Tag: Disney UTV

  • IndiaCast, Disney UTV agree to form JV

    By A Correspondent

     

    In what could impact the marketplace in a digitized distribution scenario, Indiacast, the jv between TV18 and Viacom18 which happened in June last year, and UGBL, a Disney UTV group company, have announced a strategic joint venture for the aggregation and wholesale distribution of their respective TV channels.

     

    Anuj Gandhi

    The 74 (IndiaCast) : 26 (Disney UTV) joint venture will become operational after necessary regulatory approvals and will provide 35 channels from the TV18, Viacom18,  Disney UTV & A+E Networks | TV18 to Cable, DTH and HITS platforms in India. IndiaCast CEO Anuj Gandhi will be the Chief Executive Officer of the yet unnamed entity.

     

    Talking about the joint venture, Mr Gandhi said, “This partnership will build a strong distribution company that will offer a broader and more diversified range to platforms giving us a foothold across genres – including in general entertainment, general and business news, movies, youth and kids genres. We have had a great first year for IndiaCast and this JV will give our domestic distribution business scale and wider reach.”

     

    “There are some clear and unique synergies in this partnership. The new bouquet is a more comprehensive offering from the viewer’s perspective that gives the combined entity an edge in the marketplace”, said MK Anand, Managing Director – Media Networks, Disney UTV.

     

    IndiaCast will move its domestic distribution business into this new venture, while continuing to manage its other content monetization businesses which include the international distribution, adsales and content sales business as well as the new media distribution for TV 18, Viacom 18, A+E Networks | TV18 and Eenadu channels. Disney UTV will also move its domestic distribution activities for its bouquet of all nine channels to the new entity.

     

  • Bindass way to go!

     

    When it was launched in 2008, there was some scepticism in the trade about how it would work. The music channels with their strong pedigree were doing their bit for the youth with some shows.

     

    Less than five years hence and part of the Walt Disney Company’s bouquet of channels in India, Bindass has firmly established the Youth Entertainment Channel genre.

     

    Big sister Channel V may be the leader of the pack in ratings, but with costs kept under control, the channel has taken a bold, bindaas approach to get to the top.

     

    The target is a hundred GRPs, says Nikhil Gandhi, Executive Director, Youth Channels – Media Networks at Disney UTV. Gandhi, who has been heading the channel since it launch, save a bit when he stepped out to launch UTV Stars, is bullish about public lapping up its programming content. A fair amount of investments have been made on distribution and get it in shape for the demands of digitization – first in the big metros and the 38 cities in Phase 2. The youth cluster of channels in the new management structure at Disney UTV comprises Bindass and UTV Stars (the other two clusters being movies and kids).

     

    Specifically, in the quest to ‘Rest Less and Do More’ in 2013 and while not changing its mix of music and long- and short-form shows, the popular shows like Big Switch and Emotional Atyachar will see new seasons with Gaurav Chopra and Pravesh Rana respectively. Snacky shows like Angry Appa and What on Earth will be built on.

     

    Much focus is going to be laid on on-ground and digital presence.

     

    Excerpts from an interview:

     

    How has the going been for Bindass since it took off about five years ago?

    The journey has been brilliant. We were the first ones to launch as a YEC and ever since then we have only leapfrogged from one level to the next. We’ve grown as a brand. There were certain mistakes that we made along the way but those were earlier days. We sorted ourselves out in 2009-10 and that is when we gave the first slice of the positioning called ‘What I Am.’ That kind of gave us an edge as audiences started to know that this is a brand for me and that it caters to my needs. This we did on the back of research, an exercise we continuously keep doing. So understanding the pulse of the audiences has been our core DNA. That is what drives us in whatever we do.

     

    As you look back, do you think that the Bindass concept was ahead of its time?

