Category: NEWS

  • Happy Diwali. See you on Oct 27

    Our offices are closed from the evening of today (October 22) to Sunday, October 26. Our next scheduled update and newsletter will happen on Monday, October 27. But, of course, we are around, and will surface if there’s something striking.

     

    Here’s wishing you a Delightful Diwali. And a Happy New Year and Greetings on Bhai Dooj/Bhau Beej. Crackers are fun, but do care of the environment before indulging in them.

     

    See you soon!

     

  • Announcing: The MxMIndia Annual 3

     

    It’s Diwali, and it’s time to make a very special announcement. The MxMIndia Annual 3.

     

    Yes, we’ve just about initiated work on the third Annual of MxMIndia.

     

    Come November, we will kickstart it full-steam and look at coming up with another unputdownable issue.

     

    We will unveil the theme on November 3.

     

    The idea is not just to have a volume that has all the biggies in the business. But we are looking at producing an edition that is insightful and educative.

     

    We still have requests coming in for extra copies of our first and second annuals. And we are sure you’ll ask for more of the third too.

     

    Wait for it!

     

  • ET Edge hosts ‘The ET Best Brands 2014’

    By A Correspondent

     

    Times Conferences Ltd. functional under the brand name ET Edge in collaboration with Nielsen held the first edition of ‘The Economic Times Best Brands 2014’. The platform is an endeavour to recognize the efforts of the most admired brands that are redefining the Indian marketplace in the contemporary times.

     

    India as a country stores immense potential in the form of a colossal population providing global brands with a massive ground to play and explore respective targets. ET Best Brands, through this platform aims to highlight India’s supreme brands which have displayed leadership in market cap, innovations, services, referral and recall value among all strata of consumers.

     

    With the theme of “Celebrating Brand Excellence”, the platform aimed to bring together visionaries, industry influencers, strategy planners and implementers on a single platform to discuss and comprehend modern brands and branding strategies. The summit also brought forth Indian and global industry barons and visionaries on one platform to share their knowledge and experience of brands and consumer relationships. The ET Best Brands and Nielson study was focussed to gain deeper insights into the role of new age branding and brand association with consumer preference. This effort recognises 250 of the best and the most admired brands in India based on how they have reshaped the way our markets operate.

     

    Speaking on the occasion, Deepak Lamba, President, Times Conferences Limited – BCCL said, “It is a matter of great pride for all of us at The Economic Times to introduce you to one of our biggest research based initiatives; The ET Best brands 2014. The platform recognizes the excellence of best brands that have set a benchmark across various parameters like Innovation, Brand Value, Brand Recall, consumer satisfaction, service & quality. We are celebrating brand excellence and are proud to present the top brands that have created a lasting impression in the minds of consumers.”

     

    The keynote address was given by Suhel Seth, Author & Marketing Maven and the special address was given by Amish Tripathi, Noted Author, Shiva Trilogy. A special session on making of an iconic brand was given by Sunil Vysyaprat, Executive Creative Director, Wieden+kennedy. An armchair interview of Parminder Singh, Managing Director SEA, India & MENA, Twitter was also an interesting session in the summit. The summit also focused on various panel discussions on topics such as: 5 steps to build lasting connect with the consumers, Making of an iconic brand, Brands in a virtual globe: Talking to 24×7 connected consumers & Indian brands taking it Global – Challenges & Opportunity.

     

  • Mindshare inks strategic partnership with Footmarks

    By A Correspondent

     

    Mindshare announced a strategic partnership with Footmarks to bring its beacon-powered mobile experiences and analytics to the Asia-Pacific region. The alliance will be managed out of Mindshare Singapore’s “Discovery” unit as it continues to bring innovative connected experiences to its growing list of clients.

     

    Footmarks is the leading enterprise awareness platform provider focused on delivering creative and respectful experiences that drive deep brand and customer value. Powered by Bluetooth Smart, Footmarks’ SmartConnect™ platform is an experience-based analytics solution delivering meaningful and personalized value through secure end-to-end beacon technology.

     

    The partnership will empower MindShare Singapore clients to deliver all new value-added content and personalized experiences throughout malls, retail stores, and venues across the region.

