will continue to rise and India will have 100 million online shoppers by 2016. This was revealed by Google, in its annual online shopping growth trends report, compiled by combining an extensive research conducted by Forrester Consulting and Google search trends. The report revealed that India’s e-tailing market is at an inflection point and will see rapid growth to become a $15 bln market by 2016.

     

    The research conducted by Forrester Consulting by interviewing 6859 respondents covering both online buyers and non-buyers in 50 cities/towns, revealed  that online shoppers base will grow 3x by 2016, and over 50 million new buyers will come from Tier 1 and Tier 2 cities. The confidence to shop online was on the rise as 71 per cent non-buyers from Tier 1 and 2 cities said they plan to shop online in next 12 months. The findings also revealed that women buyers in Tier 1 cities were more engaged in online shopping, and outspend men by 2x. Women were also responsible for driving growth in categories like apparels, beauty & skincare, home furnishing, baby products and jewelry.

     

    Looking at the growth trends of the categories, the report also projected that 40 million women are estimated to shop online in India by 2016. 2/3rd of online shoppers highlighted Convenience and Variety as major reasons to shop online in addition to discounts. Over 60 percent respondents also felt that buying online was directly correlated with social status. Mobile phones emerged as an important access device for online shoppers with 1 out of 3 online buyers transacting on their mobile phones in Tier 1 and Tier 2 cities. In Tier 3 cities, 1 in 2 buyers said they use mobile phones to purchase products online. This was also reflected in Google search trends with mobile phones queries growing 3x in last three years. Today, over 50 percent of shopping queries were coming from mobile phones, this share was as low as 24 per cent just two years back.

     

    Speaking at the launch of the report, Nitin Bawankule, Industry Director for Ecommerce, Local and classifieds, Google India said, “The consumer confidence to shop online has grown significantly in  last year and a half, and our objective was to understand the factors that are driving this growth and arrive at indicators that will help propel the Industry forward. As the report indicates, behavior of Indian online buyer is fast mirroring buyers in more developed markets as more subjective product categories have started to see significant growth. The e-tailing Industry needs to act now to cater to this strong user growth trend. Improved customer experience across all touch points, easy to use mobile apps can create a strong pull for non-buyers to shop online in Tier 1 and 2 cities. Women buyers are set to become the most significant contributor to the growth of online shopping and there is a huge opportunity waiting to be unlocked in this user segment.”

     

    Amongst the challenges, 62 percent buyers said they were not satisfied with their online shopping experience. 67 percent buyers also highlighted that the current return process was too complicated and expensive. Trust was a major issue with Non buyers, 55 percent non buyers did not trust the quality of products sold online, 63 percent said they were concerned about the safety of transacting online and 65 percent said, they don’t feel comfortable sharing personally identifiable information online. 66 percent of total respondents said that poor connectivity was also a major barrier for them to shop online.

     

  • Mobile Videos emerging a hot favourite among mobile internet users in emerging markets

    By A Correspondent

     

    Vuclip has announced that 67 per cent of 12,000 global survey respondents prefer mobile as their primary method for watching their favorite movies, music videos, and TV shows. Overall, 81 per cent of survey respondents were from emerging markets of India, the Middle East, and Southeast Asia. This illustrates that mobile video popularity, in the emerging markets has moved beyond just a few early adopters and is fast becoming mainstream.

     

    Survey respondents in emerging markets showed an increased desire to pay for a better video experience, such as HD and unbuffered video content, and for payment to be through their mobile carriers.

