Category: PR

  • National Public Relations Day celebrated

    By A Correspondent

     

    The National Public Relations Day was observed by the Bhopal Chapter of Public Relations Society of India (PRSI) at a function held at Krishak Jagat Office recently.

    The theme of this year’s National PR Day was “Cancer Awareness”. Speaking on the occasion, guest speaker Dr KV Pandya, Director, Jawaharlal Nehru Cancer Hospital high lighted the types of cancers, techniques to detect it and remedial measures that can be taken. He asked the PR practitioners to promote cancer awareness.

     

    Dr Pandya also added: “Cancer is a leading cause of death worldwide. It accounts for 7.4 million deaths. It often creates fear, which comes out of ignorance and misconception. PR People must take pledge to create awareness on this dreaded disease”.

     

    Mr. Vijay Bondriya, Chairman, PRSI Bhopal Chapter, said that the National and Public Relations Day is observed to highlight the growing role of public relations practice in the society today, as well as to make its practitioners aware about their professional responsibilities.

     

    Mr Vishnu Khanna, Vice Chairman, PRSI Bhopal, added that today’s PR has assumed great importance in the day-to-day functioning of the government and other organizations. Mr KC Mouli, Advisor, PRSI Bhopal underlined the need of PR education for which PRSI is making endeavours at the national level.

     

  • MSL Asia ranks 3rd in M&A leage

    By A Correspondent

     

    Publicis Groupe’s financial communications consultancies in Asia – operating as part of the MSLGROUP network – have been ranked third by volume for Mergers & Acquisitions (M&A) deals, according to mergermarket, a leading M&A intelligence service in the ‘mergermarket League Tables of PR Advisers’ for Q1 2012.

     

    MSLGROUP is Publicis Groupe’s flagship strategic communications and engagement company and the largest public relations and social media network in Greater China and India.

     

    The mergermarket study analyzed the Q1 performance (January to March 2012) of PR advisors in Mergers & Acquisitions (M&A) deals and placed Publicis Groupe’s financial communications consultancies third in terms of number of deals and eighth in terms of collective deal value ($978 million) within Asia Pacific. This represents a jump in ranking from 49th to eighth by value and from the 19th to third by volume.

     

    In Asia Pacific, the mergermarket report has considered four deals advised by Publicis Groupe’s financial communications consultancies – three by Hanmer MSL and one by MSL China.

     

    mergermarket based its ratings on deal values – considering only those over $5million – and number of deals struck. The ‘mergermarket League Tables of PR Advisers’ Q1 2012 is part of the ‘mergermarket’ report that not only evaluates and analyses M&A transactions all over the world on a quarterly and annual basis; but also the performance of PR advisors who act as strategic counsel.

     

    Commenting on the achievement, Jaideep Shergill, Chief Executive Officer of Hanmer MSL, India said: “The global economy has been witnessing consolidation across industries, much of it in the form of mergers and acquisitions. We sense immense opportunities in the M&A space for our finance practices inAsia, especially at a time when many European, American and even Asian firms are looking for quality acquisitions in the region.”

     

    Hanmer MSL India managed M&A communications for leading Indian business groups including Piramal Healthcare (acquisition of 5.5 per cent stake in Vodafone India by Piramal Healthcare), Network 18 Group (acquisition of 100 per cent stake in Eenadu Group by Network 18) and Binani Industries (acquisition of 100 per cent stake in 3B – The Fibreglass Company by Binani Industries).

     

    MSL China advised and managed communications for the Neiman Marcus Group on the US based company’s merger with Glamour Sales Holding, an online retail company, inChina.

     

  • Draftfcb Ulka lights up with Neon Brand PR

    By A Correspondent

     

    Neon Brand PR is the newest division of Draftfcb Ulka Group with a strong focus on traditional and social media. From conceiving and executing media relations strategies, the approach will be to develop PR for brands and brand campaigns that link marketing and communication initiatives for greater buzz and positive throwback on the brand. The addition of Neon Brand PR will further strengthen Draftfcb Ulka’s portfolio of services and provide seamless inputs for their branding assignments.

     

    Neon Brand PR will endeavour to bring in a significant amount of brand learning from the parent agency into its PR practice, thereby ensuring that the brand positioning and messaging are given the right tone and posture.

     

    Tanya Desousa has joined Neon Brand PR as PR Director. She has experience of about 14 years in PR, having worked in companies like Crest Communications, Hanmer & Partners and Percept Profile. She has been associated with brands like Spicejet, Western Australian Trade Office, Amway, Sanofi Aventis, Piramal Healthcare, Bridgestone Tyres, Asus Incorporated and many more.

     

    Neon Brand PR’s first assignment will be Santoor 25 Years campaign.

