Tag: BBDOIndia

  • Glory eludes India @Cannes Lions 2012

     

    By A Correspondent

     

    1992 is not a year on which I shall look back with undiluted pleasure. In the words of one of my more sympathetic correspondents, it has turned out to be an Annus Horribilis. Thus spoke Queen Elizabeth II describing the year that was quite horrible for the British royal family. Now as the world celebrates 60 years of her Accession, the Latin phrase could be used for India’s performance at the Cannes Lions.

     

    Now that the 7-day grand creative festival has come to a close in the south of France, agencies that have emerged tall and triumphant from across the globe will be heading back to their respective continents to kick off celebrations.

     

    And that we guess India will miss out on, as the contingent make its way back home. Some have done so already as you read this. The boardrooms, bars and smokers’ areas will be busy as a new week commences with agencies trying to figure out what exactly went wrong. Or perhaps what didn’t go right. Some obvious questions that’ll come up for scrutiny are whether agencies have become too complacent and are taking their creative skills for granted or whether other countries have simply outsmarted India in the game of creative one upmanship.

     

    Few doubt the creative aptitude India possesses, having given a tough time to most agencies in the past but 2012 could easily be billed as the worst year thus far – just 14 metals in kitty when the number of entries that were sent were the highest at 1,182.

     

    Even in a dry year like 2008 where India had sent only 982 entries, the total metal count stood at 23. The only bad year was 2007 where India bagged just 12 metals but then one expects performances to see an upward spike year-on-year and not the other way round. It will be interesting to see the kind of reactions that emerge from the entrant companies in the ensuing days.

     

    Though it was a forgettable year for India , there were some agencies that shone bright and whose entries managed to win a few metals. Those that were hopeful of a win did just that and came back lapping up either Gold, Silver or Bronze in the respective categories. Mentos Sour Marbles by Ogilvy & Mather continued its winning spree across festivals as it bagged a bronze in the Press Lions category.

     

    Another sureshot that bagged India its metal was an entry by Leo Burnett for its client Bajaj Electricals for their exhaust fans. The team of KV Sridhar and Nitesh Tiwari carried on with their winning spree bagging Silver in the Press Lions category.

     

    In fact, the team of Leo Burnett carried on with their rich display by picking up a Media Lion Silver for its Doorstep School campaign in the Best Localised Campaign category.  Another entry from India that was sure of a win was Cheil Worldwide’s campaign for Samsung Printers. The work bagged a Media Lion Silver in Best Use of Integrated Media in Media Lions. BBDO India’s You Shave, I shave campaign for Gillette continued with its winning streak as it bagged a Bronze in the Media Lions category.

     

    While those that were touted to win did just that, it was the Gold winners that were the talk among the delegates at the Cannes Lions festival. The tally was opened by McCann Worldgroup which won an Outdoor Lions Gold for its client Western Union.

     

    An elated Prasoon collected the coveted prize on the dais. DDB Mudra’s ‘The Hinglish Project’ for Ministry of Tourism, Government of India was another Gold winner as it bagged the metal in the Design Lions category. The same project also won a bronze in the same category.

     

    Abhinay Deo

    The third Gold winner was the entry ‘I am Mumbai’ that was entered by Ramesh Deo Productions and the advertising agency for which was Taproot India . Abhinay Deo, on bagging the award, said: “There is no thumb rule for success. All I can say is that one has to be honest to his craft. Never make a film to win an award be it Cannes or any other, because then you surely won’t.”

     

    Failures Unlimited

    While that was about the winners, the conversation that dominated the festival during the latter half was the lack of wins by India across categories. The discussion was compounded by India failing to make the shortlist across categories too. India would definitely want to forget its showing in the Mobile Lions & Cyber Lions category where it didn’t manage a single shortlist.

     

    Even categories like Film Craft, Creative Effectiveness, Branded Content & Entertainment put up a poor show by bagging just a handful of nominations. In comparison, categories like Radio and PR performed better with the shortlisted entries in either of them going on to win metals.

     

    In fact, the categories where India had the maximum number of shortlisted entries like Press and Outdoor too were failures as the conversion rate averaged about 10 per cent or so for each of them. Titanium & Integrated continued to elude the Indian contingent of bagging any metal.

     

    KV Sridhar

    The overall grim mood at the festival was highlighted by KV Sridhar, NCD, Leo Burnett India : “We are extremely satisfied with Leo Burnett’s performance at Cannes this year; getting three Lions is not an everyday event. The only disheartening thing being that India’s overall performance this year wasn’t gratifying. I think we need to push ourselves a little more to do well in such awards, because at the end of the day it’s not about how good your work is, but about how much better the world is performing than you.”