     

    The overall global study results found that:

    :: 70 per cent of men and 56 per cent of women prefer to watch their favorite videos, TV shows, and movies on mobile; compared to 20 per cent of men and 29 per cent of women who still prefer their televisions

    :: 85 per cent of men and 75 per cent of women said they will increase the amount of time they watch videos on mobile in the future

    :: 73 per cent of men and 61 per cent of women said it is important that the video not buffer while they are watching it; with 54 per cent of men and 49 per cent of women saying they would pay to download videos just to avoid buffering

    :: 65 per cent of men and 54 per cent of women prefer to pay through their mobile carrier to purchase mobile videos; followed by credit/store payment and net banking payment, respectively

     

    “Mobile is fast becoming the medium of choice for consumers in emerging markets to watch their favorite music, movies and TV shows,” said Arun Prakash, COO of Vuclip. “It is only natural for consumers to expect an unbuffered viewing experience in their primary method of consumption, with relevant and high-definition content, and simplicity of payment methods. This expectation and need continues to inspire us as an industry leader to innovate in these areas. We see a strong and fast-growing mobile video economy in emerging markets where the entire ecosystem will come out a winner.”

     

    All of the statistics in this report were gathered via a global survey of more than 12,000 people predominantly from India, Southeast Asia and the Middle East conducted in October 2014. Users were provided with multiple-choice questions and had the option to opt out. No incentives were provided for responding.

     

  • Gaana.com launches first musical brand campaign

    By A Correspondent

     

    Gaana.com has launched a unique musical campaign for its brand promotion. The brand has strategically chosen the content marketing route for this musical campaign.

     

    The recently released music video on YouTube has already fetched over a million views and in the coming few days, TVCs supported by a high decibel media plan will also being rolled out.

     

    Gaana.com has been serving out music across genres and preferences for the past two years. The recently launched Gaana 5.0, with a slick black theme and hourly playlist feature, has already led to a 20 per cent increase in average time spent by users.

     

    ‘Bas Bajna Chahiye’ campaign will further give a push to the app. It is a first-of-its-kind content marketing initiative that promotes the website as a brand. The song reflects the various moods and occasions where “Gaana” plays a role and even uses the word ‘Gaana’, as an integral part of the music video.

     

    Commenting on the occasion, Pratik Mazumder, Vice President & Head Marketing, Times Internet said, “Being the category leader in the music streaming space, we felt that the brand name itself provided the opportunity to define the category and therefore we took this route. In this musical campaign, we have emphasized on the fact that all moments & situations in life can be made awesome with music. ‘Jo bhi situation to make it awesome’ with gaana.com, Bas Bajna Chahiye Gaana”. We roped in some of India’s most talented musicians to create an amazing song for us which we shared with our users. The tremendous response has only encouraged us to take this forward and convert this in to a full-fledged campaign & launch it across different media vehicles.”

     

    The campaign has been created by M&C Saatchi and will be the very first multimedia campaign for Gaana.com that will run across TV, Print, Outdoor, Radio, Cinema and of course digital media. Over the next few months, more such videos, centered around the theme will be released.

     

  • Vijay Sankaran appointed Director, Digital Strategy at Genesis Burson-Marsteller

    By A Correspondent

     

    Vijay Sankaran

    Genesis Burson-Marsteller has announced the appointment of Vijay Sankaran as Director, Digital Strategy, heading GBM Digital Studio, a Centre of Expertise that provides specialised services and counsel to meet the needs of its clients.

     

    “Vijay’s appointment reflects Burson-Marsteller’s commitment to strengthen focus on building digital strategies that meet the needs of our clients. Vijay is a key addition to our leadership team and he will provide critical support in articulating digital concepts and solutions in a clear and compelling way to our clients,” said Nikhil Dey, President, Genesis Burson-Marsteller, India & South Asia.

     

    Yu Yu Din, currently Head of Digital, is relocating to her home country, Myanmar. She will be moving on from the consultancy by the end of 2014. Vijay will spearhead GBM Digital Studio and drive the opportunity space for Genesis Burson-Marsteller and its clients’ digital presence; creating innovative ideas that bridge digital and public relations as well as digital and marketing, to provide solutions and services that are driven by consumer insights. GBM Digital Studio comprises of a strong team of digital strategists, creative specialists working on digital and social media mandates for clients across corporate and financial, brand and consumer, telecom and technology, and health and wellness practices.

