Tag: Ajay Verma

  • Baggit partners 0101 for brand communication

    By Our Staff

     

    Baggit, the fashion brand, has partnered with 0101 to take their digital journey forward. In the last two years, its e-commerce business has reportedly tripled.  The 0101 team will spearhead Baggit’s performance and programmatic, social and martech.

     

    Nina Lekhi
    Nina Lekhi

    Said Nina Lekhi, Managing Director and Chief Design Curator, Baggit: “The ecomm growth has reaffirmed the residual power of the brand – Baggit. The Data has just confirmed our hypothesis of the huge latent demand the country has. We are excited to now take the brand to its next level and have partnered with the 0101 team.”

     

    Ajay Verma
    Ajay Verma

    Added Ajay Verma, Managing Partner, 0101: “We have recently launched venture that partners with organisations on data and communication across all internal conversion data streams – Direct, Social, Performance, Call Centre, Martech stacks, Marketplaces etc. with the promise of better customer conversion. “We are extremely excited to partner with the Baggit team to grow the brand in both offline and online channels. Our aim would be to relevantly differentiate the brand vis-à-vis the ‘sea of sameness’ of all other fashion brands.”

     

     

  • 0101 marketing agency partners with Divine Solitaire

    By Our Staff

     

    Divine Solitaire has assigned 0101 digital marketing agency for end-to-end D2C digital transformation.

     

    Commenting on this new partnership, Jignesh Mehta, Founder & Managing Director, Divine Solitaires said: “We are very excited to team up with the 0101 team to take the brand to its next level. We believe in technology as it has the power to exploit the huge potential that the Diamond Industry provides. We are launching our custom range of jewellery for our discerning customers. This is a signal of the customer centricity we are adopting as a brand.”

     

    Commenting on this new partnership, Jignesh Mehta, Founder & Managing Director, Divine Solitaires, “We are very excited to team up with the 0101 team to take the brand to its next level. We believe in technology as it has the power to exploit the huge potential that the Diamond Industry provides. We are launching our custom range of jewellery for our discerning customers. This is a signal of the customer centricity we are adopting as a brand.”

     

    The objective is to make the website the clear destination for commerce and adopt a multi-channel approach. To this end the brand is also looking at being the first Indian diamond brand to look at marketplaces, affiliates networks across the world.

     

    Said Ajay Verma, senior adperson and Managing Partner 0101: “The online diamond market has a huge potential and wants to be the first diamond brand to use tech and lead the way. Our mandate is not just for the brand’s Digital transformation, but what makes it really interesting is the management of the entire eSales, with domestic and global distribution rights. We want to make the brand big and both the team at Divine and 0101 are in a hurry.”

     

    Added Jayraj Jadhav, Managing Partner 0101: “We want to exploit the power of first party data. And our initial trials with this strategy have been very encouraging”

     

    Divine has created an omni-channel sales network that is powered by technology. This includes a combination strategy that integrates its Digital Assets with Virtual Assist, Try at Home and Online to Offline to enhance its B2C network and at the same time build B2B2C and D2C channels.

     

    Said Mihir Mehta, Managing Partner 0101: “Consumer journeys are not linear and every consumer is different. What we intend to do is create personalised experiences and create ease of shopping for customers through online channels, video assistance and try @ home features. We want to create a seamless channel for online onboarding and offline purchase.”

     

  • Enormous launches new Reliance GI campaign

    By Our Staff

     

    It happened a few months back, but we’ve got to know it only now. That Reliance General Insurance (RGI) partnered with Enormous Brands to reposition its brand in the new normal.

