Tag: Chitralekha Group

  • Chitralekha’s Mitrajit Bhattacharya moves on

    By A Correspondent

     

    Mitrajit Bhattacharya

    Mitrajit Bhattacharya, who has been with the Chitralekha Group since January 2001, has decided to move on to pursue his entrepreneurial interests. He had joined the group as Vice President – Ad Sales and soon took over as the President and Publisher in early 2005.

     

    Said Maulik Kotak, Chairman, Chitralekha Group: “Mitrajit has been an integral part of the Group’s success story over the years, having conceptualised and contributed towards projects like Watch World Awards, Music Concerts and our 60th anniversary celebrations. He was seeking time to devote to his entrepreneurial ambitions and follow his various passions. We wish him all the success on his new journey.”

     

    Added Bhattacharya: “It has been a splendid journey running such a vibrant and dynamic brand. I am happy to leave the group on a solid footing and an able team who will take it to newer heights. I thank the Kotak family and all members of my team for being a pillar of support for me all these years”.

     

     

  • Chitralekha unveils Niraj Srivastava’s award-winning novel

    By A Correspondent

     

    Chitralekha Group launched the international award-winning novel ‘Daggers Of Treason’ (The Curse of the Mughal Series) by Niraj Srivastava in Mumbai on Monday. Superstar Amitabh Bachchan graced the occasion as chief guest. The high-tea evening, hosted by ex-senior bureaucrat, Ashok Kacker and Chairman Chitralekha Group, MaulikKotaksaw theatre and film director, playwright and screenwriter, Firoz Abbas Khan reading excerpts from the book.

     

    On associating with the book launch, Chitralekha group President and Publisher Mitrajit Bhattacharya said: “We are delighted to be a part of this launch. The book is thoroughly researched and well-presented and can easily be an international bestseller. Mr. Bachchan having agreed to launch the book added so much meaning to the whole event.”

     

     

  • Digital is a given for Magazines

     

     

    A quick chat with Mitrajit Bhattacharya, outgoing president of AIM and Chitralekha group president & publisher on the sidelines of the Indian Magazine Congress held in Mumbai on Wednesday. Text and video by Santosh Jangid.

     

    The various adspend forecasts don’t paint a very good picture of the AdEx growth of magazines, in fact a recent WARC study which combines various studies puts the picture in the negative for 2016 and 2017. As President of the Association of Indian Magazines, what is your view on the magazine sector?

    There is a lot of good work that is happening by magazine brands and that is obviously moving into social media. If you see some of the legacy brands, the way they are catching up with social media, they are riding the wave. It is absolutely on par with any of the new age social media platforms. Also non-traditional format of experiential for magazines is a very weak source of revenue which if you see all major groups today activate major programmes whether they are events owned by them or they participate in major events. So if you look at Chitralekha as a group, we do a very large scale Bollywood concerts which sometimes have about 10 to 15,000 people. So they are very different kind of moneyspinners for the group. Similarly, if you look at the India Today group they have their own events which are pretty huge, similarly Outlook, Femina, Filmfare, they are doing major in the area of events. So events, digital, social media and all are coming together for magazines as a brand and I think we have to invest in this area and make the whole business profitable. Many brands have crossed the tide and started delivering profits for the investment that they have made in the past few years. I don’t see magazines in any trouble. It is as much in trouble as any other medium because it is completely unpredictable.

     

    Successive editions of the magazine congress in the past have been talking about digital. How effectively would you say is everyone embracing digital beyond the e-magazines and porting content online?

