Category: NEWS

  • HBO Premium unveils campaign for uninterrupted viewing

    By A Correspondent

     

    HBO South Asia has announced a new campaign to promote HBO’s belief that nothing should come in the way of entertainment. The HBO Premium Channels campaign is launched with the aim of ensuring that audiences have an uninterrupted ad-free viewing experience. The objective of the campaign is to get people to visit HBOPremium.com website and subscribe to HBO Premium channels or directly through DTH or digital cable operators.

     

    Announcing the launch of the new multi-media campaign, Monica Tata, Managing Director, South Asia for HBO India Pvt Ltd said, “Both the HBO Premium channels maximize the entertainment experience by airing HBO Original content and blockbuster movies 100 per cent break-free. We have initiated a multimedia campaign developed by DDB Mudra to promote the visibility and popularity of this unique proposition of HBO Defined and HBO Hits across platforms including print, cinema, TV, digital and social media. Our aim is to spoil our viewers with the very best non-stop, high quality programming, thus providing an unparalleled viewing experience.”

     

    Speaking about the creative strategy behind the campaign, Anurag Tandon, Senior Vice President, DDB Mudra, said, “Content promotion on a channel has a very formulaic approach. The usual strategy is to build intrigue through teaser like edits by using existing footage of the content that needs to be promoted. We wanted to break away from this traditional approach and leverage the USP of uninterrupted original HD quality content in a way that goes beyond just claims and announcements of the product offering. Thus came about our creative proposition of ‘addictive viewing experience’ dramatized through two TV spots showing the consumers going through the experience. We believe it is imperative for a content brand to build the ideology of viewing experience in addition to the promise of fresh content for the consumers to feel compelled to subscribe”.

     

    The TVCs will be run on the HBO premium.com webpage and will include visitor engagement and interaction through gamification of elements from the TVCs.

     

  • PHASE 1 flags off Mumbai ops

    By A Correspondent

     

    One of India’s fast growing Experiential Marketing agency, PHASE 1 has announced the launch of their full-fledged Mumbai operations. “Phase 1expansion to Mumbai is a result of the path-breaking projects that the company has executed for niche brands,” said Oum Pradutt, Founder & Managing Director, Phase 1. “We would like to extend this expertise to Mumbai clientele,”

     

    “In Mumbai,” Pradutt informed, “the company has seen exponential growth in the past years, and has conceptualized and executed some memorable events.”

     

    PHASE 1 brings with it over 18 years of expertise in total event and experiential solutions, executed both in India and internationally.

     

    The company headed by Pradutt, who is also Vice President, South for Event & Entertainment Management Association (EEMA) and member of the National Executive Committee (NEC), EEMA, has grown strength to strength since inception, and constantly diversifying into niche businesses and international markets.

     

    “PHASE 1’s operations are not restricted to events alone, though that is the core area of expertise,” Pradutt informed. “In keeping with the global economic and business trends we have diversified our portfolio to include MICE (meetings incentives, conferences, exhibitions) and IP (Intellectual Property).”

     

    The MICE sector in 2010 was valued at a phenomenal US $5.7 trillion, and with India’s strategic position as one of the top growing economies in the world,  MICE is the new dimension in and events and experiential marketing programs, catering to high end clientele.

     

    Since inception, PHASE 1 has managed events across all of India’s A1 cities and many of its B1 and B2 cities besides international destinations in South-East Asia, Sri Lanka, Dubai, Africa, North America and Europe.

     

    Mumbai is the second office of PHASE 1 in India, which is headquartered in the Garden City of Bangalore. This office will be a hub to expand the company’s reach to the Western Region of India, and offer clients the PHASE 1 trademark expertise.

     

  • How uncoupling fear and failure unleashes creativity at Pixar

     

    By Priyanka Sangani

     

    When the Walt Disney Company acquired Pixar Animation Studio eight years ago, its animation business, Disney Animation, was going through the roughest patch in its history. Pixar, on the other hand, was having a dream run.

