Category: MADISON@25

  • Gautam Kiyawat, Arminio Ribeiro, Gour Gupta, Paresh Chaudhary, Ruby Bana & Raj Nair on Madison@25

    A person is known by the company she/her keeps, and the same holds true of the company – it is known by its people – and how happy they are working for it. Madison, to its credit, has a number of old-timers who swear by it.  RITU MIDHA of MxM India spoke to a handful of the newer team members – on how Madison fitted into their system, and how they fitted into Madison’s. Three simple questions with, well, not-so-simple answers.

     

     

     

     

     

    Gautam Kiyawat, Group CEO, Madison Media

    Gautam Kiyawat became a part of Madison World in May 2012, when he took charge of Madison Media as Group CEO.

     

     A graduate from IIM Bangalore, Kiyawat has over 17 year of marketing, media and communications experience in organisations like P&G, Star TV, Phillips and Blackberry spanning across India, South East Asia and the US. He is happy working in “bold yet practical, client-focused approach in a non-political environment” at Madison.

     

    How difficult or easy it was for you to adapt to the Madison way of working?

    Quite easy. Madison, which I knew as a client, has remained true to its principles over 25 years.

     

    What are the key learnings in your Madison stint so far?

    Any agency role is a humbling experience coming from the client side. The degrees of freedom are fewer when you are helping drive multiple client agendas in addition to your own business. The great part of working at Madison is, the bold yet practical, client-focused approach in a non-political environment. There are certain founding principles and values that serve as a guiding light. Not too many organizations live by these values on a day to day basis.

     

    In a nutshell, how would you define your Madison experience so far?
    Our best is yet to come…


     

    Arminio Ribeiro, CEO, Madison OOH Media Group

    Arminio Ribeiro joined Madison’s Outdoor unit in April 2007. He is now Chief Executive Officer of Moms & Platinum Outdoor. His multifaceted personality needs no introduction. Ribeiro states that Madison objective is to achieve client delight – and he is happy to be working towards that along with others at Madison.


    How difficult or easy it was for you to adapt to the Madison way of working?

    It has not been difficult to adapt to Madison’s way of working! The fact that I decided to work with Madison rather than any other agency is because of its professional reputation, client profile, size and culture that was similar to what I had grown up with over the years – namely at JWT. At Madison World, there is a single minded objective – “achieve client delight” and this is across SBU’s and employees. Growth and profitability are by products of our delivery to our clients. Amongst the leadership team members there is collaboration and a spirit of comradeship, and I have had the advantage of working closely with Sam and Lara who have believed, supported and encouraged me in launching all our OOH business initiatives.

     

    What are the key learnings in your Madison stint so far?

    The answer is quite simple. I have imbibed Sam’s business acumen… priorities are client, then employees and then the management/me. Sam has been extremely successful by following this business principle. As I mentioned earlier, one needs to “achieve client delight” as Growth and Profitability are by-products. What’s more, one needs to be a better human being. And respect our clients and one another.

     

    In a nutshell, how would you define your Madison experience till date?

    It has been 6 years since I joined Madison and as CEO, Madison OOH Media Group. I am delighted to state that we have achieved the status of “preferred client choice” when it comes to out-of-home communications solutions across the growing consumer congregation points. As Madison OOH Media Group, we are proud to have some of the best, most experienced and developed minds in this market space, and as a team we have provided our clients with a comprehensive and integrated range of quality OOH communication services – both strategically and tactically. Being consumer-focused, our purpose through experiential, retail and design creations is to deliver experiences that enhance people’s lives at every point of engagement. This has helped deliver a market advantage to potential clients’ OOH needs which has resulted in dramatic growth and recognition for us.


     

    Gour Gupta, CEO, Platinum Communications:

    Gour Gupta joined Platinum Outdoor, a specialist OOH unit of Madison World, as Chief Operating Officer towards 2007 end. Before joining Madison World, he has spent time with Modern Suitings, Pantaloon Fashions, Selvel-Vantage Group and Portland India. Gupta believes in Madison’s values and style of functioning.

     

    How difficult or easy it was for you to adapt to the Madison way of working?

    The Madison way of working is built on trust, transparency and integrity. It is not much different from my previous work experience, and hence, it was quite easy for me to imbibe the existing work culture and smoothly ease myself into the orgainsation without any hassles

     

    What are the key learnings in your Madison stint so far?

    The key learnings so far have been understanding and managing the complexities associated with working for a large group like Madison with individuals from varied work backgrounds and experiences

     

    In a nutshell, how would you define your Madison experience?

    Enriching, Invigorating and quite Exciting!


     

    Paresh Chaudhary, CEO, Madison PR

    Paresh Chaudhary took charge of Madison PR from Veena Gidwani in June 2012. He has over 24 years of Brand Communication & Reputation Management experience across industries. Among the organisations he has worked for are Reliance Industries, Hindustan Unilever, Smith Kline Beecham , Ranbaxy and Wockhardt. He is an MBA (Marketing) with a Public affairs Diploma from Hong Kong University.

    Chaudhary defines his journey with Madison as “wonderful” and is elated that the organisation’s value system echoes his own.

     

    How difficult or easy it was for you to adapt to the Madison way of working?

    As part of its organizational DNA, Madison gives you the freedom and space to operate in. Sam’s value systems of integrity and fair play has seeped into the system, which echoes my own value systems. This made my transition easy. I am impressed by the engagement levels of our communication professionals, not just at Madison PR, but across Madison World. The empowerment to think out-of-box enhances self-drive and higher levels of customer delightment.

     

    What are the key learnings in your Madison stint so far?

    One key learning, I have had so far is that our clients really value our strategic intervention, and view us as important business partners. I intend to integrate my own areas of expertise in corporate communication into the enterprising Madison culture and use it to the benefit of our clients, so as keep raising the bar at all times.

     

    In a nutshell, how would you define your Madison experience so far?

    It’s been a wonderful journey so far, with large blue chip clients that we have on board. The fact that most of our clients have been with us for many years, reflects the confidence we have in our well-oiled teams. I plan to spring-board from here to ensure robust and consistent growth, both in terms of client’s delightment, and attracting and retaining talent.


     

    Ruby Bana, Chief Strategy & Insights Officer

    Ruby Bana joined Madison in January 2010. Prior to this she was working as Chief Intelligence Officer for APAC region at Havas.

     

    How has your experience been so far?
    I joined Madison at a very exciting phase. I have been a part of accelerated change and have enjoyed the pace as well as the experience. It is amazing how an organization this size can evolve, adapt and respond so enthusiastically.

     

    What are your key learnings from Madison?
    My key learning from Madison is that vision needs to be jointly shared by all stakeholders for it to be successful. Once a new direction is set fearless whole hearted commitment behind it with action and results to evaluate (both good and bad) is a better way than tentative steps and with halfhearted action.

     

    I have learnt to challenge myself continuously with both humility and confidence at the same time. Most of all, from Sam I have learnt that values endure and make for good long-term business sense even though in the short term it may seem irrelevant or even a baggage sometimes.


