Tag: BARC India

  • October delivers bumper ad volumes, as per BARC

    By Our Staff

     

    Advertising volumes on TV continue to witness growth on account of the festive period, as per television audience measurement body BARC India. The total ad volumes for the month of October 2021 stood at 178 mn seconds, highest for 2021, 11% higher than October 2020 and 23% higher than October 2019. The total number of advertisers stood at 2851 and brands were 4624 for October 2021, with 22% being new advertisers.

     

    Said Aaditya Pathak, Head – Client Partnership & Revenue Function, BARC India:  “Television advertising continues to grow peaking at 178 million seconds in Oct 2021, the highest for the same period over the last three years. Backed by festivities and sporting events, these numbers have reinstated a strong positive sentiment amongst marketers. New advertisers and brands continue to ride this growth wave and place their trust in the medium given its reach.”

     

    Ad volumes for the Dassera week grew by 13% over the previous four weeks and by 25% over 2019. The number of new advertisers and brands was also the highest for this period. While ad volumes for FMCG dominates charts, Ecommerce and BFSI sectors have recorded an extraordinary growth of 97% and 98% respectively, against Oct 2019, which is highest amongst other sectors. Ad volumes for the Auto sector is also showing a positive curve with growth of 3% over 2019. The Retail sector grew by 127%, Durables by 297% and Personal Accessories by 157%, over the start of the year, January 2021.

     

    As a positive sentiment in the construction sector, ad volumes for the ‘Building Equipment’ category posted a 23% growth in Oct 2021 over Oct 2019, notes the report.

     

    Dassera Week 2021 witnessed 13% growth in ad Volumes over the previous four weeks and 25% over 2019. The number of advertisers and brands during the Dassera Week 2021, is the highest as compared to previous years; 18% more than previous four weeks.

     

    Ad volumes for Bhojpuri language during the festive period were at an all-time high in 2021, recording a growth of 111% compared to the same period in Oct 2019. Apart from Bhojpuri, Panjabi viewership has also recorded a 52% growth over Oct 2019, while the growth percentage for Telugu and Marathi languages was 33% and 35% respectively.

     

  • 65 Days to MxMIndia Mediaperson of the Year 2021

     

     

    By A Correspondent

     

    It’s October 13, and 65 days to December 17, the day when we will announce the 2021 MxMIndia Mediaperson of the Year.

     

    So who do you think will it be? Will it be a group of people like we had last year, or is there someone or a group of people who could win the award this year. We have a partial shortlist ready, but its still early days. We invite readers readers to send us their nominations or suggestions of names. Nominations are welcome till Friday, December 3, 2021. Please send them directly to pradyuamanm [at] mxmindia.com. Your name and reasons, if any, will be kept confidential.

     

    As our readers are aware, over the last few years, the MxMIndia Mediaperson of the Year has earned the reputation of being the most credible barometer of the highest performer(s) in the fields of advertising, media and marketing in India in a calendar year.

     

    Realising that many award shows are held at the end of the year and hence there is a tendency to only recall and accord importance to those who make an impact in the latter part of the year. MxMIndia instituted a process where we reviewed people and entities through the year by having periodic reviews and compiling the various high performers at the end of June. We didn’t do that too often last year, but this we did.

     

    Last year’s winner of the accolade was the Independent Journalist. In 2019, it was Sidharth Rao for mainstreaming digital in creative advertising. In 2018, it was Piyush Pandey and in the previous year, it was Arnab Goswami for the launch of Republic TV. In 2016, we had Dentsu Aegis Network South Asia CEO Ashish Bhasin and for 2015 it was the BARC India core team of Punit Goenka, Shashi Sinha and Partho Dasgupta. That was the first year we gave away the award, virtually of course.

     

    As we said earlier, this year, the award will be presented online (on MxMIndia) on Friday, December 17, 2021. Wait for it.

     

  • TV ad vol grow in Aug 2021: BARC

    By Our Staff

     

    Indian marketers and brands continue to place their trust in television once again as India kickstarted its festive season for 2021. As per BARC India’s Think report for August 2021, the month recorded the highest advertising volumes on TV since the second lockdown in April 2021 with 158 mn seconds.

