Category: MEDIA

  • Gracious wins mandate for Neumec & Shivam Megastructures

    By A Correspondent

     

    Gracious Communications has added two new realty accounts to its portfolio – Neumec and Shivam Megastructures Pvt. Ltd. The accounts will be handled out of the Mumbai office. Gracious will be offering 360 degrees media buying services to both the clients.

     

    Commenting on the development, Ketan Fadia, Managing Director, Gracious Communications said, “We are delighted that our marketing & media solution track record has attracted these accounts to us. We believe that, together we can move these brands forward in exciting new directions.”

     

    Abhishek Kapoor- Partner, Neumec said: “We are in the business of redefining real estate, and we believe Gracious has what it takes to help us redefine our media efforts.”

     

    Aditya Chheda- Director of Shivam Megastructures Pvt. Ltd. added, “What we appreciate best about Gracious is they are always willing to listen to our point of view, consider our ideas, and transform them. Which is why we think they are the perfect partner to take our Realty business forward.”

     

  • Snapdeal.com, DEN unveil TV Commerce channel

    By A Correspondent

     

    Snapdeal.com has announced a 50:50 joint venture with DEN to launch a TV Commerce channel titled ‘DEN Snapdeal TV shop’. The channel aims to create a multi-nodal electronic shopping avenue for customers.

     

    The channel is currently available for viewers on channel number 132 on DEN cable network and will be extended to other cable and DTH networks in the course of the next six months.

     

    DEN Networks Ltd. reaches about 13 million households in over 200 cities across 13 states in the country. Snapdeal.com will leverage this robust distribution network of DEN to provide customers easy access to the wide assortment of products across Home, Lifestyle and Electronics categories with great value deals.

     

    DEN Snapdeal TV Shop will benefit those customers who have limited access to internet services particularly in Tier 2 and 3 cities further hampered by lack of physical access to top retail products and brands at competitive prices. Additionally, every purchase made on the channel comes with quality and delivery assurance from Snapdeal.com and the flexibility to pay on delivery – an option largely confined to e-shopping.

     

    Speaking about the partnership, Kunal Bahl, Co-founder and CEO Snapdeal.com said, “Innovation lies at the heart of Snapdeal.com and with this initiative we are taking yet another step to fulfill our promise of providing accessibility to the best products at best prices to consumers across India. We are delighted to partner with a likeminded brand like DEN Networks which enjoys massive reach and brand loyalty across the entire country and especially in smaller towns of India. India is a country with many heterogeneous segments of consumers, and we believe that by reaching 150 million households with 600 million people that have a TV, we can create another revolution through TV Commerce.”

     

    Sameer Manchanda, CMD, DEN Networks said, “We are extremely thrilled to partner with Snapdeal.com on this game-changing initiative. By leveraging Snapdeal and DEN’s nationwide distribution network, we will now be able to engage with a much larger audience which is still not exposed to the benefits of online shopping and internet access. Together we aim to offer the Customers a wide assortment of products and provide them with a hassle free buying experience.  The response to the pilot has been extremely encouraging and we are sure DEN Snapdeal TV Shop will be well received by our viewers.”

     

    Snapdeal aims to take the DEN Snapdeal TV shop to 100 Million households across India over the next 12 months.

     

  • CNN-IBN announces 9th edition of Indian of the Year

    By A Correspondent

     

    The ninth edition of CNN-IBN Indian of the Year has been announced in India. Over the years, the awards platform has become one of the biggest and most credible in Indian media. The award salutes iconic Indians who have made a significant contribution to India in the present calendar year. Hindustan Times has been the Editorial partner of this initiative since its inception in 2006.

     

    The year 2014 has been a momentous year in the history of India and has given rise to a set of role models who have been true ambassadors of brand India. These luminaries who have contributed to strengthening the foundation of our society in their own way are chosen from six different categories: Politics, Sports, Entertainment, Business, Public Service and Global Indian. The winners will be felicitated at a glittering ceremony to be held at Taj Palace, New Delhi on 31 January, 2015.

     

    Instituted in 2006, ‘CNN-IBN Indian of the Year’ has been the benchmark for credibility and transparency for providing complete information about the process of nomination and selection of the final winners. The selection criteria adheres to a unique and transparent process which includes nominations from the Network18 editorial board, ratified by a Jury panel consisting of a select group of distinguished personalities.

     

    Avinash Kaul

    Avinash Kaul, CEO, IBN Network said, “We take immense pride in announcing the ninth edition of CNN-IBN Indian of the Year Awards. We have created a benchmark in lauding the most influential, deserving and dynamic Indians, over the years. The success of the award in the past has raised the bar for this initiative and we are looking forward to a great show this year again. Our exclusive integration on Facebook is an attempt to engage with the younger and technologically savvy viewers and encourage them to vote for their favourite nominee.”