     

    Raj Nair, CCO, BMB India

    Raj Nair joined BMB India, a 50:50 JV between Trevor Beattie’s BMB and Madison World in June 2012. In his more than 20 year experience in advertising he has worked with JWT, Enterprise and Contract Advertising among others. Nair defines Madison spirit as indefatigability …. the very personification of passion.

     

    Says he:

    What really is the Madison way of working? Is it a never say never, relentless spirit? Is it a desire to create outstanding, lasting value for a client? Is it innovation in the truest sense of the word? Having joined BMB Madison just nine months back but having had the good fortune to interact with Sam closely on more than a number of occasions, I would safely say it’s all of the above and then some. It’s indefatigability. It’s the very personification of passion. It’s a sharp sense of what works and what doesn’t. It’s an eye on ROI.

     

    Nine months, quite obviously, aren’t even a blip on the larger picture woven over 25 years. And there will be many other Madisonites who have far more enriched experiences to narrate. But this I will say. On behalf of the entire media, advertising and marketing world and having taken the liberty of using a line from Casablanca, ‘Play it again, Sam.’

     


  • Madison is much more important than money: Sam Balsara

     

    It was in the mid-nineties that India started showing up on the global business radar, and multinationals started looking at India with renewed interest. Advertising was no exception. It was the time when many Indian agencies were taken over by, or merged with, global agencies. It was, they said, just a matter of time before Madison would be part of a larger media force. Rumours have not died since… but Madison World is not only alive with a radiant glow, but also growing – and how!

     

    Now 25, it has shed its puppy fat, is young and energetic, and the spring in its step is complemented by maturity of thought.

     

    Launched in 1988 as a full-service agency, it turned into a force to reckon with as India’s first full-fledged specialised media agency. Madison World now comprises 22 specialised units – media, though, continues to be the mainstay.

     

    For those who’ve had the privilege of visiting the agency’s Fort office in South Mumbai and have now walked the corridors of its Andheri headquarters in North West Mumbai, the Madison journey is very palpable. What has not changed though is the energy and charisma of its Chairman and MD Sam Balsara, and the rules he set out for himself and his agency.

     

    A labour of love and passion, Madison World turns 25 today. Clearly, a well-deserved and well-earned silver jubilee.

     

    In this freewheeling interview, PRADYUMAN MAHESHWARI and RITU MIDHA of MxMIndia make an attempt to capture the spirit of Madison World, its journey so far, future plans and what really makes Sam Balsara tick.

     

    One still remembers the time you announced the setting up of Madison in 1988. What really got you to take the plunge at that time?

    Well, I had already spent four years at Mudra and was kind of No 2 there. Mr A G Krishnamurthy was the CEO based out of Ahmedabad. While I was working there, the sense I got was that Mudra wanted to be – a la Reliance style – India’s largest advertising agency. I, however, felt that I was probably not the man – either capable or desirous – of the intense growth required to make Mudra the largest agency in the country.

     

    My heart and mind told me that a good agency is a small agency with a few large clients. That was my interpretation of an ideal agency – both from the clients’ as well as my perspective. I distinctly remember – it was Tanya and Lara’s Navjote, and I had taken a few days off. Being away from work gave me time to introspect and think. Those seven days in me triggered the thought that I should start something on my own.

     

    Did you speak with some of your clients before you really set up Madison?

    Yes, of course. After I had made up my mind, one fine day I asked Mr Godrej for an appointment. I went and met both Mr and Mrs Godrej one evening in their Juhu beach house. I told them about my plans, and asked them if they could give me one of their accounts to handle. They were very kind, and gracious and gave me the Cinthol account.

     

    …and Cinthol at that point was really flying high with its flamboyant advertising which got you into the limelight pretty fast.

    Yes, correct. I would say I got into the bigger limelight, thanks to Cinthol’s largest competitor, Lever. I don’t know whether I should get into it or not …. Lever played the oldest trick in the world – in order to stymie Cinthol Lime, they copied our commercial and inserted some shots from it into their commercial. They then went ahead and put their Liril commercial on air a few days before our Cinthol Lime was scheduled to go on air – obviously to prevent us from going on air. The incident created a lot of controversy at that point because we refused to be cowed down; we went to the press and made big noise about it. Levers and Lintas had sort of connived to spring this upon us.

     

    On a lighter note, over the next two to three years post this event, many clients were keen that I should create a similar controversy for them. It was because some marketing pundits thought that Cinthol Lime had gained a lot because of this controversy.

     

    Moving on, Madison has grown considerably and now it is a multi-brand agency. You started off as a full-service agency – and though you still have components of a full service agency…

    Soon after we got the P&G media account, I got sold on the virtues of specialisation, both from the agency as well as client perspective. To my mind, specialisation is great because it builds a body of knowledge, creates a cadre of people, and brings in efficiency and expertise, so you are able to offer service at a lower cost. The client not only gets the benefit of service at a lower cost, but also specialist expert advice. And so, as they say, if it ain’t broke, why fix it?!

     

    I then tried to replicate the specialist approach in other disciplines of marketing and advertising – for instance we spun off a PR agency with its own independent head, a few years later we did the same thing with outdoor – though it is a part of the media function, we have a separate outdoors agency called MOMS that runs completely independent of Madison Media.

     

    Madison World has grown a little larger than what my original vision was, we have tried to stick to my original principle that a good agency is a small agency with a few large clients. Madison World is today an amalgam of 22 units each headed by a unit head – who is designated CEO, GM or COO – who runs his/her agency, and has an independent set of clients almost like an independent agency. None of these units handles more than eight or ten clients. With all these units put together we do not have more than 220 clients. In Madison Media with all its units we handle about 45 clients

     

    So would you say Madison is David or Goliath?

    Madison is David, and it continues to be David.

     

    Isn’t 220 clients very large for it to be David?

    We have only 45 clients in media… 220 is the overall number.

     

    45 very large clients…

    Yes. But that is as per my original plan.

     

    Do you still believe that thinking small, as you say, is the recipe of Madison’s success?

    Yes, it is. I have also always believed that it is an advantage to know and recognise that you are at a disadvantage – because then you fight harder, think harder. And it is a disadvantage to know that you are at an advantage because then you become complacent.

     

    Have you ever become complacent in your own judgement?

    I don’t think so. Maybe sometimes my people get complacent – they might mistakenly feel that they are working for a large agency, but I never feel that.

     

    In these 25 years, what in your view, are a couple of high points that changed the course of your agency?

    The launch of Cinthol Lime and the controversy that erupted was clearly a high point. The second was when Godrej tied up with P&G – both of them encouraged me to tie up with DMB&B. It enabled us to continue working on Cinthol, and in addition work on P&G brands like Whisper and Vicks. I think breaking of the relationship with DMB&B also, in hindsight, was a high point. At that time, though, it appeared to be a big blow as I lost 70% of my business – we first lost the Cinthol account, and then because of break in relationship, we also lost the Vicks, Whisper and Philips accounts.