     

    August 2021, notes a communique, saw 17% growth as compared to May 2021, 25% vs June 2021 and 9% vs July 2021. With 2803 active advertisers and 4415 active brands in the same month, there is a 23% growth over August 2019 and 19% growth over August 2020.

     

    Said Aaditya Pathak, Head of Client Partnership & Revenue, BARC India: “As we kickstarted India’s festive season with Onam, we have seen growth in Ad Volumes in Malayalam channels for August 2021 compared to previous weeks and also compared to previous years. The number of advertisers and brands turning to television continued to increase with August 2021 recording the highest number of active brands and advertisers for the year. We continue to see a strong upward trend in the e-commerce category and a new category, Corporate and Brand Image, joining the Top 10 sectors. Bhojpuri language channels are recording strong growth with Ad Volumes being almost at par with Punjabi and Marathi language channels.”

     

    Ad Volumes of the Top 10 advertisers grew by 29% while the next 40 saw 19% growth and the remainder, 22% growth in August 2021, versus the same period for 2019. FMCG continued to dominate with the highest share with 92.9 mn seconds of Ad Volumes and has grown by 22% over August 2019. With 4.4. mn seconds of Ad Volumes for Corporate and Brand Image, the sector witnessed a staggering growth of 570% over August 2019 where it had recorded 0.7 mn seconds.

     

    E-commerce and BFSI sectors grew by 109% and 110% in August 2021 versus August 2019. FMCG, E-commerce, Building, Industrial & Land Materials/Equipments, Corporate and Brand Image and Auto, are the top 5 sectors to dominate by share.

     

    Ad volumes for Bhojpuri language channels grew by 113% in August 2021, recording the highest growth across languages over August 2019 followed by Punjabi with 47%, Marathi with 32% and Hindi and Tamil at 28% each.  Hindi language channels however continue to dominate share with 49 mn seconds followed by Tamil and Telugu with 17 mn seconds and 13 mn seconds. Onam Week 2021 recorded 2.23 mn seconds of Ad Volumes, 13% higher than 2019. Ad Volumes during Onam Week 2021 for Malayalam Channels also increased by 22% compared to the previous 4 weeks, reaffirming a strong start to the festive season.

     

  • BARC India’s Dr Derrick Gray appointed as the VP of MRSI

    By Our Staff

     

    Dr Derrick Gray
    Dr Derrick Gray

    Dr Derrick Gray, Chief of Measurement Science and Business Analytics at BARC India, has been appointed as the Vice-President of the Market Research Society of India (MRSI). Earlier this year, he was also appointed as the Chair of the Professional Standards Committee at the MRSI, where he will help guide the committee in ensuring strong ethical and professional standards for the Indian market research industry.

     

    Commenting on his appointment, Dr. Gray, said: “I am quite honoured to assume the role of Vice-President in the current Managing Committee at MRSI India. With my experience over the years in statistical research, measurement and data science, I am looking forward to working collaboratively with the team at MRSI. We hope to be able to make significant progress together as a team.”

     

    Added Nakul Chopra, Chief Executive Officer, BARC India: “We at BARC India are extremely proud of Derrick’s recent appointment and would like to congratulate him on his becoming the Vice-President of the Managing Committee at MRSI. We wish him all the success for this new role and look forward to him guiding market research in India to even greater heights.”

     

  • Partha Sinha elected Ad Club Prez, Rana Barua is Veep

    By Our Staff

     

    The Advertising Club announced the managing committee for FY 2021-2022 at its 67th Annual General Meeting. Partha Sinha, President – Response Bennett, Coleman & Co Ltd., was elected unanimously to lead the body. Sinha replaces former BARC India CEO Partho Dasgupta who was President from 2019-21.

     

    Speaking about his appointment, Sinha said: “It’s an honour to be able to serve as the President of The Advertising Club. We have a very powerful management team this year and we want to do some meaningful engagement with the advertising, media and marketing community. Last 16 months have been really difficult for the fraternity and we would like to ensure that we work closely with everyone to get some of the mojo back. Our primary focus will remain excellence. We will celebrate excellence, train people to create excellence and create forums where people can exchange thoughts and ideas around excellence.”