     

    Said Rakesh Jain, ED and CEO, Reliance General Insurance: “During Covid-19, majority of customer interactions happened digitally and we brought about a series of tech innovations to simplify and make those interactions seamless. However, we also understood that Technological disruption needs to amalgamate with humane values and focus on being customer-first, always. That is why we decided to have a brand mascot ‘BroBot’ that embodies this ethos and presents insurance with a fresh perspective to our customers in the new normal”

     

    Added Ajay Verma, Managing Partner, Enormous Brands: “It was a bold approach to launch the new brand campaign. We had set daily benchmarks for the pre-launch phase to make sure that the appropriate level of curiosity is achieved. In the end, we were 17% above our ambitious engagement target”

     

     

  • Enormous Brands decodes lockdown trends in study

    By A Correspondent

     

    Enormous Brands has surveyed the changing sentiments, attitudes, and habitual changes in India’s citizens, across top six cities during the unforeseen lockdown.

     

    Commenting on the outcome of the study, Ajay Verma, Managing Partner, Enormous Brands, said: “The young Indian population is behaving very differently from other parts of the globe. The study suggests a high level of optimism even in a situation that has brought the entire world in a lock-down and also showcased that households feels confident about the revival of the Indian economy,” adding: “This study was conducted to help brands understand how the current situation is molding the habits, behavior and attitudes of Indians. We believe this will help us shape client communication and offer strategic counsel in line with the prevailing sentiments of the consuming class.”

     

    Some of the trends include:

    Television grows from strength to strength during lockdown

    The study suggests TV still shines over OTT. 43 per cent see cable TV as the primary entertainment in the high-income households. 13 per cent across the sample size have re-activated their DTH / cable subscription.

    Interestingly, ‘news’ has emerged as the new GEC’s. A staggering 64 per cent of TV viewing time across the TV viewing population is spent on the news channels. 43 per cent believe that news reporting is unbiased and 27 per cent believe that there is a clear indication that few news channels are pro a particular political party.

     

    Newspapers poised for a strong return

    Lots of international researches suggest 21 days can break or form a habit. However, this study suggests otherwise when it comes to a daily newspaper. 74 per cent miss their daily newspaper and are waiting for the service to resume.

    While 29 per cent have moved to reading newspapers online, only 4 per cent would unsubscribe from the hard copy. Looks like the newspaper is a habit like coffee that has grown on the Indian palette, making it difficult to part with.

     

    India’s older adopt digital

    The study shows a sharp increase, as much as, 47 per cent adoption among elders (55-65 years) of e-commerce – ordering milk, grocery and home essentials and paying through wallets / UPI.

    The banks have been promoting Internet banking for over a decade, in just the last month the data suggests that first time users have increased by 28 per cent. The maximum shift of 33 per cent is among the age group of 35-50 years age segments – this is the ‘bankers’ delight segment as it is the most profitable customer band.

     

    Covid-19 helps push the ‘Make in India’ agenda

    42 per cent believe that there is an active and deliberate attempt by China to spread COVID across the world for economic gains. This has led to a strong anti-China sentiment.

    The data suggests that 47 per cent of Indians are willing to pay up to 25 per cent higher for Indian made goods over Chinese made ones. There is a strong sentiment that the world should unite against China to stop using China as the world’s manufacturer, even if it is cost-inefficient.

     

     

  • Enormous wins creative account of Shapoorji Pallonji’s SD Corp

    By A Correspondent

     

    Enormous Brands has bagged the creative duties for SD Corp, a joint venture of Shapoorji Pallonji and the Dilip Thacker Group. The agency’s Mumbai office will be handling their corporate account as well as other projects that would be undertaken by the company.

     

    Ajay Verma

    Said Ajay Verma, Managing Partner, Enormous Brands: “The real estate market is getting very interesting. The requirement is to think of newer, more compelling ways of creating brand preference. Our challenge with SD Corp will be just that.”

     

     

    Rajeeb Dash

    Commenting on the win, Rajeeb Dash, Vice President, Sales & Marketing, SD Corp, added: “We are delighted to associate with Enormous and welcome them on board as our creative partner for our upcoming projects. We look forward to a fruitful relationship and are confident that they will up the ante further in capturing consumer insights for brand development and bring valuable contribution to our brand across platforms.”