     

    A seasoned communications professional, Vijay brings with him a wealth of experience spanning advertising, digital marketing, public relations and social media. Before joining Genesis Burson-Marsteller, Vijay worked with Social Wavelength, a social media agency as Director, Digital Strategy and Planning. He has also worked with Edelman PR as Head Digital and Nokia Siemens Network as Head Social Media, a global role.

     

  • Storytelling in the age of Digital

     

    This interview ought to have appeared a couple of months back. Gaston Legorburu, Executive Director and Worldwide Chief Creative Officer, Sapient Nitro was a star speaker at the Kyoorius Designyatra in September. We met him there. Since this interview was not a very newsy one, we held it back for a few weeks back. And then came rumours and finally the confirmation of the Publicis-Sapient Nitro deal. We also read Mr Legorburu’s quote in some of the stories. So we held it back a little more. Realising of course that we were doing grave injustice to him and to you, dear reader.

     

    So here’ s the interview from one of digital media’s most happening creative gurus. Read on…

     

    While digital media is progressing in India, the pace of growth is very slow. Is this how it happened in the Web or are we seeing a trend that’s special only to India?

    I think it’s happened in the West and a few other markets. There are some markets that behave slightly different in India. I’ll start with the similarities. I think that marketers have muscle memory. Any new and emerging medium has slow adoption and there’s always a period of time because the value is under estimated. I think there’s a lag in adoption of digital media that happened in the US, in Europe, not so much in Latin America. The challenge that’s unique to India has to do with large numbers. When marketers and brands, especially multinationals look, they say, it’s billions. They look at that and there’s a direct co-relation to mass media. If we sold all these people soap, how much can we…

     

    Hey, you are talking of multinationals who are possibly more discerning than the homegrown players, or so we think!

    Multinationals have blinders around understanding the Indian markets because the country is so diverse and because so large. But if you just dissect that, if you look at the total online population of North America and of India, it’s a little over 75 percent. So the size of the opportunity is just about what it is of all of the United States. If you’re a brand and you haven’t done business in the United States and you say that digital opportunity is just about identical, you’ll get much more excited than people have been about the Indian market. If you further deconstruct the idea and you say that the size of that population is almost as big as the United States, what does it look like? Well, it’s younger, growing more from an affluent standpoint, much more tech savvy and they actively participate. When you just look at that particular audience and then you have to think about certain products, services and brands that appeal today and will appeal to that audience, you have to get crazily excited! The opportunity is eclipsed by the billion people opportunity.

     

    Could it also be because our creative agencies are not doing enough work on the digital media? The big bucks are in TV Commercials and hence the monies are much more there?

    It’s a little bit of the chicken or the egg. At the end of the day, change lies with the clients. We give agencies too much credit. Agencies chase RFPs. I think we give too much credit there. It takes the CMO that is more digital native that sees the opportunities or it takes a few successes where somebody says, if I give you this much money, you give me these many clients and it’s more predictable. I’ll do a bit more of that. Personally from a career standpoint, I started really early in the digital space. I came from a traditional background. Being in the boardroom, fighting for the longest time, until it was just the tipping point.

     

    And then there’s search.

    Yeah, it’s like I buy this keyword and I get this much business. So it’s always the search guy or the email lady that were sitting on the second floor, not with the main marketing theme but they were kind-of doing something over there and they were just peeling away budget little by little and eventually somebody is like, wait a second, she’s got more money than I do.

     

    With search, you can hardly get creative.

    I see that as the challenge. The entry, where you start peeling away the dollars and the budgets, you start getting more and more shift of the overall market budget moving, tend to be more on a performance marketing stuff, first. In India too you see lots of little digital shops popping up, it’s not visible work. It’s not visible as a big re-branding or a TVC, but it starts doing the blocking and tackling of driving business. And then you end up hitting the wall.