     

    The officebearers of The Advertising Club for 2021-2022 are:

     

    Partha Sinha

    Partha Sinha :  President

     

    Rana Barua

    Rana Barua :  Vice President

     

    Shashi Sinha

    Shashi Sinha :  Secretary

     

    Mitrajit Bhattacharya

    Mitrajit Bhattacharya:  Jt. Secretary

     

    Bhaskar Das

    Dr Bhaskar Das :  Treasurer

     

    Also on the managing committee:

    Punitha Arumugam

    Vikram Sakhuja

    Ajay Kakar

    Debabrata Mukherjee

    Rahul Johri

    Aditya Swamy

    Pradeep Dwivedi

     

    In addition, the following industry professionals have been co-opted:

    Raj Nayak

    Sonia Huria

    Sidharth Rao

     

    And these are special invitees:

    Avinash Pant

    Kartik Sharma

    Ajay Chandwani

    Sapangeet Rajwant

    Namrata Tata

    Rathi Gangappa

    Sabbas Joseph

    Sanjay Adesara

    Vikas Khanchandani

    Malcolm Raphael

     

    Dasgupta will continue as a member of the Managing Committee as the Immediate Past President for the ensuing year.

  • Remembering Pradeep Guha

     

     

     

    Ramesh Narayan: My friend, Pradeep

     

    Pradeep proved to me that you could violently disagree with someone and still be friends, writes Ramesh Narayan

     

    Ramesh Narayan

    By Ramesh Narayan

     

    Sometime in the early nineties I signed on for a tour of Spain organised by the India Chapter of the International Advertising Association (IAA). I was a rookie in the advertising industry and I looked in awe at veterans like Mukul Upadhyaya, Amol Bose, Pheroza Bilimoria, Mohini Bhullar and Pradeep Guha. Yes, his reputation preceded him even then.

     

    He was the man who was building up the Times of India Group into this formidable money-making machine.

     

    In a couple of years, we were travelling to Cancun for a World Congress of the IAA. This time, I knew Pradeep slightly better. At London, where we checked in again for the second half of our flight, he sauntered up to the Business Class queue where I was (he was travelling first class) and cautioned me to ensure my bags had been loaded. I did, and when we landed in Cancun, my bags were there, but his weren’t. And so we spent half a day shopping for some basics for him.

     

    And that was the beginning of dozens of flights and trips we did together for a host of reasons. We were the most unlikely friends. He loved shopping, I never shopped. He was an extroverted partygoer, I preferred to be in bed by 11pm.

     

    But it was sometime in the late nineties when India (to be read as Pradeep Guha and Goutan Rakshit) decided to make a bid to bring AdAsia to India that we really became a threesome.

     

    Flashes of incidents come back to me.

     

    I excitedly told him that I had managed to wrest a 15-minute slot at the IAA World Congress in Beirut to pitch the AdAsia. He looked at me and said: “You really think those guys want to see you and me on stage? Let’s get Miss World to invite them instead”. And so Pradeep, Priyanka Chopra, the reigning Miss World and I flew to Beirut. I made the presentation and then Priyanka in her gown and wearing the crown and sash came on to invite the audience to India, promising to meet them there as well.

     

    During the build-up to the AdAsia I was at the Times of India office every day from 2 to 7pm for about six months. The security assumed I was some senior employee and saluted me all the way to Pradeep’s well-designed room. Here, he poured every minute detail that could make this a memorable Congress. From the bus routes to the venue to the staff who would clean the toilets, no detail was too small for him.

    And thanks to his personal goodwill, Mukesh Ambani, Kumarmangalam Birla, Amitabh Bachchan, Priyanka Chopra and Shah Rukh Khan all graced the AdAsia. And his name never appeared in the media. He made me the face of the AdAsia with a sardonic: “I will not allow the TOI to carry my picture. And the other newspapers won’t carry it in any case. So you have to do the honours”.

     

    In 2008, a call from him brought me back from organic farming to my second innings with the advertising industry. He was taking over as President of the IAA and he insisted I be at least a mancom member with him.

     

    In 2011, after the completion of the AdAsia in Delhi, we were driving to an after-party hosted by a friend. I told him of an ethical problem I was facing in accepting a large company which was faced with pollution charges as our sponsor for the fledgling Olive Crown Awards. He listened and quietly said: “I’ll do it”. And for three years after that 9XM sponsored the Awards.

     

    In my year as President of the Rotary Club I asked for speakers, a star Chief Guest for a function at a Municipal school and TV time. He never said no to me.

