Tag: Dentsu Aegis Network

  • Indian ad industry needs to be more outward-looking: Sanjay Nazerali

     

    By A Correspondent

     

    We interviewed Sanjay Nazeraliat Goafest this year. That’s way back in April. And for some reason, we couldn’t use this interview then, because we had a bigger big story coming up every day, and this one deserved that status. Nazerali is Global Chief Strategy Officer at the Dentsu Aegis Network where he “works with account teams to collect, nurture and explode ideas that deliver outstanding business value”. He also co-ordinates with DAN strategists across the the world to ensure they “deliver original, ground-breaking insight and strategy for all our clients”.

    Following an MBA at INSEAD, he was appointed Senior VP, Marketing, at MTV Europe.  Sanjay then founded a Top 50 media insights agency, The Depot, before joining BBC News as Global Director of Marketing, Communications, and Audiences. Excerpts from an interview (do note:this was conducted in April 2017):

     

    The Indian marketplace has been going through a fair number of changes over the last few years, and since 1991 when liberalisation happened, and over the years with the start-up culture, consumerism has touched a new high. As you look at India from a global point of view, where do you see us versus the rest of the world?

    India is growing faster than Google. India has growth rates that are quite extraordinary and particularly giventhat it is a relatively liberal environment and it’s a democracy, that’s really powerful. However, within the advertising community I do not believe that the rest of the world is yet seeing the power of the work that comes out of India. One tiny little example which I accidentally stumbled across in an awards show was the Tata Tiago, and how very quickly that was rebranded from Zica, and how it was rebranded from Zica by asking people’s opinions. It was in a very very short space of time, and then essentially turning what was a problem to an advantage. Now, there are many major brands that operate globally which I have not seen react with that kind of agility and so I don’t believe that our work in India is necessarily showcased appropriately internationally.

     

    And why do you see this happening? Is it because people don’t take India seriously or is it because a Tata brand is inconsequential in the world order?

    I thinkIndia doesn’t think of itself as being globally consequential in the same way. I really don’t. When I judge awards, I rarely see campaigns coming in from India. Why? Why does the industry here not submit more to Cannes? Why doesn’t it submit more to Festival of Media?It should be doing it, because India is delivering some of the most exciting work that I’ve seen. I’ll give you one small example of this; the world is talking about brands moving from positioning to purpose, and the world of brands within society.Well, I watched some awards recently in which every single campaign was pretty much about a social purpose. Why is none of that work being showcased around the world? India seems to be leading the way in that sense.

     

    But is it possible that because of the kind of the fees that come with the awards, is that one of the reasons why people may be kind of weary?

    I’m not sure that I can answer the question around fees. What I can say is, my experience of the Indian advertising industry is that it’s very powerful but it’s also quite inward-looking. And I would love to see it become more outward-looking.

     

    We’ve read various articles of yours and your views that the modern marketer should be bracing itself forthe current tide. If you look at the Indian circumstance and the Indian environment, whether it is the homegrown advertiser competing on the world stage, or somebody who’s coming from outside, who’s getting set to conquer the country – are there any special traits that you think people should look at for India? On how to be successful in India. In terms ofmarket spends, use of media…

    I don’t think there’sa rule as such. I do know one thing, which is that the adoption of social media here is vast, and if you are not going to be part of the conversation, then you’re in a difficult place already. So I think that certainly one thing to consider is the sheer volume and power of the Indian consumer conversation. But I think there are otherspecific things within this market which are really important; something that I’ve seen happen through my lifetime is the difference in India saying “Oh my God, that’s wonderful, it’s imported, it’s foreign goods” and today the sheer level of pride in Indian produce and Indian-owned products. So I think nationalism – and I don’t mean this in a protectionist Donald Trump-type way, but I mean genuine pride in India – is something people do need to understand.

     

    Is there a sentiment that what is produced in India is not on the same level quality-wise as MNC-produced, because of the R&D and QC gaps? A case in point being Patanjali? Because along with the nationalism and pride, there is also the view that some people don’t really have faith in the quality of the product and the kind of research that goes into making of the product vis-a-vis what is produced by a transnational corporation.

