Tag: Biba

  • Biba ropes in Renuka Singh Thakur for campaign

    Biba, fashion brand, uveiled its digital campaign “Strength Meets Style,” centred around celebrating women of India. Featuring cricketer Renuka Singh Thakur, the campaign aims to shatter stereotypes modern Indian women face. Premiered around International Women’s Day, this film draws inspiration from real-life experiences to deliver a raw and relatable portrayal of societal expectations placed upon women, juxtaposing them with Renuka Singh Thakur’s authentic journey that defies those limitations.

    Said Siddharth Bindra, Managing Director, BIiba Fashion: “At BIBA, we’ve always believed in celebrating the spirit of womanhood and are proud to champion the incredible women who are redefining what it means to be authentic, powerful, and stylish. With Renuka at the heart of this campaign, we are celebrating women and paying respect to their strength and grit. We hope this film inspires women across India to embrace their individuality and rewrite their stories.”

  • Taproot Dentsu wins mandate for Biba ethnic wear

    By Our Staff

     

    Taproot Dentsu has been awarded the creative duties for the Indian ethnic brand, BIBA. The account was won following a multi-agency pitch and will be serviced from the agency’s Gurgaon office.

     

    As per the mandate, Taproot Dentsu will create campaigns for BIBA’s ‘2022 spring-summer collection’. The focus will be on the brand’s fresh perspective on today’s woman and its commitment to providing her ample choice in terms of outfits, irrespective of the occasion.

     

    Siddharath Bindra

    Speaking of the association, Siddharath Bindra, Managing Director, BIBA said, “We are excited to partner with Taproot Dentsu as our creative partner for BIBA. They bring to the table a good mix of understanding the category and interesting creative outputs for the same. We look forward to our partnership and creating some great campaigns together.”

     

    Added Abhinav Kaushik, Executive Vice President & Head of Office, Taproot Dentsu Gurugram: “Biba is a well-established brand that every woman has seen, heard of, and at some point, shopped from. To work with such a well-entrenched brand in giving it a contemporary voice that will connect with the woman of today is both exciting and challenging. We are working closely with the Biba team for their upcoming collections and are gearing up to create a fantastic campaign for 2022.”

     

  • Publicis India wins creative mandate of Biba

    By A Correspondent

     

    Ethnic fashion brand for women Biba has appointed Publicis India as its creative agency. Won after a multi-agency pitch, Publicis India will be providing full-service responsibilities including advertising, strategic direction and brand activation ideas. The account will be serviced out of New Delhi. Biba, it may be recalled, is known for its ‘hat ke’ creative work by Lowe Lintas.

     

    Siddharath Bindra

    Commenting on the appointment, Siddharath Bindra, Managing Director, Biba Apparels said: “I am happy to associate with Publicis as our communication partner for our brand Biba as the company brings quality of experience with them. For Biba; we always look for a partner who can understand and resonate with the aesthetic of the brand and we saw this in the Team and the work they presented. We look forward to partnering with them.”

     

    Srija Chatterjee

    On winning the account, Srija Chatterjee, Managing Director, Publicis India added: “We are delighted to have Biba Apparels as our client. It also feels great that our strategic approach and communication idea found resonance with what Biba has in mind for the Indian market and hope to maintain the brand as a favourite of Indians. To reinterpret a brand’s strength is once-in-a-lifetime opportunity and we are looking forward to working on it.”

     

     

  • Biba questions ‘body shaming’ culture in latest campaign

    By A Correspondent

     

    Biba Girls has launched a thought-provoking digital campaign – ‘ChangeTheQuestion’, a short film which questions the issue of body shaming. This film is an extension to the’Change’ series of campaigns by the brand.

     

    Conceptualised by Brandmovers, the #changethequestion film opens with a conversation between husband and wife while they are getting ready for an evening outing when they are interrupted by their daughter, who is dressed in her ethnic best. She asks them a seemingly a small question which urges them to introspect. The film reiterates the thought that ‘We are beautiful in our own way’

     

    Sharing his views on the film, Siddharth Bindra, Managing Director, Biba, said, “It’s the success of our earlier films and the conversations they sparked that urged us to create another film. We realized that in whatever way, we were bringing about a shift in people’s lives and perspectives. Similarly, this film touches on the topic of negative body image tactfully and how it’s a growing concern not only amongst women but young girls too. The film delivers a strong message through a very sweet story that is sure to have an impact on the audiences.”

     

    Added Suva Ghosh, Chief Creative Officer, Brandmovers India: “Just like with the earlier films which we have created for BIBA, the idea was to initiate a wave of change. We were working on a very strong insight with this film – women all over the world are worried about the way they look. We spoke to a lot of people and realised that the problem ran deep – a simple question like ‘Am I looking fat?’ can be damaging not just to themselves, but also to people around them. We are to be blamed for the world we are shaping; with such campaigns we are trying to strive to make the world a happier and a better one.”