     

    Pixar execs Ed Catmull and John Lasseter were asked to head both companies and the first thing they decided was to keep them separate – neither studio would do any work for the other. “We were suddenly put in charge of a group that we didn’t know at all.

     

    All we knew is that they were demoralised and had failed. We had all these principles about how to run an organisation based on candour, fearlessness and trust and while we had taken a conscious decision to keep both the businesses separate, we decided we would apply these principles here as well,” says Mr Catmull, president, Pixar and Disney Animation.

     

    The duo thought that instilling these principles would take them two years; it took them four. “Stating the principles isn’t the same as actually doing it. They needed to go through some problems and failures as a group before they earned each others’ trust,” says Mr Catmull.

     

    The results are there for everyone to see. All the films made by Disney Animation after this acquisition have been critical successes, with the most recent one, Frozen, going on to become the highest grossing animation film of all times.

     

    “The same people who were there when it was failing are there when it is successful,” says Mr Catmull over the phone from his home in California. Pixar will go into the history books for making Toy Story, the first feature length computer animation film in 1995.

     

    The company started off as a part of Lucasfilm which was eventually sold to Steve Jobs in 1986 which is when Pixar was formed. The various challenges it faced as it grew has played an important role in shaping its culture where the focus is on creativity, but not at the risk of alienating the non-creative people in the organisation.

     

    The desire to share the forces and factors that shaped Pixar’s culture spurred Mr Catmull to write a book, Creativity, Inc. co-authored with business writer Amy Wallace. The culture at Pixar has been consciously shaped so that it can outlive its founders and ensure that unseen forces don’t get in the way of the creativity that drives the organisation. Mr Catmull’s personal journey has been an interesting one.

     

    As a kid, he had a dream to make the world’s first computer animated film and that is what led him to joining Lucasfilm after studying physics and computer science (then an emerging field) at the University of Utah.

     

    Solving the problems in front of him is what has always driven him – it’s just that the nature of the problem kept changing. These started off as technical problems – not having the technology to make a movie using computers – and then became human ones. Being strategically located just an hour away from Silicon Valley and one hour plane ride from Hollywood, Mr Catmull found himself in a unique position.

     

    In the early days of Silicon Valley, there were creative groups that were successful but then they’d fall apart. “Observing from the outside you realise that there’s something wrong that smart people are missing out on and that leads you to realise that if they are missing out on it, I’ll probably miss it too. Then this leads to figuring out what these things are and working at fixing them,” he says.

     

    Given his background, Mr Catmull viewed these problems as a scientist, and not a manager. “I came to believe that most companies were trying to do the right thing, but in focusing on doing this right thing, they were missing out on a deeper problem – how human emotions form barriers and fears that get in the way,” he says.

     

    This led him to the realisation that most companies were so focused on competition that they didn’t introspect deeply enough on the other destructive forces that were at work. “If we can figure out what it is about managing and adapting to change that is so hard then we can find problems before they hit us. You have to work through the problem and not go around it. It’s an abstract but philosophical approach,” he says.

     

    What companies need to do is periodically become introspective. It’s important to examine the deeper reasons as to why they made mistakes or why they succeeded at something. Mr Catmull draws an analogy with meditation: “Facing inwards is a different experience from when you face the outside world, but until you experience it, you won’t know it. Similarly, it’s important for companies to occasionally be introspective and integrate it with how they act towards the outside world.”

     

    The act of management itself is a creative act, and the issues in the entertainment business are applicable to other situations as well. “The trick to solving a lot of problems lies in understanding the blocks and barriers that are based on human emotions. While we can address these, it also means that a problem never completely goes away because human nature is always there,” says Mr Catmull.

     

    For instance, the fear of failure normally stops people from engaging or speaking up in a discussion. An experiment Mr Catmull often tries is asking a group what can be done to make people more creative.

     

    Only a handful raise their hands, whereas when he asks how many know of ways to make people hold back, all the hands in the room go up. That’s because failure tends to be viewed through two contradictory lenses.

     

    While most leaders agree that their failures and mistakes have provided some of their biggest learnings and eventual success, at the same time there will be opponents who will bludgeon you for failing.