     

    Said Pratap Bose, COO, DDB Mudra Group, whose agency did win some big awards but not as many as they had hoped: “At the end of the day, as DDB Mudra, we were more hopeful as we did get 21 shortlists. Though this is an extended India problem as well. We did bag a Gold and that compensated a little. The standard to which the world has risen surpasses India to a very great extent hence India has got a lot of catching up to do. To sum it all, we are quite disheartened with the overall performance.”

     

    Pratap Bose

    Mr Bose’s comments on the creative standard of other agencies around the world rising to surpass India may all but be true. Why else would entries that stood a high chance of bagging a metal miss out on winning one? DDB Mudra’s work for Stedfast, Volkswagen and GeeBees Beverages were all assured of a win but sadly missed up winning any.

     

    Chaplin Chapters & Google Chrome by BBH India , Keeping the Legend Alive by McCann Worldgroup, Parle Agro by Creativeland Asia and A Day in the Life of India by Taproot were other worthy entrants too but were skipped for the sake of others that were found to be more deserving.

     

    Manish Bhatt

    Manish Bhatt, Founder-Director, Scarecrow and a jury member for Cannes, 2012, said, “I would say that winning at Cannes has a lot to do with probability, so many factors can work for or against a piece of work during the judging process. Also with my interactions with other jury members, I got a feel that many felt that while there is no disputing Indian creativity but the viability of that idea on various medium is restricted. As creativity is being redefined, there is a need to bring on an idea that can work on multiple platform. There is also a need to bring in more interactivity in our entries as thats what the judges are looking for.”

     

    Perhaps, it’s time for India to stop being looked upon as the ‘favourite’ one and for more creative ideas to spawn if we have to make a rousing comeback in 2013.

     

    We could then look forward to a wonderful year… Annus Mirabilis may be

     

    With inputs from Shubhangi Mehta, Tuhina Anand and Meghna Sharma

     

    Cannes Lions 2012 Winning Entrant

    Gold

    Silver

    Bronze

    Bacardi India

    1

    BBDO India

    2

    Cheil Worldwide

    1

    DDB Mudra

    1

    1

    Leo Burnett

    2

    1

    McCann Worldgroup

    1

    Ogilvy India

    3

    Ramesh Deo Productions

    1

    In alphabetical order of agency names

     

    Imaging: Rafiq

    Photograph of Abhinay Deo: Fotocorp

     

  • DDB Mudra, Leo Burnett within touching distance of each other on metals tally

    By A Correspondent [updated]

     

    With 11 out of 15 categories already finding their fate at the grand creative stage of excellence-Cannes,India’s performance at this juncture doesn’t paint an impressive picture. Out of a total 84 shortlists that India has managed to garner against its name across the 11 categories announced till date, only 12 have managed to find their way into the winners tally. A recap of India’s performance thus far shows the country having two Golds, three Silvers and 10 Bronzes in its kitty.

     

    On day 4, India managed to pick up 1 Gold, 1 Silver and 5 bronzes. The Gold was bagged by DDB Mudra Group for its entry ‘The Hinglish Project’ in Design Lions category. It also won a bronze for the same entry. The other Gold for India was bagged by McCann Worldgroup for its client ‘Western Union’ in the Outdoor Lions category. As for the Silvers, it is Leo Burnett that is leading the way with 2 Silvers including one in Press Lions for its client Bajaj Electricals and the other for Doorstep School in the Media Lions category.

     

    Leading the list among the agencies is DDB Mudra with 32 points (including 22 points from shortlists). At the second place is Leo Burnett with 30 points against its name. If not for the points accumulated from shortlisted entries, Leo Burnett would’ve been placed at the top spot. Coming in third is Ogilvy India that has a total of 19 points against its name, including 3 Bronzes that it has bagged so far. It is a close call between the fourth and the fifth spots with BBDO India sitting at 14 and McCann WorldGroup sitting at 13. Cheil Worldwide is next with 8 points including 1 Silver that it won for Samsung. Brand David is next with 4 points followed by Publicis and Bates at 2 each. The remaining ten agencies are placed at the same spot (tenth) having bagged a point each for their respective shortlists.

     

    With four more categories to go, including Film Lions, Film Craft Lions, Branded Content & Entertainment and Titanium & Integrated Lions, the table is still wide open. Whether a new contender will emerge at the top and whether India will compare this year’s metals tally to that of the past will be known in a couple of days. Note this does include the shortlists announced today.