     

  • Amith Prabhu: PR frat needs a Goafest-like event

    By Amith Prabhu

     

    Goafest has become the annual jamboree for the advertising folks in India. And nothing wrong with that if it serves the purpose of those organizing and those attending. It is an expensive programme, especially for younger people. The cost to attend Goafest for a person varies from as low as Rs12,000 (if a person under 30 from Mumbai travels by road or rail and lives in very simple accommodation for 2 nights) to Rs40,000 (if a person over 30 from Delhi flies low-cost and lives in decent three-star accommodation).

     

    The point is that in all this effort and investment or spending (depends who pays the bill) very little is achieved for the industry in terms of learning. Most high profile speakers either use the opportunity to make a sales pitch or are not effective enough to make an impact (I have been to two events and seen for myself).

     

    The few who are impactful and are not making a sales pitch have few takers because they are either not well known, haven’t got the right publicity in advance and therefore those who should be listening to them are either on the beach or in their luxury rooms or sightseeing.

     

    The real achievement is for those who want a break and get it (most often fully or partially company sponsored), great work done in the year gone by gets rewarded (sometimes with controversy), people seeking a job change get to meet their potential employers and those who want to catch up in a non-work environment with former colleagues and buddies get to do that.

     

    Some PR professionals attend because they are involved in some way with the organizing and some others are connected with the ad agency that has a big role to play.

     

    But most inspiring of all the achievements is that all the big boys and girls in creative and media agencies who fight it out like bitter rivals in new business pitches and industry awards between May and March come together in April to celebrate the profession. And this to me is remarkable. No doubt there are a handful of boycotts that happen each year, but those are bound to happen and frenemies come and go.

     

    Cannes, around which part of Goafest is modelled, embraced PR a couple of years ago by including a separate category for PR and having a full-fledged PR jury. I’m not saying Goafest should do that. I’m here to seed the idea of a gathering of PR professionals from around the country. Head honchos of PR firms can collectively do a lot for the industry and the young and mid-level professionals. The three things they should do at break neck speed is put together a forum for PR professionals modelled on PRSA, create an industry award that is transparent, world-class and the gold standard for younger professionals to gain inspiration from and plan a gathering of PR professionals over a weekend to learn from each other. Networking is no longer a major need in the age of Facebook, Twitter and frequent after hours parties in the metros.

     

    There are several forums that function formally and informally in the PR space. But none that brings together corporate communication executives and public relations professionals, at all levels and of all ages, under one umbrella. It is time for a body that works closely and learns from PRSA. There is so much it does through several chapters for the betterment of the practitioner. With almost 15 of the Top 20 global PR firms present in India there is scope to even be handheld by one of the well-established forums.

     

    Thereafter, this organization should establish a PR award that enables entries to compete in the global arena. There is a major vacuum that needs to be filled and no one can help us on this but ourselves.

     

    Finally, the PR fraternity of India needs an annual event where PR professionals get together, listen to experts fromIndiaand around the world and celebrate the profession keeping aside differences for 48 hours at least, if not more. Maybe this could be called PondyPoweR and be held at Pondicherry on the east coast ofIndia. Symbolically, a quaint town with a rich heritage, near the beach for those who want to mix learning with fun.

     

    Hope this happens sooner than later, so public relations people can ponder on how to do some Public Relations for themselves, their firms and most importantly for the profession.

     

    Amith Prabhu is a public relations professional who spent a large part of his career in India and is now based in Chicago working for a PR major. Views are personal and do not reflect that of the writer’s employer. 

     

  • India will be key growth engine market: Clive Armitage

    It’s been a modest start for Bite Communications that completed a year of operations inIndiarecently. Still a newbie in the trade, the agency expects to widen its strides as it prepares to take on larger challenges in the communications space. Confident of putting up a stellar show going forward, Clive Armitage, Co-founder & CEO of Bite Communications says that India will emerge one of the hottest growth engine markets for the agency given the unlimited scope it throws up for agencies.

     

    In conversation with Johnson Napier of MxMIndia, Armitage delves on his agency’s performance in the past year inIndia, highlights a few markets that would help bring growth to the agency and maps out new avenues that would put the agency on a higher pedestal in the months to come. Excerpts:

     

    It’s been a year of existence for Bite Communications in India. As you look back, how would you analyse your journey thus far?

    There are different ways in which you can measure the growth of an agency – on a financial basis, on a reputational basis or on a service basis. The most important thing that you do when you start an agency is make sure that you start it with a good foundation because it’s the foundation that will decide how your agency will grow or sustain itself in the future. When we came intoIndia, we weren’t sitting here saying that the most important thing for us is to grow very quickly and earn lots of money but what we wanted to do was come into the market and establish a strong team doing really good work. The assumption was that if we do that, it will lead to a good performance on the financial front as well. I think after a year we have done exactly that. We have a good team out here who are working with clients that have a great calibre in the industry.

     

    Are you content with the way the Indian team has gone about establishing the network in India, especially the manner in which they have attracted clients onboard ?