     

    Christopher Smith, Head of Mindshare Discovery, commented: “There is a growing demand from brands and consumers alike to create deeper, more personal engagement in retail, and we strongly believe beacons are becoming a vital link in delivering against that demand.  Beacons have all sorts of application opportunities for our clients across a wide range of sectors, so we are excited to explore the possibilities and help our clients continue to innovate and create deeper engagement with their customers.”

     

    Todd Paris, President of Footmarks, commented, “Having worked in advertising throughout Asia for many years, I know MindShare and the Asia Pacific Region are always at the leading edge of market and media innovation.  I’m excited to see the partnership kick off and look forward to the brand and client impact we will have in the coming month and years.”

     

  • Internet can cause distraction at work, notes survey

    By A Correspondent

     

    A survey by Webtrate.com on a sample size of 4000 people in India states that about 59 per cent of the populace have been distracted from completing work by checking emails, browsing the web, and engaging with social media. Also 46 per cent admitted that the reduction in productivity caused them dissatisfaction and unhappiness. The survey was released by Webtrate.com on the day it launched its internet blocking and productivity application in India.

     

    Out of all the groups of people questions, writers and homeworkers were more likely to be affected, with 70 per cent of India writers saying they had been distracted by the internet. About 61 per cent said they lost their chain of thought because they checked and responded to an email or social media alert while they were working on a report or longer piece of written work.

     

    Further about 38 per cent of the populace said that checking emails and social media cost them more than an hour a day in productivity while 14 per cent claimed they lost more than an hour a day.

     

    About 54 per cent said they spent more time checking social media, emails and browsing the web while working from home, although they also said working in the office also didn’t stop them from being distracted by the internet.

     

    Will Little, who designed and created Webtrate, shared: “The internet plays into our worst habits. Despite its many benefits, it is helping to fuel procrastination and lower levels of productivity by giving us access to an immediate menu of instant distractions.”

     

    Adding further he said, “The survey suggests our impulse control is getting weaker in a world of instant gratification. Yet the pressure of work should mitigate against our desire to access the internet. Unfortunately the draw of the internet is so strong that our ability to concentrate is losing the battle. It is now directly impacting on productivity levels and many people just can’t seem to help themselves. In many cases, they don’t even realise how much productivity they are losing to internet.”

     

  • ABP News’ Saas Bahu aur Saazish reveals new identity at star-studded event

    By A Correspondent

     

    ABP News and Saas Bahu aur Saazish celebrated their 10year of leadership and revealed the new identity of the programme. The evening witnessed the coming together of television stars, wherein the industry felicitated 10 Impact makers of Indian television. Those who received the ‘Achievers awards trophy 2014’ were Annu Kapoor, Prem Krishen/Sunil Mehta, Cineyug (Mazhar Nadiadwala/ Aly Morani), Ali Asgar, Dilip Joshi, Neelu Waghela, Shivaji Satam, Sandip Sikand, and R.D Tailang.

     

     

    Ashok Venkatramani

    Ashok Venkatramani, CEO, MCCS India said, “Saas Bahu Aur Saazish is the programme which has become the household name among Indian woman. 10 years back when we started SBS, the idea was to report all the crucial happening of soap operas which at that time were beginning to engulf the Indian audience. Today with the new identity launch, we are looking forward to become more sharper in our reporting and reach to our SBS Family. On the 10th year of Telebrations, we would like to thank entire entertainment industry, our viewers, and partners who have been supportive throughout. We look forward to provide entertaining content along with keeping the values of reporting alive.”

     

  • dna unveils brand campaign highlighting new positioning

    By A Correspondent

     

    In the recent past, dna has come out with breaking news, some of which has been the reason for intense debate in the Parliament of India, leading to proactive steps taken by the Government to address the issues raised by the newspaper. Be it at national or state level to city level, dna strives to publish news which is of high reader value for an emerging, busy India.