    In certain Indian software, that is not true. I’m going to to tell you a story which really shocked me.Last November, I was kindly invited by Google to go and visit their campus in Silicon Valley.Beautifully warm, I was sitting outside and I looked around and I said to my host, Google is an Indian company; every single face here is Indian! There are Indian couples sitting on the benches eating tiffins together at lunchtime. You go into the canteen there and there are five types of food – you have Punjabi, you have Gujarati, you have South Indian food… So I don’t think that is true in terms of digital product at all. I think it’s probably true in terms of physical product, but I think India, as the gravity of perception moves towards soft products rather than hard products, I think that perception changes.

     

    You have a strong Indian armas far as Carat is concerned,on the back of the Mondelez win, and now you have the Marutiwin. Is there any specific agenda that you have for your team here to look at things differently from theexisting big dads?

    Yes, and its one I’m absolutely passionate about, which is simply this; today, we need more specialists than we’ve ever had before in marketing, you know once upon a time, life was easier where the client funded everything, the ad agency who made it and the medium where it played out. You now have a hundred and fifty people on any given campaign, you’ve got the paid social specialist, you’ve got the organic social specialist, the paid search specialist, the data stack developer, you have everyone. How are you going to get them to work together? And that to me is the single-biggest agenda point that I have, which is in one word – love. If you do not love, respect and collaborate across various disciplines, you will never deliver an integrated campaign for clients in today’s world. And I know I’m using a fruity word like love but fundamentally, this is about collaboration.

     

    But people do work in fiefdoms, especially in the creative world.

    Yes and that is absolutely my agenda, which is, smash down the fiefdoms, make it in everybody’s interest, for everybody else to win. Make that win collaborative because you can get 90% of the campaign right, you’ll then fall down on paid social and the entire campaign will disappear.

     

    But do you think the existing people, because they come with their own baggage, can implement that change, or do you need some outsiders to infuse a fresh deal of…

    Well, I think it’s a little bit of both. I’m using fruity words like love and respect and all this, but you can look at this in respect of hard commercial terms.How can I incentivise you financially to work with that person over there? Can part of your bonus beactually based on the extent to which you will or won’t collaborate as judged by them? Now the moment you start getting into those sorts of hardcore rate chart matrix, you start to drive a different kind of behaviour. If I know my bonus is contingent on you appreciating that I’ve collaborated with you, hey I’m going to collaborate with you.

     

    Do you think that’ll happen?

    So withinDentsu Aegis’ network we’ve taken one step towards it; we were the first group to do that, which is we have a single country P&L across all ofDentsu Aegis. Now that I think is an incredibly important move and you know, two decades later or a decade later [Martin] Sorrellhas his version of thisthat he’s trying to do. If we are going to work best for our clients, and we have to think about clients, the hand that feeds us, you have to collaborate, and to me that is my biggest agenda point, which is to change the behaviour of agency groups.

     

  • WATConsult unveils report on the ‘Internet of Things’ in India

    By A Correspondent

     

    WATConsult, part of the Dentsu Aegis Network, has launched its latest report on the current state of the Internet of Things (IoT) industry in India. This report is the second offering from their latest property WATInsights, under its market research division, Recogn.

     

    The key findings of the report are that there has been an increased adoption in India in recent years with a major share from the Industrial IoT segment. The sectors investing heavily are Manufacturing and Smart Cities / Public utilities. In the consumer IOT segment, Smartwatches and health and fitness bands have the highest usage and intention to purchase.

     

    Said Rajiv Dingra, Founder and CEO, WATConsult said, “IOT is one of the significant trends that will impact all businesses by 2020 and the findings from our latest WATInsights report reflect that. Innovation and broader awareness among consumers in the coming years will lead the IOT market in India to grow at 41% CAGR.”

     

  • Dentsu beefs up digital play. Buys Sokrati to launch Merkle

     

    By A Correspondent

     

    Left to Right: Anubhav Sonthalia, Ashish Bhasin, Ashish Mehta and Santosh Gannavarapu

    The Dentsu Aegis Network (DAN) has announced yet another acquisition, beefing up its digital play in a bigger way. It has informed that it has signed a definitive agreement to acquire Sokrati, a data-driven performance marketing and analytics agency. The network has also announced the launch of Merkle in India and post-acquisition, Sokrati will be rebranded as Merkle Sokrati. Founded in 2009, Sokrati is headquartered in Pune and employs a staff of 120 digital marketing professionals.