    I wouldn’t say it was ahead of its time; probably I think the audiences were not ready for it. We were still struggling with single TV homes, distribution was a huge issue, the industry wasn’t as organised… Now as I look back, I wish there was a DAS regime that happened at that time or that DTH was flown in a big way… Today, we can proudly say that we were the first guys to make a concept called YAC, which has become the need of the hour for any youth channel in this space right now. We were the first ones to launch a show that time – Sun Yaar Chill Maar – which went on to complete 150 episodes, which was a first sitcom daily soap. Even today our audiences go with such shows. So clearly we were a futuristic youth brand where even the advertisers and brands loved our concepts, shows etc. But somewhere we knew that we were a new brand and that we needed time to take on MTV at that time. But the tables have now turned and we are very strong in our leadership right now.

     

    So was it a first-mover advantage or disadvantage? Are you happy with the decision?

    I would say it was an advantage. I am absolutely happy now as all that we did in those years is now paying off. In fact all the learnings, perceptions, tracks that we had about our audiences is now very relevant as it has started paying off. The last six months have been a clear-cut work on the product, the brand as well as where do we take our audiences along with us as we progress.

     

    There has been some tweaking in the brand positioning over the years…

    Yes, the first one was ‘What I Am’ in 2009-10 which gave a sharp focus to Bindass being a youth brand. It gave it attitude and the audiences also lapped it up as they could identify with it. Having done that for two years, we realised that we had to give some purposeful meaning to Bindass because it was coming out to be wholesome entertainment but that’s about it. And we gave a whole new dimension of restless to it. So it’s about having an attitude with a purpose. Bindass today is an attitude and a positive one. It’s a must-have for you. If you have four engineers and one of them has a Bindass attitude, the likelihood of him succeeding above the others is far more than the others. So that’s the whole promise of being restless. We are trying to push our viewers and telling them not to be happy with what you have done; take your limit to the next level.

     

    Where is this viewer of yours located?

    Honestly, we have viewers from all across the country but our heart is sitting in North-west India. That’s from North of India to the West of India including Punjab, Bihar, Jharkhand etc. That’s because we have realised that all these people who have a different standard of living have the same dream as a guy from Mumbai. But their taste and perception of what is happening on television might be different.

     

    Has DAS been a shot in the arm for your channel?

    Not only DAS but the distribution across the country itself, we have really bolstered it. We have been on the ground and ensured that we have enough nuts and bolts to tighten our distribution.

     

    By being a YAC, you are also catering to the most fickle generation who can switch tastes very easily. How do you ensure they continue to hang around you?

    Predominantly our strength has been research and even before we launched this channel we realised that there is a gap for this kind of space. The name that came to be known of our channel was born out this entire TG who came on the channel and said we want the channel to be called Bindass. The second name that was close was Dhoom, but the name Bindass cut across Bombay, Delhi, Kolkata, Chennai, Hyderabad, Amravati etc. So the name itself is an attitude on its own.

     

    I wouldn’t call them fickle-minded but getting-bored-very-fast generation. You have to keep them on their toes rather than them keeping you on your toes. One needs to understand what is driving them and what their ambitions are and that’s when you start getting pegs of properties that need to be created. Every show that gets aired on our channel is backed by humungous amount of research.

     

    The other thing that we do with this TG is that we do not talk to them; we speak with them. We engage with them so that they start identifying very closely with us. That’s what keeps us going forward. Of course there are gives and takes as far as show formats and all are concerned but largely all the shows that we have done have been in that zone and has given us the edge.

     

    In terms of advertiser-friendliness, how would you rate the channel since you launched operations to now? How have brand-driven shows delivered for you?

    The biggest testimony is that we are in season 4 and 5 of most shows like Big Switch, Emotional Atyachar etc. The whole thought is to take them along with us. We have now become not just a platform to be heard but also an enabler. In fact this year the change on Emotional Atyachar is about empowering. Also, our brand is very well personified across all the shows that we are doing.

     

    Did you face issues with the moral police in terms of content being aired?

    The moral police will be there for any show and I am sure for every show in this world if you are in the public domain you will have issues with the moral police.

     

    Coming back to the present, what’s the story looking like currently?

