Tag: Crayons

  • APL Apollo’s TVC with Akshay Kumar

    APL Apollo Steel Tubes Ltd has launched a new TVC featuring actor Akshay Kumar. The 60-second ad has been produced in collaboration with Crayons.

    Said Sanjay Gupta, Chairman & Managing Director, APL Apollo Tubes Limited said: “At APL Apollo, we are committed to innovation and delivering products of the highest quality. Our collaboration with Akshay Kumar for the Roof Tuff TVC exemplifies our dedication to excellence and toughness, ensuring that our customers receive only the best. We are happy to launch this promo as we aim to promote this product in as many industries as possible.”

    Added Charu Malhotra, Chief Brand Officer & Group Head Marketing, APL Apollo Tubes Ltd: “The launch of our new TVC with Akshay Kumar underscores our relentless pursuit of finding new and impactful ways to connect with our audience. Through this engaging narrative, we aim to highlight the durability and reliability of APL Apollo’s Roof Tuff, setting new benchmarks for toughness and performance in the industry. We aim to extensively promote the campaign with a comprehensive integrated marketing strategy including TV/Radio/Cinema & Digital.

     

  • Amitabh features in APL Apollo TVC

    By Our Staff

     

    APL Apollo Steel Tubes has launched a new TVC campaign titled ‘Desh Ki Badhti Taqat’, featuring actor Amitabh Bachchan. The TVC, conceived by Crayons, highlights the forward-thinking trajectory of the company, focusing on solidifying its reliable and trustworthy connection with the customer base.

     

    Speaking on this commercial launch, Sanjay Gupta, Managing Director of APL Apollo, said: “Our ‘Desh Ki Badhti Taqat’ TVC reflects the company’s journey on becoming the World’s largest structural steel tubes company along with deep-rooted responsibility towards nation building. We are proud to have Amitabh Bachchan as part of our journey, symbolising the strength and trust of our brand. Our vision extends far beyond being a homegrown success; it’s about sculpting a transformative narrative, where our innovation moulds a stronger, more resilient future.”

     

     

  • Cornitos onboards Crayons as agency

    By Our Staff

     

    Cornitos, a healthy snacking brand, has onboarded Crayons Advertising Limited, as an integrated communications partner.

     

    Speaking on the development, Vikram Agarwal, Managing Director, Cornitos, said: “Our vision is to expand our reach and penetrate deeper across all channels pan- India. Our search was for a partner who understands Bharat, provides strategic inputs leading to high-impact marketing, and creates strong communication ideas. Over a few meetings and extensive interactions with Team Crayons, we strongly felt they understood our objectives and aligned with our Vision. We are very excited and look forward to strengthening our brand with Crayons as our integrated communications partner.”

     

    Commenting on the account win, Samir Datar, Chief Strategy Officer, Crayons, added: “Cornitos created a taste for Nachos in India, long before international brands set foot in this market. With growing conversations around healthy snacking, Cornitos, with its expanded portfolio, is poised to capitalise on the opportunity. Their expansion into Baked Extruded Snacks with Crusties offers a unique opportunity to communicate the evolution of its brand identity and messaging in the coming months. We are proud to partner with the brand and delighted to be part of this exciting journey ahead.”

     

  • MangoData and Crayons Advertising to collaborate

    By Our Staff

     

    Mango Data and Crayons Advertising have announced a collaboration as media partners.

     

    Speaking about the partnership, Deepak Negi, CEO Mango Data said: “The power of this partnership is already evident in some of the new wins for Crayons where the strength of Crayons’ creative idea was amplified by Mango Data’s cutting edge technology and effective media solutions. I expect that we will soon be a powerhouse of innovative and clutter-breaking ideas to maximise the effectiveness of the engagement between the brand and its consumers”

     

    Kunal Lalani, Managing Director, Crayons is also very upbeat about the partnership. He said: “In this day and age, what is important is to have great content that is delivered precisely to the right target audience. This partnership is going to bring about theperfect balance between content and technology”

     

  • Crayons wins outdoor rights of Kumbh 2019

    By A Correspondent

     

    In a multi agency pitch, Crayons has bagged the exclusive rights of 700 outdoor sites of Kumbh 2019 at Prayagraj (eka Allahabad), an event expected to be visited by more than 12 crore people from across the globe. The 2019 edition of the Kumbh Mela is scheduled to start on January 15 and will be on till March 4.

     

    Said Raghu Khanna, CEO Crayons Outdoor Division – AmberOOH: “With the exclusive rights of the best outdoor properties of Kumbh 2019, We have the advantage of offering unmatchable branding opportunity covering key entry points of Mela, railways station, bus stands. Brands will have good visibility on all roads leading to Kumbh Mela to get the maximum exposure and recall.”

  • Power of +ve campaigning: Why SP won & BSP, Cong lost

    By Rajiv Singh

     

    Political pundits talk about caste factor, anti-incumbency, development, corruption and so on to explain Tuesday’s assembly election results, but some advertising experts give a completely different explanation – negative advertising failed and positive campaigning clicked.