     

    “There is a very real aura of danger around failing and this is not going to go away. We operate in an environment where both these meanings are here to stay. Leaders need to accept that people have real fears about their responsibilities and the consequences of executing their job. It’s an active thing for leaders to make it safe so that if people fail, they aren’t punished and this is something that happens by example over a period of time,” he says.

     

    A unique aspect at Pixar is a think-tank called Braintrust. It’s made up of some of the most senior people in the company including Messrs Catmull and Lasseter. This group acts like a peer review system, going over the progress of each movie Pixar is producing with the director every few months. However, while it does provide critical feedback on the film, the decision on what to do with that feedback is left entirely up to the director.

     

    The company tried replicating this in other parts of the business over the years and failed every time. It took them time to realise that the reason Braintrust worked so well was because the group had no authority.

     

    The individuals in the room – collectively and individually – were extremely powerful and this could cause people responsible for the project to enter the meeting in a defensive posture. “We made it clear that nobody in that room, not even John or me, could override the director.

     

    By removing the authority from the room we were making it safer for the director to approach it with an open mind,” says Mr Catmull. The rationale delves deep into human psychology. People don’t want to embarrass themselves or other people, and they tend to naturally defer to those with more authority and experience. These barriers keep them from saying what they think.

     

    “The idea at Braintrust is about the dynamics in the room and discussing things with candour,” he says. Another conflict most organisations face is the power struggle between different departments, in this case creative and production. A healthy organisation accepts that each domain has a somewhat different agenda and respects that.

     

    At the same time the leader must realise that if any one department wins, it is detrimental to the organisation as the goals of the department have come first over the greater good. “We talk about balance as a calm yogic state, but it’s the wrong metaphor. It’s more about a physical activity like sports where things are dynamic and it is people who can adapt to the realities of this changing environment who are good at balance,” he says.

     

    Finally, he says that writing this book doesn’t mean that Pixar has it all figured out. “The figuring-it-out process is what we continually do. This is just the approach you take so that you are continually facing in towards the problem,” he says.When the Walt Disney Company acquired Pixar Animation Studio eight years ago, its animation business, Disney Animation, was going through the roughest patch in its history. Pixar, on the other hand, was having a dream run.

     

    Pixar execs Ed Catmull and John Lasseter were asked to head both companies and the first thing they decided was to keep them separate – neither studio would do any work for the other. “We were suddenly put in charge of a group that we didn’t know at all.

     

    All we knew is that they were demoralised and had failed. We had all these principles about how to run an organisation based on candour, fearlessness and trust and while we had taken a conscious decision to keep both the businesses separate, we decided we would apply these principles here as well,” says Mr Catmull, president, Pixar and Disney Animation.

     

    The duo thought that instilling these principles would take them two years; it took them four. “Stating the principles isn’t the same as actually doing it. They needed to go through some problems and failures as a group before they earned each others’ trust,” says Mr Catmull.

     

    The results are there for everyone to see. All the films made by Disney Animation after this acquisition have been critical successes, with the most recent one, Frozen, going on to become the highest grossing animation film of all times.

     

    “The same people who were there when it was failing are there when it is successful,” says Mr Catmull over the phone from his home in California. Pixar will go into the history books for making Toy Story, the first feature length computer animation film in 1995.

     

    The company started off as a part of Lucasfilm which was eventually sold to Steve Jobs in 1986 which is when Pixar was formed. The various challenges it faced as it grew has played an important role in shaping its culture where the focus is on creativity, but not at the risk of alienating the non-creative people in the organisation.

     

    The desire to share the forces and factors that shaped Pixar’s culture spurred Mr Catmull to write a book, Creativity, Inc. coauthored with business writer Amy Wallace. The culture at Pixar has been consciously shaped so that it can outlive its founders and ensure that unseen forces don’t get in the way of the creativity that drives the organization. Mr Catmull’s personal journey has been an interesting one.

     

    As a kid, he had a dream to make the world’s first computer animated film and that is what led him to joining Lucasfilm after studying physics and computer science (then an emerging field) at the University of Utah.