     

    Going with this thought process, dna launched a brand campaign focusing on the major news stories first broken by the newspaper. The new dna strives to be proactive and agile with many firsts being offered to its readers. Some of them being JBM – Just Before Monday, Celebrity Columnists, Special Interest Pages like Zeegnition, dna of Career, dna of Luxury, dna of Wealth, and many more.

     

    A second in series, dna recently positioned itself as ‘News for the Busy Indian’. dna continues to provide news which is relevant, unbiased and factual to its core reader which can be defined as “increasingly inquisitive” wanting to have a stake and pay a proactive role in the fast emerging socio-politico-economic scenario.

     

    The key thought behind the campaign is that newspaper should be able to offer perspective to its reader, news which impacts their own day-to-day life. Apart from being breaking news, it should also be waking news so much as to provide a perspective to the news that helps readers to wake up, react, and act.

     

    The campaign was launched on Thursday, October 21st 2014 and covers Mumbai.

     

  • Raja of Retail reinvents himself

     

    By Malini Goyal

     

    I wouldn’t suggest we are an ideal organization, but I think we have made the beginning towards building one” Kishore Biyani, in his autobiography ‘It Happened in India’.

     

    Seven years after India’s Raja of Retail penned his entrepreneurial journey – and in the process convinced his elder daughter Ashni that he wasn’t writing it, as she feared, “too soon” – Kishore Biyani’s “ideal organization” is still a work in progress. By 2007 – 16 years after he opened his first store to sell apparel, Pantaloons – Biyani had done enough in the retail space, and more, to earn the Raja handle.

     

    His Future Group was selling food and groceries, apparel, footwear, furniture, consumer electronics, home products, books, medicines, mobiles et al through multiple formats like supermarkets, hypermarkets, malls, specialty stores – and, yes, an online portal too.

     

    Forays into the broader consumption space – restaurants, entertainment centres and even consumer finance and insurance – were all prongs of the group that hit revenues of just over Rs 5,000 crore in the year ended June 2008.

     

    Today, Biyani looks back at the no-holds-barred growth phase with mixed emotions. “Success is very heady. [But] difficult times humble you.”

     

    Those difficult times came courtesy of the global financial crisis of 2008.

     

    The Future Group found itself saddled with a debt of over Rs 4,000 crore even as liquidity dried up and consumers tightened their purse strings.

     

    The debt kept rising, peaking at Rs 7,800 crore in 2012. The post-2008 phase was of gritty survival, culminating in the sale of Pantaloon to the AV Birla group for Rs 1,600 crore in 2012; and a series of selloff deals are still in the pipeline.

     

    Over the next couple of years, rationalizing stores became the buzzword and, as things stand today, Reliance Retail is the largest organized retailer – the newly crowned ‘Raja’, if you will – and e-commerce giants Amazon, Flipkart, Snapdeal et al have captured the mind space of consumers and the moneybags of investors.

     

    Yesterday’s Raja of Retail, now 53, seemingly with a smaller fire in the belly, is watching the new kids on the block, happy that he wrote his tome at the right time – after all, wasn’t it Biyani himself who told an investor: “Retail is like riding a bicycle uphill, if you stop pedaling you will slide down?”

     

    Biyani hasn’t stopped pedalling. The only difference is that he now wants to ride a faster, larger cycle, a road bike perhaps, that traverses terrains beyond organized retailing and bunny-hops onto the track of food – processing it, marketing it and branding it.

     

    At the same time he wants to throw his hat once again in the ring in which he was one of the first to do so: e-commerce. Don’t forget he had set up Futurebazaar.com in 2007 – the same year Flipkart was born.

     

    “He [Biyani] is in the most exciting phase of his career. I have never seen him so engaged and committed,” says Shailesh Haribhakti, managing partner, Haribhakti & Co, an independent director of Future Lifestyle. On the board, Haribhakti has known Biyani for over two decades now.

     

    Food for Thought

    Last month, prime minister Narendra Modi inaugurated a 110-acre food park in Tumkur in Karnataka, Biyani’s first iron in the fire of foodprocessing.

     

    He plans to set up two more – one in Madhya Pradesh and West Bengal each – with the aim of fuelling the foods business into a Rs 20,000-crore behemoth by 2020, from just Rs 1,000 crore currently.