     

  • Jaquar rolls out new film with Enormous

    By A Correspondent

     

    In line with Jaquar’s leadership position, Enormous has crafted a campaign with an aim to re-create awareness of the brand among the premium audience with global sensibilities. The film titled, ‘Rain’ revolves around how one shower can help consumers relieve their all-day stress.

     

    Said Sandeep Shukla, Chief Marketing Officer, Jaquar: “Connect brand Jaquar with consumers having global sensibilities and aspirations. We wanted out of the box idea which  re-creates the magic of re-discovering bathing.  We wanted to induce Jaquar bath spaces as individual’s personal sanctuary to wash away the stress of one’s day to day life.”

     

    Added Ashish Khazanchi, Managing Partner, Enormous Brands: “The new age products from jaquar elevate the mundane experience of bathing to a level never experienced before. We wanted to turn this functional benefit into an emotional benefit. The opportunity was the undifferentiated category clutter and the sameness of executions across brands. We found the fit in the Indian concept of ‘shuddhi’, when one takes a bath one sheds the remains of the day.”

     

    Ajay Verma, Managing Partner, Enormous said, “Jaquar as a brand has been a pioneer over the years. We wanted to set the brand apart from the category paradigm of ‘Girl in the bathroom’. The idea was to pivot the brand around a relevant insight of Shuddhi  and the execution was planned in a way that clearly sets up the brand right at the top – One that re-defines the bathing experience.” The film is shot in Budapest and post-produced in Poland.

     

  • An Enormous Year for Ashish Khazanchi & Ajay Verma

     

    It’s a little over a year since Ashish Khazanchi and Ajay Verma set up creative shop Enormous. Both had had a glorious innings in creative advertising agencies and, well, their jingalala moments. Why, after collaborating much on the Tata Sky account, they figured that they were perhaps made for each other. Excerpts from a free-wheeling conversation the Enormous managing partners had with Pradyuman Maheshwari :

     

    A little over a year since you’ll set up shop… so, would you say it’s been an enormous year?

    We aren’t sure if it would be right to call it enormous, but it’s been a good year, full of memorable instances. We are much better off than we thought we would be. The market has changed a bit. Clients are far more open to independent agencies, and from our perspective the timing was just right.

     

    You started when times were tough. As you look back, was it a good time to start?

    I don’t think we’ve ever faced those kinds of issues. We started from zero and we had everything to look forward to. We had a lot of clients talking to us, interested in creating newer kind of solutions or getting a fresh perspective.

     

    Did you move with any clients from your earlier?

    We made a promise to ourselves… that we won’t touch any people or clients from the agencies we came out of.

     

    Uff, but everybody does it!

    We started the agency from scratch and we’re happy that we don’t have any bad blood. Not to say that we won’t in future, but we didn’t want to create an agency on bad blood.

     

    What about the clients who were comfortable dealing with you?

    We haven’t said no to anybody too…. I think as we come to the end of the first year, we are far more confident than we were in the beginning. I think now the time is right to approach them.

     

    Any lows in the year?

    If you’re working in an agency and you don’t win a pitch, you forget about it the next morning. But if you’re doing your own business and you lose a pitch, it is not just commerce, but it is your reputation now that is also at stake.

     

    Anything else?

    We’re building every day on optimism – small and big victories. But there are things that bothered us. For example, talent, is a huge problem. And for smaller agencies, it is even a bigger problem. The other issue, which personally bugs us, is how a lot of agencies are shortchanging themselves in terms of monies they charge just to get a client.

     

    You have such large overheads and you charge so less, they are just making the process difficult for themselves. But the key pillars we go by are that we’ll get the client at our terms and work in a way that the client gets value out of us.

     

    If you look at a percentage of a large agency, how much would you charge?

    It would be on a case-to-case basis. We don’t want a client to come to us because he’s getting cost-efficiency. We’ve hired an ECD who would have been an ECD anywhere in the country. It’s not like we took a junior guy and gave him a huge designation. We have two senior creative directors, both coming from very good agencies.

     

    Are you optimally staffed?