     

    Solving the problems in front of him is what has always driven him – it’s just that the nature of the problem kept changing. These started off as technical problems – not having the technology to make a movie using computers – and then became human ones. Being strategically located just an hour away from Silicon Valley and one hour plane ride from Hollywood, Mr Catmull found himself in a unique position.

     

    In the early days of Silicon Valley, there were creative groups that were successful but then they’d fall apart. “Observing from the outside you realise that there’s something wrong that smart people are missing out on and that leads you to realise that if they are missing out on it, I’ll probably miss it too. Then this leads to figuring out what these things are and working at fixing them,” he says.

     

    Given his background, Mr Catmull viewed these problems as a scientist, and not a manager. “I came to believe that most companies were trying to do the right thing, but in focusing on doing this right thing, they were missing out on a deeper problem – how human emotions form barriers and fears that get in the way,” he says.

     

    This led him to the realisation that most companies were so focused on competition that they didn’t introspect deeply enough on the other destructive forces that were at work. “If we can figure out what it is about managing and adapting to change that is so hard then we can find problems before they hit us. You have to work through the problem and not go around it. It’s an abstract but philosophical approach,” he says.

     

    What companies need to do is periodically become introspective. It’s important to examine the deeper reasons as to why they made mistakes or why they succeeded at something. Mr Catmull draws an analogy with meditation: “Facing inwards is a different experience from when you face the outside world, but until you experience it, you won’t know it. Similarly, it’s important for companies to occasionally be introspective and integrate it with how they act towards the outside world.”

     

    The act of management itself is a creative act, and the issues in the entertainment business are applicable to other situations as well. “The trick to solving a lot of problems lies in understanding the blocks and barriers that are based on human emotions. While we can address these, it also means that a problem never completely goes away because human nature is always there,” says Mr Catmull.

     

    For instance, the fear of failure normally stops people from engaging or speaking up in a discussion. An experiment Mr Catmull often tries is asking a group what can be done to make people more creative.

     

    Only a handful raise their hands, whereas when he asks how many know of ways to make people hold back, all the hands in the room go up. That’s because failure tends to be viewed through two contradictory lenses. While most leaders agree that their failures and mistakes have provided some of their biggest learnings and eventual success, at the same time there will be opponents who will bludgeon you for failing.

     

    “There is a very real aura of danger around failing and this is not going to go away. We operate in an environment where both these meanings are here to stay. Leaders need to accept that people have real fears about their responsibilities and the consequences of executing their job. It’s an active thing for leaders to make it safe so that if people fail, they aren’t punished and this is something that happens by example over a period of time,” he says.

     

    A unique aspect at Pixar is a think-tank called Braintrust. It’s made up of some of the most senior people in the company including Catmull and Lasseter. This group acts like a peer review system, going over the progress of each movie Pixar is producing with the director every few months. However, while it does provide critical feedback on the film, the decision on what to do with that feedback is left entirely up to the director.

     

    The company tried replicating this in other parts of the business over the years and failed every time. It took them time to realise that the reason Braintrust worked so well was because the group had no authority.

     

    The individuals in the room – collectively and individually – were extremely powerful and this could cause people responsible for the project to enter the meeting in a defensive posture. “We made it clear that nobody in that room, not even John or me, could override the director.

     

    By removing the authority from the room we were making it safer for the director to approach it with an open mind,” says Mr Catmull. The rationale delves deep into human psychology. People don’t want to embarrass themselves or other people, and they tend to naturally defer to those with more authority and experience. These barriers keep them from saying what they think.

     

    “The idea at Braintrust is about the dynamics in the room and discussing things with candour,” he says. Another conflict most organisations face is the power struggle between different departments, in this case creative and production. A healthy organisation accepts that each domain has a somewhat different agenda and respects that.

     

    At the same time the leader must realise that if any one department wins, it is detrimental to the organisation as the goals of the department have come first over the greater good. “We talk about balance as a calm yogic state, but it’s the wrong metaphor. It’s more about a physical activity like sports where things are dynamic and it is people who can adapt to the realities of this changing environment who are good at balance,” he says.