     

    The processed and packaged foods business in India is a gargantuan pie, at Rs 40,000 crore; however, it is fragmented and dominated by unorganized players. In 2012-13, Indian households are estimated to have spent Rs 11,00,000 crore on food.

     

    For his part, Biyani doesn’t see the food foray as a shift from the core business. “I have never looked at myself as just a retailer,” he says. “We have always been an FMCG company,” he adds.

     

    To be sure, group company Future Consumer Enterprises is present in over 60 product categories, and the plan is to make frozen foods, ready-to-eat and baked items at the food parks. “India does not have home-grown food products that cater to Indian tastes,” adds Biyani.

     

    Biyani wants to do to food what he did to retail in the 1990s. “Hopefully, we will be the largest food FMCG company in the country by 2020,” says Biyani. His vision is to make Future Group a Rs 1,00,000 crore entity by 2020, with food contributing a fifth of those revenues.

     

    When Biyani took the plunge into retail, Walmart founder Sam Walton was doubtless an inspiration – but not necessarily for the Walmart model. The Future Group CEO has been influenced by Walton’s desire to “rewrite rules”.

     

    Biyani reckons he’s done something similar by creating a unique retailing model in India that has the look and feel of mandis, and takes into account local tastes and cultures. The food venture will follow the similar principles of providing indigenous solutions.

     

    Twist in E-tail, too

    Biyani made headlines early this month when he squared off with trailblazing etailer Flipkart. After Flipkart’s big sale day, on which it claimed to have sold goods worth $100 million, Biyani slammed it. “How can someone sell products below the manufacturing price? This is not legal,” he told the media.

     

    A few days later, Biyani chose to collaborate with Flipkart’s rival Amazon to exclusively retail Future Group’s 45 private label brands on its platform. And there’s more to the deal, insists Biyani. “This is not a transactional tie-up. It is deeper and strategic.”

     

    “The deal is significant. It is the first time that Amazon India has entered such a strategic partnership with a big organized retailer,” avers Amit Agarwal, country manager, Amazon India.

     

    Arvind Singhal, chairman of Technopak Advisors, isn’t impressed. “People are misreading the alliance, which is not between two partners but a seller and a buyer. That is all it is.” Both Agarwal and Biyani disagree. “It’s a win-win partnership. They have great consumer insights [offline].

     

    We understand online customers well, in real time,” Agarwal says. The two partners will use each other’s strengths to woo consumers, explore product development and brands in new categories, collaborate in distribution and cross promotions. The alliance will later extend to food.

     

    “The partnership has etched out a certain guaranteed [level of ] sales, throughputs and margins,” says Biyani. Experts say fashion is one of the fastest growing segments in etailing due to its fatter margins (than in groceries) and also growing consumer demand.

     

    Amazon is not the only piece in the online play. Future Group is betting big on catering to customers using multiple online channels, or omni-channel retailing. It has invested heavily in the backend in terms of supply logistics and inventory to make servicing offline-online orders seamless. Soon, it will allow customers to place orders online and pick up delivery from one of its retail stores.

     

    In Tier II and III cities, last September it rolled out direct selling service Big Bazaar Direct that allows customers to place orders with appointed franchisees. Armed with a tablet preloaded with Big Bazaar product catalogues, these franchises can collect orders from consumers’ doorsteps and earn a commission.

     

    Biyani is no newbie to e-commerce, having set up an online portal in 2007 that went through various tweaks and experiments. He first set up information kiosks that displayed products and offered information to consumers.

     

    According to news reports, in six months in Uttar Pradesh alone, Biyani wanted to set up 37 such stores selling – along with books, apparels and movies – regional brands. It did not work. “We were ahead of the times,” is how Biyani explains it.

     

    In 2010, Biyani re-launched the digital platform with a target of garnering a tenth of the group’s projected revenues of Rs 30,000 crore in 4-5 years. The platform spanned e-commerce, m-commerce and teleshopping.

     

    By 2011, muted consumer response tempered the projections to daily sales of Rs 1 crore. A year later, the business-to-consumer model was tweaked to include business-to-business, with an eye on corporate gifting. That too hasn’t set the Ganges on fire. Futurebazaar. com did business worth just Rs 100 crore last year.