    I think we have crossed that stage many years ago. It is no longer the question of whether to get into digital or not because everyone is on digital platforms. A magazine like Filmfare is competing on social media with a company which is a year or two years old and covering celebrities and Bollywood. Digital is not a platform which we are discussing as magazine publishers whether to be in it or not. Different brands are on different stages of adoption on digital. Some brands have performed very well on Facebook, some people have done well on Twitter and some have adopted the newer platform like Snapchat in a better way. Each one depending on whether you are a news publications or gossip publication have adopted to different social media platforms but you cannot have the same game which is going to be played by a news magazine like India Today or a film magazine like Filmfare or a regional magazine like Chitralekha. Chitralekha is 66 years old in the print form where the age profile of readers is very mature. They are all 35+ where as if you see our social media presence, we have over 1 million active fans who are under 35 years of age. Each one is using digital to its own advantage and there is no one size fits all. Magazine industry has adopted digital fairly but having said that, are we all satisfied? Obviously not because the digital environment changes almost on a daily basis so what works today does not work tomorrow. So that is a continuous process and yes I must agree that the revenues are still not in line with customer acquisition and thats where we need to figure out how to keep the costs low and how revenues should be on par with the customer base which our digital assets have acquired.

     

    Are number of people visiting the online substantial enough to merit the spends on creating the content online?

    It is a chicken-and-egg story. If you don’t do it, you will not get it and if you do, you may have to wait. You may be successful, you may take time to be successful, you may not be successful. MPA (Magazine Publishers Association) results from the US quoted substantial jumps from mobile and the amount that mobile is contributing today is huge but not revenues. So the access today comes 62% from mobile but only 16-17% revenue comes from mobile. These are the gaps which need to get filled up. It is a constant challenge which is not particular to print or magazines but the same challenge is faced by television broadcasters. Your programme is not watched on a pre-appointed time which you see it on television. You may watch it when you want to watch it, in whichever format it is available. So I think, is Netflix affecting broadcasters? Yes, it is.

     

    What about paywalls? Some of the magazines are being sold online, but that is also being very heavily discounted

    There is no such formula. Our magazines online are equally priced if not higher than our print copies. It is not necessary that you need to have discounted prices and that’s how it sells. It’s also convenience, it is also dollar pricing. A printed copy may cost Rs 25 and the online copy may also cost the same. Highly discounted rates are for subscription models which is in print. Physical deliveries are also going through subscription of 50% – 70%  off. Digital online magazines are a highly profitable model but just the volumes need to jump.

     

    How effective is the monetisation happening online? Are print advertisers willing to pay extra for the digital edition?

    That is really where the problem comes. First, you need readership figures, you need measurement figures which is print plus online. Until you have the online measurement figures, it is difficult to demand a certain price for the advertisement which runs on the digital version. There are issues but digital copies and the revenues from the digital copies that you sell online if very good and that’s growing because it’s convenient. If you have a consumer who is in America who is waiting for two days to get the product delivered, he is okay about getting it online without waiting and today readability is much better. Phones are huge platforms. Currently, a lot of publishers are dumping the desktop data on mobiles and not creating content for mobiles. Mobile is very different from digital because with digital you create something and start putting in different formats but in mobile first, you create content only for mobile devices. That is where the tipping point would be, as to how big the mobile category is so that you start investing for content which is only for mobile.

     

    Despite the negative view on advertising spends and readership of magazines, we still have new magazines being launched, especially in the B2B arena?

    The launch of magazine is not an expensive proposition. So if you have conviction, lot of people launch magazines because the cost of launching a B2B magazine is pretty low but I don’t believe in that concept because you should not launch a product because it is cheap to launch it. If you see the spate of products coming in the market, it has really slowed down. We have had hardly any major magazine which has been launched in the last two to three years whereas a lot of them have either closed down or recalibrate. That’s the maturing up of the market. You see a lot of global licences which were given to Indian publishers they have pretty much realised there is not so much of a market here and they have gone back. I don’t think that mad rush of launching magazines is any longer there and talking about B2B, people launch because it is cheap and economical to launch. They try their hand out, if it works, it works, if it doesn’t work it’s fine. I must add that B2B magazines have a great role in building communities which they can do well beyond their printed avatars. And the success rates of these community-building B2B properties are very high.

     

    One last question: your view on the Magazine Congress. We’ve had two-day congresses in the past, and this year it’s been just a one-day affair?