     

    In keeping with my principle that it is an advantage to know that you are at a disadvantage, we worked harder, we fought harder, we kind of developed this specialisation approach. In all this, of course, our creative did suffer.

     

    Any other milestones…?

    Media has been a reasonably good run. I think a more recent high point would be when P&G went on pitch and WPP approached me for a tie-up. This ultimately resulted in our ownership of Mediacom in India.

     

    Would you say it was the biggest high point?

    I would say it was one of the biggest high points, but you cannot take away from others.

     

    On one level you are competing with WPP, and on another you are partnering them – how does this work for you?

    I think one of the things I have learnt the hard way in life is that in the world of business there are no permanent enemies and friends. In today’s complex world, you have to be willing to work under various kinds of situations – you cooperate with some, you collaborate with others.

     

    While I would say that at one level it was a bit scary to collaborate with a competitor, it is a good, relevant experience and successful too – as we have demonstrated, Mediacom is a good successful agency.

     

    How do you make sure that all 22 units of Madison work towards the same goal, and that there is the same spirit of excellence?

    It is definitely not easy. Now I am being helped by Lara at the managerial level, so it helps us keep better tabs and controls. Our value system, according to me, also happens to be a sound business practice. The fact that you are transparent, simple and honest might be an old-fashioned way, but it makes good business sense. I presume that clients like to deal with transparent and honest agencies. Having said that, a principle is not a principle unless it hurts, and some of our principles have hurt us in a business or profit sense. Though, in the long term, these are also principles that help in retaining and growing business.

     

    One of the advantages or disadvantages of Madison is Sam Balsara. How have you managed to ensure that even as the organisation does not get too impacted by your persona, it reaps the benefits of it at the same time?

    Yes, you are right – it is both an advantage and a disadvantage. Disadvantage because I cannot be here, there and everywhere – many times I attend meetings which I easily need not have attended. It does put some extra pressure on our time.

     

    Probably one of the reasons some of my colleagues pull my leg for emailing them  at 2am is because they don’t know that I suffer from insomnia. I do not really know if it is hard work that led to insomnia, or is it insomnia that makes me work at 2 in the morning (laughs).

     

    What is the key differentiator that distinguishes Madison from the rest of the pack? Has it changed across the years?

    Differentiators obviously have been different. Today we are a little better structured, we have a better infrastructure, better resources, better ability to have a better well-oiled machinery that can service our clients’ needs and brands much better. We are getting increasingly focused now on not delivering the result anyhow or somehow, but delivering it through process and structure. We are able to deliver result by design – rather than by accident. Since last two to three years, we have been spending considerable time and energy on that.

     

    The media space is now changing at a fast pace – digital is growing. What is your strategy to adapt and cope with the changing media space?

    Since the last two years, we have been spending considerable time, money and resources on digital. The reason is that our clients have also begun to like the interactive and engaging power of digital. We believe that for an organisation our size, it is important to use our resources at the right time – it does not pay to invest in something 10 years ahead of its time. Investing ahead of time is a good idea if you invest six months to a year ahead, not 10 years ahead. The digital age is showing signs of explosion in India, and that is the reason for increased focus on digital in the last two years.

     

    Have you made any structural changes in the organisation in this direction?

    We want each of our planners to be digital savvy. However, considering that digital is a new area of functional expertise, we have islands of digital excellence and some people who evangelise digital among our large army of media planners.

     

    As the big strive to get bigger in the media space through mergers and acquisitons, do you see the scene getting more complex for Madison?

    The situation for Madison has never been easy. Neither was it in the ’80s and ’90s, nor is it now. As long as you operate independently, and as long as you operate in the business environment whether it is in India or America, there will always be severe competition in our kind of businesses. We will have to learn to cope with it.

     

    I know it is difficult to be a soothsayer, but in terms of future, where do you see Madison grow in the next 5 years?

    Let me try to sidestep your question a little by saying I am less of a visionary and more of an action man. I do strongly believe that if my today is safe, sound and successful, I will be alright tomorrow. Given that, we are doing reasonably well. Though it is difficult for me to say something specific, I would like Madison to be bigger, better and stronger than it is today.

     

    There are rumours time and again about you tying up with another international player or selling out…

    I can say with reasonable confidence that we have never ever thought of selling out. However, we are not closed to the possibility of having a joint venture partner in Madison with a view to making it stronger, better and more capable.

     

    Is there a specific timeframe you are looking at?

    Things like this cannot have a timeframe – how can I tell you when my daughter is going to get married? One thing I can tell you – though it might sound ridiculous – I did not start Madison to make a lot of money, neither will I sell Madison to make a lot of money. Madison is much more important than money.

     

    Are there areas in the last 25 years where you think that, given a chance, you would have done things differently?

    Of course there are. In hindsight, I think it was stupid of me to decry creative awards in the early years – when Madison was strong in that area. I always thought that awards came in the marketplace, and not from some forum or stage, though I myself presided over so many award juries. It was clearly a mistake. In the absence of anything else, clients look at the award telly to check the creativity quotient of an agency, and my overall approach and thinking in the ’90s that awards were not important was clearly a mistake.

     

    In terms of your agency, is there anything that you think you could have done differently?

    Yes, in our early years we should have focused on resourcing our creative department much better and stronger and deeper then we actually did.

     

    Though you do have 22 constituents, Madison World is essentially seen as a media agency…

    Yes. But in a way we have outdoor units, we have mobile, we have retail, we have sports management, PR. That is one of our ambitions, to make them as big in their respective fields.

     

    And Sam Balsara is best known for Madison Media…

    I don’t think any man can decide the label he would be given, especially by media people like you – 15 years ago The Economic Times decided to call me a media wizard, and I think the label has stuck. However, having said that, let me tell you, our OOH and PR units are doing extremely well and they are improving not just their financials but also stature and reputation. Mates, our celebrity management unit, is also doing well.

     

    So do you get involved with meeting celebs with Mates?

    No I am not. However let me tell you that initially I was the PR expert, the client servicing expert, the celebrity management expert, the media expert…I was everything.

     

    And ultimately all the hard work paid off…

    One of the things I said to myself when I started Madison was that any agency I create must be worthy of Sam Balsara working in it. It had to have a certain reputation and stature. Having spent nearly eight years in two good client organisations, and another eight in client agencies, I did not want to spend another 16 working in a company that did not deserve me as an employee.

     

    And your people helped you in attaining that. Who would be the key people without whom Madison would not be where it is today?

    I think they are predictable – first there was D Sriram, then Srini, Veena Gidwani, then Punitha more recently, Prabha is still there. Now Lara, Gautam… having said that, they are not the only ones. We have many young people burning midnight oil, and making a difference.

     

    Has Gautam’s arrival changed things at Madison?

    Gautam has worked in larger organisations – and hence, he is a little more focused on processes and structure than just the outcome. It is good for an organisation our size at this stage in our life.

     

    You work with a number of global networks – is there anyone you would want to emulate in terms of their practices and processes?