     

  • In a first in India, Twitter acquires ZipDial

    By A Correspondent

     

    Twitter announced that it has reached an agreement to acquire ZipDial (@zipdial), its product partner based in Bangalore, to make Twitter even more accessible to people around the world. This is Twitter’s first ever acquisition in India.

     

    Christian Oestlien, VP of Product, Twitter explains, “Over the next several years, billions of people will come online for the first time in countries like Brazil, India and Indonesia. For many, their first online experience will be on a mobile device – but the cost of data may prevent them from experiencing the true power of the Internet. Twitter, in partnership with ZipDial, can make great content more accessible to everyone.”

     

    ZipDial has built a mobile platform that lets people follow and engage with content across all interfaces. The user experience combines SMS, voice, mobile web, and access to mobile apps to bridge users from offline to online. For example, through ZipDial, it’s easy to engage with a publisher or brand by making a toll-free “missed call” to a designated phone number. The caller will then begin receiving inbound content and further engagement on their phone in real time through voice, SMS or an app notification. These interactions are especially appealing in areas where people aren’t always connected to data or only access data through intermittent wi-fi networks.

     

    ZipDial’s platform has engaged nearly 60 million users with hundreds of marketer clients, including the world’s leading brands and media companies. The platform’s unique model of engaging users while “offline”enables ZipDial to personalize the experience and content in ways that are not possible on traditional online platforms.

     

    Valerie Wagoner, Founder and CEO, ZipDial explains, “More than half of the world’s population live in emerging and newly developed markets, and these consumers use their mobile phones differently. We build for them. ZipDial’s innovative platform has already scaled across South Asia, Southeast Asia and Africa, where we operate. We are thrilled to expand our impact to a global level with Twitter.”

     

    Rishi Jaitly, Market Director, India and Southeast Asia, Twitter said, “We’re extremely impressed with what ZipDial has built and are delighted to welcome them to the flock. In India, our primary mission, which is bolstered by this acquisition, is to help every Indian with a mobile device enjoy a great, relevant Twitter experience. We believe Twitter – a platform invented for SMS and rich in media – is a perfect match for India, a mobile-first country with a celebrated media heritage.”

     

    This acquisition significantly increases Twitter’s investment in India, one of the countries where the company is seeing great growth, and also brings Twitter a new engineering office in Bangalore.

     

  • Ronnie Screwvala returns to media with digital foray, with B Sai Kumar as MD, Ajay Chacko as CEO

    By A Correspondent

     

    Sai Kumar

    Media veteran who promoted the entertainment conglomerate UTV Ronnie Screwvala is making his first major foray in the media after exiting UTV. Along with former Network18 Group CEO B Sai Kumar, he is setting up a digital media company. Based in Mumbai, in its first phase, the venture aims at launching multi-genre, multi-lingual content across video, audio, text and other traditional and ‘new age’ art forms. The investment envisaged is an outlay of up to Rs 150 crore across two phases – while the first phase would be largely domestic-focused, the platform will evaluate new geographies and verticals in its second and subsequent phases.

     

     

    Ajay Chacko

    The venture with Mr Sai Kumar as Managing Director, has roped in former Network18 COO Ajay Chacko as CEO and is said to have commenced a global search for talent in creative, product and technology functions across entertainment, current affairs & infotainment spaces.

     

  • InMobi ‘pivots’ to take on online Ad giants like Google, Acxiom, Experian directly

    By Krithika Krishnamurthy & Peerzada Abrar

     

    Mobile advertising network InMobi is all set to woo large enterprises with a new analytics service that will mark a crucial shift in the business model of the eight-year old company that is looking to revive growth and investor interest.

     

    The move, termed as a “pivot”, will see InMobi ­ combine data from clients with insights on consumer behaviour that it has gathered ­ create new marketing strategies for enterprises. This will pitch the company into direct competition with global players such as Google, Acxiom and Harte Hanks.

     

    “The trials have already begun,” said a person with direct knowledge of the development. “This pivot will make In Mobi an early mover in this space.”

     

    Experts are of the view that for mobile advertising networks that are increasingly dependent on algorithms that churn out programmed output, looking beyond is proving to be crucial.

     

    “Companies like InMobi have to pivot because of the complex channels of data involved (online, offline, beacon, mobile),” said Michael J Becker, managing partner of mCordis, a consulting firm that advises companies on mobile trends and advertising strategies.