     

    Even in 2014 when we were organising the silver jubilee Summit of the IAA, I called him and said he should somehow get Shah Rukh Khan to come for the opening session of the conference in Kochi. He just said, “You deliver a jet. I’ll deliver SRK”. And that was it.

     

    On the work front, as President of the AAAI, I was able to recover many longstanding dues from errant clients for our members simply because as regional Chairman of the INS he was happy to arm me with a letter that would place an embargo on the advertising of those clients if they didn’t pay up.

     

    Pradeep had the dubious distinction of being the author of the Page 3 culture. He also helped birth the Bombay Times and though he didn’t personally usher in the era of paid news, he half-heartedly oversaw it. He knew how to make anything into a huge spectacle. The Filmfare awards, the Miss India pageants, even the Bombay Times party. It was the only party people lusted to get invited to. However, through all this he never took his eye off the ball. All these efforts were aimed at brand-building for the various publications of the Times of India group.

     

    Here was a large-hearted man. Sure we had our differences, including one bitter exchange of hot words at KL airport over the theme of the 2019 IAA World Congress. But when the Congress was over and it turned out so well, we were back to our old relationship. Pradeep proved to me that you could violently disagree with someone and still be friends.

     

    Ambi Parameswaran, as President of Advertising Club honoured Goutam, Pradeep and me on stage and called us the Three Musketeers of the advertising industry.

    We lost Goutam last year. Pradeep a couple of days ago, and I stand bereft.

     

    Ramesh Narayan is a veteran and awardwinning industryperson and headed various media industry associations

     

     

     

    Partho Dasgupta: Live like a King again, Boss

     

    The outpouring of love, respect, devotion as well as a sense of despair and loss – in words and pictures – in newspapers, and social media posts though don’t do justice to the Man himself, writes Partho Dasgupta

     

    Partho DasguptaBy Partho Dasgupta

     

    It’s amazing to see the various social media posts on PG (The Boss) pouring in through the weekend. So many, just so many have remembered him with their memories of the man who shines today as one of the brightest stars of the media and advertising world out there. The outpouring of love, respect, devotion as well as a sense of despair and loss – in words and pictures – in newspapers, and social media posts though don’t do justice to the Man himself. He is (yes, not using the past tense still) a man who is bigger than all this.

     

    He was a towering personality in the Old lady of Boribunder (Times – VT building) whose presence in every review meeting or otherwise meant one learnt something that day. I still remember presenting The Economic Times  efforts in franchising the brand into regional languages by providing a page of the top news in the local language but with English ET masthead. He taught me never to use the term Vernacular – since it meant the language of the Vernas i.e the slaves. I have always learnt from him how to think strategically, thinking big and to encourage people instead of pulling them up for their mistakes.

     

    The way he gave the Indian event industry a new scale, stature, and glamour, was unprecedented. He was a man who always thought way ahead of his time, encouraged people to perform and partied hard to get amazing results. I still remember the way he organised the Abbys with SRK and stars performing on stage as the President, The Advertising Club. From there on the AdAsia at Jaipur to the recent IAA World Congress at Kochi – he brought the world to recognise and witness the Indian advertising industry at its best. I doubt anyone else could do that.

     

    He was the life of every party. His Diwali do every year was a sought after one and one where most erstwhile colleagues and senior people would meet. A man with excellent relationships, across industries and across levels, he loved to entertain. And lastly the managers he helped groom, the startups he advised, are there across the industry successfully managing their businesses – is the big legacy he left. I doubt we will see another PG again.

     

    Live like a King again, Boss.

     

     

    Partho Dasgupta, former CEO of BARC India, is Management Strategy Consultant and worked with The Times of India for many years

  • It’s official. Nakul Chopra to take charge as BARC CEO wef Aug 25

    By Our Staff

     

    Broadcast Audience Research Council India (BARC), the Indian television industry’s audience measurement body has announced that Nakul Chopra will be its new Chief Executive Officer effective August 25, 2021. Sunil Lulla has resigned his remit to pursue his ambition as an entrepreneur.

     

    Interestingly, Chopra was part of the BARC India Board in 2016 and was subsequently appointed Chairman of the body in 2018-19. In January 2020, he was appointed a member of its Oversight Committee. Chopra was CEO, India and South Asia of Publicis Worldwide, for over a decade. He was also President, Advertising Agencies Association of India (AAAI) from August 2016 to July 2018. AAAI is 20% owner of BARC.