     

    The Idea Man and His Execution Problems

    Clearly Biyani, whose grandfather made the move to Mumbai from Nagaur district of Rajasthan in the mid-1930s, is one of those earthy Indian entrepreneurs who didn’t need to go to Ivy League B-schools to sniff out business opportunities. Perhaps the closest similarity to Biyani is the Hissar-born Subhash Chandra of the Essel group who was the first mover in businesses from flexible packaging and satellite television to a cricket league and direct-to-home television.

     

    Like in Chandra’s case, however, execution – and building professional teams that work seamlessly with the founder and his family over a reasonable period to help in execution – has proven to be harder.

     

    “Biyani’s biggest strength is ideation – you will see a steady flow of announcements and ideas, but not enough attention is paid to execution,” says a former senior executive who worked with Biyani. “I still think he is doing too many things,” adds Abhishek Ranganathan, vice-president, PhillipCapital, a financial services firm.

     

    Execution suffers because of a lack of strategic management bandwidth. It is not that Biyani does not realize the significance of getting smart professionals. According to media reports, he tried hard to hire Amazon India head Agarwal but could not.

     

    Around 2010, he went on a hiring spree. A 2010 media report says Biyani had hired over 30 senior executives from HUL, Pepsi and Coke for leadership positions in a four-year burst. In 2010 alone, he hired six of them, including V Vaidyanthan of ICICI, Vibha Paul Rishi of Pepsi and Sameer Sain from Goldman Sachs. But few of the high-profile honchos hung around for long.

     

    The absence of structures and processes in operations rattled many who were used to an MNC work culture. They found that often they did not have complete control over their department. “Imagine I am heading Big Bazaar. And then somebody has a marketing suggestion that KB loves. The next thing I know, without even consulting me, the idea has been approved,” says a senior executive who was in a leadership role with the group.

     

    At the other end, those responsible for mistakes were not being pulled up adequately. “KB is a brilliant visionary. He gives a long rope to make mistakes. But at the end, if you are not delivering then you have to be accountable. That accountability was often missing,” adds the senior executive. Explains Ranganathan of PhillipCapital: “Poor management bandwidth is also a function of objectives not being made very clear [to professionals].”

     

    The Succession Issue

    Those who have worked in the Future group – we spoke to over 10 such senior executives – say there is a bigger issue that the group must address: family and succession.

     

    The Future group has gone through three phases. In the first, till around 2008 or so, the group was KBdriven. “His word was gospel. And he called the shots. The organization was well aligned,” says a former executive. Then post-2008, Biyani hired a bunch of professionals to run the business and the family took a back seat. But by 2012, as the group stared at a debt crisis, the family was back with a bang, with cousin Rakesh Biyani playing a critical role in pushing for operational efficiencies.

     

    “We were buying sales, not earning them. We forgot the basics of retailing. We did not put enough effort to fix internal operations,” says Rakesh, director, Future Group. Last year, Future Group closed about 40% of its underperforming Food Bazaar stores. All other formats – from KB Fairprice to home furnishing chain Home-Town and Big Bazaar – are being scrutinized.

     

    Some 2 million sq ft of the 16 million sq ft retail space has been rationalized (after which the group has added 3 million sq ft). Higher margin products like in the fashion category are being given more space and display while in the low-margin food and grocery category, the thrust is to do more with less, points out Rajan Malhotra, president, retail strategy, Future Group.

     

    A Morgan Stanley report released early this month takes note of “a decisive shift in philosophy and strategy to focus on balance sheet restructuring, lower leverage, improved capital efficiency and high same-store sales growth vs unbridled space additions and investment in non-core businesses.”

     

    Future Group’s leverage crisis has taught Biyani many lessons. He now believes in the dictum “Big does not equal great and great does not equal big.” Creation with control rather than unbridled growth is a constant theme. He realizes that profit, balance sheets and stock market are important and keeps a close watch on the numbers. And the pioneer who leaned heavily on his gut to take decisions will also use science, technology and data analytics a lot to make business calls. “In the digital world, things are different,” he adds.