    Everything is getting concise, our attention is getting concise. Earlier, we had a lot of international speakers, they would come, speak and they used to sell. They were all licensers of major magazines so they were very actively romancing this market. We have passed that stage. Also, people’s attention is very low nowadays and getting so many people for two days is a very difficult format. So this time, it is very tight but we have managed to get good speakers from different fields. We have got people who not just come and talk, you will hardly find publishers speaking in this congress. We are not trying to restrict knowledge from within the industry, for the industry and for the industry because we have passed those stages and this is the 10th congress.

     

  • IAA Debates to debate on quality of print advertising

    By A Correspondent

     

    The next IAA Debates, presented by the Dainik Bhaskar group will be on “The quality of creativity in print advertising today is adversely impacting the efficacy of Print Medium.”

     

    The debate is scheduled for Friday, August 5, 2016 at ITC Grand Central, Parel, Mumbai, 6pm onwards.

     

    Srinivasan K Swamy

    Srinivasan K Swamy, President IAA India Chapter and Senior Vice President IAA Global said, “IAA Debates is an important property of IAA. Many industry leaders have taken the stand and debated on subjects that the industry always felt uncomfortable with. It has therefore become a must-attend event from all section of the advertising, media and marketing fraternity. I look forward to an intelligent fight between seasoned professionals”.

     

    Speaking for the motion are, Mitrajit Bhattacharya, President & Publisher- Chitralekha Group, President – AIM and Sandip Tarkas, CEO, (Sports, Media & Special Projects) Future Group; and speaking against the motion are Rana Barua, CEO – Contract India and  Joy Chakraborthy, President, TV18 -Revenue & CEO Forbes. Nandini Dias, CEO – Lodestar UM – will moderate the debate.

     

  • Chitralekha hosts first season of Mrs. Gujarat contest

    By A Correspondent

     

    The Chitralekha Group hosted its very first season of Chitralekha Mrs. Gujarat 2016, at Club 07, Ahmedabad.

     

    After being groomed by experts in their fields, the 21 finalists faced the jury comprising Priyadarshini Rao, noted fashion designer and founder of the label Mineral, Mickey Mehta, well known Wellness and Holistic Living guru, actress Soha Ali Khan, Tanvi Vyas, Femina Miss India Earth 2008, a popular face of Indian television, actor, producer, Jamnadas Majethia or JD, renowned rapper, Devang Patel and fashion photographer Ashish Sompura over three gruelling rounds of traditional, Indo-Western and gown to emerge winners of Chitralekha Mrs. Gujarat 2016 along with the 1st and 2nd runners up, Mrs. Readers’ Choice, Mrs. Fitness, Mrs. Photogenic and Mrs. Congeniality.

     

    The winner of Chitralekha Mrs. Gujarat 2016 won a GetAway Goddess holiday package from presenting sponsor Cox & Kings, while the 1st Runner Up title was powered by AU Finja who gave away glittering gold jewellery and the 2nd Runner Up won gift vouchers from LG.

     

    The gala event saw some enthralling entertainment acts and the coming together of Ahmedabad’s leading socialites creating a larger-than-life platform of the beauty and fashion ecosphere.

     

    Other sponsors who came on board to put this mega event together include co-sponsor, Mycro Fine Atta Chakki, category sponsors, Kiwa and Urmin, hospitality partner, Club 07 and radio partner 93.5 RED FM.

     

    Commenting on what went behind creating the pageant; Mitrajit Bhattacharya, President and Publisher of Chitralekha Group says “We believe strength of a woman comes from being multi-faceted and marriage pushes a woman towards achieving goals which otherwise seem impossible to achieve. Chitralekha Mrs. Gujarat is a platform which looks to reward these outstanding women of Gujarat who continue to prove that beauty is not just skin deep. We are overwhelmed by the response both in terms of quantity as well as quality in the first year itself. As an organisation, it’s now our responsibility to nurture and help them achieve their dreams. More power to them.”

     

  • Watch World Awards to happen tomorrow

    The Chitralekha group’s annual Watch World Awards will happen tomorrow, October 9, at the Westin Gurgaon.

     

    The sixth edition of the awards will see top-end luxury watch brands vying for the coveted awards in Marketing and Product categories.