    What we wanted to do when we started was be relatively selective around the clients that we work with. What we don’t want to be is an agency which is just the arms and legs to a client. We want to be a strategic partner to help the client achieve their goals. All of the client engagements that we have now got, we have been fortunate enough to establish that kind of a relationship. There have been moments when we have turned the client away because they didn’t want to work with us as they weren’t willing to consider digital solutions and other such things. From that standpoint, we have been able to meet our stated objective. The other thing to be stated here is that it is a pretty simple business model: if you hire a bunch of people and you want them to be really motivated and stick around, you have to give them a chance to work around big clients. If they get to work on clients who are just doing low profile jobs the best thing to do is leave. The thing about our team here is that we allow them to do big work with our clients. Obviously, every client is different and you do get challenging clients that are demanding, and we’ve had a fair share of those, but I think the current client base is what we are happy with and are seeing them grow very well. So we have seen a great start but it is just an introductory chapter to the book; there are many more chapters to write and much more work to be done.

     

    Despite India being a relatively nascent market, how do you see it shaping up as a market of choice for Bite Communications?

    The thing is that we have around 14 offices around the world. So when we have clients elsewhere and when we refer it to newer offices we are always nervous on how that relationship is going to go. The teams have to be strong and reliable enough that whenever we come across an opportunity to expand our relationship with our clients, we have tremendous confidence that we can suggestIndiaas an option and know that the work gets done and the result is going to be superb.

     

    How do the offices in Asia Pacific and around the globe stack up against each other?

    We have our office inHong Kongthat employs around 40 people. We also have offices inBeijing,Shanghai,SingaporeandSydney. Across the region we have around 100 people andIndiais our newest and favourite child. If I look around the business on a global basis, I have to look at where the growth potential is. Personally for me, the three markets that have the biggest growth potential include North America,ChinaandIndia. North America is a fairly established market already and there is more scope for growth but inChinawhere we have about 40 people and about 8-10 inIndia, we’ve got plenty of potential for rapid growth. That’s how I look atIndiaas a market – it’s one of the engines for the next 5-10 years for the growth of the business. Engine by the following aspects: one, by the sheer headcount and revenues and two, by innovation. Historically, we have a heavy focus on technology and as marketing gradually starts to evolve I seeIndiahaving a great advantage in terms of innovation and starting to deliver on some of the products that we can further use on a global basis.

     

    While you’re ideally tagged a small agency given the staff headcount, how would you associate Bite Communications as an emerging agency in India?

    We are 250-people strong agency across the 14 offices that we have our presence in. I would define us as being a small global network. Our objective is to be in a business that has a higher headcount across the offices that we are present in. I do not believe in the model whereby you have to have a dot on the map of every city. The challenge to that is you end up losing your overall proposition if you have a network that’s very huge. For us, we have around 14-15 offices that are strong and large enough that they can serve the needs of the clients at strategic locations around the world. Probably the countries where we need to make ourselves felt isBrazilandRussiawhere we work on partnerships and are not present there yet. So the next two years or so would be about those two locations and looking at ways to get into them and also growing smaller and younger offices likeIndiavery quickly.

     

    What is the role you see digital taking up for you in India?

    We are ambitious about the future and think about digital as once-in-a-lifetime opportunity for the PR industry to get out of the PR silo and get into large and marquee budgets – that’s what we are hungry for. We feel digital will help us become a much larger and bigger agency much quicker than the others.

     

    The Indian PR market is a cluttered one with more than 2000-odd agencies fighting it out to grab the mindshare of clients. What is the future you foresee for the PR space in India?

    I think there is plenty of scope for growth for PR agencies inIndia. I think it’s a reflection of how clients have become more mature and are ultimately left thinking and have started to fuel the need for working with specialist agencies inIndia. The space has become very competitive right now and it wasn’t the case around 8-10 years ago. I think the agencies that have a clear proposition and remain differentiated will manage to win the trust of their clients. We are not afraid of competition; we welcome it. It only inspires us to be more different and creative than most.

     

    As you move forward, what is the goalpost that you’ve set for the agency?

    The goalpost for me is not financial, it is going to be based around the type of work we do – increasingly doing more and more integrated communication campaigns. We still are a traditional agency but we want to be winning more awards for our integrated work which demonstrate we can take great content from client’s point of view in the marketplace and then deliver that to a commercial benefit via a host of different channels be it traditional media or digital media. The challenge for the team here is demonstrate that you can do that for the outside market place to gain a reputation – do that and all the financial success and growth will follow.

     

  • Cornelia Kunze is Vice Chair, Edelman APAC

    By A Correspondent

     

    Edelman has named Cornelia Kunze vice chairman, Edelman Asia Pacific. In her new position, Ms Kunze, presently CEO of Edelman Germany, will support David Brain, President and CEO, Asia Pacific, and the regional team in building Edelman’s fastest growing region. She will be based in Mumbai and report to Mr Brain.