     

    InMobi has so far gathered data from third-party website and partners, and mostly competed with Google and Facebook. It will now not only push advertisements on smartphones but will run marketing campaigns through email and other channels. Manish Dugar, InMobi’s vicepresident for finance and legal, declined to term the new business model as a “pivot” saying “finding new initiatives and scaling them is a regular activity in our industry.” The company according to him follows an investment philosophy of 60:30:10. While the bulk of the money is used to run the existing business, a tenth of the money goes into trying out “moonshots” which are at an idea stage.The ideas that make it past this stage are then provided with investment to scale and commercialise the idea.

     

    “Big data analytics is one such initiative,” he said. The shift in business comes at a time when InMobi has been out in the market since last year to attract new funding of about $300 million (Rs 1,896 crore). According to people in the know, the company is seeking a valuation of $2 billion (Rs 12,640 crore) but not many investors have stepped up. SoftBank which invested $200 million (Rs 1,250 crore) in 2011 has since invested an additional’ . 30 crore so far.

     

    InMobi’s competitors are closely watching the new moves by the Bengaluru-based company.

     

    Mobile advertising company AdNear gathers both online and offline data, much like InMobi plans to do, and unlike InMobi, which is a third-party intermediary player, it works directly with brands.

     

    “It’s (InMobi) a good company, but it has grown too big to pivot at this stage,” said Anil Mathews, chief executive of AdNear, whose startup raised $19 million last October from Telstra Ventures and Global Brain.

     

    “The ad network business is dead. It’s gone long ago. The ‘network effect’ of an ad network doesn’t hold strength,” he said, referring to the emergence of exchanges that publishers and advertisers can plug into and bid for ads in real time. People with knowledge of the developments said InMobi’s CEO Naveen Tewari is trying to wooe investors with big-data analytics pitch.

     

    InMobi is also looking to raise funding through debt from foreign banks if it does not get the valuation it wants from the investors, according to a source with direct knowledge of InMobi’s funding plans. According to a senior executive, InMobi which has 900 employees has crossed revenue of over $200 million `1,264 crore). “We are com(.mitted to our business model which continues to deliver phenomenal results,” said Dugar, who said the company serves ads to 872 million monthly active unique (devices).

     

    The company announced that it turned profitable in the last quarter of 2014.

     

    Competitors however question the company’s ability to survive cut-throat competition from the likes of Google, Facebook, Microsoft, Millennial Media, Twitter and Yahoo. “I agree they were early movers in mobile advertising and ran it very well, but the entire industry has become programmatic. They need a brute force to catch up,” said another top executive at a rival firm who did not wish to be quoted.

     

    Source:The Economic Times

    Copyright © 2015, Bennett, Coleman & Co. Ltd. All Rights Reserved

    Licensed to republish

     

  • Meet the Pitchfork Partners

    Sunil Gautam (right) with Jaideep Shergill

     

    The announcement last November surprised many as Jaideep Shergill had a successful four-year run as CEO of the MSLGroup. He chose to leave the Pubicis Groupe to join former boss and mentor Sunil Gautam, the chartered accountant-turned-communications professional who founded Clear Advertising and PR and later Hanmer & Partners which eventually morphed into MSL India. SG, as he is known in the PR fraternity, was Chairman Emeritus of the MSLGroup. Effective January 1, Shergill and SG have set up Pitchfork Partners, a specialised consultancy which will handhold corporate and start-ups in their marketing service activities.  In an interview with Pradyuman Maheshwari, the duo share their vision and why firms like Pitchfork will thrive in the ecosystem.

     

    Fifteen years back, you chose Hanmer & Partners as the name of your agency. Now, Pitchfork Partners.  Sunil, what’s with you and your out-of-this-world names. Why Pitchfork?

    Jaideep Shergill (JS): Let me take this one. It’s what the devil uses. It’s his weapon of choice. We were looking for a mischievous, mysterious and magical name. Something that’s out of the ordinary. There are a lot of firms that do communication, creative, PR, digital, but all of them are very tactical and are not really putting their money where their mouth is. After running companies for many years, we’re fairly convinced there’s a vacuum out there. When we were thinking of a name, we wanted to think of something more irreverent. The devil stands for that. Pitchfork is his weapon of choice…

     

    So in what way does the name convey what you’re going to be doing?

    JS: Yes, it’s more than a name. The Trident, Pitchfork, is like the Trishul. In our scheme of things, there are three verticals.

     

    You were having a decent time, Sunil, near-retired, you could’ve invested here and there, played golf. Why get into an all-new activity with all the struggles?

    Sunil Gautam (SG): Yes, I was having a great time, but I want to have a better time. There’s lots to do, a lot of fun. I enjoy working, it’s my passion, it’s great to team up with Jaideep, we know each other for 18-odd years now.