     

    The product category was judged by panellists including Swiss master watchmaker Antoine Simonin, fashion designer Raghavendra Rathore; polo champion Adhiraj Singh and filmmaker Apoorva Lakhia. Nitish Tipnis, Senior Marketing & Business Transformation Specialist (Automotive & Retail) judged the marketing category.

     

    Speaking on the Awards, Mitrajit Bhattacharya, President and Publisher, Chitralekha Group said, “Watch World Awards has gathered a stature which the watch industry looks forward to.  With each edition, the list of marquee brands has grown up reiterating the significance of the unique platform we have created. Most importantly the awards have been able to touch the right chord with the watch brands and watch lover

     

  • Fifth edition of Chitralekha’s Watch World Awards held in Gurgaon

    By A Correspondent

     

    Watch World from the Chitralekha Group hosted the fifth edition of the definitive roll-call show in the world of horology – The Watch World Awards recently. Hosted at The Westin, Gurgaon, in presence of luminary guests from a cross-section of the society, the awards saw eclectic watch brands winning commendations across 10 product and six market categories. These top brands were adjudged by acclaimed jurists including Antoine Simonin, Neeraj Pandey, Raghavendra Rathore and Adhiraj Singh who unanimously adjudged CARTIER Rotonde de Cartier Astrocalendaire as the ‘Watch of the Year 2014’.

     

    The event saw attendance by eclectic timekeeping brands vying for the top awards. The winners in the Marketing categories included SEIKO for their Kolkata Knight Riders IPL Campaign bagging the ‘Best Marketing Campaign in Print’ award and TITAN Edge and XYLYS picking up the award for ‘Best Marketing Campaigns on Television’. BREITLING New Bond Street, London picked the ‘Best Boutique’ award, while HUBLOT FIFA 2014 and IWC Mercedes AMG Petronas partnership was adjudicated as the ‘Best Integrated Marketing Campaign’.

     

    Mitrajit Bhattacharya

    Mitrajit Bhattacharya, President & Publisher, Chitralekha Group & Creator of Watch World Awards said, “Watch World Awards has reached a stature which the watch industry looks upto. The list of marquee brands and participating product line-up continues to grow reiterating the importance of the platform. To match the incredible watches we once again had put up an incredible jury comprising the best from across watch making, designing, sports, creative and marketing. No wonder the watches which come through this tough jury and emerge victorious stand for the best in timekeeping.”

     

  • Mitrajit Bhattacharya is new President of Association of Indian Magazines

    Mitrajit Bhattacharya
    R Rajmohan

    By A Correspondent

     

    Chitralekha group President and Publisher Mitrajit Bhattacharya will be the new President of the Association of Indian Magazines. He takes over from Tarun Rai of Worldwide Media.

     

    Meanwhile, R Rajmohan, Publisher of Open magazine will be the new Vice-President and B Srinivasan, Managing Director of Vasan Publications will be General Secretary. Pradeep Gupta, CMD, Cybermedia will continue to be Treasurer.

     

  • Chitralekha group’s Watch World awards timekeeping excellence

    By A Correspondent

     

    The Chitralekha group’s Watch World magazine hosted the fourth edition of the Watch World Awards at the Westin Hotel in Gurgaon last week.

     

    The marquee event of the horology echelon brought niche’ watch brands and watch-makers together amidst celebrities. Moderated by Chitralekha’s President and Publisher Mitrajit Bhattacharya, now an expert horologist himself, the jury comprised master watchmaker Antoine Simonin; along with Priyadarshini Rao, Ravi Shastri, Neeraj Pandey, Shripad Nadkarni and Sharda Agarwal. The jury awarded leading watches across eleven categories in the Product Awards section and six categories in the Marketing & Merchandising Awards category.

     

    The event saw attendance by well-known timekeeping brands like Cartier, Bulgari, Zenith, Hublot, Graham, Ulysee Nardin, Breitling, Corum, Parmigiani, Seiko, Swarovski, Titan, Antonio Bernini, and Rotary amongothers.