    Their challenges are a little different, and cannot be compared to ours. Theirs are organisations of 100,000 or 150,000 people with billions of dollars of income. Many of them are publicly listed – the challenge for them is managing their stock price and profitability etc. Fortunately our concerns are none of all these. Our key challenges are: Is the client happy with our services? Are we helping our brands score in the market place, are we building our brands?

     

    What is your biggest learning as the head of Madison?

    I would say you need to decide on what should be the objectives of your organisation, and where you want to lead it, and remain focused on that. These objectives cannot be stated only in terms of market share and profits.

     

    You have a number of long-standing client relationships, as well as returning clients…

    If I may say so, in lighter vein, a Madison client is an over-serviced client. We love them, we pamper them, we spoil them and they get used to us – and find it difficult to leave us.

     

    Is Madison ready for the next round of leaders?

    In today’s media and advertising world, changes are happening or changes in people are happening all the time – we have seen that we are able to survive these changes and actually make something out of them. I think every change is an opportunity to climb greater heights.

     

    Lastly, If you had to look back and give yourself a self-score on a scale of 1 to 10, what would it be?

    I would say 5.5.

     

    You are being tough on yourself.

    Not exactly. I am quite fair. Contrary to what a lot of people think, I am not as focused on growth and business and profits as many people give me credit for. I am a little more focused on doing a job well, getting a job done and making our brands succeed in the marketplace. I dare say there is a compromise in there, and I would rather compromise on this side than that. Almost for the first five years of Madison’s life, not only did we not pitch for a new client, if somebody called me and said we want to talk to you – I would tell them that we were pretty tied up and could not come. It is actually reflected in the fact that for the first four-five years, we only had our two founding clients – Godrej and Nelco. This, however, does not mean that we did not really grow – we got substantial additional business from Godrej, which kept us growing. Though management pundits today call it stupidity to put all your eggs in one basket, to my mind I did not want to spread myself too thin as I felt that it was a bigger risk than actually putting all my eggs in one or two baskets.

     

    So 5.5 it is?

    Unfortunately in today’s world the only yardstick for success has become marketshare growth and bottomline – my performance is not that good on these scores.

     

  • Former P&G marketing head Vivek Bali on Madison@25

    Madison was already being acknowledged for its ‘media capabilities’, when it participated in and won a pitch for Procter & Gamble Media AoR in 1995. This was the beginning of business of Media AOR in India.

     

    Vivek Bali, then, was at the helm of marketing affairs at Procter & Gamble India.

     

    MR Bali, currently Director, ANV Consulting Pte Ltd, Singapore, still has a vivid memory of the first media AoR pitch in India, his experience of working with Madison Media and of course the media magician Sam Balsara – and also the making of the first afternoon soap on Doordarshan, ‘Shanti.’

     

    In this short but vibrant trip down memory lane, Bali reminisces about this and more.

     

    As the head of Marketing Services at P&G, I worked very closely with Sam for many years, after we appointed Madison as our Media buying AOR in 1995. Out of the four agencies that pitched for the business, Madison stood out due to Sam’s hands-on approach and ability to get things done despite all odds. We were looking for an agency that could shape the media environment, rather than optimize within the monopolistic constraints of Doordarshan (DD). Madison’s spectacular growth over the years proves that it has continued to evolve and master the intricacies of India’s disruptive media scenario.

     

    Sam has many outstanding qualities that have made him extremely successful. For me, the two that stand out are “the ability to build a connection with people at all levels” and “overcoming obstacles”. We used to go to DD in Delhi very often to convince the Director General to open an afternoon slot. Sam knew virtually everyone over there, right from the security guards to the office peons to the DG. It is unimaginable now, but we were told DD was not interested in making money through advertisements. After many presentations and meetings we finally convinced them to start on an experimental basis with “Shanti” (jointly produced by UTV, Madison and P&G). The programme was very successful and established the afternoon slot. This is just one example of how Sam was instrumental in changing the media scenario that benefitted P&G and other companies.

     

    P&G’s media department used to set a “savings target” for Madison’s media team. The target was reviewed every quarter. Sam made it a point to attend the reviews despite many other commitments and his active involvement ensured that the target was beaten every year.

     

    As Madison celebrates its highly successful 25 years, I wish all of them the very best for the next 25 years.

     

    Vivek Bali is a practitioner turned consultant with over 21 years of FMCG industry experience. An MBA from the Indian Institute of Management, Ahmedabad, he worked with Procter and Gamble in India and Thailand. In India he headed the Hair Care Category group and in Thailand was the Customer Team leader for Big C/Casino.

     

  • Happy clients on Madison@25

    An agency, be it media or creative, thrives only if its clients are happy clients. While Madison’s success story by default becomes the story of its happy clients, we did speak to a few of them, and here is a glimpse of what they have to say…

     

    Saugata Gupta – CEO – Consumer Products Business, Marico:

    Madison under Sam has created one of the finest media entities in the country. We have a very strong and close partnership with Madison. Madison is a role model for what a media agency and a true partner should be like. We wish Madison and Sam many more years of heady growth.

     

    Karan Kumar, Head – Marketing Manager, ITC Ltd., Education and Stationery Business:

    “The experience has centred around involved engagement – a combination of valuable strategic partnership and attentive servicing. Appreciate Paresh’s involvement and his putting together a team on a business which is mix of experience and dynamism.”

     

    Rohan Mirchandani, CEO and MD, Hokey Pokey Ice-Creams:

    “Even though it has been only been a few months since I have worked with Madison PR, the results have been fantastic. A young, enthusiastic and talented team of professionals who have made me feel so comfortable with their high-value work. The most amazing thing about them is their belief in our product and concept. Before starting, their team actually tried our product, did a lot of research and then personalized the strategies accordingly. They are helping us not just in building a brand but to build a strong foundation for the future. Overall working with Madison PR has been an exceptional experience and I look forward to working with them for more years to come. All the best!”

     


  • Old-timers Prabha Prabhu, Veena Gidwani, Neelkamal Sharma, Basabdutta Chowdhury, Dipankar Sanyal & Nagaraj Krishnamurthy on Madison@25

    Prabha Prabhu, CEO, BMB Madison

    Madison feels like my own agency. You are given complete freedom to run the business your way within some broad parameters discussed at regular Management meets where strategies are discussed and finalized. The focus also is more on work than financials.

     

    Another very important aspect is that there is no office politics despite the fact that it is now 25 years old. Whilst it is extremely professional in the way it operates, there is tremendous bonding between the employees. Madison is not too strict about work timings, yet employees themselves make sure that they finish the work on time. Also it’s not work, work, work all the time. There is enough room for FUN too.

     

    No wonder, then that even if people quit Madison, many of them return.

     

    Having been part of the entire Madison journey, I have many fond memories. The first one that comes to mind, of course is, the way we started Madison itself. We started off with Godrej Cinthol and Tata’s Nelco TVs. We had to start work on both the accounts immediately and since our office was still undergoing renovation even most of the routine meetings were held at Yacht Club, to make sure work did not suffer.