     

    Do you think all the tech jargon is a challenge in the process of storytelling?

    I think you can’t build a brand on a spreadsheet. That is a silly idea and unfortunately, I was at a conference not too long ago and a CEO of a big company said that we don’t need more mad men, we need more ‘math’ men. I thought that’s the dumbest thing I ever heard. I think we need, both. There’s art and science. Going back to storytelling, I think it will and still remains the single, most powerful tool we have as marketers to connect brands to consumers. Everything is driven by emotion, all the other stuff rationalises what you want and feel.

     

    I’m a big believer in the art of storytelling and being able to make emotional connections. That said, I feel, the power story lies with you, not me. I could sit here and talk forever, you might forget most but if there’s something that connects with you, something you want to talk to with your friends, over dinner, then I’ve done my job. If I represent a brand, that should be my canvas, not a 30-second spot or a banner ad. It should be your story. And I think we quickly forget about that and focus so much on the creative product without recognising that the objective at the end of the day is to change perceptions or shift behaviours. It’s not just about telling a compelling story. It’s telling a compelling story that shifts perceptions or drives behaviors.

     

    That’s traditionally been the objective of storytelling, to change perceptions and/or to persuade people to buy or consume.

    We could step back to speak at that level since it makes a lot of sense. Think about stories and think about you and what stories have helped evolve who you are, versus stories that simply entertain or are pass time. When you look at all of the different story structures and everything we know about storytelling, there are some stories that are much more likely for you to see yourself in, for you to learn a lesson from, for you to take something away than others. If you think about Indian or American culture, what are stories passed from generation to generation? You look at Disney Films. What’s the structure most likely to get passed on in an oral society as opposed to a broadcast media world? This is a little bit of ‘Back to the Future’.

     

    What according to you has changed from traditional to digital advertising? Any one thing you’d like to highlight.

    There’s been something that’s been constant, but we have lost sight of it for a period of time because of broadcast media as it is. That’s storytelling. Stories are as old as time. It is the way we make sense of the world. Such a big part of just being human. Clearly, if you want to persuade or connect people, that’s the most powerful story. It was before television from the traditional storyteller’s time. It’s always been a big part of commerce, of persuasion. But what changed with broadcast media is that stories became less participatory. They became less about interpretation and passing on of the story. You now could sit back and just suck it up. You could sit down and watch a movie and it just entertains you. It doesn’t change your view of the world. In some cases it’s just profound stuff. This idea that if you can see yourself in the story, you’re much more likely to remember it and connect with.

     

    What we’ve seen here in India is that the emphasis on an emotional connect in digital advertising. Is that specific only to India?

    I think there are two things that are not specific to India. People are people. I said to you something funny or interesting and then you say it to a bunch of people. Think about what makes stories get passed on? If I look at your Facebook or Twitter, most of the stuff is either things about you or something you found interesting that you want to share with your friends, you want to be associated with. Funny, entertaining stuff. We always do that. A lot of it going through those social pipes is people wanting to share their story.

     

    It’s all about me, me, me, me, me. There are stories that people see themselves in. Those are stories better suited for advertising, marketing, for connecting people to brands. Forget about digital, just look at television. Just a 30-second piece of a film. When it really connects with you emotionally, there are two things. You think that’s hilarious, that’s based on an insight, I remember that ad, that ad was really great and then you forget what brand it was from. There are those and then there are those others where you are like, man! They value the same things I value, I should feel good about being associated with that brand. I just had this experience, I need to share this with somebody.

     

  • Damon Johnson appointed SVP – Business Development at YuppTV

    By A Correspondent

     

    Damon S Johnson

    YuppTV has announced the appointment of Damon S Johnson as Senior Vice President – Business Development. As part of his new role, Damon will – lead the development of distribution partnerships and explore, and build new content and entertainment options for the burgeoning over-the-top (OTT) internet TV market.

