Category: NEWS

  • #1 daily Dainik Jagran damns IRS on its Page 1

    By A Correspondent

     

    When we wrote about dna’s questioning of the IRS findings, we had used the phrase ‘knives are out’ to describe the development. But now it appears newspapers are bracing themselves for the war.

     

    Leading news daily Dainik Jagran,  the numero uno daily in the  country as per the IRS 2013 study, has published a large front-page story say it doesn’t approve of the IRS findings. In fact it goes a step further and says the AC Nielsen’s claim of scientific method of surveying is ‘khokhla’ (Google translate: ~hollow, gossipy).

     

    Legal eagles are being consulted on how to combat the MRUC, RSCI and AC Nielsen in Court, but in the meantime those whose publications have gained much in the study or reflect favourably vis-à-vis competition are saying that it’s unfair to damn the readership study authorities.

     

    As reported by MxMIndia yesterday, some aggrieved dailies are considering collectively or individually filing law suits.  When alerted about this, a senior MRUC functionary told us that Court cases files by aggrieved members and newspaper groups after the publication of readership numbers is nothing new for the MRUC.

     

  • Vikram Gaikwad, Vistasp Hodiwala join hands to launch new agency Underdog

    By Ravi Balakrishnan

     

    Vikram Gaikwad, former partner and executive creative director at independent agency Creativeland Asia and Vistasp Hodiwala, VP and senior creative director at JWT, have combined forces to launch a new agency named Underdog.

     

    The agency principals represent a classic art and copy structure. An art director by training, Mr Gaikwad has an impressive track record with stints at Grey and most recently Creativeland Asia to his credit. He’s worked on brands like Bajaj Appliances, Mercedes, Mahindra and Parle Agro.

     

    Mr Hodiwala has been associated with Lead India and Teach India as well as the Godrej corporate brand campaign.

     

    This is quite literally the first time Messrs Gaikwad and Hodiwala will be collaborating. Mr Hodiwala says: “We have been in the same industry for two decades, even been to Cannes the same years but our paths never crossed.”

     

    On meeting via a mutual friend, the duo found they shared a high level of compatibility and a desire to strike out on their own. Mr Gaikwad says: “We would have earned more had we joined networks but there’s a joy to creating something.” He has previous entrepreneurial experience, leaving Grey to found Creativeland Asia with Raj Kurup. He wryly says: “This is my second innings.” It’s a first for Mr Hodiwala, who says: “There comes a time when what the agency expects from you and what you expect out of life are different.”

     

    The agency will be self-funded and for the moment has no servicing or planning partner in place. The goal according to Mr Gaikwad is: “To grow with brands, no matter if they are small or big.” The duo are in conversations with three or four brands at the moment.

     

    The one thing Underdog is sure it’s not going to be is a boutique. Mr Hodiwala observes: “No agency would be caught dead doing that. The time when that was in vogue was possibly 10 years ago. People want to be responsible communicators now and stand for a certain amount of honesty and serious originality.”

     

    Source:The Economic Times

    Copyright © 2014, Bennett, Coleman & Co. Ltd. All Rights Reserved

    Licensed to republish

     

  • Firstpost.com launches new business portal, Firstbiz

    By A Correspondent

     

    A little less than three years after the highly visible launch of Firstpost.com, the online news destination from the Network18 group, has launched www.firstbiz.com, a standalone business news and views site. Network18 already has moneycontrol and the Forbes India websites amongst its business-y web news offerings.

     

    While Firstpost has in the past covered business, economy, investing and brands as a part of its general news coverage, this standalone approach comes at a time when India gears up for its giant, general election where economic and business agendas are set as much as the political, notes a communiqué. Said R Jagannathan, Editor-in-chief: “With Firstpost, we walked right into the middle of a rising tide of public anger against poor governance and corruption. By reflecting a diverse range of public opinion that mainstream media was slow to respond to, Firstpost made a space for itself. Durga Raghunath, CEO Firstpost added: “We are also thrilled to take Biztech, that was previously a standalone property into our fold. Enterprise technology is a phenomenally important space that we will build a multitude of experiences around. We will focus on great depth in this area, both online and offline.”

     

    We are not sure whether we would agree with Mr Jagannathan’s comment on mainstream media has been slow. On the contrary – one of the charges against the television media specifically and even the newspapers in recent years – is that they’ve been exceedingly belligerent. The group’s subsidiary runs CNN-IBN, IBN7 and IBN-Lokmat, and one can be sure that editor-in-chief Rajdeep Sardesai has a different view on the slow responsiveness. The news media genre has in fact grown in the last two years. But, of course, the internet access numbers have increased too which is why web destinations like Firstpost.com and MxMIndia have benefitted.