     

    When did you decide to start Pitchfork? Is there an appetite for a business like this?

    SG: We’ve been talking about it for a couple of years but were in no hurry. With markets opening up, we feel the time is right. We hope there is an appetite for business like this. Our initial response has been very encouraging so far.

     

    Will you charge a retainer fee or…

    JS: Retainers and projects. Some long-term programmes where the client will work with us for six months or a year. If it’s a project, we’ll bill them as per our hours. We’ll have billable hours like a McKinsey. We’ll have hourly models.

     

    Will people agree to this? They agree to a McKinsey because they expect them to re-engineer their operations and offer high-end consultancy.

    JS: But we have had hourly systems in MSL historically anyway. We had a large number of clients who pay us a flat retainer fee. But even today, a large no. of clients also pay MSL by the hour. It’s not like that model doesn’t exist. It’s not new, but, yes, it’s not yet at a McKinsey level.

     

    Jaideep, you helmed MSL independently for four years and seemed to be on a high. So why give that all up?

    JS: Three or four reasons. Having been in the mainstream business for a long time, I’ve been through and seen a lot of change. The company we were a part of got acquired, we acquired other companies, I’ve seen the transition from traditional PR to modern communication. I honestly wanted to do something different. There was a wide space there. That’s what Sunil and I were looking at. It’s in three areas. Strategy consulting, because we want to move up the value chain, the second area is aggregation and disintermediary. We won’t work in the traditional PR alone. Given our wide-ranging experience in communications, we’ll be like a business or marketing or brand consultant to a company. That’s the wide space I saw.

     

    When you were with the MSL group, you had the opportunity to steer the company to do some of these things, right?

    JS: Yes, we did! 96% of our business was traditional. In the last four years, we moved it more significantly than any PR firm. Today 55% of MSL revenue is traditional and 45% is non-traditional. From 5% to 45% which comes from research and insight, creative, content, digital. It’s happening. Where Sunil and I see the gap is when we come in to the equation, we come in as people who can implement, execute stuff. The clients have decided what they want. We come in at a late stage, sometimes even after the ad agencies are brought in. We come in as the last mile. We want to change perceptions. We want to move up the value chain. We want to offer a service that can work directly with the top management, can be more strategic and can work with a complete backward and forward option. Literally from when the client is looking for a marketing director or a CMO or a Corp Comm Head, we want to come in even at that early stage, help the company through that evolution. That’s what we can’t do within a structured environment. You need to be out there on your own and at the end of the day our value is what he has and what I have. It’s two people bringing their collective wisdom, experience. We will give it a shot, this model hasn’t been tried before.

     

    Were you happy with the way traditional PR agencies have had to change course over the years?

    JS: They can certainly do better. They can do it faster. Speed is of the essence. When we’re together we’re more nimble because there’s just two of us. When you’re in a big institution, everything moves slowly. We want things to move fast.

     

    All going digital?

    JS: Of course! That’s the reality of life. If they don’t, they’ll die.

     

    You mentioned when an organisation is too big, you’re unable to do things. But the whole objective of setting up a new organisation would be to grow that big and do various things.

    SG: The whole idea is very few people who’ll be advising CxOs, the top levels, in terms of strategy. When it comes to implementation, may be we’ll outsource it. When you have to involve yourself at top levels to think strategy, you need to really give a lot of time. This is something you don’t want to delegate, which has been happening across agencies. We’ll be a very lean and mean set-up. At the peak, we may have not more than 10 people. Whoever worked with us will be a partner, will be handpicked, will deal with top level clients in terms of giving them strategic advice. We don’t want it to be large because we don’t want to implement things. We’ll get it done for clients, we’ll oversee it, under our advice and guidance.

     

    Wouldn’t that limit your scope in any way?

    SG: Not really, what we’re here to do is enjoy ourselves. Work closely with fewer clients but give a lot of quality time and thinking for them. Clients are willing to pay top dollar for this.

     

    Sunil, you’ve been part of the PR business since the time of the IPO boom. Unfortunately, clients do not use the services of PR consultants effectively unless there’s a crisis or a new development. They’re not really partners in their progress.

    SG: I don’ think PR agencies have really worked themselves to reach that level. That’s my opinion. I don’t think they’ve worked that hard to reach that level in terms of rubbing shoulders with CxOs to give that kind of advice. There are various reasons for that. But there are clients who are willing, who want, who recognise there is this gap and some of them are already talking to us.

     

    But isn’t all the PR advice they seek is getting the news out (or not out) the next day?