     

    Ms Kunze will have a particular remit to help develop the consumer and brand planning offer. She will also further develop Edelman’s current stable of German clients in the region which includes BMW, Osram, BASF and TUV SUD. In India, Ms Kunze will support Robert Holdheim, Managing Director of Edelman India, with the rapid development expansion of that business in the wake of the Tata win by Rediffusion/ Edelman.

     

    Ms Kunze’s placement in Mumbai is a reflection of the growing importance of India in the region for Edelman. Asia Pacific markets are emerging at unprecedented rates and India marks a significant point of growth for the entire region.

     

    “Cornelia brings with her the understanding that smart companies recognize the need for competitive advantage by being more strategic in their public relations approach. I worked with Cornelia for seven years in EMEA during which time she took our business in Germany from $6 Mio to $18 Mio (2012) and leaves us now with, by far, the most awarded marketing PR offer in that country,” said David Brain.

     

    “Over the past few years, Cornelia has transformed our offering in Germany into what is arguably the most sophisticated of its kind in the market” said Robert Holdheim. “One piece of this was the acquisition and integration of digital firm GoSub. That experience will be invaluable as we look to continue our development in the Indian market.”

     

    “Whilst I will miss my fabulous German colleagues and clients, I am really looking forward to this new challenge in Asia and to being based in India, a market I experienced for six weeks last year,” said Ms Kunze.

     

    A new CEO for Edelman Germany will be announced later this month.

     

    Edelman is the world’s largest public relations firm, with 63 offices and more than 4,200 employees worldwide, as well as affiliates in more than 30 cities. Edelman India Pvt. Ltd. is part of the global Edelman network with a team of more than 250 professionals across an eleven city network. Edelman India offers Indian and global clients strategic communications and media relations support, as well as Digital Communications, Public Affairs, Health, Technology, CSR and Sustainability communications.

     

     

  • PRCAI elects new mancom

    By A Correspondent

     

    The Public Relations Consultants Association of India (PRCAI), the apex body of communications and public relations consultancies, at its Annual General Meeting, elected a new management committee and support chapter heads.

     

    The elected members are Sharif D Rangnekar, CEO & Director, Integral PR, for the post of President; Nikhil Dey, President, Public Relations, Genesis Burson Marsteller, as Vice President and Shivraj Parshad, Principal, The PRactice, as Secretary.

     

    As part of its National outreach, the regional chapter heads elected are Ajay Lamba, COO, Integral PR as Chairperson, North; Shane Jacob, The PRactice as Chairperson, South; Madhuri Sen, MD, Waggener Edstrom as Chairperson, West and Basav Bhattacharya, Strategic Consultant, Integral PR as Chairperson, East.

     

    Mr Rangnekar, the newly elected President said: “PRCAI is committed to its mission: to build and enhance benchmarks relevant to our business including the areas of Knowledge, Ethics and Expertise.” Setting the tone for the two years ahead of the new Management Committee, the President said that PRCAI intends to focus on talent at one level as well as create platforms that recognize quality of work done by the industry so as to showcase the best work done by our industry.”

     

    PRCAI has been representing the industry for over 11 years. During the many years it has organized different forums, taken up a variety of issues and engaged with multiple stakeholders for distinct purposes. In the past year, PRCAI aligned with EPACA to set norms for government engagement aimed at a higher level of transparency.

     

    Public Relations Consultants Association of India is a trade association set up in October 2001 that represents India’s public relations consultancy sector while providing a forum for Government, public bodies, industry associations, trade and others to confer with public relations consultants as a body.

     

  • Charlotte Chunawala named CEO of Cohn & Wolfe India

    By A Correspondent

     

    Cohn & Wolfe have announced that Charlotte Chunawala has joined as CEO, Cohn & Wolfe India, effective immediately. Ms Chunawala will be responsible for all operations in India, providing strategic client counsel, leading new business efforts and ensuring integration with the agency’s offices across the Asia-Pacific region and around the world. Ms Chunawala will report to Donna Imperato, CEO of Cohn & Wolfe, and be supported by Dolly Tayal and Piyal Banerjee, heading Mumbai and Delhi offices respectively.

     

    Ms Chunawala’s global experience includes over 15 years of agency and consultant work in the UK, Europe and South Asia where she managed high-profile client programs across key verticals including consumer, corporate and financial communications as well as public affairs.

     

    With offices in Mumbai and Delhi, Cohn & Wolfe India will be supported by former Unilever India communications head Irfan Khan, who will serve as chairman of the board, and Prema Sagar, the pre-eminent PR thought leader inIndia, who will serve in a mentoring role as the agency continues its expansion.

     

    The opening of Cohn & Wolfe India is the latest of several endeavours by Cohn & Wolfe to build its presence in Asia, including last year’s acquisitions of impactasia and XPR in Chinaand Southeast Asia, respectively. The agency now has eight offices in the Asia-Pacific region.