     

  • MTV and Twitter partner on #RockTheVote

    By A Correspondent

     

    MTV has announced a strategic use of the Twitter platform as part of the Hero MTV Rock The Vote initiative to enhance the interactivity and reach of the campaign across youth. Users of all kinds of devices can engage with the #RockTheVote conversation on Twitter.

     

    This will be the first time this kind of call-to-action innovation will be visible to the audiences globally. Through this feature, the mobile user does not need to be online while listening in to the conversations on #RockTheVote on Twitter, noted a communiqué.

     

    Speaking about the innovation, Sumeli Chatterjee, Head – Marketing & Insights, MTV India said, “MTV Rock the Vote initiative is an interactive campaign that is designed to fuel conversations around elections. The ‘Follow the Hashtag’ feature will ensure we reach out beyond just the smartphone users…thus allowing the large user base of regular (feature) phones to interact with the Rock The Vote campaign.”

     

    Commenting on this innovation, Rishi Jaitly, India Market Director, Twitter said, “In India, Twitter has brought our users closer to the issues and moments that matter to them, while also enabling them to express their views and participate in real-time. We applaud MTV India for innovating on our platform on the occasion of Rock The Vote and for using Twitter’s unique mobile service to engage its viewers.”

     

  • Don’t reject new IRS, correct it: Amit Ray

     

    By A Correspondent

     

    Sometime in the afternoon today (Feb 3), the Indian Newspaper Society is meeting the top brass of the Media Research Users Council for a discussion on the new Indian Readers Suvey findings . On Friday, 18-odd publishers issued a joint statement. The basic message: “We, the leading newspapers of the country, condemn the newly published Indian Readership Survey (IRS 2013) in the strongest possible terms.  The survey is riddled with shocking anomalies, which defy logic and common sense. They also grossly contradict audited circulation figures (ABC), of long standing. We also strongly ask RSCI and MRUC, the conductors of the Indian Readership Survey, to withdraw the results of IRS Q4 2013 immediately and  as well as put a stop to all future editions of this survey, as their continued publication will cause irreparable injury to the reputation of established publications like ours.”

     

    According to the information available to MxMIndia, a senior INS officebearer wrote to the MRUC saying that members of the apex body of newspaper publishers will pull their subscriptions if the new IRS findings weren’t disbanded.”

     

    The print media ecosystem is divided on what should be done with the new IRS. While many publishers have damned the findings and pushing for it to be dumped in the scrapyard, there are a fair number of media agency professionals and advertisers who believe that the media research findings must be honoured.

     

     

    MxMIndia Comment: Post IRS, worries for broadcasters * When publishers hailed IRS * Likely outcome of INS-MRUC meeting

    By A Correspondent

     

    Guess who should be most worried after the IRS 2013 survey findings that were out last week? The entire broadcast ecosystem of course, especially the folks at BARC. While the monsieurs at tech vendor Mediametrie and the yet-unappointed panel manager may mouth a few ouis, nons or whatever, the knives and suparis will surely be out if there’s any dramatic changes from the present.

     

    Let’s look at a few hypothetical scenarios.

    Scenario 1: Sony is Hindi GEC #1, ratings of the #1 GECs drops 100 GRPs

    Scenario 2: India News turns #1. The current leaders fall by the wayside

    Scenario 3: In Tamil, Pudhu Yugam becomes GEC #1

     

    These are of course just scenarios, but if the results of the IRS 2013 out last week are an indicator, they aren’t impossible to happen. It’s going to be a change of methodology, a change of vendor (possibly not fully if TAM is selected as panel manager), a change of philosophy and an all-new Technical Committee ensuring the processes are followed and the system is robust. And above all: BARC with a chairman from the industry, a CEO and his secretariat and a techcom that has reps of a broadcaster, media agency and advertiser.

     

    The problem, as many industrypersons told us, is not the process, but in the final numbers. These are after all IRS survey. As in the case of BARC, even the IRS saw representatives of all stakeholders actively participating in the processes.

     

    In fact on the day the IRS was launched in Mumbai in March 2013, Peter Suresh, the much respect research head (Head-Strategy) at the Dainik Bhaskar told MxMIndia:  “The entire process is automated, and that is incredible. Attempt to report individually on a far larger number of geographical units is also very heartening. District cut too has increased - hence the data can be analyzed at a far more granular level. Bulk of action of late has been in rest of India, beyond six metros and hence granular cut is extremely important. Data slicing at a deeper level, and multiple ways of presenting it, make far more sense. Readership numbers are the cornerstones of most media marketing and sales strategies - and the finer they can be cut, the more robust they are. And, of course, these will help in delivering better stories to the marketers.”