     

    Agency Titanium Grand Prix Grand Prix, Titanium Gold Silver Bronze Shortlist Total
    Points 12 10 7 5 3 1
    DDB Mudra 1 0 1 22 32
    Leo Burnett 0 2 1 17 30
    Ogilvy India 0 0 3 10 19
    BBDO India 0 0 2 8 14
    McCann Worldgroup 1 0 0 6 13
    Cheil Worldwide 0 1 0 3 8
    Brand David 4 4
    Taproot India 3* 3*
    Bates India 2 2
    Publicis Communications 2 2
    BBH India 1*+1 1*+1
    JWT Mumbai 1 1
    Creativeland Asia India 1 1
    TBWA\ India 1 1
    M&C SAATCHI 1 1
    OMD India 1 1
    Mindshare 1 1
    Draftfcb + Ulka 1 1
    Grey Worldwide 1 1
    PERCEPT/H 1 1
    Bacardi India 1* 1*

     

     

    * Winners to be announced on Saturday late evening @ Cannes

     

  • ‘The Hinglish Project’ and 6 other wins add on to India’s tally on Day 4

    By A Correspondent

     

    Day 4 at the Grand Auditorium, Palais des Festivals was not as eventful for the Indian contingent as the metals failed to come in big numbers as envisaged. India managed to clinch only 7 metals, including 1 Gold, 1 Silver and 5 Bronzes in the four categories for which the winners were declared – Design, Press, Radio & Cyber. In Cyber there were no shortlists from India.

     

    The Gold was bagged in the Design Lions category which had a total of eight shortlists from India. DDB Mudra Group was the winner of the lone Gold for their work ‘The Hinglish Project’, bagged under the Consumer Services category, the work was for Ministry of Tourism under the Incredible India initiative.

     

    Ogilvy & Mather’s work for Mentos Sour Marbles saw it bag a Bronze

    The creative credits for the entry include Sonal Dabral, Chairman & Chief Creative Officer, Pratap Bose, Chief Operations Officer, Louella Rebello, ECD, Shirin Johari, Associate Creative Director – Copy & Art, Michael Remedios, Agency Producer & Warren Pereira of W Films.

     

    Incidentally, The Hinglish Project also bagged a Bronze in the Design Typography category. Reacting to the win, Louella Rebello, ECD, DDB Mudra Mumbai said: “The Hinglish Project has been a labour of love. We named it ‘The Hinglish Project’ because it is exactly that. A project that aims to demystify Hindi and make it familiar and more approachable by using a wonderful blend of the two languages. It was very well received and appreciated even before it was entered and the Cannes Lions are testimony to this. Kudos to Shirin Johari. At DDB Mudra, it’s champagne time as we bring home our Lions.”

     

    Perhaps the biggest disappointment for the Indian contingent was in the Press Lions category where it managed only four metals out of a total of 30 shortlists. The big winner was Leo Burnett as it bagged Silver for its client Bajaj Electricals. Leo Burnett bagged the award in the Home Appliances & Furnishings category; the creative team for which included KV Sridhar – CCO, Nitesh Tiwari – ECD, Vikram Pandey – CD, Vikram Pandey – Copywriter, Brijesh Parmar – Art Director, Amol Jadhav – Photographer, Sushma Singh/Adya Thakur – Account Supervisor and Beena Koshy – Advertiser’s Supervisor.

     

    The Print category also brought in three Bronzes forIndiawhich included one by Ogilvy & Mather for Mentos Sour Marbles – the team for which included Abhijit Avasthi/Rajiv Rao, CCO, Priti Arora, CD, Tushar Pal, Copywriter, Deelip Khomane, Illustrator and Typographer.

     

    O&M bagged another Bronze in Press Lions for its work around Hot Wheels

    The other bronze went to BBDO India for its ‘White Collar Hippies’ campaign – the team for which comprised Josy Paul, CCO, Rajdeepak Das, ECD, Sandeep Sawant, CD, Yohan Daver, copywriter; while the third Bronze went to Ogilvy & Mather for ‘Hotwheels’ for its client Mattel Toys – the team for which included Abhijit Avasthi/Rajiv Rao, CCO and Sukesh Kumar Nayak, ECD & Copywriter.

     

    The other Bronze was bagged in the Radio Lions category by Leo BurnettIndiafor Strand Bookstall. The team for the campaign was led by K V Sridhar, CCO, Nitesh Tiwari, ECD and Ashwiny Iyer Tiwari, CD of Leo Burnett.