    The story today is that we are very clear that we have created an identity for ourselves. We have an edge as far as our shows are concerned. The fact that all our shows are original home-grown concepts is the biggest feather we have in our cap. There are 5-6 formats that we have originally created and which are working very well. We are even looking at licensing some of our formats to different parts of the world. We have already done that with EA last year and are looking at Superdude and Big Switch format being licensed to different countries soon. So where the freshness of Bindass is concerned, the whole new leap that we took in the last three months has paid off. Superdude has given us good GRPs and we are in the process of launching two more shows. EA has been our flagship show and that is yet to come so I think we are only going to go to the next level as far as our performance is concerned.

     

    As for the business perspective, we are doing it at a different cost level altogether, where programming is concerned, as compared to competition. We are trying to give audiences shows in a different manner and at a different cost.

     

    Since HSM is your critical market, have you looked at going Hindi for Bindass?

    We were initially 70:30 Hindi to English but the moment I stepped in I said we need to go 100 per cent Hindi. There is a Hinglish touch to it as that is what audiences also want but largely, we are doing shows in Hindi.

     

    With various networks looking to switch to regional feeds what is your strategy on that front?

    We too are considering that option; it is there on the cards. We are looking at the right time and moment. As for the choice, Bhojpuri and Punjabi really do not interest us and we consider South to be a different country altogether. These are markets where advertiser interest is larger than any other market. But we are still doing research around these markets and will arrive at a solution very soon.

     

    How is the merchandising and web business doing for Bindass given that the youth look up to these segments as well?

    The first testimony is that we have 20 lakh fans on Facebook and more than 4 crore hits on YouTube. These are large numbers. When I quote this to an advertiser they just jump at the possibility as we are given them additional eyeballs for engagement. Also, for us these are all organic growth numbers. In the last two years we have been growing significantly and the plan is to take the number further and become the largest youth brand in the country on facebook. I am also the most spoken about and engaged brand on facebook, which tells me that there is something about my brand that works with the consumers.

     

    Also we have developed a very strong creative team internally. The OAP team is phenomenally entrenched with what the audiences like. From the time we have been born we have always been different in terms of look and feel, colours etc. All this has evolved over a period of time and all of this is also going on the web. We also do multi-lingual multi-level campaigns through various platforms where there is media exposure. Like we had a game on the DTH platform around EA. I think the group synergies give us a lot of empowerment to start and take such steps in other avenues.

     

    Another thing where we established ourselves last year was the ground space. We tied up with 3-4 mega events that took place across the country like NH7. We did Lady Gaga event to David Guetta to Enrique Iglesias…we are looking at doing similar things going forward.

     

    How much of Events is critical where engagement with the youth is concerned?

    I think it is one of the critical aspects. Youth will keep going to such places where they get entertainment and the whole idea is to engage at a different level. For example, we have created chickipedia on the web which is about the man’s perspective on how women think. It has been lapped by HUL who have pledged support for the next 2-3 seasons as well. So it’s about engaging with the right kind of shows on the web.

     

    Will these ground level activities be extended to B-class towns?

    Yes. For example, there is this concept called Croaking, which is the biggest karaoking competition in the country. It’s not about you having the talent to sing but about you having the b***s to take the mic and go on the stage and sing. So that’s again about empowerment and is being held across 15 cities. So that’s one important ground level activity. Another ground event we are doing is called Bindass Buddies Project being taken to 200 colleges across 15 cities. We will engage with the TG on campus which no other brand has been able to tap. We’ve got Axe who has come onboard as sponsor. So we’ve been able to create the right kind of associations.

     

    In terms of GRPs what is your target for the next quarter?

    Honestly, we have exceeded our target. We’ve now revised the targets on our own because DAS was anybody’s game and we didn’t know how it would pan out. We were hoping and had put all the right measures in place. Now that it has crossed that barrier and we’ve done better than what we expected – there is a channel V sitting at 52 and we are at 46, and they have 5 shows versus our 1 show. So the whole dynamics has changed for us. We will take it to the next level by adding more shows and at least be in this zone for the next 6-8 months.