     

    It’s open to debate if people vote on the basis of advertisements or not, but look at some campaigns:

    “Utho, jaago aur badlo” (Rise, awaken and change) and “Jawab hum denge” (We will give a befitting reply) – the taglines used by the Congress to woo voters in Uttar Pradesh flopped.

     

    Power of Positive Campaigning

    Jeeta and Jaggi – the toon characters used by the Congress to connect with the people in Punjab by poking fun at the Badal government – too failed.

     

    “Na hatya, na phiroti, na balatkaar, hum denge saaf suthri sarkaar” (No murder, extortion or rape, we would give you a clean government) – the BJP’s election plank in Uttar Pradesh didn’t revive the fortunes of the party.

     

    Now, look at what worked: “Umeed ki cycle” (Bicycle of hope), the tagline of Samajwadi Party’s successful campaign in Uttar Pradesh.

     

    “While Mayawati’s BSP and Rahul Gandhi-led Congress were busy fighting each other, the SP talked about problems faced by the aam aadmi,” said veteran adman KV Sridhar.

     

    “That’s why their campaign clicked; it didn’t take a potshot or dig at the rival parties,” added the national creative director of Leo Burnett.

     

    One of the TV commercials made by Arkash Entertainment – the Mumbai-based production house in charge of Samajwadi Party’s campaign – shows a cycle racing past an elephant.

     

    “We wanted to say something without saying anything,” said Arjun Sablok, the creative head of Arkash Entertainment, who made his debut in political advertising with this campaign.

     

    “Our campaign focused on positives and avoided mudslinging,” added the 45-year-old adman and filmmaker who first met Akhilesh Yadav three years ago in a UP village. Saurabh Uboweja, director of brand consulting firm Brands of Desire, said this approach worked because the voter is not in a negative mindset.

     

    “Voters have seen growth recently as a general positive economic environment reverberates in the nation. When one has a positive mindset in general, positive campaigning linked to higher growth will tend to prove more beneficial than dragging voters into the past,” he said.

     

    Mr Sablok – who has made a film with Hrithik Roshan and a music video with Lata Mangeshkar besides several commercials with leading Bollywood actors – said he started preparations for his first political campaign a good nine months before the elections. An outsider in Uttar Pradesh, he travelled extensively to know about the ground realities there. And he used real-life situations and people.

     

    In one of the television commercials, for example, Raju, a rickshaw puller, talks about his problem of working everyday to pay back the loan and then a voiceover says the Samajwadi Party will implement an insurance programme for rickshaw pullers. Other such characters used in the campaign include Buddhiram, a farmer lamenting about lack of electricity, and Neetu, a housewife whose husband works in another state because of lack of jobs in Uttar Pradesh.

     

    Mr Sridhar of Leo Burnett said this smart and straightforward campaign worked at a time when Mayawati and Rahul Gandhi were busy blaming each other.

    So, in his mind, Rahul Gandhi’s relentless campaigning failed to revive the Congress in the country’s most populous state partly because the party’s advertisements failed to connect with people.

    The Congress campaign in UP, created by Percept/H, talked about the misrule of the Mayawati government and asked people to give Congress a chance. “The campaign had no insight into people’s lives,” said Mr Sridhar. Negative campaigning proved disastrous for the Congress in Punjab too, a state that had never before voted the ruling party back to power.

    The opposition party’s campaign, created by Delhi-based advertising agency Crayons, featured toon characters Jeeta and Jaggi who talked about corruption and other problems under the ruling Shiromani Akali Dal-BJP government.

    This failed to pull down the Badal government.

    The Akalis’ campaign, handled by New Delhi-based agency Brand Curry, highlighted the development work done by the government.

    “Over the past few years, there has been a demographic and psychographic change in the profile of voters. In terms of demographic change, young voters have emerged, who abhor negative campaigning,” said Brand Curry MD Subrata Chakraborty. “In fact, even the old voters have no appetite for advertisements that look down upon others,” he added.

    The BJP, which rose to national prominence in early 1990s with its Ram Janmabhoomi movement centred on Ayodhya in Uttar Pradesh, lost the plot in the state not only in terms of negative slogans but also due to lack of synergy between its print and television campaigns. “The TV campaign was not in sync with the print campaign,” said a BJP leader in the state.

    One of the TV commercials showed famine-like situation in the state and starving people, he said, requesting anonymity. “But this is not the ground reality. This election was not fought on starvation and malnutrition…This left the people cold.”

    Sushil Pandit, owner of Hive Communications, the ad agency that handled the print campaign for the BJP in UP, said the party highlighted too many issues without a clear focus. “There was no consistency in approach,” he added.

    But experts say it’s up to the agencies to help political parties with a nice strategy.

    “Political advertising is driven by politicians, and not the ad agency, but the strategy should come from agency,” said Prathap Suthan, the creative mind behind the ‘India Shining’ and ‘Incredible India’ campaigns and chief creative officer of tech support firm iYogi.

    Source: The Economic Times

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