    Said Nick Waters, CEO of Dentsu Aegis Network Asia Pacific: “India is the fastest growing large economy in the world. It is on track for 400 million smartphone users, making it second only to China, and has emerged as a major e-commerce market. Sokrati’s strength in mobile, e-commerce, data, analytics and performance media provides an ideal basis from which to launch Merkle in India as we develop the roll-out plan for Asia Pacific. We will develop the unique M1 addressable media platform for India as a next step.”

    Added Ashish Bhasin, Chairman and CEO of Dentsu Aegis Network South Asia: “Sokrati has strong ability in CRM and data to accelerate the launch of Merkle in India and further bolster our data practice, which is becoming increasingly critical in all aspects of our business. It will also give our clients added value as we bring CRM and data into the heart of our digital offering. With Dentsu Aegis Network India already being a leader in performance marketing services, with iProspect and the recent acquisition of SVG, the complementary addition of Sokrati will enable the network to take a clearly dominant position in the rapidly growing Indian digital advertising market. With Sokrati on board, we will now be more than twice the size of any of our competitors in search and performance. Out of 3,500 staff in India, about 1,500 will be digital professionals, and over 35% of our revenue – a market-leading statistic – will come from digital.”

    Added Zhengda Shen, President of Merkle Asia Pacific: “Given Sokrati’s strong credentials and proven capabilities in data & analytics, Sokrati will be in the ideal position to give strong footing to Merkle’s launch in the Indian market, in line with Merkle’s global growth strategy. India is strategic to Dentsu Aegis Network and is one of the fastest-growing markets in the world.”

     

     

  • Isobar announces global Isobar commerce practice

    By A Correspondent

     

    Isobar, part of Dentsu Aegis Network, announced the launch of a global Isobar commerce practice. The commerce practice will deliver commerce experiences for clients through globally integrated platforms and solutions that are informed by local insight. This will, notes a communique, bolster Isobar’s strategic capability to deliver commerce solutions through the Isobar commerce practice and will include 1,000+ commerce specialists across Isobar’s network in Americas, EMEA and Asia-Pacific.

     

    As part of the launch, centres of excellence have been established in Americas1, EMEA2 and Asia-Pacific3, and market-leading commerce company Bluecom will be rebranded as Isobar Commerce. The practice will include all Commerce centres of excellence, all e-Commerce, m-commerce, retail commerce experts and Commerce off-shore delivery centres within the Isobar network.

     

    Said Jean Lin, Global CEO, Isobar: “The reinvention of last mile is a key part of business transformation today, and the commerce specialists from our global practice will help our clients to win in the digital economy.  As part of Isobar’s Brand Commerce strategy, we utilise data, customer experience and technology expertise to create seamless experiences that deliver measurable commercial success.  The creation of the Isobar Commerce practice will further strengthen our commerce capability and global consistency to bring brand inspiration and transaction closer.”

     

  • Happy mcgarrybowen executes GST-ready campaign for Tally Solutions

    By A Correspondent

     

    Tally Solutions, a pioneer in accounting and business management software, collaborated with Happy mcgarrybowen, the creative agency from Dentsu Aegis Network, to launch its first ever campaign for its GST-ready software. With over 30 years of serving businesses across India, Tally is in an unrivalled position to deal with GST.

     

    Speaking about the campaign, Kartik Iyer, CEO and Co-Founder, Happy mcgarrybowen says, “Working with Tally has been an enriching experience at many levels. As pioneers in the business of Fintech, their insight and view into the GST era is unmatched. Their ability to break anything that is complex down to simple clear points is what makes them the leader undoubtedly. There is a lot to do together. We look forward to doing some great work for them.”

     

  • Dentsu Webchutney gets into B2B marketing

    By A Correspondent

     

    Samera Khan

    Dentsu Webchutney, the digital agency from Dentsu Aegis Network, has announced its newly established Business to Business Marketing Division. It will be headed by Samera Khan, EVP – Strategy, Dentsu Webchutney.