    JS: To begin with, we won’t just advise our clients on PR. That’s most important. We’ll be their communications and marketing advisors. It goes much beyond. It’s giving them a path on their communication needs. Advertising, digital, PR, events… whatever they need.

     

    Both of you known essentially as PR professionals. Do you think you can break that barrier and look at clients – blue chip clients – for their entire marketing services activities?

    JS: Absolutely! There’s no reason, why not? The walls have fallen any way. What’s the difference between the digital work an ad agency or a PR agency does? Everyone is doing everything. Even though we come from a more PR or communications background, there’s enough that we have to be able to guide somebody in the right direction. We’re not the people going to be sitting and writing the copy anyway. So, if a client has a creative requirement, we will find him the best creative talent.

     

    Tell us more about the start-up part of your business?

    JS: Yes, we will look at tech, digital, PR companies who’ve reached a strength of 20 to 30 people and they don’t know how to grow. Creative, digital companies now want to go to the next level. We’ll come in and guide them through the whole growth process, take them to the point where they can either get acquired or sell out or scale up and then we’ll buy into them early as early adoptors or seed fund kind of structuring. We don’t want to be private equity. We want to be mentors.

     

    If any of your MSL clients come in, would you entertain them?

    JS: We’d still want them to work with MSL. But if they are looking for something specific which we are doing, why not? You should also know we’re very transparent with Pubicis about what we’re doing. We also offer a complementary service which is also the reason why our relations with the group is as good as they are.

     

    So will Publicis be your first preference for your clients?

    JS: We’re more than happy to go with anyone. While we’re agnostic, we’ll look at Publicis as the first call. If we find a solution within, why go out? There are certain skillsets it may have not have like market research, for instance.

     

    Sunil, do you see the communications business headed this way with senior professionals like yourself setting up personalised consulting services?

    SG: I’m very confident the world will move that way. Clients today do not get time from senior guys who can think on their behalf.

     

    Do you have any targets on what you want to achieve in your business in the first year?

    JS: Not in terms of a number. As Sunil said, we’re in it to have some fun! The third pillar that we have will require us to give a lot of time for mentorship. We’ll be mentoring young professionals who want to grow. All that doesn’t have a revenue stream. There will be a long gestation period. As an example, if we’re advising a startup PR firm, we won’t actually get anything out of it for the next 5-10 years till it grows. We’re not setting business targets but goals we want to meet as individuals and getting to that self actualization place in life where we’re having fun, we’re working and are able to add some value to the people we work with.

     

    Would you at any point think of getting an investor on board? Maybe after 4-5 years?

    SG: It’s too early to say. This is just our first month.

     

    A shorter version of this appeared in dna of brands dated January 12

     

  • Rediff appoints Suman Varma as Head of Delhi ops

    By A Correspondent

     

    Dhunji S. Wadia

    Rediffusion Y&R has announced the appointment of  Suman Varma as Head of Operations, Delhi. She joins the agency network from JWT where she worked for 22 years. In her new role, she will be reporting to Dhunji S. Wadia, President, Rediffusion Y&R and add to the company’s leadership team. Meanwhile, according to reports, Amitava Sinha, chief operating officer for East, North & South has quit Rediff.

     

    On her appointment, Mr Wadia said, “I’m delighted to welcome Suman to Rediffusion-Y&R. She brings the right mix of talent, experience and enthusiasm that we seek to inject into our talent pool.  Her strong leadership skills will enhance the quality of the work that we do for our clients and add value to their brands.”

     

    Suman Varma

    Said Ms Varma: “After a successful stint of 22 years with JWT and extensive associations with some of the most robust marketing companies, I am now seeking to leverage the depth and width of my experience in leading the Rediffusion-Y&R, Delhi team to greater success.  Leaving the comfort of JWT was a tough call, but the thought of joining Rediffusion-Y&R and teaming up with Dhunji was exciting.  I look forward to the new challenges ahead.”

     

    With over 22 years of experience in advertising , Ms Varma’s last assignment was as Vice President & Executive Business Director, JWT India and was leading the GSK and Hamdard account.

     

  • Zee launches &TV with much fanfare & Shah Rukh

     

    By Our Research Editor

     

    It’s been worth the wait. Industrypersons hoping that an all-new big-bang GEC will rev up the scene were not disappointed. Indian entertainment’s most sought after name – Shah Rukh Khan – was present at the launch.

     

    By the time you read this, you’ve already heard and read enough about what &TV is going to be all about. That it was to be called &TV was known now for around a year. In fact the industry was hoping for a surprise or a twist, but that didn’t happen. That a galaxy of production companies have been retained for some high visibility fictions and non-fictions was also known. In fact the names were there on the television fanzines and Indiantelevision.com even had rather detailed insider info on the launch.

