Tag: Futurebrands

  • DY works appoints Ashish Bahl as CEO

    By Our Staff

     

    DY Works appoints Ashish Bahl as CEO. Ashish takes over from Tresa Paul who has moved out to pursue new opportunities.

     

    Ashish has spent over 25 years reshaping brands and building memorable campaigns in advertising, marketing & media. He has worked with SABMiller India (now AB-Inbev) Neo Cricket & Sports, Mccann, Contract, JWT, Leo Burnett & O&M, where he’s worked with over 100 iconic global brands including Pepsi,Coca-Cola, MasterCard, Nestle, ESPN, SABMiller, Hero-Honda and many more. Since 2017, Ashish has founded/co-founded three companies including The Happiness Project, 1418 (a platform for 14-18 year-olds) and Happinessperkm (India’s only motorcycling brand built by riders).

     

    On this appointment, Santosh Desai, CEO & Managing Director, FutureBrands, said: “I’m thrilled to welcome Ashish on-board. Ashish’s appointment signals the evolution of DY Works from building products and experiences to re-crafting and using design-thinking to find impactful solutions rooted in deeper belief systems. I’m excited about what’s yet to come and the change we’ll bring.”

     

    Said Ashish Bahl, Managing Director & CEO, DY Works, “I’m honoured to join an incredible team at DY. My key focus will be to use design-thinking and semiotics to build purpose-driven brands. In this new phase at DY we will expand the definition of design where we will build brands committed to human-centric business design. I look forward to this new journey and creating some fantastic work with the DY team.”

     

  • So, what’s the view on Depiction of Women in Advertising

     

    By A Correspondent

     

    The Advertising Standards Council of India (ASCI) and Futurebrands, have unveiled the GenderNext study to study the representation of women in advertising. GenderNext, notes a communique, covers patterns of portrayals across multiple categories, such as personal care, fashion, beauty, home and hearth, gadgets and wheels, money and education. The study also touches upon how advertising portrays women versus how they see themselves and want to be seen.

     

    According to Lipika Kumaran, the lead author of GenderNext, the study reveals that while there are some positive moves, mainstream advertising still heavily borrows from an inventory of overused, and sometimes harmful stereotypical tropes. A detailed study of over six hundred advertisements revealed several problematic tropes- such as sensualising the act of eating by women, showing women as spenders in financial advertising, women running around the house while others lounge around, male gaze acceptance in beauty ads,, showing women as lower down in tech-hierarchy in gadget ads, male celebrities challenging and instructing women,among others. A detailed list of such depictions across categories are captured in Annexure A.

     

    Women interviewed across different life stages and town classes pointed out that it is not them but others in their sphere who lag behind them, and they are the ones in need of empowerment. They feel that advertising can be their ally in this journey. The study found that for young unmarried women, common stereotypes used in advertising such as women joyfully undertaking the drudgery of work was not aspirational at all. Typical women’s day ads that show women emerge victorious after significant struggle were not considered particularly empowering. Women are tired of ads showing young women being bestowed with freedoms only after putting up a fight.

     

    The study proposes a category agnostic framework “The SEA (Self-esteemed – Empowered – Allied) Framework” that aims to guide stakeholders in imagining as well as evaluating portrayals of women in their advertising by building empathy and aiding evaluation

     

    The study also proposes a 3S screener for scripts/storyboards, casting, styling to identify stereotype red flags. The screener looks at aspects of a) Subordination b) Service and c) Standardisation (. More details of the SEA framework and 3S screener can be found in Annexure B

     

    Said Subhash Kamath, Chairman, ASCI: “GenderNext acts as a guide for stakeholders – brand owners, marketers, advertising professionals – to aid the creation of more progressive depictions of women in advertising. The deep insights on women, and what they feel about advertising is a fantastic input into advertising creation, and we hope that brands and advertisers will be motivated by the findings to depict women in more progressive ways. We also intend to set up a task force to evaluate advertising guidelines on harmful stereotypes”

     

    Added Santosh Desai, MD, Futurebrands Consulting: “As an influential form of popular culture, advertising has historically been a significant source for the propagation of gender stereotypes. While things are changing, what this study, initiated by ASCI and carried out by Futurebrands uncovers, is that gender continues to be represented in a skewed and discriminatory manner. Some obvious ways of stereotypes are less visible, but there are many other ways, both subtle and not-so- subtle, in which gender portrayals continue to be skewed. The GenderNext study has identified some common patterns of discrimination and has also created a framework that enables marketers to identify and eliminate such undesirable representations.”