     

    Speaking on his appointment, Chopra said: “I have had the benefit of a long association with BARC. The organisation has grown in measure and strength. TV continues to be the definitive screen of the Indian home – its strong reach and connect continues to elicit the trust of advertisers. I look forward to working with the very capable BARC team in further building on TV measurement and continuing the journey toward screen agnostic measurement.”

     

    Sunil Lulla
    Punit Goenka
    Punit Goenka

    Added Lulla: “After four decades of an exciting career in professional services, I now embark upon an entrepreneurial journey. I am privileged to have been able to contribute to BARC and this has been possible only because of the excellent team of professionals, a very supportive Board and the gold standard of Board-appointed committees. I wish Nakul Chopra all the success”.

     

    Said Punit Goenka, Chairman, BARC India, thanking Lulla and welcoming Chopra: “I thank Sunil for his stewardship of BARC and his efforts to enhance the strength of the BARC currency. I am very happy to welcome Nakul as the natural and unanimous choice of the Board for the continuing journey of adding robustness to the BARC currency and strengthening the governance of the world’s largest television audience measurement body”.

     

     

     

  • What next for B**C?

     

     

    By A Correspondent [Updated]

     

    [please read: https://www.mxmindia.com/2021/08/barc-makes-it-official-sunil-lulla-quits-nakul-chopra-to-take-charge-as-ceo-wef-aug-25/]

     

    In July this year, a not-so-little birdie told us that winds of change could be blowing soon in A&M-land. Some tangible movements were seen in the headquarters of one of the world’s largest television audience measurement bodies.

     

    This was suitably denied, and scoffed at. But we’ve seen such responses before. When the denial is a scoff, matlab, there is some black in the doll (ugh, dal mein kuch kaala hai!)

     

    So we stayed put, until a platform scooped the news on Thursday evening. It was more than just breaking khabar, it was laced with nuggets that presented the captain in rather poor light. But that’s possibly in keeping with what it (the platform) has done in the past, so we weren’t surprised, although saddened. If an offering is equally brutal to one and all, it’s fine. But when it gets selective, there is an unnecessary reason to attribute motives.

     

    But the hows and whys of the development aren’t the mainstay of this story. It just gave us an opportunity to drive home a concern.

     

    There are concerns. Who now will captain the ship?

     

    Who from the business is happy to increase her/his stress levels? Perhaps even start popping tranquilisers. Or get sugar levels astray. Whatever.

     

    Captaining a media audience measurement body in India is the world’s most thankless job. Note: not one of the most. It’s by far the worst. Worser, if there is such a word, than being the Municipal Commissioner of Mumbai. Try your utmost, the city will flood every year. You get the drift?

     

    While media measurement gets hit always, what happens in television is worse. It required a former captain of his tam, er, time, to be doing 56 sit-ups to build his endurance. Another former captain took to fast cars and gizmos to take his mind off. A recent one is a marathoner, and been, as they say, a lambi race ka ghoda. But the racetrack is full of thorns. It’s worse than the dirt tracks caused by the Mumbai rains.

     

    Heck, let’s not digress.

     

    The problem with the measurement body is that there is a tribe within which ought not to be rated so regularly, insists on doing so. Get 12-and-a-half more people to watch it in a certain geography, and you could tilt the balance in statistical analyses. So what do you do? Game the system.

     

    But this tribe has tightened the noose (again, no pun intended) on the business. And although it contributes just about 10 per cent to the coffers, it results in 90 per cent of the stress. The 90-10 principle.

     

    Then there are assorted corruption charges. Some proven, and a countless hot on the rumour circuit. Unproven, but not unimaginable.

     

    All and sundry attempt to cajole and bamboozle the captain and his/her team. Only conversations with some get sadly leaked in public. Others don’t. It’s gotten so bad that even though the ‘discreditors’ have been discredited, the discredited stay discredited.

     

    Back to the captain of the ship. It’s confirmed, he has opted out. Setting sail to something not-so-dramatically different soon. Let’s say, hypothetically, on a Thursday.