     

  • How India fared @ Cannes in 2009-2011

     

    From the MxM Infodesk

     

    Adlanders from India wouldn’t want to forget 2009 in a hurry. If the slowdown of 2008-09 was one reason for gloom to descend on the industry, there was good news too – in the form of Cannes Lions – the pinnacle of award shows in the creative arena. With 25 metals,India beat all odds and set an example for global creative powerhouses to sit up and take notice.

     

    While the current economic growth has witnessed a decline in recent times, the number of entries that have been sent to Cannes Lions from India is at its highest. For the record, there are 34,301 entries from 87 countries that have been submitted to the Cannes Lions, of which 1,182 pieces have been entered from India. This is slightly more than the last year’s figure of 1,177 entries.

     

    A quick recap into India’s previous performances at the festival throws up interesting facts. Like 2009, the year 2011 too ended on a good note for India as it managed to accumulate a total of 24 metals – just one short of India’s highest ever tally of 25 Lions in 2009. With 4 Golds, 7 Silvers and 13 Bronzes, it was a memorable year for most agencies as hopeful entries ended up bagging the coveted metals. This was after India ended up putting 42 shortlists under its name.

     

    Mudra Communications emerged the ace performer as it ended up with three Silver Lions, five Bronze Lions and nine shortlisted entries. They were followed by BBDO India that bagged two Silvers, one Bronze metal and seven shortlists scoring 20 points. Ogilvy & Mather India with 13 points ended up third. McCann Worldgroup came next and was followed by Lodestar UM and Taproot India tying for the fifth place.

     

    As for the entries, the one that caught maximum attention was ‘Silent National Anthem’ by Mudra that won a total of four metals – one Silver metal and three Bronze metals. Another noteworthy entry was BBDO India’s ‘W.A.L.S – Women Against Lazy Stubble’ for Gillette that bagged the inaugural Creative Effectiveness Lion. Ogilvy & Mather too won metals for their entry ‘Train’ for Indian Railways and for Mentos Sour Marbels entries – Guillotine, Snake and Gun. McCann’s work for Onida Mobile Phones also enabled them to bag a couple of awards.

     

    In contrast, 2010 was one of the tough years for Indian ad agencies as they managed only 17 metals comprising 3 Golds, 6 Silvers and 8 Bronzes. The tally picked up pace towards the latter part of the event, offering a glimmer of hope to the delegates assembled, who otherwise were faced with the scare of India losing out on its popularity to outside countries.

     

    What was disheartening was that India drew a blank in most categories including Titanium, Integrated and Film Craft but finished well in Print, Design and Outdoor. While Publicis won a Gold Lion Campaign for the work done for Publicis Communications, Ogilvy won a Bronze Lion for the work done for Department of Posts. Aman Ki Asha and TransAsia Papers were the two entries by Taproot India that scored big at the awards. Tide Dirt Magnets by Leo Burnett was another entry that received due credits at the awards show. If not the metals, the delegates were perhaps comforted by way of august speakers who turned up at the event to share their knowledge on the given subject. It also witnessed Piyush Pandey and Agnello Dias taking part in discussions on the stage – a fact that was earlier moaned by Indian adlanders quite aloud.

     

    As for 2009, it was the best so far for India as it bagged 25 metals including 4 Golds, 7 silvers and 13 Bronzes out of a possible 42 shortlists. The highlight of the year was India winning its first Film Lion Gold, which was awarded to JWT India for the work done for The Times of India Chennai launch, entry titled A Day in the Life of Chennai. The entry by Senthil Kumar was awarded Gold in the Film Craft category and the in Music category. As for the agency tally, it was Ogilvy that emerged triumphant with 27 points followed by JWT India at 26 points. Publicis and Leo Burnett came third and fourth respectively. Other notable winners were Happy Dent’s Palace, Fevicol’s Bus, Neo Sports’s Gas entry, etc.

     

    Other notable winners included MediaCom India bagging a Gold Lion and a Silver Lion for ‘To Shave or Not to Shave’ campaign done for Procter & Gamble’s Gillette, Maxus bagging two Bronze Lions – one for ’20 Million Experiences’ for Tata Sky and one for ‘Midas Touch’ for Nokia India, Lodestar Universal bagging a Bronze for Nano and Madison Media winning a Bronze for ‘Say Condom, Aloud’ for BBC World Service Trust.

     

    Metals Tally in 2011

    Gold – 3

    Silver – 10

    Bronze – 10

    Creative Effectiveness metal: – 1

    Total No. of Metals - 24

     

    Metals Tally in 2010

    Gold – 3

    Silver – 6

    Bronze – 8

    Total No. of Metals - 17

     

    Metals tally in 2009

    Gold – 4

    Silver – 7

    Bronze – 13

    Total metals – 25