     

    “These are dynamic times for development in Indiaand there is tremendous potential for growth in the region,” said Ms Imperato. “I am very grateful to have a partner in Charlottewho brings a deep understanding of these market dynamics, and whose experience will greatly enhance our ability to serve clients who are looking for communications support in one of the fastest growing economies in the world.”

     

    “I am excited to be heading Cohn and Wolfe’s entry into the Indian market,” said Ms Chunawala. “With clients constantly demanding better brand understanding and brand definition; who better to work with than Cohn and Wolfe, which is recognized internationally as a leader in brand strategy.”

     

     

  • Modi Omega Pharma awards PR mandate to GreenThumb

    By A Correspondent

     

    Modi Omega Pharma India Pvt. Ltd. has appointed GreenThumb as its communications partner following a multi-agency pitch. As part of the mandate, GreenThumb will be responsible for the development and implementation of an effective media strategy to generate awareness across all metros and mini metros about the various brands in the company’s portfolio.

     

    Modi Omega Pharma is an OTC division of the Umesh Modi Group of Companies, which has over 17 companies in its portfolio and an annual turnover of Rs2,000 crore. Modi Omega Pharma was formed in 2010 as a 50:50 joint venture between Modi-Mundipharma and Omega Pharma Limited, a Belgium-based pharma OTC company with operations in over 35 countries.

     

    On the engagement with GreenThumb, Ms Himani Modi, Director, Modi Omega, said: “In the last few years, Modi Omega Pharma has endeavoured to bring internationally renowned OTC products to meet the changing needs of Indian consumers. Since 2010, we have launched an anti-snoring throat spray ‘Silence’, an anti-head lice lotion ‘Jungle Formula’ and anti-acne products under the brand ‘Bodysol’. We are in an expansion mode and recently launched a premium baby skin care brand ‘Galenco’. Therefore, it was imperative that proper measures should be taken to reach out to the target audience and create mass awareness about our products. We invited a multi-agency pitch and were keen to partner with a PR agency that would have a clear understanding of our requirements. We liked the fresh and innovative ideas that were presented by the GreenThumb team and decided to give the mandate to them.”

     

    Commenting on this partnership, GreenThumb’s CEO Arjun Banerjee said: “With only a handful of brands available in the anti-lice, anti-snoring and premium baby skin care segments, there is definitely a massive demand in the market for technologically advanced and high quality products in these categories. So, we are extremely happy to partner with Modi Omega for promoting their internationally renowned brands across India. The challenge would be to position Modi Omega’s brands as the most sought after in their respective categories and our PR Campaign over the next year will focus on addressing this issue.”

     

  • Here for the long haul: Anthony Good

    Anthony Good
    Deepak Khanulkar

    If an agency has been around for almost a quarter of a century in India- and more than 40 years in existence globally – there must be something valuable about its offerings that may be setting it apart from its peers in the business. True to its objective, Good Relations India has been one such agency that has been the bedrock for clients who continue to flock to its doorstep for seeking solutions, however small or complex they may be.

     

    As part of its continuing efforts to provide the best solutions to its clients, Good Relations has announced the rollout of its CSR initiative – CSR Advisory and CSR Audit, with which it hopes to redefine the way clients approach the function. With Anthony Good, Founder & Chairman, Good Relations and Deepak Kanulkar, CEO, India leading the drive, the company has an imperative plan up its sleeve as they take to the new terrain in India .

     

    In conversation with Johnson Napier of MxM India, Anthony Good and Deepak Kanulkar delve deep into the need for such a service in India, analyse how the CSR marketplace is currently placed in India and predict what’s in store for the agency in time to come. Excerpts:

     

    The Good Relations Group boasts a legacy whose origins sprang at a time when the PR industry itself was in its infancy. What was the thought process you went through to come up with an agency that was much ahead of its time?

    Anthony: We were one of the first public independent agencies to start here in India in 1988. Before that the agency took wings in the UK even before you were born. Our claim to fame was for two things: one was that we were the first to float in the London Stock Exchange, making us the only PR company at that time to do so. The reason we got there was because we were pioneers in extending the bricks of the PR service from pure Press Relations. I myself was a journalist and started at the lowest level but it’s funny what you learn as a beginner and when it stands you in good stead. I then spent time doing PR for an airline group and that responsibility led on to a marketing role. When I left to start a PR agency, I realised at that stage that PR even then was moving away from press relations to a broader range of responsibilities. In fact, when we floated Good Relations in the UK we had seven operating subsidiaries. We were also the first agency to own a design firm and have an advertising arm – though not in the conventional sense. Unlike the way things were structured in those days, where many ad agencies owned PR subsidiaries our ad agency was designed to carry forward programmes which were PR programmed.