     

    And who will take controls. There’s no clear co-captain currently. There’s no deputy captain. The grapevine tells us that a former super-captain who also headed the body of one of the stakeholders may well hold interim charge. He’s nice man too. We know it. We’ve fought with him, but we’ve turned friends. And when he was super-captain, we heard he was a great guy. Just. And in a way he knows the system inside-out. Clearly not an outlier. [we were proved wrong here. he’s appointed full-time captain]

     

    But there are other concerns. It’s not the question of whether the industry deserves the measurement body, but is there a concerted effort to get rid of it? Perhaps there is. Perhaps there isn’t.

     

    We don’t know. But our heart bleeds. Too much bark, bite and backstabbing. Time that someone calls the bluff. Time that there’s some soulsearching. Atma chintan!

     

    Many of the law-enforcers are said to have failings, but do we do away with them? Do we make life this miserable that the boss opts out?

     

    Meanwhile, we at MxM shouldn’t be complaining. Doom in the world outside rings music to the newsperson’s ears. Sadly our ears too.

     

    Important: Any resemblance to any living and non-living objects, organisations and people (save MxM) is purely coincidental

     

  • BARC launches new ad campaign

    By Our Staff

     

    BARC India has launched a campaign, #MeasuringMoments. The campaign reaffirms the importance of television in Indian households, and it also showcases the accuracy in viewership trends via a series of narratives backed by data and insights.

     

    Speaking on the campaign, Rafiq Gangjee, Marcomm, BARC India, said: “BARC India is an organisation that is deeply rooted in measurement science and technology and over the last six years, we have been able to ascertain the fact that television continues to be the screen of the household. While the result of all we do lies in the dependable weekly currency we deliver to the industry, there are always greater stories to tell that depict the power that television has over viewers. Our campaign, #MeasuringMoments, reflects these numerous stories that lie within various folds of data and insights. We hope to bring life to these moments and establish a deeper connect with viewers.”

     

    Conceptualised and executed by the internal teams at BARC India with its agency, #MeasuringMoments – Where Data Does the Storytelling, is currently live on BARC India’s social media channels and will continue to provide regular insights on significant moments captured in our lives.

     

     

  • TV Ad Volumes up in H1 2021 over last 2 years

     

     

    By Our Staff

     

    Advertising volumes on linear television have grown in the first half of 2021 over the last two years. This has been reported by BARC India’s latest report titled ‘TV Ad Volumes Insights – The Mid-Year Analysis’.

     

    The ‘Think’ report indicates that H1 2021 witnessed higher growth with 12% and 37% increase in ad volumes if compared to 2019 and 2020 respectively. Said Aaditya Pathak, Head – Client Partnership & Revenue Function, BARC India: “Ad volumes for H1 2021 is promising and encouraging for the industry as a whole. The number of active advertisers and brands are also picking pace. There is a sharp increase in Ad Volumes from the top three advertisers and while FMCG continues to dominate by share, e-commerce category continues to see strong growth year on year. The auto sector has also made a comeback despite the impact of the second wave. Data for the first half of 2021 reinstates that while new advertisers have turned to television for widespread reach, existing ones continue to increase their attention to the medium.”

     

    FMCG continued to lead the share in H1 2021 with 566 mn seconds, a growth of 40% over H1 2019. Building sector registered 30.7 mn seconds of Ad Volumes; a 24% growth in H1 2021 versus H1 2019. Ad Volumes for BFSI sector grew by 7% over H1 2019 with 14.5 mn seconds in H1 2021.

     

    In fact volumes registered in June 2021 is the highest if compared to the same period for 2019 and 2020 despite the impact of the second wave of Covid-19. With a 6% growth in Ad Volumes over June 2019, June 2021 saw a total of 1839 advertisers and 3074 brands advertise on television.

     

    After a dip in June 2020, the auto sector made a strong comeback in June 2021 by registering a growth of 74%. With 3.94 mn seconds in June 2021, the auto sector is at par with the ad volumes it registered in June 2019. More impressively, the sector achieved 128% growth over May 2021. Likewise, Ad Volumes for the Telecom sector almost doubled in June 2021 over May 2021 and has registered 2x growth in June 2021 over June 2019.

     

    With 15.4 mn seconds in June 2021 alone, ad volumes for the E-commerce sector have registered a whopping growth of 56% when compared to June 2019. Currently at all-time high, the category constitutes a 12% share in the total ad volume pie.