    Honestly, no. We need a much bigger base of the pyramid. They are tough to come by. We’re hiring people who are more or less, best in class! Sometimes we can’t even afford an art director. But if he’s available now, and all positions are full, we still take him because we may not get him if he’s needed tomorrow.

     

    What’s your staff strength now?

    Sixteen people.

     

    Let’s look at the highs. What have been the highs of the year?

    The client support has been a great high!

     

    Other highs?

    The completely unique partnership between Cheil (television commercial for Samsung’s Galaxy Grand Neo) and us also was a great high. That was just less than 60 days from our Agency being formed.

     

    The phone call was a great high.

     

    When you pitch to clients, what is your proposition? What is it that Enormous is offering that others are not?

    Apart from a Lowe & an Ogilvy, who we have great respect for, there is this entire world of agencies which have no idea what they are about. If the work is good, it’s an aberration, rather than a result of a certain process and quality control. If I was to go to a pitch with an Ogilvy or a Lowe, I’d be very scared but if I were to get into a pitch with any of the others, I’d be very optimistic that we would most likely win it or we have an equal chance if not more. It’s the idea we put on the table. That’s what this field is about. We’re very good there. Because we’ve always given a damn about the kind of work we do. Not just here but as individuals this is a collective of people who care about what they do.

     

    Ashish, you’ve done some great creative work in the last 10 years. One was hoping to see some action coming up sooner?

    We’ve had ShopClues. There have been some smaller pieces of work, not that visible but we’re incredibly proud of some of them. There is some stuff now happening for an electronics major. It should be out by end -December. It’s for the World Cup. It would be one of the best! We’ve looked at sports in a completely new lens. There’s some really great work that we’ve done.

     

    So, how do you deal with your shareholders? Is Vivek Suchanti happy?

    Ajay:  The kind of brands we’re associated is also a great high. It’s fantastic. They’ve been great encouragement.

     

    Ashish: Vivek Suchanti has been very hands off. While we still have a lot to do in terms of big campaigns, financially we’re fine. If you’re diligent, more or less, they don’t interfere at all.

     

    Do you have periodic reviews?

    Ashish: None at all. It’s completely hands of. Hats off to them

     

    Ajay: They believe in us, our one year has instilled a lot of confidence in them,

     

     

    What are the plans for the second year? You said you have this big telco in the bag?

    Ashish: We’re doing digital work for them on project basis. For the second year, we have to triple our size, our visible campaigns and our talent. You also have to get to some critical marks before people start trusting you with their brands. They trust you as an individual but question …Is this agency robust enough? I think that’s exactly the reason we’ve got so many senior people on board.

     

    Even though the clients may trust him or me in their individual capacity, they want you to earn your spurs somewhere else. Once you’ve done it, more and more people let you in. This is exactly what’s happening right now.

     

    Ajay: The first year being very good and, like Ashish mentioned, the idea is to grow very rapidly. The market forces and the environment are just right for keeping ambitions intact.

     

    Ashish:Acche din aane waale hai’. Happy days are coming!

     

    Both of you have come in from big agency, big clients background. Personally, do you miss all the action of big spenders?

    Ashish: Of course I miss that. I keep on saying we’re not a small agency, we’re an agency that’s still small.

     

    How’s it working together?

    Ajay: It’s not like we’re working together for the first time. We did Tata Sky together. The relationship and bonding has only increased over time. I think through that last year, ups and downs, having a partner like Ashish has been really fantastic. So, nothing to really worry about.

     

    Ashish: It’s not like we started in day 1 and we’re like made for each other. It took us time to get into the kind of stride we are into right now. We’re perfect foils for each other now. I am the person who would screw up on all deadlines and anything with organizational abilities, Ajay is a rock solid person out there. I’d be going with complete airy-fairy strategies.

     

    Have you ever thought of expanding your team of co-founders?

    Ashish: Absolutely not. Between the two of us, we have the knowledge and expertise required to roughly run any communication setup. ETN*, BTN, Digital… whatever… now whatever we need, we’re going to hire.

     

    A version of this interview appeared in dna of brands on November 24, 2014