     

    Commenting on the occasion, Mr Bhattacharya said, “We are elated at the success of the fourth edition and this success reiterates the growing popularity and acceptance of the property. By bringing together iconic brands from the world of horology we endeavour to celebrate the institution of technological innovativeness and bespoke workmanship of our master creators”.

     

    Late Rolf W Schnyder, CEO of Ulysse Nardin, was posthumously honoured with a special award for his contribution to the watch industry. His wife and President of the Board of Ulysse Nardin, Chai Schnyder accepted the award on his behalf.

     

    Jury member Antoine Simonin commented “Watch World Awards is steadily becoming one amongst the most respected and followed awards in the field of horology across the world. Being associated with the awards for the fourth time in a row is a great honour for me and I am privileged to be one amongst the esteemed jury panel. I have seen a greater awareness being generated amongst the audience through the awards and looking at the quality of nominations this year, I am quite sure that this will augur well for the horology eco-sphere of the country.”

     

    While the Product category saw stiff competition; the Marketing category saw Seiko and Kolkata Knight Riders bagging the ‘Best Marketing Campaign in Print’ award with Tagged by TITAN picking up the award for ‘Best Marketing Campaign on Television’. While ‘The Best Marketing Campaign in Outdoor’ was won by Ulysee Nardin for its initiative at Hyderabad Airport, Hublot Avenues-Prestige, Kuwait picked the ‘Best Boutique’ award, Seiko and Kolkata Knight Riders were awarded the ‘Best Organised Event” award and Tagged by TITAN was adjudicated as the ‘Best Integrated Marketing Campaign’.

     

  • Chitralekha launches 62nd anniversary issue

    By A Correspondent

     

    The anniversary issue by the Chitralekha Group had a simultaneous five-city launch in Ahmedabad, Surat, Baroda, Rajkot and Mumbai by columnist, humourist, writer and playwright Taarak Mehta, psychiatrist and sex therapist, Dr Mukul Choksi, painter, Ghulam Mohammed Sheikh, chairman of the Khadi and Village Industries Commission (KVIC), Devendra Desai and Vice Chairman of MCX-SX, Jignesh Shah, respectively.

     

    Themed on the topic ‘Game Changers’ the issue has contributions by experts like Chandan Mitra, Sam Pitroda, Justice Markandey Katju, Kapil Dev, Gunwant Shah, Sagarika Ghosh, Salim Khan amongst others who have shared their perspective on people and incidents which have changed the conventional rules of the game and emerged as “Change Agents”.

     

    The issue also houses the third edition of Chitralekha’s ‘Gujarati Power List’, which comprises superstars from the fields of politics, business, corporate, music, fine arts, cinema, sports, media and social service, who have gone beyond their own areas of comfort and influenced the larger society.

     

    Moreover, the issue also carries a specially compiled music CD by Sa Re Ga Ma comprising 62 best songs of the superstars of Indian Cinema, Dev Anand, Shammi Kapoor and Rajesh Khanna.

     

  • The Anchor: 6 pointers for luxury advertisers when choosing a magazine

    By Mitrajit Bhattacharya

     

    #1 Whether the magazine caters to the right TG of the brand, not the TG that the planner/ advertiser belongs to, which may not necessarily be the same.

     

    #2 Most luxury brands in this country are consumed by the wealthy, so an income profiling is often better than SEC. The business community scores over the salaried class, who often simply cannot afford luxury (unless they are a rich banker). So, choose your vehicle accordingly.

     

    #3 Often a multi-brand distributor/ company has the same magazine list for all their brands. Decide for individual brands and not for the group; consumers finally see them individually.

     

    #4 Frequently check how the layout of copy/ edit pages is coordinated with that of advertisements. Many luxury magazines go to the extent of designing facing edit pages with relation to the ads and that really helps noticeability/ engagement.

     

    #5 Do not lose sight of sales; maintain the right balance of image-building (which is so critical for a luxe brand) without losing sight of the real impact on sales.

     

    #6 Be sure of the strengths of the medium and use it the best possible way, and not necessarily have the ‘same size fits all’ ad strategy across all media.

     

    Mitrajit Bhattacharya is the President & Publisher, Chitralekha Group & Vice President, AIM.