     

    Dainik Bhaskar is one of the signatories of the statement issued on Friday against the IRS. Interestingly, a day after the IRS was released - on January 29, to be precise -several newspapers front-paged their successful showing in the readership study. These include some of the signatories to the statement.

     

    The meeting between the Indian Newspaper Society (INS) and the Media Research Users Council (MRUC) at 2/2.30pm today is most likely going to end in a stalemate. It may be remembered the RSCI was formed by the MRUC and INS-sponsored National Readership Studies Council to govern  the new IRS. So the buck is clearly in the RSCI court. For the INS to damn the IRS is tough because its members had endorsed the process.

     

    The MRUC is being represented by Chairman Ravi Rao, TechCom chaiman Paritosh Joshi and Director General Shaswati Saradar. At the time of writing, one is not aware of who will represent the INS. But Hormasji Cama, a former head of the INS and MRUC and now chairperson of the RSCI, is travelling, the decision will need to be finally taken by him.

     

    According to the grapevine, the MRUC/RSCI has already written to Nielsen, asking the research agency to clear a few doubts. It’s possible that the new IRS findings will be put under suspension for a few weeks until the clarifications come in and Mr Cama is back.

     

    MxMIndia spoke with veteran media professional and former chairman of the MRUC Technical Committee Amit Ray for his views and to suggest the way forward of the mess.

     

    1. Is there really any anomaly as it is being made out to be? And if yes, why has it happened?

    a. There appears to be a lack of experience in the current dispensation vis-à-vis readership research. Instead of letting go of the previous experienced professionals, MRUC and RSCI should have engaged them more significantly given that the task was assigned to the same research agency that had failed earlier. If you remember, AC Nielsen was the agency which did the NRS in the past.

     

    b. The questions that are now rightly being asked are: Was Nielsen the right agency? Does it have the requisite experience for newspaper readership study in India? Did we forget that NRS had failed thanks to the same agency?

     

    c. I strongly believe that publishers ought to have got their own experts to validate Nielsen’s methods and later the results. How can the publishers let a body like new MRUC decide about their future knowing fully well that the real pillar of the earlier IRS was the research agency and the techcom together?

     

    d. One of the reasons why the print media rejected the NRS and opted for MRUC’s IRS was the concept of ‘continuous research’. So why was this junked overnight? It is very likely that the current people will defend this by asking for more time. This time the publisher would do well to have their own team of experts with experience and not just blindly trust the experience (or the lack of it) of the current technical committee and the research agency.

     

    e. Everyone inside MRUC would’ve known about what has happened historically. Even MRUC had a problem in the past when circumstances forced MRUC to choose a new agency NFO. This was the around 2000/2001. If my memory serves me right the new Agency took almost 3 years to complete the research. May be the current office bearers were not aware of this

     

    2. What are the next steps? Scrap IRS?

    a. Rejecting the new IRS will be a regressive decision. Instead of rejecting it, we should look at correcting it. If we reject it, we will be starved of another 15-18 months of data which will be counter-productive to publishers.

     

    b. Call the people from the earlier MRUC technical committee especially those who took it to another level because of which the INS agreed to team up with the MRUC. May be a good idea to urge the veteran Roda Mehta who set up the IRS to intervene and suggest changes. I will be happy to help too and possibly pull in a few others.

     

    c. Ask AC Nielsen to allow a detailed audit of their actual work. Invite some of the senior folks at Hansa Research Group to come in as professionals – and not representing Hansa – to offer their advice. They are clearly best suited to find the soft spots where mistakes are committed so that we don’t repeat them

     

    3. Both RSCI and MRUC are part-sponsored by print publishers. The officebearers of both bodies have publisher representatives. So is it right for the INS to now play Big Brother to decisions taken by its own members?

    For the sake of the industry and the entire print media sector, it’s important that IRS 2013 is salvaged. As I stated earlier, publishers will suffer the most if it’s scrapped. Media studies like that of KPMG, PwC etc make sectoral assumptions and projections based on these. I believe the entire sector shouldn’t suffer because of the mistakes of some.

     

  • Helios Media forays on to digital with SanjeevKapoorKhazana

    By A Correspondent

     

    Helios Media, the speciality services company for the broadcast sector, expanded its services to now also include digital media monetisation and the venture begins with bagging the mandate of representing Sanjeevkapoorkhazana

     

    Helios will work in embedding brand’s messaging within the content of the channel which claims to be the largest non-Bollywood YouTube channel in India, generating over 85 million views per month.