     

    In this genre, any specific targets that you have to get to the No. 1 spot?

    The genre is growing and there will be a new number 1 as everybody progresses. Though there will be a level at which we will get saturated – 100+. That’s where we are headed to.

     

    What’s the plan to expand to 38 more cities…

    LC1 is very important for us and we are happy it is happening. These are markets which you’ve never heard of earlier. It’s not that we were not there; we were there in these markets just that our focus now will get even more larger. About 18-20 per cent of the play is going to LC1. The second phase of DAS is also what we are looking forward to. The first phase of DAS has given us a good boost for three metros; so that’s going to become the play now. The more mass you get with your content that will become the booster for your channel.

     

  • UTV Indiagames launches official mobile game for ‘Brave’

    By A Correspondent

     

    The gaming company, UTV Indiagames, has launched the official java mobile game for Disney Pixar’s ‘Brave’.

     

    This game captures the vivid and beautiful Scottish Highlands. Based on the protagonist of the movie -Merida, the user has to use his/her archery skills to unfold the mystery and save her family.

     

    “Disney Pixar’s Brave has an excellent storyline which has all the elements – adventure, mystery, action – that lend itself into an engaging game, deepening the fantastical movie experience. With this Java game we want to reach out to 60 per cent of India’s mobile phone population,” said Samir Bangara, Managing Director – Digital, Disney UTV.

     

  • Games on, but GECs not worried

     

    By Meghna Sharma

     

    The UEFA Euro Cup has made the Europeans forget all about the economic crisis; London, along with the whole world, is eagerly waiting for the world’s biggest sporting event – the Olympics – to begin. The world is buzzed about the various sporting events coming up in the next few months.

     

    Sports, around the globe, generate a major interest and channels – sports or otherwise – fight each other out for viewership and advertisements, and brands try to out-do each other through advertisements and activations to leave a mark on the public’s mind.

     

    The last event of such a stature in India was the recently concluded IPL which saw the entertainment channels fighting for eyeballs. With the next three-four months choc-o-bloc with sporting events, MxMIndia takes a look at how channels in the country are gearing up.

     

    Event Period Channel
    UEFA Euro Cup June 8- July 1 Neo Prime
    Wimbledon June 25-July 8 Star Sports
    India-SL series July 22- Aug 7 Ten Cricket
    Olympics July 27-Aug 12 DD/ESPN or Star Sports

    Time to worry?

    According to the media planners, for GECs and other channels, there is nothing to worry about. “Non-cricket fare is still appealing to a small niche segment and hence, its popularity is not reflected in ratings. India in the months of Jul-Aug has always been a moderate performer and not as high profile as some others and so this will also not have a major impact,” feels Shubha George, COO -South Asia, MEC.

     

    Suresh Balakrishnan

    And she is not alone. Suresh Balakrishnan, CEO, Brand Programming Network, agreed with her and added that though cricket is more than a sport in India, even IPL, which has both cricket as well as entertainment and was telecast at primetime, hasn’t been able to affect channels, especially the GECs in the recent past. “Lately, IPL has been able to get a rating of 2-3 which has hardly affected any GECs, so I’m sure other sports won’t matter to them at all. However, there is no denying the fact that viewership for other sports is increasing in the country. And major events might be able to at least reach the ratings which cricket gets, in the coming years.”

     

    Mr Balakrishnan, however, feels that sports channels don’t have much to worry about as there are many male-focussed brands which help them generate enough ad revenue. “Having said that, I also feel that channels showing sports other than cricket know that recovering money isn’t an easy task,” he added.

     

    The television behaviour showcases the interest of the masses which obviously tilts towards popular entertainment channels. However, most media planners agree that sports viewership is growing in the country and soon things might change but until then channels will have to make do with what they have/get.

     

    Amin Lakhani

    Amin Lakhani, principal partner, Mindshare said: “All leading newspapers and news channels have special coverage of important events, take Euro Cup for instance, but how much of it is being converted into viewership or readership? Even then, that hasn’t deferred them from covering the events because they know that, though tiny, there is a loyal following. Even brands are doing activations for sports which are gaining popularity in other sectors apart from Sec A&B – Pepsi is doing activations for football.”