     

    Finally, he says that writing this book doesn’t mean that Pixar has it all figured out. “The figuring-it-out process is what we continually do. This is just the approach you take so that you are continually facing in towards the problem,” he says.

     

    Source:The Economic Times

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

    Licensed to republish

     

  • Adani appoints Quasar as its digital AoR

    By a correspondent

     

    Adani Enterprises Ltd. has awarded the digital mandate to Quasar Media Pvt. Ltd., following a multi-agency pitch. Quasar has won the digital duties across social media strategy and management, search engine optimization, media planning & buying and online reputation management. The account will be handled by the Quasar Mumbai office.

     

    Commenting on this new win, Gaurav Nabh, Head, Quasar said, “We are exciting about working with Adani, one of the leading infrastructure company’s in India. They have some extremely ambitious plans on the table and we welcome the challenge to partner with them on their journey. We have started 2014 on a very positive note and look forward to some breakthrough work in the coming months.”

     

    The Adani Group is one of India’s leading business houses with revenue of about US $9.4 billion. Adani is a globally integrated infrastructure player with businesses spanning coal trading, coal mining, oil & gas exploration, ports, multi-modal logistics, power generation & transmission and gas distribution.

     

  • Content testing tool Ormax Xpressive launched

    By a correspondent

     

    Ormax Media has announced the launch of Ormax Xpressive, an automated facial coding based content testing tool. The product is powered by Europe-based RealEyes, a global thought leader in facial coding services.

     

    Ormax Xpressive can be used by media companies, such as TV channels, film studios, content producers and media agencies, to test video content ranging from 10 seconds to one hour in duration. Ormax Media have already tested 11 videos using the tool, even before its formal launch slated for this week.

     

    Speaking about Ormax Xpressive, Shailesh Kapoor, CEO – Ormax Media, said: “Facial coding based testing captures the consumers’ actual behavioural response to the content being tested, instead of relying on them answering a set of questions. The product is based on the premise that for any content to work, it needs to emotionally engage with its target audience. Decoding facial expressions into emotions enables us to measure which specific emotions were triggered off by the content, at a second-by-second level. We are extremely proud to bring this technology to India, in association with RealEyes.”

     

    Alex Slater, Commercial Director, RealEyes, added: “Every day we’re bombarded with thousands of marketing messages. But to achieve any sort of cut-through, you’ve got to move people.  If 80% of behaviour is determined by the subconscious, why is it that 90% of research seeks to mine the conscious, rational brain? The face doesn’t lie. Facial movements are spontaneous and subconscious.  This type of emotional intelligence is richer and more pure, and it makes little demand on the audience during the test.”

     

    The emotions tracked by the product include happiness, surprise, confusion, sadness, disgust and scare. Data can be analysed by age, gender, markets, SECs and other relevant consumer variables. The only equipment required to participate in a test is a webcam-enabled computer. The test can be conducted at the respondent’s home or at a central location.

  • Havas Media appoints Josh Gallagher as Regional Strategy Director

    By a correspondent

     

    Havas Media Group has announced the appointment of Josh Gallagher as Regional Strategy Director.

     

    In his new role, Josh will be responsible for driving offline and online strategy for the agency’s key clients including AXA, Emirates, LG Electronics and Shangri La Hotels. He will also lead the adoption of agency’s proprietary planning process Meaningful Connections Planning with an eye to delivering innovative solutions to new and existing clients. An integral part of his mandate is to propel the uptake of Havas Media Group’s Meaningful Brands research, a unique framework that analyses and tracks the connections brands have with our quality of life and well-being.

     

    Josh joins the agency with ten years of experience working with international media and digital agencies in Australia. He was most recently with Zenith Optimedia Melbourne, where he worked as a Communications Strategist, driving strategy for Honda, Lion Nathan and Reckitt Benckiser. Prior to this, he spent seven years with Universal McCann Brisbane, where he worked as Client Services and Strategic Director. He has also had a stint at digital agency Kruse Digital.

     

    Based out of Singapore, Josh will report into SK Biswas, Chief Strategy Officer at Havas Media Group, Asia Pacific.