     

    Sanjeev Kapoor

    Speaking on the assignment, Chef Sanjeev Kapoor said, “Sanjeevkapoor.com was one of the first websites to make its presence in the country. Being a pioneer in the space, it is quite evident that our YouTube channel has garnered a huge subscriber base of 2.7 lakh. Our popular videos generate as much as 1mn+ plus views. This therefore becomes a great destination for brands to not only reach a large consumer base but also to capture the most appropriate mind-space. Helios Media has been partnering us on monetising FoodFood for a year now and I believe in their understanding of the space and the skill to position brands in the right environment which will help SanjeevKapoorKhazana realise its full potential in terms of revenue maximization”.

     

    Divya Radhakrishnan

    Commenting on the win, Divya Radhakrishnan, MD of Helios Media, said: “Helios Media’s focus is on selling brands and not just commodities by appropriate positioning and working with brand custodians to provide seamless solutions that go beyond regular commercial advertising. We strongly believe that TV has grown beyond just providing reach and its content has the Power to Influence. Therefore it is important for commercial messaging to chase the content irrespective of the screen it comes on. It’s because of this approach that the SanjeevKapoorKhazana mandate came our way and we are delighted to be entrusted with this responsibility by Chef Sanjeev Kapoor”.

     

    Helios Media has augmented its existing team with a central digital team in Mumbai under Kirtan Mankad who has earlier worked with UTV, Zoom and Hungama.

     

  • SapientNitro is Lycra’s global AOR

    By A Correspondent

     

    SapientNitro has announced that it has been appointed global advertising agency of record for the Lycra brand. Invista, which owns the brand, has tasked SapientNitro with responsibility for global brand strategy, advertising, digital, social and customer experience.

     

    Said Bob Kirkwood, Executive Vice-President of Marketing at Invista: “Lycra is one of the best known ingredient brands globally and we have high aspirations for the brand. We want to communicate our brand positioning to the millennial generation and build a consumer following of Lycra brand ambassadors.”

     

    The account will be run out of SapientNitro’s London office. The work will involve TV-led brand advertising as well as co-operative campaigns with famous garment and retailer brands and will be rolled out globally across key regions in 2014.

     

    Said Nigel Vaz, SVP and European Managing Director at SapientNitro:  “Invista is an exceptional global innovator. This is a fantastic global advertising account win for us and a powerful demonstration of where our Storyscaping approach – which combines the power of storytelling with systems thinking to allow brands to create not just ads but worlds – can take us and our clients.”

     

  • Mumbai leg of IAA Retrospect & Prospects with D Shivakumar on Feb 12

    D Shivakumar

    By A Correspondent

     

    PepsiCo India Chairman and CEO D Shivakumar will present a 60-minute review of the highs and lows in media, advertising and marketing in 2013 and a forecast of what will happen in 2014 Colors is presenting partner of the event which will be held at Hotel Sahara Star. Last month, Mr Shivakumar had presented a similar session in Delhi NCR.

     

    Srinivasan Swamy

    Said Srinivasan Swamy, President, IAA India Chapter and VP-Development, IAA Asia Pacific: “This would be infotainment at its best. In sixty minutes, we will have the wisdom and insights of a leader of our fraternity encapsulating the immediate past and the near-future in an absorbing audio-visual format. It will be a must-see for all members of our industry. The Delhi audience loved it. We, along with our partner Colors, felt there was a need to present this in both Mumbai and Delhi.”

     

  • Yeh clients maange more. PR agency honchos say in third edition of MSLGroup’s annual report

    By A Correspondent

     

    PR and social engagement network MSLGroup has released the third edition of its annual PR industry report. Titled ‘Public Relations in India: The Impact of the Economic Downturn and the 2014 Outlook’, the study carries a survey of senior PR professionals – account directors and above – to understand where they believed the industry was headed in 2014.

     

    What emerged was a picture of cautious optimism. Most respondents felt that growth would be strong but there were serious challenges: squeezed cash flows, clients expecting more for the same fees, and shrinking budgets in some cases. The talent shortage continues to remain a major concern, notes a communique

     

    Some of the survey’s findings:

    • About 20% of the respondents said industry growth would be in the 15%-20% range in 2014. What’s interesting is that this growth would happen despite clients cutting overall communication budgets. This indicates that money is being diverted from other disciplines, such as advertising, to PR.
    • Despite the downturn, 30% of respondents said clients had increased budgets either ‘somewhat’ or ‘drastically’.
    • Most felt that the tough times would last for several months more.
    • An overwhelming majority – 90% – said clients were demanding more for the same fees.
    • Respondents identified integrated marketing communications as the best way to grow business.
    • Apart from digital, clients are demanding crisis communications, training, content and research and insights from their PR agencies.