     

    There was great excitement on Cinthol from Day 1. The first new launch was of the variant Cinthol Lime. We had the film shot and ready but the launch was delayed for several reasons. And one Sunday evening, just 2 days before launch of the film we saw the old Liril film interspersed with shots of our Cinthol Lime film. The first thing that we did was to incorporate the message COMING SOON in our film and aired it immediately. Then Sam and me rushed to Delhi, met up the DD officials and noticed that the Liril film script was approved just two days before release. DD stopped airing HLL’s Liril ad. Sam also spoke to journalists about this and the news was all over. Cinthol Lime galloped in Market share and overtook Liril.

     

    Another very interesting milestone was when P&G and Godrej came together to form PGG and that’s when we started working with P&G on Cinthol. The then CEO of P&G David Thomas was happy with us and wanted us to handle P&G brands. And as you know for that we had to be one of their Network Agencies. And David mooted the conversation between us and one of their roster agencies DMB&B. We started work on the two flagship accounts of P&G, Whisper and Vicks. And soon we made Whisper the market leader.

     

    P&G asked all their creative agencies to pitch for their AOR business. All of us, Grey, Leo Burnet, Mudra, Saatchi & Saatchi and Madison pitched for the account. We were the smallest and newest agency of P&G and yet we won the Media AOR account and thus became the first media AOR in the country.

     

    Shanti, was the first long running afternoon serial on DD and getting the slot from DD, getting producers to bid for it was part of the exciting journey of Indian Television.

     

    The stories of course are never ending.


     

    Veena Gidwani, Former CEO, Madison PR

    My friendship with Sam goes back many years before I became a part of Madison. My twelve and a half year journey at Madison PR was exciting, challenging, fun -filled and satisfying. Working closely with Sam on building Madison PR from scratch into an agency recognized for its Brand PR having a strong, motivated and committed team and a blue chip client roster was hugely enriching .

     

    As an organisation, Madison is professional, transparent , progressive and ethical, always putting client delight as the focus and every Madisonite feels a deep sense of pride being a part of the team. As a boss, Sam was easy to work with, trusting, appreciative and non interfering … always receptive to new ideas…. spotting opportunities and willing to invest for the future. He was sharp and incisive, able to get to the crux of any issue in no time.

     

    Sam has another rare quality of making team members of all ages and at all levels feel absolutely at ease. He has a special soft corner for the young PR team and had on several occasions expressed that when it came to energy and ideas to let one’s hair down, the PR team beat all other teams at Madison hands down. At our annual off sites, he contributed greatly during the business sessions in the day in helping us crunch ideas and numbers and in the evenings bonding with the team by sometimes walking the ramp in style for a beach fashion show or uninihibitedly answering personal questions on “Vodka with Veena” or helping to build a raft out of worn out tyre tubes, bamboo and rope and then participating in a river rafting race!

     

    I have always admired Sam’s zest for work and his boundless energy (he can be engaged in a serious discussion even at midnight after a long, hard day and still come up with fresh, exciting ideas!) and have never ceased to be surprised by his constant desire to learn new things from people in varied spheres.

     

    On this momentous and special occasion my heartiest congratulations to Sam, Lara and the entire Madison team and best wishes for more milestones and Bigger Celebrations!


    Neelkamal Sharma, COO Buying, Madison Media Group

    Madison has grown along with its clients’ businesses, and is competitive enough to handle all existing small & large national and multi-national blue-chip clients. It is able to develop tools locally to help meet clients’ advertising & marketing related challenges. It is honest and transparent enough to retain its clients and talent over years who believe in similar values in today’s cutthroat competitive environment.

     

    While HR takes care of many fun-filled events across the year, the real fun lies with people here who are a bunch of enthusiastic youngsters, and passionate enough to work hard to provide best media solutions for their clients. In all this, we work closely with our Media partners, and are able to work on win-win partnerships, delighting both media partners and clients.

     

    Working in Madison, I have learnt that client interest comes first, ahead of Madison’s interest and my own personal interest. It is wonderful that Madison has grown over the years, and yet retained its work culture and values.

     

    Sam is really a wonderful person to work with, one gets to learn a lot from. I can’t think of another organization that can offer me a combination of such leadership and values.
    When I look back, there are many fond memories and moments of pride during my last 15 years at Madison and some of those are “imitating Sam in his peculiar style” which you will find many Madisonites doing in the corridor or at many Madison get-togethers. Madison bagging so many awards and accolades, of course, is the pride of every Madisonite.


     

    Basabdutta Chowdhury CEO, Platinum Media

    I joined Madison when it was 21 years old. I have grown as Madison has grown. It has given me freedom and opportunities to fulfil my career ambitions. I am where I am today thanks to Madison. I could not have been more privileged than to work with Sam.

     

    The hierarchy in Madison, though it exists, is pretty flat – learning and growth opportunities are unlimited. It provides a great platform for young professionals who have the inclination.

     

    Madison’s vision, values, integrity have taught and inspired me to be the kind of professional I am today.

     

    My fondest memories in Madison revolve around Sam’s ability to defuse a difficult negotiation process with simple, real-life situations in a light-hearted manner. Every time I look back, these incidents bring a smile on my face. And I am sure many more such memories are still in store for me.


     

    Dipankar Sanyal, COO, Madison MoMs

    Madison is unique. It is thoroughly professional and at the same time there is a great bonding. Here one gets the freedom to speak his or her mind, express onself freely. This helps in solving issues/ problems far more easily. Even the junior members feel comfortable to bring up their ideas and thoughts without any hesitation. Our business is all about ideas and people, and when there is an atmosphere which allows free flow of thoughts and ideas among its people you are able to add immense value to your clients because you are always creating and adding on to a great product.

     

    It has been eight years that I have been with Madison in the current stint. Two major aspects that have always held me back are: people and the management. I have a bunch of brilliant people who have time and again proven that they are the best. On the management front I have always been allowed to express myself freely, act like an entrepreneur within the management guidelines. Personally that has helped me develop as a professional and an individual. Most importantly, I would not have got Sam Balsara anywhere else. It is an honor and privilege to be part of his team.

     

    An interesting incident comes to mind, that shows how seamless the organization is, when I first joined Madison in 1998, I was a junior client servicing executive. I remember Coca Cola had given us mandate to handle their OOH activities. We had to make an important presentation to them. The day before the presentation, Sam sat with me from evening to night correcting and guiding me through the presentation. I can never forget that evening as that was a huge lesson for me on many accounts in my life.


     

    Nagaraj Krishnamurthy, Senior Vice President, Madison Business Analytics

    As freshers from college, three of us (Santosh, Deepak and Myself) developed Adwise, the much acclaimed system of Madison way back in 1998. The system was so good that it was peerless for that time and remains so even today. As youngsters, three of us worked as if we were on a mission from God. In hindsight, very surprised that three freshers from college could accomplish so much in such a short period with so little resources. Easily, Adwise development is one of the most productive phase of my life.