     

    Commenting on his appointment, Biswas said: “Josh is a very welcome addition to the regional strategy team. He has an unrelenting curiosity for uncovering consumer insights and is a champion of integration. He is one of those rare strategists, who have a hands on and practical experience of working on integrated strategies and expertise in both offline and digital communications planning processes.”

     

  • Lowe Mumbai is Agency Office #1

     

    They are here. The 2014 Effie Effectiveness Index is derived from almost 3,000 finalists and winning entries to Effie Award competitions worldwide between June 14, 2013 and June 13, 2014. The Index is constructed by converting every Effie award and finalist into points – 12 for a Grand Effie, eight for Gold, six for Silver, four for Bronze and two for a finalist (with contributing agencies receiving half these points). Throughout the Index, ‘Country’ and ‘Region’ refer to where a campaign ran, not the location of the agency or advertiser responsible for it.

     

    The 2014 Effie Effectiveness Index, which is into its fourth year, has declared Lowe Lintas Mumbai as the most Effective Agency in Asia Pacific for 2014 and the 2nd most in the world after Sancho BBDO from Bogota, Colombia.

     

    This recognition follows a series of accolades on Lowe Lintas + Partners over the past year beginning with the win of the “Agency of the Year” title at Effies 2013, in India. This was followed by Lowe Lintas + Partners being awarded the Effectiveness Creative “Agency of the Year” across Asia Pacific at Tambuli Awards, Manila in June 2014.

     

    Regional Rankings

    The Index can also be analyzed by region and the companies that ranked highest in each region in 2014 are:

     

    Asia Pacific

    Unilever (advertiser), McDonald’s (brand), Omnicom (agency holding group) BBDO (agency network), Lowe Lintas – Mumbai (agency) and Barnes, Catmur & Friends – Auckland (independent agency).

     

    Europe

    Unilever (advertiser), Vodafone (brand), WPP Group (agency holding group), BBDO Worldwide (agency network), TBWA\Istanbul (agency) and ACG Advertising Agency in Budapest (independent agency).

     

    Latin America

    PepsiCo (advertiser), Movistar (brand), Omnicom (agency holding group), BBDO Worldwide (agency network), Sancho BBDO – Bogotá (agency) and Madre Buenos Aires (independent agency).

     

    Middle East & Africa

    Unilever (advertiser), Coca-Cola (brand), WPP Group (agency holding group), McCann Worldgroup (agency network), FP7/DXB – Dubai (agency) and Iris MENA – Dubai (independent agency)

     

    North America

    Procter & Gamble (advertiser), Dove (brand), Publicis Groupe (agency holding group), Starcom MediaVest Group (agency network), Starcom MediaVest Group, Chicago (agency) and Cramer-Krasselt, Chicago (independent agency).

     

    About the Effie Awards:

    Since 1968, the Effie Awards have been honoring Ideas that Work Globally.

     

    Introduced in 2011, the Effie Effectiveness Index (www.effieindex.com) recognizes the importance of marketing effectiveness by revealing which companies were the most successful at creating ideas that delivered results.

     

    From a small-budget retail campaign that achieved marketplace success in Brazil to a global bank that doubled business in the Middle East, Effie continues to reward Ideas that Worked across the globe.

     

    Now in its fourth year, the Effie Index provides an insightful glimpse into those who are delivering Ideas that Work across the globe.

     

    The Index features the most effective Marketers, Brands, Agency Holding Groups, Agency Networks, Agency Offices, and Independent Agencies. These rankings can be filtered by region, country and product category.

     

    Which companies, either independent or part of larger networks, produced the most effective work in each country and region over the past year? Which agencies, brands and marketers have achieved effectiveness on a global scale in 2014? Explore this year’s rankings to find out.

     

    Most Effective Marketers

    For the third year in a row, Unilever tops the global Marketer ranking. Coca-Cola jumps to second place, with Procter & Gamble slipping to third. Consumer packaged goods again dominate the top 20, but they are joined by auto giants Ford Motor Co. and General Motors and mobile leaders Vodafone and Samsung, with regional food chain Hungry Jack making a surprise debut.