     

    “The line between a customer and a consumer is fading day by day. Globally, B2B brands have the largest audience on LinkedIn; they have 36 times more followers on LinkedIn than on Instagram but 20 times more engagement on Instagram than on LinkedIn. The users’ browsing and search behaviour is the same through the day and that’s what we want to own with our B2B division. We want to remove the boring from B2B,” said Sidharth Rao, CEO and co-founder at Dentsu Webchutney.

     

    The new division is poised to help businesses targeting other businesses across categories and industries. Businesses that work with Dentsu Webchutney will have specialized services available to help them with Online and Offline Marketing, Market Research, Publicity, and most importantly, a focus on Content Marketing and Distribution Strategy.

     

    Added Khan: “Our strategy is to focus on B2B with experiential content marketing across the various touchpoints that the customer already exists on. We pride ourselves on understanding what moves the Indian consumer. Now it’s just about using that same understanding for a business decision maker. Even though our starting point is B2B, our goal is to think of it as H2H (Human to Human), to humanize this crucial relationship.”

     

  • Vizeum wins media mandate for A&M Noodles

    By A Correspondent

     

    Vizeum has bagged the media mandate for A&M Noodles from Maruchan Ajinomoto India, following a multi-agency pitch.

     

    As part of the mandate, the Dentsu Aegis Network media agency’s scope of work for its latest client will focus on launching the client’s Noodles brand directed towards youth and kids.

     

  • Hyperspace wins retail and visual merchandising mandate for SBI Life Insurance

    By A Correspondent

     

    Hyperspace, the retail design studio arm of Posterscope India, part of the Dentsu Aegis Network, has won the retail mandate for SBI Life Insurance. The mandate was won through a multi-agency pitch that called for designing and implementation in various retail formats pan-India.

     

    Commenting on the win, Arti Singh, Associate Business Director Hyperspace, said: “It is very critical in today’s competitive market to be distinguishable and our client’s communication expresses a credible intent to reach out to the right customers with the right product. We delivered on each aspect that lucidly projected our philosophy to collaborate, create and deliver on the client’s requirement. The win can be attributed to our campaign planning abilities that make use of retail consumer research and insights. Our in-house planning tool, ‘Connect’, particularly proved to be effective in showcasing how efficiently large scale retail execution can be delivered with ease and transparency.

     

    Added Haresh Nayak, Managing Director Hyperspace: “This win truly strengthens our retail portfolio. With our focus on distinguished offerings, especially our retail planning and implementation process, we have proved that standardization with accuracy can be achieved for large scale retail projects such as this.”

     

  • Global ad spend to hit $563.4 billion in 2017, notes latest Dentsu study

     

     

    Based on data received from 59 markets across the Americas, Asia-Pacific, Europe, Middle East and Africa, Dentsu Aegis Network’s Ad Spend Forecasts – June 2017 point to a more cautious economic outlook in 2017 than the previous year, with global ad spend growth falling from 4.8to 3.8 per cent. However, conditions are set to improve in 2018 with forecast growth in ad spend of 4.3 per cent. Events will play a key role in 2018, with events such as the Winter Olympics & Paralympics in South Korea, the FIFA World Cup in Russia and the US Congressional elections all expected to stimulate ad spend growth.

     

    Despite concerns about the economic impact of Britain’s decision to leave the European Union, UK ad spend growth held up better than expected in 2016 at 6.1 per cent. While there are signs of caution in 2017, with growth dipping to 4per cent, 2018 is forecast to see growth bounce back to 5.9 per cent. A similar picture unfolds in the United States, where a slowdown to 3.6 per cent is forecast for 2017, followed by a slight improvement in 2018 to 4.0 per cent. The United States also remains the largest market in the world, accounting for 37.7 per cent of global advertising spend in 2017. Advertising spend in emerging markets continues to outpace developed economies. For example, ad spend growth in India is forecast to grow at 13 per cent in 2017, while China is the second largest market in the world by share of advertising spend—remaining the only emerging economy to feature in the top five largest ad markets.