     

    I and many like me, are a part of Madison even after years is in itself a proof that Madison is special in more ways than one. Entrepreneur culture at Madison and of course Charisma of Sam Balsara makes one stay in Madison for really long durations.

     

    This quote of Sam captures it all: ‘We believe that our client’s problems are our problems and we do go the extra mile. I hope to sort of try and partner the client genuinely without looking at Madison’s stream of resources or profitability. Do whatever to make the client succeed.”

     

    Sam does believe in every word of that statement and has ensured it is in the DNA of Madison.

     

    Interviewed by Ritu Midha

     

     

     

  • Madison@25: Andre Nair, Ashutosh Srivastava,Vikram Sakhuja, Shashi Sinha, Lynn de Souza, Ambika Srivastava & Divya Gupta on the formidable frenemy

    Madison and Sam Balsara are so close to each other’s identity that while talking of one, people start talking of the other. The same happened in the case of these honchos. It is almost as much a tribute to 25 years of Sam Balsara in the industry as it is for Madison World.

     

     

     

     

     

     

     

    Andre Nair, (Former CEO GroupM South Asia), Chief Operating Officer, DatVietVAC Group Holdings

    For me, Sam Balsara & Madison represent two aspects; each the maker of the other.

     

    Madison: Joyously Indian to its core, they’re a competitor to be reckoned with. They jealously retain their clients and pitch clever, selectively & aggressively; no secret to their success & expansion over 25 years. And, through its history, Madison has grown & given opportunity for new bold leaders, like CVL Srinivas & Punitha Arumugam, to rise.

     

    Sam: Outside the competitive arena, as a key industry leader, he lives up to that old Ogilvy aphorism – a gentleman with brains, who works tirelessly with other leaders for the general betterment of the industry.

     

    Here’s to Madison and their next thriving 25 years!

     


     

     

    Ashutosh Srivastava, Chairman & CEO, Global Emerging Markets, Mindshare Worldwide

    My first encounter with Sam was years ago when I used to run Fulcrum (Unilever’s media AoR@HTA ,now JWT), prior to setting up of Mindshare in India – when Sam was looking for a person to replace Sriram who had moved to Singapore with Starcom. Sam was by then a charismatic industry leader with high credibility among clients, and Madison was seen by the advertising firms as an upstart, disrupting the establishment and breaking up the full service agency model.

     

    While I did not end up joining him in Madison, I did end up joining that industry. That one conversation with him really deepened my resolve to do what I could, along with other like minded colleagues, to get WPP to bring Mindshare & Maxus (Maximize in those days) to India. The rest, as they say, is history! Personally speaking, it certainly inspired me to get to where I am today, and I hold Sam in the highest regard as a pioneer in the market, who showed us the way. Even after WPP set up GroupM and carved out a dominant share in the market, we always saw Sam and Madison as a worthy ‘frenemy’ in the market. ‘Frenemy’, because they had similar values as us, they were a worthy competitor in pitches who always had good talent, had trusted relationships with their clients and for a long time, were very careful about who they chose to work with – Sam is always a man of his word, and was extremely careful not to overcommit to new clients without first making sure his existing clients got the highest value out of their relationship with Madison. So bitter competitors in pitching for new business, but similar views and vision on what would grow and strengthen the media agency sector. And eventually as frenemies, we ended up doing a JV together, to set up an independent Mediacom in India !

     

    Congratulations and best wishes for your 25th!


     

    Vikram Sakhuja, CEO, Maxus Worldwide

    I’ve known Sam for 20 of the 25 years Madison has been in existence. It dates back to 1993 when in P&G I took on the Media Manager role. In those days Media planning and buying were managed through full service agencies, and I introduced the notion of a consolidated Buying AOR (subsequently both Planning and Buying). Madison won the pitch, and Sam’s personal entrepreneurial style had a lot to do with it. With Sam’s support we pioneered the afternoon slot / as well as India’s first daily strip – Shanti on DD. And that was a start of a very productive relationship that continued when I moved to Coca-Cola and held a Media pitch there. Sam’s greatness lies in his high client orientation, his indefatigable energy, his deal making angles and in those days an ability to get quality talent like D Sriram, CVL Srinivas, Ajit Varghese and Lakshmi Narsimhan into Madison to work on our business.

     

    Even as a competitor it is a pleasure to work alongside Sam. He is a true statesman and puts industry interests above own. He continues to have an amazing eye for detail, and is practical to boot. For me, Madison and Sam are inextricable. I have learnt a lot of the Media I know from him, and he continues to inspire. I wish both him and Madison warmly on this milestone.


     

    Shashi Sinha, CEO, IPG Media Brands

    I have immense regard for Sam as an individual. At the time when media was not much recognized by the industry, he came to the forefront and provided industry the needed pedigree. It was largely his efforts that brought credibility to media buying business,

     

    Madison has definitely grown a lot – and created many milestones. Challenge now is to scale up and keep the momentum going. Organisation is built on culture and systems – and I am sure focus is on the side now – Sam whenever he decides to leave, would leave a legacy. Challenge is to take it up from there.


     

    Lynn de Souza

    Madison and Sam have always fascinated me. A true blue Indian story of guts and glory, innovation, ambition and perseverance. And often a bit of healthy jugaard!

     

    They believe in the strength of long term relationships, and are not afraid to ask for what they deserve. Sam’s energy is legendary and he built a successful empire largely on his ability to drive himself, and build lasting relationships with key team players and clients.

     

    I wish them 25 more years of pathbreaking game-changing success.


     

    Ambika Srivastava, Chairperson Vivaki Exchange India, Vivaki

    I have always admired and respected Sam. There are two things that I would love to mention – one, that Madison has provided very good talent to industry in leadership roles – CVL Srinivas, Ajit Varghese, Punitha Arumugam. It is just amazing. It is a place from where leaders have emerged – it is Madison’s great contribution to the industry, and a tribute to Sam’s leadership.

     

    Second, Madison has always been very tough competition. When you win against Madison – the win is far sweeter, because the competition one knows is formidable. It is not that every pitch we competed has converted into a win for us – but whenever it has happened, it has been exciting.

     

    I admire Sam for his energy and that he finds time to do so much for the industry as well.

     

    Really very good people.


     

    Divya Gupta, CEO, Dentsu Media

    My full salute to Sam and his team

     

    Madison’s client roster, the deep relationship and tenure it enjoys with these clients, speaks volumes.

     

    Just when you think you have managed to get a lead on Madison, Sam pulls out a rabbit from nowhere! By far one of the toughest competitors to go up against in a business pitch… I have had the misfortune of learning it the hard way!

     

    Sam’s passion, drive, tenacity is legendary. Madison stands testimony to this.

     

    I wish Madison and Sam an equally dynamic and successful future.

     

    Interviewed by Ritu Midha

     


  • Vision, values and never-say-die spirit work for Madison@25: CVL Srinivas, CEO, GroupM

    CVL Srinivas, now CEO, Group M, South Asia spent five years (1998-2003) at Madison Media. His second job post his PGDBM – the first being a four year stint with Fulcrum (JWT) as Media Head, Foods & Personal Products, Unilver AC.