    Source: www.effieindex.com. © Effie Worldwide

     

    Most Effective Brands

    Coca-Cola takes the title of the world’s most effective brand for the third year in a row. McDonald’s retains second place, while mobile giant Vodafone jumps one spot to third. Pepsi drops a spot, with Dove rounding out the top five. APAC regional brands NRMA Insurance and Hungry Jack’s, along with Latin American powerhouse brand Movistar crack the top ten this year.

    Source: www.effieindex.com. © Effie Worldwide

     

    Most Effective Agency Holding Groups

    WPP Group remains the most effective global Holding Group for the third consecutive year, with Omnicom staying in second place. IPG rises to third, while Publicis and Havas round out the top five.

    Source: www.effieindex.com. © Effie Worldwide

     

    Most Effective Agency Networks

    BBDO tops the world’s most effective agency network with 1149 points this year. Ogilvy & Mather drops to second, while McCann Worldgroup, DDB Worldwide and Leo Burnett round out the top 5 for the second year in a row.

    Source: www.effieindex.com. © Effie Worldwide

     

    Most Effective Agency Offices

    Sancho BBDO from Bogota, Colombia moves up one spot to lead the Global Individual Agency Office rankings in 2014. Lowe Lintas Mumbai climbs to second, with Ogilvy & Mather Mumbai, Dubai -based FP7/DXB and Starcom MediaVest Group’s Chicago office rounding out the top five. The top 20 includes agencies from New Zealand, Hungary, Turkey, and Australia, among others.

    Source: www.effieindex.com. © Effie Worldwide

     

    Most Effective Independent Agencies

    Budapest-based ACG Advertising Agency is the Most Effective Independent Agency in 2014. Kinograf (Kiev, Ukraine) and Madre Buenos Aires tied for second, while New Zealand agency Barnes, Catmur & Friends and Banda Agency (Kiev, Ukraine), complete the top five. All of the top ten most effective independent agencies stem from Europe, Latin America or Asia Pacific this year.

    Source: www.effieindex.com. © Effie Worldwide

  • Eulogy Media completes four years in India

    By a correspondent

     

    London-based PR agency Eulogy Media recently completed four successful years of existence in India. Headquartered in Bangalore, the India operations functions across offices in India including Mumbai, New Delhi, Pune and Kolkata.

     

    The team expertise and the client portfolio of Eulogy ranges from national as well as international clients from Education, Power, Fashion/Lifestyle, F&B, Automobiles, Information Technology, Media Buying and Advertising, Data & Media Analytics, Realty, Bio-sciences to Alco-Bev.

     

    Talking about the journey in India, Cyrus Jogina, Managing Director, India, stated, “It has been a great journey and specially last year has been very exciting in terms of overall growth and structuring; client wins, office expansions, geographical spread amidst positive client testimonials for bringing to the table innovative, out-of-the-box ideas and designing successful campaigns time and again. We have an unremitting aspirant vision of broadening our reach across sectors and markets in India.”

     

    Adrian Brady, CEO, Eulogy, said “The India office was our first expansion of the Eulogy brand into a foreign market – four years hence I am pleased and proud of the journey we have been on. From a single office to five offices and mixed bag sectorial expertise being built slowly but steadily, we have extended our mission of ‘igniting profitable conversations’ through the communication campaigns in India as well. We have confidence in our personnel in the India office lead by Cyrus, of taking the consultancy to the next level within a short time.”

     

    Eulogy has also successfully forayed into Digital PR and is currently organically growing this division.

     

  • Myntra.com unveils ‘Live for Likes’ campaign

    By a correspondent

     

    Myntra.com has launched its largest marketing campaign to date, christened ‘Live for Likes’, in an endeavor to engage today’s social media savvy generation. The ad aptly portrays people’s increasing desire to upload attractive pictures and gather maximum likes for it. It is a multi-media campaign which kicked off on social platforms and has extended to TV; and will be brought alive in various media over the coming weeks.