     

    Jaideep Shergill

    Said Jaideep Shergill, CEO of MSLGroup in India: “This is a time of great churn for the industry. Ground realities – from the evolution of media to the increasing number of stakeholders to what clients want – are changing fast and it’s a challenge to keep up. Thankfully, the industry has shown the capacity and resilience required, and this is evident from the survey’s findings.”

     

    The second section of the report examines the rise of cheap smartphones and their impact on marketing communications. As India becomes the new battleground for high-end smart phones, there is a ‘sub-revolution’ bubbling under. Given the country’s price sensitivity, several firms have unleashed a range of cheap smart phones that have become very popular. The Slideshare link of the report is: http://www.slideshare.net/mslgroup/india-pr-report-2014-mslgroup.

     

  • 10 years of being much-liked

     

    Today (Feb 4) is social networking platform Facebook celebrates its 10th anniversary. The site went live on February 4, 2004 in founder and CEO Mark Zuckerberg’s Harvard University dorm room, and since then has grown to become a global service with more 1.2 billion monthly active users.

     

    Said Zuckerberg on the occasion:  “It’s been an incredible journey so far, and I’m so grateful to be a part of it. It’s been amazing to see how people have used Facebook to build a real community and help each other in so many ways. In the next decade, we have the opportunity and responsibility to connect everyone and to keep serving the community as best we can.”

     

    Take a look at the pages above on the site today and the way it was around 2004-05. Plus timelines, milestones and vital stats.

     

  • MRUC issues statement. Decision on IRS by RSCI on Feb 19

    By A  Correspondent

     

    We have received the following statement from the MRUC director-general Shaswati Saradar:

     

    :: IRS 2013 was released on January 28, 2014.

     

    :: In the week since then, there has been considerable comment and discussion in the media about the quality of the study. Yesterday, the Indian Newspaper Society sought a meeting with the MRUC to discuss the situation and the way forward. Following on from this meeting, the MRUC Chairman convened an emergency meeting of the Board of Governors to crystallise the Council’s point of view. This meeting held earlier today has taken the following decisions:

     

    :: The Council asserts that the design, methodology and in-field execution of the study was benchmarked to and conducted at the very highest standards. The massive integration of technology, from DS-CAPI, through automated collation and tabulation, to a brand new UI (user interface) with a comprehensive suite of on-board analytics played a crucial role in this exercise. The Council intended to deliver a study that could legitimately carry the ‘Gold Standard’ appellation. It is satisfied that the study has moved many steps forward in that direction.

     

    :: The Council is conscious that it is now only one of the two constituents of the Readership Studies Council of India. With the RSCI now being in charge of governance of the study, the MRUC is no longer at liberty to make a unilateral determination of the way forward, particularly in a situation as contentious as it appears today.

     

    :: The Council looks forward keenly to the RSCI meeting called by the RSCI Chairman on February 19, 2014. All aspects of the study will be placed before the RSCI for helping the broader community of stakeholders convince themselves about the study’s robustness and integrity.

     

    :: A brief presentation is appended. This will elucidate many of the aspects referred above. (presentation embedded in this story)

     

  • INS rejects MRUC response. Mulls alternative currency. Key publicatns to start withdrawing fm IRS

    By A Correspondent

     

    The Indian Newspaper Society (INS) has scoffed at the decision taken by the Media Research Users Council (MRUC) this evening rejecting the ultimatum the INS had issued to them yesterday to withdraw the IRS 2013 findings that were released last week (January 28).

     

    A senior publisher told MxMIndia that the INS may consider legal recourse if necessary and at least one or two big publishers have already sent letters of withdrawal from the IRS.

     

    On being told that the RSCI meeting is just a fortnight away, the publisher told MxM that the INS can’t wait for a fortnight as the data is in the market and is being misused. When alerted that the RSCI chairman (and a former INS president too) Hormasji Cama was travelling, the INS member and publisher told us that since the Executive Board was around, they could have met and taken a decision.

     

    The publisher said that the advisory issued to the MRUC yesterday (Feb 3) was clear: that the IRS 2013 should be withdrawn. The data would be then viewed, validated and re-released, if necessary. The MRUC decision can be read here: http://www.mxmindia.com/2014/02/mruc-issues-statement-decision-on-irs-by-rsci-on-feb-19/

     

    Meanwhile, the INS is mulling an alternative currency too, the publisher said.