     

    What was not known much in advance were the finer details of the big opening act of the channel – Shah Rukh Khan and a Siddhartha Basu/Big Synergy production ‘India Poochega – Sabse Shaana Kaun?’. Although Khan earned his stripes on the small screen, his recent outings with non-fiction (save the award shows) have been mixed. While Kaun Banega Crorepati was fine, others like ‘Kya Aap Paanchvi Pass Se Tez Hain?’ and ‘Zor Ka Jhatka: Total Wipeout’ failed to attract audiences.

     

    Television industry observers though aren’t too worried. What Shah Rukh Khan has done is draw attention to the channel and will pull viewers to it in the early days. Just as an Akshay Kumar did for Colors, a little less than seven years back. “The good thing is that SRK isn’t one to accept defeats easily and he will keep at it until he succeeds. So you never know!”

     

    The launch proeedings at the Reliance Mediaworks studio at Mumbai’s Film City were very business-like. Before Shah Rukh Khan descended on the stage (literally!), Zee Entertainment Managing Director and CEO Punit Goenka unveiled the logo with a tap on the backdrop. “&TV will offer a more substantial viewing experience to an audience that is always seeking fresh and relevant content. The channel extends our Hindi entertainment portfolio under the ‘&’ bouquet and will add to the consolidation of our leading position in the entertainment industry.”

    Said Rajesh Iyer, Business Head, &TV on what the channel will stand for: “While the spirit of &TV is young, it is deep-rooted in values. We intend to be a power house of entertainment, by tapping into and harnessing the powerful changes in the thinking, mindset and belief sweeping through this country of billions. As a new channel, we will lead with innovation, try new things and new ways to meet the challenges of an increasingly competitive environment. We are thrilled to have Shah Rukh Khan as the host of our flagship non-fiction property and we are certain that the audience will enjoy a different side of their superstar! ”

     

    So will &TV be an attempt to flank parent Zee TV and shave away from rating points from Colors which has been consistently at #2 among the Hindi GECs over the last few months?

     

    “If &TV weans away viewers, it will do that for not just Colors but across all GECs. But rather than that, as we have seen in the past, the genre of Hindi entertainment will grow if &TV works with viewers,” said the analyst quoted earlier. But what is the guarantee of &TV working given that Pal has a dismal outing despite being from the Multi Screen Media/Sony stable and being headed by Anooj Kapoor who turned around the fortunes of Sab TV? “It’s impossible to guarantee anything. In broadcast, as it is in life. Just because a certain channel has failed till date doesn’t it mean it can’t bounce back and others will not do well.”

     

    This, it may be noted is Zee’s third attempt with a second GEC, if one does not put Zindagi in the same bracket.  EL TV and Zee Next started out with much enthusiasm, but did not create an impact and were pulled off. “Those were different days. The attention and budgets being given to &TV with Rajesh Iyer and his team are of a dramatically higher magnitude.” Indeed they are. An IndianTelevision report pegged marketing costs to be in the region of Rs 150 crore. Other trade wags say the entire outlay in the first year to be in the region of upwards of Rs 400 crore.

     

    &TV, MxMIndia learns, will be promoted extensively on the Zee TV network. An extensive 360-degree campaign has been envisaged. The channel’s tagline is Jashn Jeene Ka” which has been rendered by musical duo Sachin-Jigar.

    Other than India Poochega – SabseShaanaKaun?’ which is an adaptation from Who’s Asking, a format owned by Israel based Armoza, the channel also uveiled a host of fiction properties. Starting with, Begusarai, a quintessential quirky land set in the hinterland of Bihar with film-maker Tigmanshu Dhulia designing the first look of this multi-starrer film on TV, being one. There’s a historical thrown in the form of Razia Sultan, there BhabijiG har Par Hai!, a sitcom, and then there’s a soap titled Badii Devrani, which, as the name suggest, will have all the family melodrama built into it.

     

    According to a communiqué handed out to the media, the ampersand or & in &TV, signifies a conjunction of aspirations and rootedness which is synonymous with the spirit of new age India. “Through its content offering, the channel will bring together people and ideologies thus fostering cohesive viewing within Indian households. &TV will showcase a diverse and dynamic mix of relatable fiction, high voltage non-fiction, marquee events and blockbuster movies.”

     

    Does all of this look a bit like what some other channels are about? A rival broadcaster, while insisting on anonymity, says the comparisons with any channel are incorrect. There is a one billion-plus viewing public, and broadcasters are tailoring content to all tastes. “We scoffed at Sab’s programming as too downmarket, but see where it’s reached. Also, look at Life OK. Despite being from the Star India stable, it has carved a unique niche for itself.”