     

    Damon Johnson brings with him over two decades of valuable industry experience having worked in the industry’s leading organizations as an executive responsible for building digital businesses. Most recently, Damon Johnson was at PlayStation where he led Sony’s efforts to build an OTT entertainment platform. As an early believer in OTT, he joined PlayStation to establish the Media and Entertainment group where he successfully led a team that negotiated with Netflix, Amazon Instant Video, Redbox Instant by Verizon, HBOGO, EPIX, Disney, ESPN, DirecTV, DISH, NFL, MLB, NBA and NHL to build the industry’s leading OTT platform on PS4, PS3, VITA and VITA TV. Prior to PlayStation, he was responsible for building the digital media division for Fox Sports in Latin America.

     

    Uday Reddy, Founder and CEO, YuppTV said, “At YuppTV we have built the Number One South Asian language subscription service delivered via the internet, mobile phones and now connected TV devices (OTT).  In order to further this growth and open new markets, we have brought Damon Johnson on board to lead our distribution partnership development and leverage our industry-leading OTT platform to explore and build new content and entertainment options. We are pleased to have someone who brings years of experience, hands on approach, and creativity, to the team. We welcome Johnson to the YuppTV family.”

     

  • Shine launches new advertising campaign

    By A Correspondent

     

    Shine.com has put up a good show this year that saw them launch a portal exclusively for IT jobs (tech.shine.com), increase their database to 15 million, venture into e-learning offerings for candidates and substantially increase their new client count apart from improving satisfaction levels of existing clients.

     

    Seeing the increasing usage of mobile phone in job search, Shine.com is now targeting to become a ‘mobile-first’ company where the entire registration and job search process for a candidate can happen only on a mobile phone. Apart from simplifying the user flows on mobile, Shine.com has also added exclusive features on its mobile app that lets candidates leverage their personal networks to find people in companies where they want a job.

     

    Commenting on this unique feature, Amit Garg, Business Head – Digital, HT Media, said, “For us to give value to jobseekers and recruiters, we are always experimenting with new technology to create brand new solutions that would take the industry ahead. While doing so, our research pointed us to the ‘power of weak ties’, a seminal study that says that your next career move is likely to come from people who are not our closest friends but are likely to connect you to professional circles that you don’t have access to. Our new app leverages these ‘weak connections’ of a candidate and our consumer proposition says that Shine.com will come to your use where your best friends cannot.”

     

    Rohit Ohri

    Rohit Ohri, Executive Chairman, Dentsu India and CEO Dentsu Asia Pacific (South), said, “We’re really excited about the new Shine.com campaign. Conceptualised by Soumitra Karnik and the Dentsu Creative Impact team, the campaign introduces a mascot for brand Shine.com. A mascot who is an innovative thinker and a quick solution provider to everybody’s job-related problems. We’re hoping that Mr M will become a brand property that will give Shine.com memorability, relevance and ultimately leadership in the category.”

     

  • Mindshare, Google team up and launch ‘Search As Signal’

    By A Correspondent

     

    Mindshare has announced a new product, Search As SignalTM (SAS), to inform media decision-making for Mindshare clients.

     

    Search As Signal has access to aggregated, indexed search trends that can be filtered by country to give marketers information on whether they are trending up or down relative to their norm or the category norm. With proprietary category definitions crowdsourced, analyzed, and defined by Mindshare and Google, SAS looks at brand and category activity outside the brand-messaging vacuum. The SAS alert system gives Mindshare clients an early indicator if a category or brand is accelerating, giving teams real-time insights to turn into media actions that influence content, keyword search and paid media decisions.

     

    SAS, unique to the marketplace, lets Mindshare clients access customized, fliterable, aggregated and anonymized search trends relevant to their brands and categories (on an non-exclusive basis). Thus Mindshare clients can understand where a brand sits in the larger cultural environment of search activity. The initiative combines Google’s global reach and Mindshare’s global network to bring unprecedented insight and data to Multinational clients.