     

    The forecasts show how digital technology continues to disrupt and drive innovation in the way brands connect with their consumers. In 2017, we forecast that advertising spend on mobile will overtake desktop, reaching 56 per cent in terms of share of global Digital advertising spend. In 2018, mobile ad spend will grow further to account for a total of US$116.1 billion. With smartphone subscriptions set to reach 4 billion by 2025 and about a third of consumers reporting that their smartphone is their primary source of entertainment, we can expect to see this trend continue to strengthen.

     

    Furthermore, our forecasts suggest that in 2018 digital will be the top media in terms of global share of spend, taking over television for the first time. Digital’s share of total media spend is predicted to reach a 37.6 per cent share in 2018 (up from 34.8 per cent in 2017), versus 35.9 per cent for television (down from 37.1 per cent in 2017), amounting to a total value of US$215.8 billion. Reflecting the continued disruption by digital technology of the print media industry, Paid Search (advertising within the sponsored listings of a search engine) is forecast to overtake traditional print media (newspapers and magazines) in 2018. Print media has been on a downward trajectory for some years now, but will likely fall to a 13.8 per cent share of total spend in 2018 (down from 15.1 per cent in 2017) while paid search is forecast to grow to 14.6 per cent up from 13.6 per cent in 2017.

     

    While digital ad spend is growing rapidly and set to overtake television, within digital there are a number of new sources of growth that point to the future of advertising. For example, in 2017, online video is set to grow by 32.4per cent; social by 28.9per cent; and programmatic (i.e. automated ad buying) by 25.4 per cent. Looking ahead, brands will need to embrace the potential of disruptive technologies such as virtual reality, artificial intelligence and voice activation. However, research suggests that only 8per cent of brands currently intend to use virtual reality for advertising purposes.

     

    Commenting on the latest ad spend forecasts, Jerry Buhlmann, CEO of Dentsu Aegis Network, said:“We are reaching a tipping point in ad spend now as digital overtakes television, mobile overtakes desktop and paid search overtakes print. Digital and data must now be the default settings for advertisers. Evolving to people-based marketing rather than audience-based marketing and using data to increase address ability is essential for brands to manage tighter conditions in 2017 while positioning themselves for future growth.”

     

    “At the same time, the challenge for brands is to ensure that they are ready to embrace the potential of new innovation. As technologies such as virtual reality and voice activation become more prominent, brands must ensure that they remain relevant by creating new value for their consumers.”

     

    Commented Kartik Iyer, MD, Carat India: “India continues to be amongst the few countries seeing growth rates in double digits. While this may be slightly lower than past expectations owing to various market drivers like demonetisation and GST, the growth is clearly expected to continue. Driving this growth is digital with a growth rate of over 35per cent which is far in excess of that seen by other more traditional media. And with digital quickly progressing on its path of becoming the Go To media for entertainment, this trend is also expected to continue. Other media like TV and cinema are expected to grow at around 12per cent while Radio and OOH should see a growth of 10per cent and Newspapers around 8per cent. Another medium that is driving growth is that of ambient (at over 15per cent growth rates). Considering the changing retail environment, the medium, in tandem with digital is becoming pivotal for delivering quality engagement with consumers.”

     

    Figure 1: Growth in advertising expenditure 2016-2018 (selected economies)


  • Vivek Bhargava extends his love for table tennis sponsorsing a team in TT league

    By A Correspondent

     

    Vivek-Bhargava

    When he is not evangelising digital, Vivek Bhargava is playing table tennis. The DAN Performance Group CEO is a passionate table tennis enthusiast, he has been a medalist in the last two national tournaments in the 40-plus category and has helped setup and run a table tennis academy in Central Mumbai.

     

    Now iProspect India, a part of the Dentsu Aegis Network, has grabbed sponsorship of the team iProspect Challengers consisting of star players such as Han Ying (World Rank 6), Petrissa Solja (World Rank 13), Andrej Gacina (World Rank 18), Li Ping (World Rank 26) and Soumyajit Ghosh (Youngest National Champion and Qualifier for London Olympics).

     

    The league consists of 48 International and domestic players forming six teams. The inaugural season of the country’s first ever professional table tennis league will be played from July 13 to July 30, 2017.

     

    Said Bhargava: “iProspect was the title sponsor for the first two seasons of Mumbai Super League – it was time to attempt doing something much larger. I believe that every kid should attempt playing a competitive sport. It teaches you two things- one, to lose early in life and how to handle it and two, the only way to improve your game is to work harder – life is the same!”