     

    The campaign, ‘Live for Likes’, taps into the global trend of taking ‘selfies’ and getting appreciated by friends on social media. Myntra.com encourages its shoppers to look their stylish best with the latest fashion trends coupled with a million dollar smile for a perfect picture on every occasion, be it a leisurely hangout with friends, a cocktail dinner or a slumber party. The campaign has a slightly quirky ‘take’ on this trend, reflecting how people go a little out of their way to get more ‘Likes’.

     

    Vikas Ahuja

    Speaking about the launch, Vikas Ahuja, Chief Marketing Officer, Myntra said, “Young shoppers of today are totally digitally savvy, and highly active on social media platforms. ‘Selfies’ are a common trend and people try to put their best foot forward to share pictures of themselves – often it is as important, or more important, to look good online as it is in real life! In our campaign, we have tapped into this trend and married it with the key role that fashion plays in helping people look good. The TV commercial is very fashionable and stylised, has a peppy, foot-tapping music track, and is aspirational yet relate-able to youth. And encourages them to Get the looks, Get the Likes!”

     

  • Bates CHI bags Dalmia Cement biz

    By a correspondent

     

    Bates CHI&Partners has won the mandate for Dalmia Cement Bharat Limited. They were chosen over DDB Mudra and another local agency.

     

    Dalmia Cement having usurped the No 2 position in the North East in just a year, is now set for more markets, and not just in the East. Dalmia Cement has their cement footprint spread across South and East India through a portfolio of regional brands. The brand is also a pioneer in super specialty cements used for airstrips, oil wells and railway sleepers.

     

    B K Singh, Senior Executive Director, Group Marketing & Corporate Communication said, “We believe that successful and admired brands are built through well thought strategies and sustained efforts over time. In this endeavor, we needed a partner who has been through similar journeys of aspirational brands and more importantly the willingness to experiment with fresh thinking. In Bates CHI we found such a partner and we are happy to have Mr. Abeer Chakravarty and his team on board.”

     

  • Cheil appoints Rahul Nanda as SVP – New Business, Digital

    By a correspondent

     

    Rahul Nanda

    Cheil Worldwide SW Asia (Cheil India) has appointed digital domain specialist, Rahul Nanda as Senior Vice President – New Business, Digital. Nanda, moves from Web Chutney where he was Partner & President, until its sale to Denstu India.

     

    A digital domain specialist, he comes with 19+ years of experience and expertise across various sectors including Digital Marketing, Application Development, Mobile Communications, DTH including an ISP.

     

    Reporting to Rajesh Bhatia, Nanda will lead the growth and expansion of the agency’s integrated media offering as well as enhance its internal digital capabilities.

     

    Hari Krishnan
    Rajesh Bhatia

    Confirming the appointment, Hari Krishnan, COO, Cheil Worldwide, SW Asia said, “Cheil India is growing exponentially and with digital being a key quotient for new business acquisition, Rahul’s coming on board reflects this momentum. I am positive that his entrepreneurial genius will work in furthering our digitally-integrated vision.”

     

    “With the scale and skill of our digital offering today, I believe, we are rightly positioned to aggressively take our proposition to a much wider audience base. And we needed someone of the stature and pedigree of Rahul to fulfill that agenda. Am delighted with his coming on board,” said Rajesh Bhatia, SVP & Head Digital, Cheil Worldwide, SW Asia.

     

  • Press Club Mumbai’s first anniv commemoration meet for Charu Deshpande

    By A Correspondent

     

    The Press Club Mumbai has convened a commemoration meeting on Saturday, June 28, 2014 at 4 PM, the first anniversary of Charudatta Deshpande’s untimely death.

     

    The cause of death of the former journalist and senior corporate communications officer with Tata Steel was suicide though what led to it has been under investigation. Over the last year, the Press Club Mumbai, along with a group of friends of the late journalist have led a campaign to ensure justice is meted out to those who drove Charu to suicide.

     

    There will be an update on the stage of the investigation and police case. Members of Charu’s family will also attend the meeting and will inform of certain initiatives Tata Steel has taken to address their grievances.