     

    TV Ad Volumes, Insights: The Mid-Year Analysis

  • May 20121 observed marginally subdued ad volumes from April: BARC

    By Our Staff

     

    Television welcomed 63% new advertisers in May 2021. This and more data on advertising volumes was revealed by BARC India on Thursday.

     

    Said Aaditya Pathak, Head – Client Partnership & Revenue Function, BARC India on the release of BARC India’s ‘Think’ report for May 2021: “2021 began on a high note for television Ad Volumes. Despite a marginal dip from April 2021 due to the ongoing pandemic, Ad Volumes in May 2021 have witnessed a significant growth of 64% as compared to May 2020 and have remained at par with previous years. Moreover, television attracted over 60% new advertisers of the Total Advertisers in May this year, indicating that advertisers continue to bank on the medium. With lockdown easing up and upcoming big events, we expect TV Advertising to remain strong this year.”

     

    Advertising on GEC and Movies genre continued to grow as per BARC India’s latest TV Ad Volumes Report. Ad Volumes on both the genres outperformed the same period for the previous three years and have registered a growth of 74% & 76% if compared to May 2020. Owing to the increasing consumption of regional content, advertising on South language GECs registered a staggering growth of 103% while the rest of the Regional GECs witnessed 53% growth in May 2021 vs May 2020. South Movies and Regional Movies channels witnessed 85% and 129% growth for the same period.

     

    Of the total of 2142 advertisers in May 2021, 1347 (63%) were new advertisers. FMCG category continued to dominate Ad Volumes with 72% share, followed by Ecom with 10% share in May 2021. While over 70% of Advertising was dominated by the Top 50 Advertisers in May 2021, the Top 10 advertisers had the highest share since 2018 with 54%. Advertising by the Top 10 advertisers continues to see steady growth.

     

    Growth observed in Ad Volumes in the first quarter of 2021 has evidently seeped into the ongoing second quarter of the year, despite state-wide partial lockdowns being implemented in various parts of the country. Moreover, the growth witnessed in May 2021 reinforces the strength and robustness of television as a medium.

     

  • RIP, Indu Jain. Conscience-keeper + Tribute by Sunil Lulla

    Picture courtesy Twitter. Copyright unknown

    Bennett, Coleman and Company Limited chairperson Indu Jain passed away late on Thursday evening after a Covid-related situation. She was 84. Ms Jain will be best remembered in the Indian media for her contribution to ensure that one of the largest and most successful media organisations in the country that she owned and spearheaded with her two sons – Samir and Vineet – also had a purpose. She is widely regarded as the conscience-keeper of the media empire, and helped mainstream spirituality and world peace into the newspapers her group ran. Our deepest condolences to the Sahu Jain family, specifically her sons, and the large number of people -—in the media and outside of it — whose lives she touched, and impacted.

    We invited Mr Sunil Lulla, CEO, BARC India, who has spent nearly a decade with BCCL and had a strong linkages with Ms Jain, to share a short tribute. 

     

    Spiritual Angel, Ms Indu Jain. A Tribute

     

    Sunil Lulla

    My life is privileged to be touched by the Spiritual Angel , whom we called Mataji and sometimes Chairperson – Ms Indu Jain. I was a latecomer to the Times group, where most have spent a few decades mastering the craft Times teaches so well.

     

    She was very enthusiastic in supporting the new/ to-be-started television network  with the rapid acquisition and build out of a generous studio space, in Mumbai.  Her passion has always been to  spread positivity messaging, be it in news or  via music to the youth. She understood the business compulsions and marketplace needs. In balance, she actively encouraged and facilitated by inviting her wise associates Sri Sri Ravishankar  and Sadhguru Jaggi Vasudev to spread their contemporary and positive message of well-being to millions of viewers.

     

    She bought balance to the space of heated debate and pulsating music in her own sagacious and peaceful way. When she learnt the architects had not followed the right protocol in the construction of the studio and office, she wisely suggested changes. As she stated, the right light, the right direction, sets the tone of success. I have always believed her action gave wings to the success of the Times Television Network.

     

    She will remain Mataji – forever. May her soul rest in peace.

    Sunil Lulla

    Chief Executive Officer

    BARC India