     

    Having planted the seeds of ingenuity across several domains, how did your tryst with CSR come about? Also, when did India figure in the scheme of things for the Good Relations group?

    Anthony: One of the domains that has always been high on our radar is the area of social responsibility. Let me illustrate with an example. You may have social issues relating to, for example, water pollution. Now you may need to use advertising as a tool to tell people what you are doing so that they get the message from more than one source. That led us to believe that the future of PR was combining a number of specialist areas so that for any given set of requirements of the clients you could bring together the specialists in those areas. But one may wonder why we didn’t do that when we came to India ? The answer to that I’d say is: India wasn’t ready for it at that point in time. It wasn’t even that way when I originally started Good Relations. We didn’t have seven specialist units then. PR wasn’t ready, even we launched on the London Stock Exchange, but when we floated we had a range of offerings, which meant we could feel like specialists in each of those areas. Now you may say: aren’t these things that companies can do for themselves?

     

    Exactly. And, also you do have companies that have an in-house CSR facility…

    Anthony: In fact there is a tendency with bigger companies to only do these sort of things (CSR) in-house. Even in a country like Britain, which is in no way near as hierarchal like India, and I say this with a bit of experience – this is my 371st visit to India – and I have learnt that Britain may be hierarchal, but India is the expert at that. If you are not at a decision-making level in an Indian company, you are unlikely to be able to convince the senior management that what you are saying is right. I think it is a dangerous thing to keep all these responsibilities in-house. If you are talking about basic press relations, a large retail store for example, will need to have in-house people who will know the ins and outs of merchandise, stores and management, but when it comes to rather broader issues not only do you need a greater breadth of experience but also you need the ability to say: Mr client, you are wrong!

     

    When you come to Corporate Social Responsibility, often you will find companies who think that they know what they have to do and what not to do and actually reminding companies of their responsibilities in this area of the importance of developing a reputation into the community relaying a very important message that if you are not at a decision-making level then it may be just as difficult. What we are doing here is very much to duplicate what we did in Britain but also having regard to the particular need of this environment. One must realise that doing the right thing lasts a very long time but doing the wrong thing lasts even longer, maybe forever.

     

    How would you differentiate CSR from Crisis Management, which is another important function that’s receiving due attention by most agencies?

    Anthony: The two, in a sense, go hand in hand. Being responsible and making companies aware of their need to be seen as part of the community in which they operate, establishing what the needs of the community are and being seen as a source of solutions looking at what they should be doing and what they should not be doing. I remember what someone told me during one of my trips to this country: nothing ever moves upwards in an Indian company. The best advice that one can give to companies looking to come to India is that bit of advice. We know of companies who have tried meeting company ‘x’ for years but nothing comes out of it as things only move downwards. That’s why I feel it is important to have a consultancy relationship, because the top people do listen to consultants. There is a need for specialised professional advice but they are unlikely to think that it will come from within their own business.

     

    Do you provide consultancy services to any other units of Good Relations across the world?

    Anthony: You must know that Good Relations Group Plc, which we floated in the UK, was acquired by the Lowe Group which was also acquired by the Interpublic Group. And, you may know that there are two big communication companies in the US namely, Omnicom and Interpublic. The Good Relations agency was bought out by one of my friends and refloated as Chime Communications. So I am no longer part of that group, however, we had started GR in India when it was independent. My personal involvement as of now is only with Good Relations in India .

     

    As you make a dash for floating CSR into India, what has been the attempt in finding out what is it that is desired from this unit in India?

    Deepak: I have been on the client side of the business before I joined Good Relations in 2007 and what I have seen is that whenever it comes to CSR – especially at the ground level – clients start doing CSR initiatives as per the specifications provided by the local panchayats without even due diligence as to what is required in that particular area. This, I feel, is a huge gap. In the sense that the money is being spent but whether it is rightly spent is the question to be asked. In most cases, this used to be the actual ground situation where the money is spent because the sarpanch is saying so. What we plan to do is something different.

     

    What is the difference you seek to bring with your offering?

    Deepak: We would be offering two services: CSR Advisory and CSR Audit. Where CSR Advisory is concerned, when a company has to set up office in a certain location apart from other branches of engineering, what is also important is social engineering. Where is the location, what is the demographics, breakup of population and so on, it is important to have adequate knowledge of the entire social scenario. There is that gap which I have always seen. I’ve seen it rampantly. I have travelled a lot; I have travelled in interior places and I have seen ground realities. I have travelled to the village where UID card was launched…and I have seen people and I have seen the requirement, there is always a gap between what the company does – although they are spending on CSR -but whether it is effectively benefitting the community and the company nobody knows. So, I think our product which we are offering will bridge this gap. Each rupee has to be spent prudently and each rupee spent has to achieve its objective.

     

    What about CSR Audit?