     

    Srinivas (Srini as he is known properly as) has, covered many a mile and crossed many milestones post his Madison stint, and is today the most powerful man at the helm of the largest media entity in the country.

     

    In this short conversation with Ritu  Midha of MxM India, he fondly remembers his stint with Madison, his learnings from there, and adds that working with Sam was a huge bonus.

     

    What do you think has been the key factor behind Madison’s stupendous success?

    Madison has been successful due to Sam’s leadership and vision. Additionally, the never-say-die spirit, the vision and values have held it on good stead for all these years.

     

    You were a part of Madison in its early days. How was the experience working in a ‘David’ agency with mammoth dreams?

    For me, Madison was terrific learning. I was young, restless and wanting to explore unchartered territory. Madison provided me a perfect platform to hone my skills. Working with Sam was a huge bonus.

     

    Any interesting incidents/fond memories you can share with us?

    I have many fond memories. I (finally) got married around the time I joined Madison, so in that sense it proved lucky!!! We had a small, well-knit team and I enjoyed working with people like Ajit Varghese, Sudipto Roy and so many others. Madison also made me shift base to Delhi, a city I wasn’t very sure of, but grew to like and ended up living in for 14 years.

     

    What is your take on Madison as competition?

    Madison is a highly respected brand in the media space. We treat all competition with the same seriousness. To Madison’s credit they have remained consistent.

     

    Do you believe Madison success story can be repeated by another standalone media agency?

    Nothing is impossible, although it is very difficult to build an empire like Sam has, being a standalone agency.

     

    What are your views on Sam, the person, the boss and the competitor? Any key learnings from him that have guided you?

    I have the highest regard for Sam as a person, boss and competitor. Despite the legendary status he has achieved he remains a very humble person. His attention to detail, passion for his client’s business and ability to engage with people at all levels make him very special.

     


  • Madison@25: Timeline… from 1988 to 2013

     

    1988

    March 21: Began with Godrej and Nelco accounts

     

    1989

    Launched Cinthol Lime which made a phenomenal impact in marketplace with 5.3% market share in premium market in first month.

     

    1993

    Grew steadily, increasing seven-fold billings in 5 years.

     

    1994

    Tied up with DMB&B Added P&G brands Vicks & Whisper. Moved Whisper’s share from 27% to 47% despite premium pricing, making it market leader.

     

    1995

    Added Philips DAP account;
    March: Won Buying AOR of P&G

     

    1996

    Adopted Concept of Unitisation.
    March: Won Buying AOR of Tata Tea
    October: Won Coke Buying AOR

     

    1997

    Won Buying AOR of Godrej

     

    1998

    January: Madison Media opens in Delhi
    March: Outdoor company called Out- Sel started
    April: Rural unit, Anugrah Madison begun
    August: Madison Media opens in Bangalore with BPL Group AOR

     

    1999

    January: Split media into two with CVL Srinivas as COO of North & South and Punitha Arumugam as COO of West
    March: Retained Coke AOR in pitch and won planning
    April: Lost Cinthol creative account
    July: Parted company with DMB&B
    July: Vicks & Whisper accounts moved out because of parting with DMB&B

     

    2000

    January: Retained P&G Buying AOR
    March: ADNOVA commences operations
    April: PR Unit starts independent operations
    May: Won Maruti (TV) AOR & Perfetti van Melle AOR
    June: Won Kinetic AOR, Godrej planning AOR
    August: Madison Media Research Centre starts operations

     

    2001

    May: New Outdoor unit – MOMS commences operations as independent company. Wins ZEE TV, VIP, Delsey and HBO
    September:
    Madison Creative commences operations in Delhi
    September: Mothballed ADNOVA
    2001-02: PR wins Sify, TBZ, Swagelok accounts among others; PR network expanded to Indore, Chandigarh, Pune; Anugrah Madison wins ACC

     

    2002

    January: Lost Tata Tea AOR because of Tata Group consolidation
    February: Won ESSEL/ Playwin /Zee AOR
    April: Merchandising unit (MMS) commences operations as independent company. Wins business of Airtel, Samsung & Shaw Wallace

     

    2003

    Madison Creative wins Red Bull account,
    Madison Media wins Kotak Mahindra, Asian Paints, Cadbury AOR
    Anugrah Madison wins Sky Insurance and Water Base (Shrimp Farm)
    MOMS wins Skoda, Kotak and Godrej Tea

     

    2004

    Jan: Madison Media wins Hyundai AOR
    April: Brand Equity ranks Madison Media as the second best Media Planning and Buying agency
    June: Media wins Airtel AOR
    July: MOMS wins Times TV Zoom account
    Anugrah opens office in Mumbai
    Aug: Madison Dream Year launched
    New in-film unit (MATES) starts operations
    Merchandising unit re-branded as Madison Retail Paradigm

     

    2005

    Jan-Apr: Madison Media wins TVS, Tata Tea, Tata Chemicals media AOR.
    Madison Media launches 2 sub-brands: Madison Media Plus, Madison Media Infinity
    May: Madison Media becomes India’s Most Admired Media Agency, according to the Brand Equity Ad Agency Reckoner 2005.
    June: Sam Balsara nominated on Media Jury at International Advertising Festival, Cannes 2005.
    September: Madison launches Think Pink Year.
    Madison Media wins the coveted General Motors Account
    Oct – Dec: MATES starts celebrity management division, sign on Akshay Kumar
    Madison PR starts Media Training Capsule and Design Cell

     

    2006

    June: Madison Media becomes the first Media agency to bring home not one but two Cannes Media Lions Awards for work done on Cadbury and P&G.
    October: Madison Media evolves into 4 sub brands – Madison Media Alpha, Madison Media Plus, Madison Media Infinity and Madison Media Sigma
    November: Madison starts Shopper Marketing Consultancy Unit – MASH
    December: Events take Madison International; Madison invests in Thai Events Company Penada

     

    2007

    January: Madison stars BTL unit, Out-Sel Promotions in Bangalore and second Outdoor Agency Platinum Outdoor
    April: Madison ties up with Philippine based company Xurpas to launch Madison Xurpas Mobile Service to enter the mobile space
    August: Madison Creative re-brands itself as mc2
    October: Madison acquires a stake in Professional Management Group, India ‘s first Sports Marketing Company founded by Sunil Gavaskar and marks an entry into the Sports Management
    November: Madison Media ranked No. 1 Media Agency by Brand Equity Ad Agency Reckoner 2007 Again!