     

    Business as usual

    Akash Chawla

    Entertainment channels continue to enjoy the largest share in the viewership pie. Although, they continue to compete with each other, when it comes to other genres, nothing has been able to write them off.

     

    Akash Chawla, Zee Entertainment Enterprise (ZEEL) marketing head – national channels, said: “Just like IPL, we are ready to combat any other sporting event. Our programming strategy does not depend on these events.”

     

    “For us, it will be business as usual. The channel is backed with strong and fresh content for its viewers, irrespective of the programming on competing genres,” said Hemal Jhaveri, general manager, Movies Ok.

     

    Hemal Jhaveri

    Other genres which focus on the same target audience as the sports channels are youth and news. But many in these genres believe that such sporting events don’t affect their viewership. Nikhil Gandhi, executive director, youth channels, media networks, Disney UTV claimed that most of the sporting events attract a majority viewership of urban youth, whereas they, as channels, focus on the HSM belt which includes 62 cities. Hence, such sporting events won’t affect their viewership.

     

    A broadcast veteran from a Delhi-based news channel too felt that news channels give enough coverage to the various sporting events, so there is no question that the events might eat into their viewership pie. He said that though both cater to the same TG, they are different genres and people might shift between the two, if needed.

     

    Nikhil Gandhi

    On the other hand, Neo Prime, the sports channel which is currently telecasting UEFA Euro Cup 2012, is aware of the competition within and between other genres and risk involved, but is still optimistic. “Sports is still a male-dominated genre, whereas other genres (read GECs) enjoy female viewership. But during big events, there are chances of a shift in the remote control. Sports do get eyeballs. And as for the advertisements, the brands which advertise on sports channels are different from the ones in GECs or other channels. Hence, nothing overlaps each other,” said Prasana Krishnan, COO, Neo Sports Broadcast.

     

    Prasana Krishnan

    Hopefully, as said by various media personalities, sports other than cricket in the coming years will be able to generate same interest among Indian citizens across sections and help sports channel to boom and enter the main TRP race as well.

     

     

     Imaging: Rafiq, Pictures courtesy: London2012.com

     

     

  • UTV Stars enters UK as UMP Stars

    By A Correspondent

     

    Following a successful launch in India and the Middle East, UTV STARS now enters the UK market as UMP STARS. Premiering as a free-to-air channel on Sky, UMP STARS is a specialty entertainment channel dedicated exclusively to Bollywood.

     

    Commenting on the expansion in UK, MK Anand, Managing Director- Media Networks, Disney UTV said: “We are pleased to launch UMP STARS in the UK which will complement the presence of our flagship Hindi Movies channel UMP Movies in the region. UK has a large South Asian diaspora and Bollywood fanbase. With the launch on UMP STARS, the TV viewers will now be able to enjoy rich and vibrant Bollywood content. We are proud to extend our media sales association with Sky Media and look forward to another grand entry into the region after the successful launch of UMP Movies in December 2011.”

     

    Advertising representation for the channel in the UK will be handled by Sky Media. Richard Hawking – Operations Director commented: “We’re thrilled to be adding another UMP channel to our portfolio. Following the success of UMP Movies, UMP Stars strengthens and broadens our Asian offering to advertisers while delivering fantastic Bollywood content to Sky’s customers.”

     

    Kamlesh Patel, CEO, TVMedia3.com who exclusively distributes Disney UTV Channels in UK and Europe and sealed the deal between Sky and Disney UTV said: “TVMedia3 is delighted to bring UMP Stars to mainstream UK audiences on the huge success of UMP Movies earlier this year. TVMedia3 looks forward to building and delivering this unique content with the team at Disney UTV to audiences across the world”.

     

    The Broadcasting arm of Disney UTV made inroads into the UK market with the launch of UMP Movies on 12th December 2011. With the launch of UMP STARS, the company further strengthens its foothold in the region.