     

    Rubeena Singh

    Commenting about the association with the league, Rubeena Singh, CEO, iProspect India said, “We are excited to be associated with Ultimate Table Tennis League… TT is a game that demands quick reflexes, quick decisions and extreme agility- quite like the way we run our performance marketing business, generating alpha ROI for our clients’ media spends.”

     

  • Dentsu Media is now dentsu X, in India and elsewhere. Divya Karani to stay as India CEO

    By A Correspondent

     

    Dentsu Aegis Network today announces the launch of dentsuX which will be, as a communique notes, an “integrated agency network combining best-in-class communication and media planning services, content creation, technology, data and behavioural insights, following the rebrand of the Group’s media specialist – Dentsu Media”.

     

    The new proposition, “Experience Beyond Exposure”, relays the brand’s strong belief in the power of experience over exposure, the communique adds.

     

    Takaki Hibino

    Takaki Hibino, Global Brand President of dentsuX,will continue to lead the agency globally. He said:  “When Dentsu Media was first launched in 1999, the use of the word ‘media’ had a very limited meaning. For close to two decades, Dentsu Media alongside its creative agencypartners has expanded to offer much more to our clients than that original definition could describe. This is why we evolved its identity to reflect the potential of our brand and selected ‘X’ to represent the importance of delivering unique experiences. By integrating data, technology, creativity and distribution in the dentsu X offering, we can develop these experiences for clients that are truly focused on digital solutions.”

     

    Nick Waters

    Added Nick Waters, CEO of Dentsu Aegis Network Asia Pacific: “Dentsu Media is unique as a scaled Asian agency network. Integrating within Dentsu Aegis Network portfolio of agencies it has propelled its growth so that it currently leads the Campaign new business tables.”

     

    “This change of branding serves to better reflect the agency’s capabilities and further enhance its position as a global agency network,” Waters added.

     

    Divya Karani

    In India, dentsu X will be headed by Divya Karani as CEO. Said Karani: “Dentsu Media has always believed in reaching ahead, anticipating and embracing change. ‘Experience’ is the currency in the brave new world we live in. dentsu X delivers to this.”

     

    The rebrand of Dentsu Media to dentsu X is effective today.

     

    Editor’s Note: As a policy we do not honour the capitalising or various ways in which brands call themselves. Unless of course it’s a change of spelling. For instance, the communique from Dentsu spells Dentsu Media with a lowercased ‘m’ –Dentsu media and not Dentsu Media. But we don’t write it as that. Since it’s a launch press release, we’ve let it be a lowercased dentsu in the name but from now on, it will be: Dentsu X J

     

  • Dentsu Aegis Network reaches out to 2,000 kids on ‘One Day For Change’

    By A Correspondent

     

    Dentsu Aegis Network’s CSR initiative ‘One Day For Change’, witnessed 1,750 employees engage with 2,000 children to execute the project, ‘Tools For School’. Now in its fourth edition, the CSR initiative was conducted across all Dentsu Aegis Network offices in India including Mumbai, New Delhi, Bangalore, Kolkata, Chennai and Kochi.

     

    One Day For Change is an annual social commitment by the Dentsu Aegis Network, where employees from each of the countries are encouraged to go out and volunteer on the same day. Incidentally, Dentsu Aegis Network recently launched its CSR advisory, Indeed, to facilitate corporate investments by companies in Corporate Social Responsibly, through insights and a brand-led approach.

     

    Commenting on the initiative, Ashish Bhasin, Chairman and CEO, South Asia, Dentsu Aegis Network, said: “A significant number of children in the primary years drop out of school and the chief reasons for this are poverty and accessibility. Therefore, this year for our One Day For Change, we decided to focus on education. After all, no country can move forward unless it is 100% literate. We partnered with Bitgiving to raise funds to utilise for our project, Tools For School”

     

    Last year, over 1500 employees volunteered in India, contributing 6,000 staff hours. While the final numbers are still trickling in, it is estimated that in 2017 in India 1750 employees volunteered over 5,000 staff hours for the ODFC initiative.