     

    Building for Growth

    On the back of this recalibration of the core business, Biyani is laying the foundation for the future with the food processing game plan. The food parks will have flour and rice mills, pasta plants, bakeries etc. The products will be sold through Future group’s retail chains (particularly the neighbourhood format KB Fairprice).

     

    Biyani’s upmarket food retail format, Foodhall, is a crucial piece of the food processing blueprint. The Mumbai outlet in the Palladium mall in Lower Parel is a far cry from the mandi imagery one associates with Big Bazaar, and has a fair slice of the high-spending consumer, many of them expats.

     

    “It is very profitable. We see this more as our food laboratory where we test our new products and recipes before going for mass production,” says Avni, Biyani’s younger daughter who steers this business. Biyani’s bet on food could prove a masterstroke. A recent Crisil report says that smaller tier II regional players have outpaced giants like HUL, ITC and Nestle in the Rs 1,20,000-crore food and beverages category.

     

    From 20% in 2008, their share has gone up to 30% in 2014 and by 2019 it is likely to touch 40%. The big marketers have found it difficult to operate in a segment that offers slim margins and requires a regional product focus in a country with varied food habits. For Future Group, food is a vertical integration from the retail business, presenting Biyani the opportunity to push his own private food labels (which offer higher margins).

     

    Like in the past, Biyani needs a seasoned team to execute his vision. “We have a good leadership team. We are working with Egon Zehnder and Ram Charan to further boost it,” says Biyani. Those who know the group well say the family is still deeply involved and the group lacks professional management bandwidth.

     

    While Biyani’s cousin Rakesh is operationally involved, his other brothers – Vijay, Anil and cousin Sunil – are directors in the group with no executive roles in listed firms. The second generation comprising Kishore’s daughters Avni and Ashni and his nephew Vivek (Vijay’s son) too have joined. “I see the group going through two big transitions – from one generation to the next, and from one business [retail] to another [food]. Doing both the transitions simultaneously won’t prove easy,” says a former executive at the group.

     

    Another is more candid: “Kishore needs to sort the palace once and for all. There can be only one king. When everybody is not pulling in one direction, the army does not work well.”

     

    The army also needs more colonels, majors and lieutenants. Biyani denies that hiring talent is an issue, and says it is an ongoing effort. A Mumbai-based headhunter who refused to be named says: “When I look at the group, I see that it has many doers who can manage the operations but no visible leaders. A family business has to look at long-term institution building.”

     

    In It Happened in India, Biyani makes a telling observation of his influence on the family: “I believe it was our generation and myself who were responsible for making the family look at things differently first about the social customs that were being practiced and, some years later, the way it did business.”

     

    Perhaps it’s time for Biyani to once again look at the way the family does business. Or is it time for the nextgen to show the way?

     

    Source:The Economic Times

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

    Licensed to republish

     

  • VIP unveils sequel to ‘Life Leke Chal’ campaign

    By A Correspondent

     

    Following the success of ‘Life Leke Chal’, VIP Industries has unveiled their popular campaign yet again. Amplifying their reach, the campaign is engaging with the customers on multiple platforms like TV, social media, cinema and is being broadcasted on leading radio stations. Making the campaign more interactive, the brand is running live contests on social media and radio.

     

    Sudip Ghose, Vice President-Marketing, VIP Industries says, “Following the surge in sales and the immense positive feedback we got post the ‘Life Leke Chal’ campaign launched earlier this year, we decided to re-launch the campaign just before the onset of the festive season. With so many brands vying for the consumers’ attention during this period, we are confident that this highly addictive jingle will help us stand out and retain the customers’ attention.”

     

    Conceptualized by Prasoon Joshi the ‘Life Leke Chal’ campaign was built around three 20-second TVCs. Each TVC highlights three different bags with their unique features, from sturdy and durable bags, Teflon coated anti stain and water resistant bags to the lightest bag in the VIP Portfolio.