     

    “Leading agencies, like Mindshare, are helping to offer their clients’ a holistic view of how their campaigns are performing across channels as search activity is a strong signal,” said Anya Paul, Global Agency Business Leader, Google.

     

    “We’re happy to work with them to make insights available through THE LOOP and Search As Signal to enable their clients to make smarter investment decisions.”

     

  • FCB Ulka Digital and Tata Value Homes unveil ‘One Nation One Price’ proposition

    By A Correspondent

     

    Tata Value Homes Ltd. (TVHL) along with FCB Ulka Digital has pioneered the journey of online home booking with Tata Value Homes. Leveraging on the opportunity of festive season and championing the e-commerce route, Tata Value Homes launched the first-ever e-commerce portal for buying homes with a retail pricing proposition of One Nation One Price. So far over 300 homes have been booked within just few days of the launch.

     

    For decades the behaviour and method of buying homes in India has remained the same. Home buying is still a long struggle accentuated by problems such as tedious booking procedures, lack of trust, no transparency, etc.

     

    Keeping these challenges in mind, a year back, FCB Ulka Digital with Tata Value Homes embarked upon this online journey of facilitating house buying. The communication objective during the festive campaign was to reinforce this convenient and innovative method of buying homes online.

     

    To give further impetus to the idea, the team promoted India’s First Real Estate Website for buying homes. This website for the first time ever sold houses across cities such as Mumbai, Bengaluru, Chennai, Ahmedabad and Pune at the same price on the theme – One Nation, One Price.

     

    The campaign received an overwhelming response with thousands of users showing interest in the campaign leading to an online sale of over 300 houses. “Evolution of Indian consumer over the years to embrace the e-commerce platforms has opened up the market for consumers across the globe. With the increasing internet penetration, this new platform builds on the vision of being the largest provider of homes. We believe this will enhance the overall experience of the consumer in completing his online home buying experience”, shared Brotin Banerjee – MD & CEO Tata Housing.

     

    Commenting on the success, Satish Ramachandran, Sr. Vice President of FCB Ulka Digital said, “We have always believed digital can work wonders for brands and this campaign testifies the same. It introduces a whole new behavioral change amongst the customers, thus changing the marketing trend in the real estate segment.”

     

  • Celkon hands over digital mandate to Liqvd Asia

    By A Correspondent

     

    LIQVD Asia has bagged the digital mandate of Celkon Mobiles, a leading manufacturer, which designs and manufactures a wide range of Windows and Android mobile phones. The company will now be handling the entire digital mandate for this brand.

     

    The agency which specializes in building digital experiences, will be designing strategies for all the digital assets of Celkon Mobiles including media buying, creatives, social media, search marketing, etc. and will lead complete Digital Services for the brand.

     

    On the decision of appointing LIQVD Asia as its digital agency, Murali Retineni, Executive Director, Celkon Mobiles said, “We have always been a pan-India brand with significant spends on digital but we are now planning an aggressive spike in our spends on the digital medium. We were looking for an agency that had proven capabilities in this segment and are delighted to have appointed LIQVD Asia as our digital agency. We are hopeful that together we will take the brand to new heights.”

     

    Commenting on the new client win, Zubin Nalawalla, co-Founder, LIQVD Asia said, “We are excited to add Celkon Mobiles to our prestigious client list and to extend comprehensive Digital Media management to the brand. We are looking forward to working closely with the brand.”

     

    Celkon Mobiles has been constantly in the news for launching Windows & Android phones at very affordable costs without compromising on the quality or features. The brand is looking at spending between 15-20 crore INR over a period of the next one year.