     

    Another senior industryperson told us that it’s all about how one works around the demographics.  “Remember what happened after LC1. With an increase in the number of panels and meters across the country, we could be in for a new beginning in television in India. And this is where an &TV can score.”

     

    &TV is scheduled to launch in March, though no dates are given yet. Interesting World Cup Cricket is going to be on till March 29, but being held in Australia and New Zealand, it won’t impact primetime viewing. The 2015 edition of the Indian Premier League (IPL) is scheduled from April 8 to May 24. Then there are the slew of programming on all of television.

     

    And did we hear that there could be a couple of more Hindi GECs that may launch in the next year? It’s a party that will never end. Like one of our infinitely loooong television dramas.

     

     

     

  • Times Television Network to host ‘Digital India Summit 2015’

    By A Correspondent

     

    Times Television Network will be hosting the ‘Digital India Summit 2015 on the 3rd & 4th February 2015, in New Delhi. The summit based on the theme:  Digital India: Bits & Bytes of a Billion Dreams, will be inaugurated by Shri Ravi Shankar Prasad, Hon’ble Minister, Ministry of Communication who will also deliver the keynote address. The two-day summit will bring together the most important stakeholders of the digital revolution from across industry, government, academia and civil society.

     

    Digital India Summit 2015 is envisioned to realize the dream of Digital India – a digitally empowered society and knowledge economy, offering world class services at the click of a mouse. Digital technology can play a vital role in transforming the fortunes of 1.2 billion Indians. Everything from economic productivity to social services–including education and healthcare—to governance at central, state and municipal levels can be improved through deployment of robust information technology.

     

    MK Anand, MD & CEO, Times Television Network said, “Digital India Summit 2015 will provide a public platform to hold discussions that will prepare India to face technological challenges and devise solutions that will aim to contribute towards realizing the implementation objectives of Digital India. The entire campaign will be substantive as the suggestions, ideas, insights, research and conclusions of the discussions will all be curated by our research team along with a leading global consulting firm to produce an action plan ‘white paper’.”

     

    The forum will invite transformative ideas from all significant stakeholders that aim to realize IT (Indian Talent) + IT (Information Technology) = IT (India Tomorrow). Conceived with the aim of lasting a full 5 year term, the summit promises to bring to the forum the best ideas every year and follow up on its progress the next year.

     

    The initiative is being supported by leading organizations like MAIT (Manufacturers Association for Information Technology), EY (Ernst & Young) and the Nasscom Foundation.

     

  • Incredible! Given min rev pre-condition of Rs 100 cr, only Big 5 can pitch for tourism min biz

    By Pritha Mitra Dasgupta

     

    The tourism ministry has floated a tender for the Rs 200-crore Incredible India campaign, inviting bids from advertising agencies with revenues of at least Rs 100 crore, a condition that rules out participation of mid-sized firms such as Contract, Rediffusion Y&R, Everest, Bates CHI, Grey or any Indian-owned agency like Concept group of companies and other smaller boutique shops.

     

    While the ministry runs this campaign every year, in the international leg this year it wants to focus especially on new markets like Russia and CIS countries, the Middle East and South America, among others.

     

    “The bidding agency must have a cumulative revenue from creative work equivalent to Rs 100 crore or above in the last three financial years. In addition, the creative agency should have handled at least one creative account in any field, with revenue of over Rs 5 crore, in any one of the last three years,” says the tender notice.

     

    The ministry has also stated that the agencies will have to submit an earnest money deposit (EMD) or bid security of Rs 50 lakh. This will be returned to “unsuccessful bidders…within one month of issue of the work order/contract to the successful bidder”.

     

    According to the head of a non-participating agency, if the guidelines are strictly followed, only five agencies in India can bid for the account. These include Ogilvy & Mather, J Walter Thompson, McCann Erickson, Lowe and FCB Ulka, said the agency head, who did not wish to be named.

     

    “This is extremely discouraging for agencies at a time when Prime Minister Narendra Modi is emphasising so much on patriotism and ‘Make in India’. With this tender, the ministry has alienated almost the entire advertising fraternity,” the agency head added.

     

    The ministry briefed a few agencies at a meeting in Delhi earlier this week and gave them time till February 9 to submit their proposals.

     

    “The selected agency should be able to provide a creative vision and strategy for taking forward the Incredible India campaign of the ministry of tourism,” the tender notice says, adding, “The agency would also be responsible for taking over the content, inventory of films and other creatives from the creative agency which handled the account of MoT and maintaining the same.” The Incredible India campaign was launched in 2003 by Ogilvy & Mather.