    Deepak: The other product is CSR Audit. Now, normally companies do CSR directly or indirectly through the NGOs. The person who is sitting in the HQs is not getting a real picture of what is happening at the ground level. The NGOs are reporting that everything is happening properly; occasionally they send photographs of the activation programmes. But I think that like we have financial audits, there should be an audit from a third-party, not really the CSR company representative or the NGO local catalyst. It has to be done by independent body or agency which will actually go and see what is being implemented and report it back to the management. Normally, it doesn’t get reported in the right frame or the right percentage to the management. I used to work with a couple of MNCs and one thing I have realized is that whenever there used to be someone visiting from, say, Singapore or Hong Kong, it always reminded me of my school inspection days. On that school inspection day, you’ll have everything neat and tidy. Everything will be organised and in place. During inspections, things are taken care of, which isn’t the case otherwise.

     

    What is the connect you are trying to draw with CSR?

    Deepak: With the above example, the bosses here are showing the super bosses from the APAC region only what they want to see. And if the company is going to have a certain strategy on the basis of what is shown to them then that strategy is definitely going to fail. Because you are not giving them the right picture or a full picture, or maybe both. So, I think for sustainable organizations, we have to look in the mirror and assess ourselves and project the right picture. For a management, be it any strategy, a right picture has to be given. And our products, both the services that we are offering, are actually kind of an outreach program which will give the right picture. And if CSR is about helping the communities around, we have to make sure that it is ‘actually’ helping the companies around. I remember some time back Rahul Gandhi had mentioned that out of Rs100 that is spent on social initiatives, only Rs5 reaches the poor while Rs95 is getting evaporated.

     

    I think same could or would be happening in the corporate funding front for social products. And this needs to be arrested especially because CSR Bill has taken shape now; companies having a certain slab of turnover and profitability have to spend 2 per cent of that on CSR. I think this is a very big and good move and which is why we are getting into this. It’s because CSR is going to be something which is not a feel-good kind of a thing but something which deals with corporate sustainability. It will be an integral operations issue, it will be related to the DNA of the organization and not something that I am doing because I am liking it or not liking it. This is very important and this is why we are coming up with the two offerings.

     

    When do the two units flag off?

    Deepak: Right now, as we speak. And the reason we are doing so is because we want this to reach out to the corporate audiences. And of course, this will be available at a cost because this is not a CSR that we are doing. We are doing it as a service which will be chargeable. But there is a proper framework that has been put in place. It is not that services are being launched for the sake of launching. They are being launched after understanding all that I discussed with you and also there is a framework of not only system in process but also of right people. So we have people who are part of NGOs, we have people from the public life – MPs and MLAs who have done a lot of good work at the ground level , we have people from academics who are into CSR… So it’s not something we say that we know everything about it. No. We have taken partners in progress who are experts in the domain of social responsibility. This is broadly what it is.

     

    Any other USP to expect from your CSR venture?

    Deepak: In terms of specifics, each CSR mandate is going to be unique and the biggest thing which is going to happen is that in each CSR, it will be mandatory for each team to go on a ground visit. We are not going to teach or preach CSR by sitting in AC offices. We are going to roll our sleeves and go and hit the ground and do an audit. And when we are doing a third party audit, we are going to do it independently, so that we get an honest feedback from the beneficiaries. We are not going to go as a part of an NGO or a company because the opinions can be twisted. We are going to go there as independent people and get the real picture.

     

    Not many PR agencies have a CSR Audit unit which in a sense makes you different from the lot…

    Deepak: People have CSR advisory but I don’t think they have Audit. For this, I have worked on grass root level. And CSR is not something which you can start or launch by sitting here in Mumbai. You have to have the experience of working in the interiors. I have travelled to tribal habitats where a concrete road ends 6kms away from the village. I don’t need packaged water but can have water from the railway station because my system has become immune. So, it’s about your ability to reach out to the grassroots and how many companies will be in the capacity to have this? None. We have in-house team members who have travelled inside-out across many states of India . You need that passion.

     

    It’s a product that we are offering but one needs to have that passion to have that sympathy and empathy to drive this as a product. We are not developing this as a profit making machine; it is because we feel that if India has to grow, Bharat has to grow. And if Bharat has to grow, we all need to take an inclusive approach. India cannot grow at the cost of Bharat. We are there as messengers of finding the truth at the grass level and getting it on discussion platforms. Until and unless we honestly get it out from Bharat, it will be difficult of India to manage Bharat and Bharat to be part of India . Although, we are a one country but there is a Bharat and an India . And through this product we are attempting to see that Bharat benefits from the money India makes from India and Bharat.

     

    So for 2012, CSR is going to be a big thing for GRI.

    Deepak: It is a good thing and we are looking at it in a way that a rupee saved is a rupee earned. So it is all about sustainability and it is all about going and ensuring that the rupee spent is spent on right cost.

     

    How would you rate the growth of your agency in India thus far?