     

  • BIBA seeks to #ChangeThePerception in latest campaign

    By A Correspondent

     

    After its powerful message on gender prejudice in arranged marriages, BIBA has come up with another gripping digital film on dowry-a social iniquity which is still prevalent in our society. The film was launched on the eve of International Women’s day to mark the day and to send out a strong message.

     

    The second film draws attention towards the mindset of the older generation, who still believe that dowry is the birthright of every groom on account of merely being a man. It showcases an average age couple who just have fixed a match for their son and a grandmother who still believes in seeking dowry; the reaction of the couple to this demand will leave the audience amused.

     

    The film subtly talks about the change that is slowly occurring in the minds of people as they realize that deep-rooted practices like dowry are archaic in value and hold no relevance in today’s vastly progressive world. This change in attitude has not just transpired in the bride’s family but also in the groom’s family.

     

    Sharing his views on this digital film, Siddharth Bindra, MD, BIBA said, “After a grand success of our first digital film, BIBA is pleased to present the second film of the campaign- #ChangeThePerception as a part of the Change Is Beautiful series. The feedback encouraged us to move forward and take up another, more serious social issue of the Dowry system. With this ad film we have attempted to take a different and positive take on the changing world. As an ode to womanhood, BIBA dedicates this ad film to the Indian woman on this International Women’s Day and beautifully captures the message of- Change Is beautiful. This film is all about embracing and celebrating that change.”

     

    Biba’s stand for changing ideologies in order to establish a forward-thinking society also managed to instate that change is always beautiful and better! The Chief Creative Officer of Brandmovers, the agency behind the conceptualization of this film and Biba’s digital agency on record, Suva Ghosh said,” Dowry has been a tradition in our country for years and still continues to be. We wanted people to realizethat their take on this issue is mistaken, especially the generation that still refuses to see it as a social evil through this witty take on the issue and extend BIBA’s stand of changing the convention”.

     

  • The long and short of storytelling

     

    By Amit Bapna

     

    After last year’s crop of online specials, we are well and truly in the age of the long (anything beyond 30 seconds) films these days. Playing out mostly on digital media, some of these films had us rolling on the floor laughing, desperately hunting for a box of tissues and every emotion in between. But we are left with an uncomfortable question: does occasionally great filmmaking make for great brandbuilding? Especially at a time when brand connect is often nebulous and far-fetched? Euphemistically called branded content, this genre seems to be the new ‘Holy Grail’ for many marketers. Biba’s ‘Change is Beautiful’, Anouk’s ‘Bold is Beautiful’, homeware brand Cello’s ‘mother-daughter’ film and Lenovo’s #Goodweird campaign are some recent examples of films bidding for engagement through subtle branding. But in pursuit of subtlety, have they missed the branded part of the equation entirely?

     

    A two=minute film from ethnic apparel brand Biba was all about addressing societal biases of arranged marriages in India. If it was not for the last shot with the brand logo, many a viewer would not realise that the bill for their viewing pleasure (or otherwise), has been footed by a brand called Biba. About walking this thin line between messaging and content delivery, Siddharth Bindra, managing director of Biba says, “The brand is giving a point of view on subjects which are important for today’s women”, and that in his view is resulting in a strong corelation (between the film and the brand). The 10 million views clocked within 7 days of launch signifies the point of view of (our) customers, he adds. The brief for the agency was to create engagement around the brand, via content that creates conversations says Suva Ghosh, founder and chief creative of ficer, Brandmovers, the agency behind the film. Mostly social issues like equality, women empowerment, and gender choices create conversations, get shared and tend to go viral, he adds.

     

    Myntra’s private label brand, Anouk, one of the 11 private labels in the online player’s portfolio wanted to identify with free spirited, modern Indian women. The reason, according to Abhishek Verma, head, Myntra Fashion Brands is that most brands in the ethnic category take a more product driven route. And so films touching on a host of issues like single parenting, eve teasing, lesbianism, and the most recent one on gender discrimination at the workplace. All of them have been well-mounted creative renditions and are linked by the common feature of not having any direct product-connection. How is the brand benefitting? Are the 15.5 lakh views garnered by the brand enough for it to rest on its laurels?

     

    Verma agrees that likes and shares cannot be the measure of success and would like to be evaluated a year from now on how these films, taken together, have worked for the brand. “A year from now we would like to be known as a brand that stands for freedom of women”, he says.

     

    What makes this particularly relevant is a backdrop where marketing budgets are under severe scrutiny and every campaign has to justify its ROI. So, if a few brands are opting to feed prospects a diet of brand-less communication, what are the chances of it registering? For Dheeraj Sinha, chief strategy officer, South & South East Asia, Grey it’s not about how many times the brand name appears, but how engaging the communication is and whether it goes with the stance of the brand.