     

    2008

    March: Madison Media starts operations in Sri Lanka and wins Airtel and Britannia accounts
    April: Sam Balsara acquires a majority stake in WPP’s Mediacom operations in India
    April: Madison – Mediacom combine wins P&G’s media planning and buying business in a Pitch
    July: Madison announces the launch of second Media Agency Platinum Media; to commence in last quarter of 2008 in October 2008
    August: Madison Media wins Rs. 325 crores worth of new business – clients include Indian Oil, Max New York Life Insurance, SpiceJet, Bharti AXA Mutual Fund, Bharti AXA General Insurance, Bharti Retail, Airtel Digital TV and Levis
    September: Madison World wins first integrated account of Levis and to offer Levis its Media, PR, Outdoor and Entertainment services through an integrated service

     

    2009

    Feb: Madison World announces the launch of Platinum PR

    April: Madison World wins 2 awards at Festival of Media Awards, Valencia – Madison Media wins Best Communication Strategy for BBC World Service Trust, Condoms Campaign and Mediacom wins People’s Choice Award for Gillette.
    June: Mediacom wins 1 Gold and 1 Silver at Cannes Media Lion for Gillette – India Votes to Shave or not to Shave under Best Use of Mixed Media and Best Innovation in FMCG category respectively
    Madison Media wins 1 Bronze Media Lion Award at Cannes for BBC World Service Trust, Condoms Campaign under Best Use of Mixed Media
    July: Madison Media wins coveted Britannia Media AOR.
    Platinum Outdoor launches Activation and Design services

     

    2010

    Madison Media retains Airtel and General Motors account in a multi agency pitch, but looses Coke.
    Madison World brings Trevor Beattie to India, launches a 50-50 JV with Trevor Beattie’s BMB to launch BMB in India
    MOMS launches IES – Integrated Experiential Solutions
    Madison World launches new media brand Crest to handle ITC media planning and buying AOR
    Madison World launches Madison Business Analytics and Madison Digital

     

    2011

    Madison Media wins Pidilite Media AOR.
    PMG signs up Abhinav  Bindra for Sports Celebrity Management and Mates signs up John Abraham.
    Madison Media wins 10 awards at Emvies 2011 including 2 Golds, 1 Silver and 7 Bronze.
    Madison Media announces the launch of Pinnacle, a dedicated unit exclusively to handle the Kraft AOR
    Media Infinity II in Bangalore  renamed Madison Media Omega
    Madison Media launches new positioning of iEngine.
    Madison World  evolves a 4 pillar strategy  of:  Automation, Ideation, Digitilization, Diversity
    Madison Media  announces several senior level additions to its  Leadership Team. Anugrah Madison celebrates its 25th Anniversary and launches AMRA – Anugrah Madison Rural Academy

     

    2012

    Gautam Kiyawat joins Madison Media Group as CEO

    Madison Media wins Crompton Greaves, Dixcy Textiles, Enamor, GO, Glenmark, Radikal Rice and Café Coffee Day Media accounts

    Paresh Chaudhry joins Madison PR as CEO; Veena Gidwani retires after twelve years of driving growth at Madison PR

    Raj Nair joins BMB as Chief Creative Officer

    Madison Media wins Grand Emvie, Media Client of the Year for Cadbury and 8 Golds , 5 Silvers and 2 Bronze

    Madison PR wins Glaxo Smith Kline, Games 24X7.com, Garuda Food, Hilton, Hygienic Research Institute and Star CJ, Sketchers, Grover Wines accounts

    Madison PR starts office in Hyderabad

     

    2013

    Madison World starts The Football Edge, a jv with Noomi Mehta and Baichung Bhutia.

    Madison Media win Max India corporate account, Ruchi Soya and MagicBricks.com

    Sam Balsara wins Media Agency Head of the Year at the IAA Leadership Awards.

     


  • Mazel tov, Sam & Madison: Sir Martin Sorrell

     

    Sir Martin Sorrell first ventured into advertising with Saatchi & Saatchi – and was addressed as third brother to Charles and Maurice Saatchi by many then.  In those days, he was not impressed by the way the industry was run. He purchased Wire and Plastic Products, a wire basket manufacturer in 1985-and there began the journey called WPP- the advertising and media giant. An MBA from Harvard University’s Graduate School of Business Administration, Sir Sorrell is Group Chief Executive Officer, WPP.

     

    Madison and WPP, as is known, are not only close competitors in India, but also partners – Mediacom in India being their joint venture.  On the occasion of Madison Media’s 25th anniversary, RITU MIDHA of MxM India asked Sir Martin Sorrell for his views on Madison, Sam, his JV with Madison and if he would be interested in WPP partnering Madison.

     

    1. What, in your view, are the key factors that have enabled Madison’s success as a standalone media agency?

    Sam, Sam, and Sam is the answer to that.

     

    Sam has been the driving force in Madison in developing it into the force that it is.

     

    Lara obviously has been a great support to Sam, but I think we have to say that the agency is very focused on Sam and his talents and his view of media planning and buying in the Indian context.

     

    Sam is a wonderful entrepreneur in our industry, in India. He has a very deep and engaging vision of how the media business has grown, is growing and will grow in India, over the last quarter century, and I’m sure over the next quarter century at least.

     

    2. How is the Mediacom experience in India – are there any ideology clashes?

    Certainly not to my knowledge, but you’d have to ask Sam about that.

     

    It seems to me that we have a very shared vision on how clients should be responded to, serviced and how client relationships should be developed.

     

    3. How does the expertise WPP and Madison bring to table for Mediacom differ?

    WPP looks at things in a global context, not only an Indian context, and we have strong linkages to consumer insight and data and horizontality as well as digital and internet and interactive expertise. In some senses, Madison and Sam complement that because they place an enormous amount of emphasis on big data, on consumer insight and of course on the development of digital.

     

    We’re pretty much in agreement strategically and structurally about how we go about things.

     

    4. You have a sizable presence in India. Why did you tie up with your closest competition here?

    Madison is a media planning and buying agency,or what we at WPP would call media investment and management.

     

    To WPP, media, while it’s an important part of our operations, in India,that is just one part of it. We have approximately US$500 million of revenue in India, andthat revenue covers an awful lot of activity.

     

    Having said that,  in media planning and buying, or media investment and management, Madison is a worthy competitor and a strong competitor, although there are others as well in the market.But I would agree with you that of the media competition there, Madison is the strongest competition.

     

    Given our client pattern in India, it makes sense for us to have a joint venture with Sam, which has proven to be extremely successful.

     

    5. Sam has often indicated that though he is not interested in selling Madison, he is open to a global partner in Madison. If the opportunity arises, would WPP be interested?

    The answer is “definitely”.

     

    6. 25 glorious years – your message to Sam and Madison?

    Mazel tov!

     

    7. Moving to a slightly broader subject, at a time when political and economic predictions about India are not too very rosy, how do you see our media market shaping?

    I think your question is too gloomy. I’m extremely optimistic about India and its growth. Most BRICs have had a slowdown — that’s in relative terms because in Europe we would kill for 5 or 6 percent growth, which it looks like the Indian economy will deliver. If the Indian economy grows at 5 to 6 percent, we will grow at double that rate, as we did virtually last year andwill do again this year.

     

    So, I’m not gloomy at all about India. With the rise of the lower middle and middle class in India bringing 100s of millions of people literally into relative prosperity,Isee nothing but opportunity in India along with other markets such as Brazil, Russiaand China, and indeed the next 11 and the CIVETs.