     

    Prasoon Joshi

    Prasoon Joshi, Chairman Asia Pacific, CEO & Chief Creative Officer India McCann Erickson Pvt Ltd said, “VIP is an iconic Indian brand which resides in the hearts of people, the whole team has kept this in mind while developing ‘Life Leke Chal’. I am happy that this communication has showcased VIP products range beautifully and people are humming the breezy music.”

     

  • Kartik Smetacek joins L&K Saatchi & Saatchi as ECD

    By A Correspondent

     

    Kartik Smetacek
    Charles Victor

    L&K Saatchi & Saatchi has announced the appointment of Kartik Smetacek as Executive Creative Director.

     

    Charles Victor, National Creative Director – L&K Saatchi & Saatchi said, “Acquiring talent has and will be our focus across offices. Great work can only come from wonderful creative people and I believe Kartik is definitely one of them. He has extensive, diverse experience and I love the fact that he’s hungry to take on bigger responsibilities and challenges.” Charles added that bringing people like Kartik into the system was one of the many steps taken to raise the creative bar, the results of which will soon be seen.

     

    Through the many years of experience behind him, Kartik has worked on diverse brands like Airtel, Colgate Palmolive, Taj Hotels, Cadbury, DNA, Lakme, Tata Motors, Nerolac, Bigrock and Rustomjee, to name a few.

     

  • Karishma Lintas wins creative mandate of Paper Boat

    By A Correspondent

     

    Karishma Lintas, part of the Lintas India Group has won the creative mandate of Paper Boat. Karishma Lintas edged out Happy Creative Services &Dentsu in the multi-agency pitch that was held a few weeks ago.

     

    As its partner, Karishma Lintas would be responsible for providing creative insights and solutions to Paper Boat and will also chart out strategic recommendation, positioning and marketing of brand Paper Boat across various media.

     

    Neeraj Kakkar

    Sharing his thoughts on choosing Karishma Lintas as its creative partner, NeerajKakkar, CEO, Hector Beveragescommented: “Design thinking is at the crux of Paper Boat and we believe that the same applies for Karishma Lintas. With a very clear mandate in mind, we decided to appoint Karishma Lintas as the creative agency for our brand. Backed by a strong team and disruptive ideas we were very confident about our choice and the quality of deliveries. Karishma Lintas understands our brand sensibilities and their work has been inspiring.”

     

    Paper Boat was launched nationally in August 2013 and is among the fast-growing juice brands from the stable of Hector Beverages.

     

     

    GV Krishnan

    Sharing his excitement on winning the account and providing a roadmap that Karishma Lintas would emulate in the growth of the brand, GV Krishnan, Executive Director said, “We admire the vision and purpose of brand PaperBoat aspiring to reduce cynicism in society and to reaffirm faith in life. Through our creative solutions, we genuinely believe that we could win the heart of every Indian by emotionally connecting with his childhood memory and serving them a delicious traditional Indian drink to savour. We’ve had inspiring and transparent discussions with the founders of Paper Boat and are excited to create an awesome portfolio going ahead for Karishma Lintas.”

     

    Paper Boat is backed by Sequoia Capital, Catamaran Ventures (N.R. Narayan Murthy’s VC firm) and Foot Print Ventures and is run by industry veterans – NeerajKakkar, James Nutall, SuhasMisra and NeerajBiyani.

     

  • Monica Nayyar Patnaik is now MD, Eastern Media Limited

    By A Correspondent

     

    Monica Nayyar Patnaik

    Monica Nayyar Patnaik is now Managing Director, Eastern Media Limited that runs the popular daily, Sambad.

     

    Soumya Ranjan Patnaik continues to be the CMD, Eastern Media Limited and Editor, Sambad. Tanaya Patnaik is now the Executive Director, Eastern Media Limited. At Sambad, K K Mohapatra continues to be the Chief Operating Officer and Rajeev Srivastava as the Chief Marketing Officer.

     

    Meanwhille, earlier this month, a new  logo design celebrating 30 years of successful publication of ‘Sambad’ was unveiled on Monday by Mr Patnaik at a function held at the Ganesh temple inside Sambad Bhawan premises here. The celebrations saw sportscaster Harsha speak on his ‘Winning Way’.