     

  • Yahoo announces Year in Review India 2014

    By A Correspondent

     

    Yahoo India announced its 2014 Year in Review (YIR), a look at the year’s top trends, happenings and events, which caught the imagination of Yahoo users in India. YIR is based on users’ daily search habits and an editorial selection of what they read, recommended and shared most on Yahoo in India.

     

    In its seventh year now, the annual YIR reflects what interested Yahoo users through 2014 – from the celebrities they couldn’t get enough of, to events that made history.

     

    Prime Minister Narendra Modi, who contributed to changing the political landscape in 2014, led High and Mighty ‒ the Political Top 10. Modi’s trusted aides Amit Shah and Arun Jaitley also feature on this list, which includes Congress President Sonia Gandhi and Nationalist Congress Party chief Sharad Pawar.

     

    Not surprising for a cricket-crazy nation, the game continued to dominate the most-searched sports. Alongside M.S. Dhoni and Virat Kohli, Sachin Tendulkar ‒ wielding a pen this time for his much talked about autobiography ‒ featured among Cricketers of the year. Legendary Indian boxer Mary Kom, who became the first Indian woman boxer to win a gold medal at the Asian Games clinched her position among the Brightest Sports Stars, as did fellow boxer Sarita Devi, who shines in the same category.

     

    Sunny Leone was the Most-searched celebrity for the third year in a row! Deepika Padukone reserved her place among the top-searched celebs, with Alia Bhatt joining the list. Among the actors, Hrithik Roshan and John Abraham were much “searched after” in 2014. Oscar-winning actress Jennifer Lawrence led the list of most-searched international celebrities in 2014.

     

    The slew of reforms and Modi’s efforts to improve diplomatic ties were of ongoing interest to Yahoo users. ‘Make in India,’ the three magic words that constitute Modi’s mantra while abroad, made it to the top of the list of Biggest Financial Events of the Year. The government’s decision to deregulate diesel and gas prices, and the setting up of a special investigative team to bring back illicit wealth stashed abroad, were other top searches in the category. More than a few controversies also grabbed attention online. These included the Supreme Court declaring all coal block allocations between 1993 and 2010 illegal, and the Syndicate Bank bribe-for-loan scandal. Airfare wars in the Indian skies, Flipkart’s Big Billion Day Sale and Alibaba’s record-breaking $25 billion IPO were also highly searched in the same category.

     

    India’s richest man Mukesh Ambani led the list of YIR’s 2014 Finance Newsmakers. Also on this year’s list are Apple CEO Tim Cook, with one of the most important ‘coming out’ events of the year, Microsoft CEO Satya Nadella and Infosys CEO & MD Vishal Sikka. Whether it’s Flipkart’s Sachin Bansal or Binny Bansal, or Snapdeal’s Rohit Bansal, the e-tailing sector’s domination by ‘the Bansals’ ensured they were Finance Newsmakers for the year. Two high-profile deaths in the corporate world – the mysterious plane crash of French oil major Total’s CEO Christophe de Margerie’s in Moscow and the death of Tata Motors’ MD Karl Slym in Bangkok – were among other top searches in this category.

     

    Coming to the nation’s most influential people, Mukesh Ambani makes a second appearance at the No. 1 spot, with Tata Group boss Cyrus Mistry and Gautam Adani, Chief of Adani Group of Industries, making up the top 3.

     

    From dominating the political arena to putting Indian traditional menswear on the International map, Prime Minister Modi left a firm stamp on style trends in 2014. His signature Modi kurta and variation of the Nehru achkan coat were among the most-searched Beauty & Style trends. Sheer palazzo pants, bright floral leggings / jeggings, and a full-grown beard (which replaced last year’s handle bar mustache) were among the other beauty and style trends that users aspired to and wanted to know more about.

     

    Looking at the tech gear Yahoo users searched for this year, three Apple products appear in the top 10 gadget searches, with iPhone 6 coming in at a firm No. 1. Samsung clocked in with two Galaxy devices. See the 10 Most Wanted Tech Gadgets.