    Deepak: This is my fifth year at GRI. I have seen the slowdown of 2008 and at that point I was very new in the company and I was promoted to head the company. We are in the business of relationships, although everyone wants to make money at the end of the day.

    We did not lose a single client at that particular time which means we have a valuable service to offer. I still remember that there were some clients who were offered same services by competition at 35per cent of our fee. I got a call from a CEO of a company to know how the other company was offering same service at that fee. So I went and met him and quite a few others and told them how they are offering you can ask them, but why and what I am offering is because we are very prudent in terms of taking business. As a company policy we are not into rat race.

     

    What is it you desire to see becoming of Good Relations in time to come?

    Anthony: We are not in this business for the short term; we are here for the long haul. We have been around for almost 25 years so we must be doing something right. Our effort is to see that the relationship we share is a win-win for both the client and for ourselves. What we intend to do is have an annual fee review which is based on work done on our side and value delivered to our clients. And with inflation making a comeback here, we hope to have an inflation-proof fee which will see us giving the best value to our clients even in dire times. In every business there are two sets of people: those who are there for making a quick buck and those who are there for the long ride. And I can claim that we are very much here for the long run.

     

  • Vizeum bags media duties of Bloomberg UTV

    By A Correspondent

     

    Aegis Media’s Vizeum India announced their appointment as media AoR for Bloomberg UTV. As Bloomberg UTV prepares itself for an aggressive growth strategy, Vizeum is roped in as the Media AoR and will play a vital role in the channel’s future growth plans.

     

    Confirming the same, Sriram Kilambi, President, Bloomberg UTV said: “We were on the lookout for a passionate, result-oriented partner who would think like us and find value for us. Vizeum came to us with strong references and once we met, we knew they had what we were looking for. We are looking forward to working together.”

     

    Commenting on the win,S Yesudas, Managing Director – Indian Subcontinent, Vizeum said: “We had a dream of attracting clients and talent to Vizeum automatically in our 4th year of operation, rather than us having to go out, based on what we do. As we are embarking on the 4th year, I am delighted with the progress we are making. I take this opportunity to welcome Bloomberg UTV into the Vizeum family. We are thankful to Sriram and his team for considering us worthy. This business will be handled out of our Mumbai office.”

     

    Vizeum successfully operates in 55 countries with a philosophy of in-depth understanding of the co existence of lives, brands and media in the actual world.

     

  • Ketchum appoints Rob Flaherty CEO, Ray Kotcher becomes Chairman

    By A Correspondent

     

    Ketchum has announced that Rob Flaherty, senior partner and president, will also assume the role of chief executive officer, effective July 1. Raymond L Kotcher, senior partner and CEO, will become the chairman. This shift follows a multi-year plan designed to ensure a seamless management transition at the highly successful agency, which PRWeek recently named as its 2012 agency of the year.

     

    Mr Flaherty joined Ketchum in 1989 and was named president in 2008. He will continue to report to Mr Kotcher. Over the course of his tenure Mr Flaherty has been involved in all aspects of the firm including having successfully led its largest office (New York), one of its global practices (Corporate) and several of its largest client engagements. He has counseled client organizations and brands including IBM, FedEx, Philips and Pfizer.

     

    According to Dale Adams, President and CEO of Omnicom’s Diversified Agency Services group (DAS): “As CEO, Ray developed the Ketchum brand into one of the most successful in the DAS group of companies and in the public relations sector. I have great respect for Ray’s leadership and many accomplishments and am pleased to have his continued commitment and involvement as chairman. His ability to lead and plan with this group will ensure the transition to Rob will be seamless.”

     

    Mr Kotcher, started at Ketchum in 1983, was appointed president of the agency in 1992, and in June 2000 was named CEO. As CEO, he transformed and grew the firm. In 2009 Kotcher led one of the public relations industry’s largest-ever mergers when Ketchum and Pleon combined operations to create the leading communications consultancy in Europe.

     

    Under his leadership, Ketchum’s geographic client-service footprint also grew in developing markets through acquisitions in China, India and Russia and a joint venture in the Middle East. As CEO, Kotcher also led the development of a range of offerings in areas such as change management, sports and entertainment, and word-of-mouth marketing.

     

    “I am privileged to have served as Ketchum’s CEO through more than a decade of extraordinary change and opportunity in the communications industry,” said Mr Kotcher.

     

    “The appointment of Rob to CEO has been long planned for and he is distinctly qualified for this role,” he continued.

     

    As chief executive, Mr Flaherty will work with Mr Kotcher and other leaders of the firm to guide agency strategy. He also will remain focused on providing clients with breakthrough ideas and the agency’s talent with clear opportunities for growth.

     

    “Having called Ketchum my home for 23 years, I am deeply honored to assume the role of CEO from Ray. Ray has been an outstanding leader, mentor and friend. I tremendously value our partnership and am looking forward to it continuing,” said Mr Flaherty.