     

    Brands are treading this path for multiple reasons and often floundering. While the comparative cost of the digital medium when pitted against TV rates make it look cheaper for now, many stumble because of the ambiguous positioning that the digital medium has been accorded in the minds of many media planners and creative mavens. As somebody famously pointed out, the ‘storytelling muscle’ in organizations has atrophied from lack of use over the years as we basked in the glory of mass media.

     

    Rishi Dogra, former PepsiCo-man and currently CMO, babajob.com, an online job portal for aspiring workers bemoans the fact that the approach of traditional marketing towards digital video content has its roots in a system that has been architectured for TV with too much focus on percentage time allocated between branded message and the rest of the narrative. At his new company, the team has created a unit called BabaLab which would focus on original programming, relevant to the portal’s ecosystem. He plans to collaborate with young filmmakers across the globe.

     

    Whatever be the journey, a long-term approach to branded content is a must-do: the brand needs to get known for the kind of stories it tells over time. The other big must-do, according to Sinha, is to play the branded content game on a slightly longer term basis, unlike the current sniper approach and the force-fit to click-topurchase metrics.

     

    The 6-minute long Lenovo film created in collaboration with The Viral Fever to promote its multimode Yoga convertibles and tablets, and Cello’s 7 minute long film showing the laboured journey of a mother’s life are two different genres of story-telling, both very subtle in their brand connect. They and the sundry others like them face the challenge of getting lost in the traffic eventually — the large swathe of ‘likes’ and ‘shares’ notwithstanding — if they do not follow the rulebook. Else to conventional wisdom, these brand-less films end up the equivalent of a luxurious self-indulgent night-out.

     

    Source:The Economic Times

    Copyright © 2016, Bennett, Coleman & Co. Ltd. All Rights Reserved

    Licensed to republish

     

  • Slowdown? Top brands report 30% jump in festive sales

    By Writankar Mukherjee & Sagar Malviya

     

    The festive season sales have started off well in most of the country with marketers reporting up to 30% jump in year-on-year sales as consumers swarmed malls and markets in the first weekend after the Shraadh fortnight.

     

    Top retailers and brands such as Samsung, Peter England, Woodland, Van Heusen, Indigo Nation, Biba and Scullers attributed the positive start to festive sales to pent-up demand, 10% hike in dearness allowance for more than 80 lakh central government employees and pensioners, and the payout of festival bonus. “The festive season has started off in good spirit,” Harkirat Singh, managing director at shoes and apparel retailer Woodland, said. “There has been a modest 30% jump in sales, with consumers buying for themselves and gifting,” he said.

     

    Consumer electronics and durable-makers like Samsung and LG said that while sales in the east has picked up in the weekend before Durga Puja, in places such as Delhi and Mumbai, consumer enquiries, sales bookings and purchases of large-screen televisions and large home appliances such as side-by-side refrigerators and fully automatic washing machines have increased. Atul Jain, senior vice-president for consumer electronics at Samsung India, said the demand increased by up to 30% last weekend over the previous four days. “This gives us huge confidence as we enter the festival season,” he said. Samsung is targeting a 50% jump in sales in east and 40% rise in national festive sales to around Rs 3,500 crore.

     

    The festive spirit was most palpable in Kolkata where malls were choc-a-bloc this weekend and there were long queues in front of popular stores such as Sreeleathers and Baazar Kolkata on Sunday evening.

     

    Some like Sreeleathers kept their store open from 6 am till 10 pm. SB Dey, partner at the leather products retailer, said that despite extending operational hours, huge rush created long queues outside all his stores. At Great Eastern, the largest durable retailer in the east, sales started picking up from the last week despite heavy rains, its director Pulkit Baid said, adding that sales are up 15-20% over last year. The pick-up in consumer demand has come as a relief for retailers after lukewarm sales during Onam, Kerala’s biggest festival, last month.

     

    Future Group-owned apparel maker Indus League, which owns and sells brands like Indigo Nation, Scullers and Jealous Jeans, said it had to rush in fresh stocks to several outlets across several cities including New Delhi and Mumbai.

     

    “We did not anticipate such a huge demand since Onam sales were comparatively dull this year,” Indus League CEO Rachna Aggarwal said.

     

    Women’s ethnic fashion brand Biba said its sales have grown 35-40% so far this season, almost double the pace of its expectation. “During this season, we usually see a lot of traction in heavy clothing sets which cost around Rs 8,000. But this year, consumers are not shying away from buying garments priced up to Rs 20,000,” Siddharth Bindra, managing director at Biba, said.

     

    Men’s apparel brands Van Heusen and Peter England said their sales are growing 40% and up to 25%, respectively, in the east. “However, sales growth is yet to touch what it was in 2011,” Kedar Apshankar, chief operating officer at Peter England, said.

     

    Source:The Economic Times

    Copyright © 2013, Bennett, Coleman & Co. Ltd. All Rights Reserved

    Licensed to republish