     

    In 2006, Grey won the account while a part of the business went to Wieden+ Kennedy. But O&M won back the account in 2012 following a multi-agency pitch and it is seen as a frontrunner this time round as well.

     

    The ministry runs the campaign in both domestic and international markets.

     

    Source:The Economic Times

    Copyright © 2015, Bennett, Coleman & Co. Ltd. All Rights Reserved

    Licensed to republish

     

  • We knew Zindagi won’t be in league of Zee, other GECs

     

    Okay, okay, this is for the second consecutive day that we are doing a big story on a Zee channel, but that’s a coincidence. No motive… no quid pro quo 🙂

     

    So should a Hindi general entertainment channel necessarily score big on the weekly ratings roster to be termed a success? Not if you are Zindagi, launched in June 2014, which hit upon the winning concept of airing Pakistani television shows at primetime. The concept has worked, carving a unique ‘premium’ niche for the Zee Entertainment channel. Pradyuman Maheshwari spoke with Priyanka Datta, Business Head of Zindagi. Excerpts from an interview:

     

    For India and Indians, Pakistani and everything Pakistani is perceived as Enemy #1. Did the seven-month run of Zindagi see any unsettling moments given the various issues we’ve had with our neighbour?

    When we launched the channels we too thought along these lines. In fact we had security outside our office and were ready for any possible backlash. But the response has been amazing. There is no negativity whatsoever, in fact there’s only appreciation from all quarters.

     

    The channel was launched with much fanfare on June 23, 2014. How has the year been for you?

    The response has been overwhelming. It wasn’t a mass channel to deliver major ratings like you see in the Hindi general entertainment channel (GEC) space. We launched keeping the content for an ‘X’ mindset and we’ve reached that audience remarkably well. Now we intend to innovate and grow.

     

    If there’s one thing to differentiate the mindset of a ZeeTV versus that of Zindagi, what would it be?

    Zindagi very clearly caters to an absolutely progressive mindset. A person who can stand for her right, it has female audience-based shows, away from the melodrama, more in the realistic realm of things. That’s the content we offer and the audience we target.

     

    For an organisation which has a channel where ratings are always in three figures, it must’ve taken some to get used to this double-figure rating for a GEC?

    That’s all in the mind because in this very network you have English channels which also have a single figure rating but are doing very well in their genre. We knew Zindagi won’t be of the league of Zee or other Hindi GECs because the content differs widely. We felt it could’ve done a little better than what it’s delivering now, but we were not very way off.

     

    You haven’t caught the bug of reality or song-and-dance shows yet?

    We don’t intend to, this isn’t a typical Hindi GEC. I don’t think there’s any need for a reality show or non-fiction. For example, a DID doesn’t fit into it.

     

    No Pakistani DID?

    Zindagi isn’t a Pakistani channel. Currently, the content is all from Pakistan, primarily because the language affinity is there. In India, we don’t have finite shows in the Hindi space. That will take time to come on air here. We are already talking of regional productions as we go on, along the year.

     

    But, as of now, it is Pakistani…

    Yes, the content that you have is Pakistani. We’re looking at exploring content from various places like Turkey and Egypt from the second phase of this year.

     

    How have you done in adsales ?

    This channel is being received well. I’m sure we’ll do better as we go along.

     

    Are you able to attract any premium because of the kind of audience you have?

    Honestly speaking, whatever we are doing is the premium we are getting and selling on. We definitely can’t sell on ratings, seeing them as they are. It’s all on premium and the brands have only been growing. It’s faring pretty well. The mindset is also changing from an advertising standpoint. In the Hindi space, people so far are not used to buying content on premium. It’s all very CPRP- and GRP-linked. English channels, for instance, are bought on premium and perception, not ratings. Hindi channels haven’t been bought on perception because none existed to buy.

     

    The sentiment in Pakistan in the television industry is very popular towards Zindagi. It’s more money for them too. Are you cashing in on that in any way?

    We’re looking at getting more. We’ve already procured most of the cream they have produced so far. The good thing is, it’s not just the content that’s bringing the freshness. All their best actors and directors are into television. They are far more natural actors… they go to bed in nighties, not zari-lined sarees! That appeals very well to our audiences.

     

    Some of the Pakistani stars are quite a rage here, right?

    Yes, it’s working for them. Now, many Zindagi stars are getting into Hindi films. Like Fawad Khan was signed on for a film much earlier, but became a household name only after he was on Zindagi. Everywhere he went for the promotion of his film Khoobsurat, he was being asked about Zindagi Gulzar Hai and asked to sing, talk of his TV show etc.

     

    A version of this appeared in dna of brands dated January 19, 2014