     

    The report, said Manisha Kapoor, Secretary-General, ASCI: “ is only the first of the many initiatives ASCI will put together in this space. This is a continuing conversation.”

     

    For the study, the primary research involved ad clinics with 160 respondents and 20 focus group discussions across 10 centres, in addition to tapping into Futurebrand’s proprietary study Bharat Darshan. More than 300 people were spoken to via social media. All stakeholders such as national and regional advertisers, agency and creative heads. Gender domain experts, policy makers and advocacy groups were consulted as part of the study enquiry.

     

  • ASCI partners with Futurebrands to launch GenderNext study

     

    By Our Staff

    The Advertising Standards Council of India (ASCI), in association with Futurebrands, is launching the first ever gender depiction study in Indian advertising. GenderNext aims to provide actionable insights that can shape the gender narratives in advertising positively. The study is the first of several initiatives ASCI will undertake in 2021 as part of a year-long focus on gender.

    The GenderNext study, notes a communique,  has attracted much interest amongst advertisers, who are backing it with their own insights as well as funding. The landmark study has received support from the likes of Nobel Hygiene, ITC-Vivel, Kellogg, Colgate, Diageo, Eureka Forbes and Mondelez, and ASCI hopes more of its members will become a part of it.

    The report, to release in September 2021, is expected to help in understanding the depictions of women in advertising. It uses several starting points of inquiry. To begin with, there will be a semiotics and cultural decode of Indian advertising over time, across categories and regions. In addition, advertisers, creative voices, policymakers, gender experts will be met for their inputs. Ad clinics will be conducted across 10 centres with consumers for their views and feedback on gender depiction in advertising. The study will draw an understanding of the larger cultural shifts in India through Bharat Darshan, a proprietary study done by Futurebrands over a decade, and across more than 200 towns. GenderNext is a first-of-its-kind study and expected to be of significant value to advertisers and creative agencies, as well as academia, policymakers and advocacy bodies.

    Subhash Kamath

    Said Subhash Kamath, Chairman, ASCI: “As a self-regulatory body, ASCI wants advertisers to embrace more responsible advertising. The idea is to not just limit ourselves to being a complaints management body but also to help advertisers navigate through complex issues and contribute to the creation of positive advertising. ASCI will support brands and advertisers to “get it right” in various ways, and this is one such initiative”.

    Manisha Kapoor
    Manisha Kapoor

    Added Manisha Kapoor, Secretary General of ASCI:  “The portrayal of women in advertising has been the subject of much debate. The gender narrative has been evolving and changing but it is not a simple, linear change. GenderNext will help advertisers navigate these narratives, which can sometimes even be seemingly in conflict with each other. The idea is to provoke conversations, and generate actionable insights that advertisers can tap into for progressive, culturally relevant and aspirational gender portrayals. Besides GenderNext, we will also be partnering with like-minded organisations with similar objectives to make a difference to the gender narrative.”

    Santosh Desai
    Santosh Desai

    Said Santosh Desai, MD & CEO, Futurebrands: “We are excited to be part of a study that will track the changing gender narrative in advertising and help advertisers with insights to craft their strategies better. The study – a synthesis of primary consumer feedback, opinions of a wide range of stakeholders and commentators, and a wider reading of cultural changes – will build on the extensive cultural tracking work Futurebrands has been engaged in over the past decade.”

    Added Kartik Johari, VP – Marketing and Commerce, Nobel Hygiene, the principal sponsor of the study: “As a company where our brands resolutely speak the consumer truth, through this unique partnership with ASCI, we are keen to understand how popular culture has, and will continue to shape, our perception of gender. We hope this research forms not only a map of their minds, but a casting net on the minds that will shape tomorrow.”

  • Mullen Lintas wins mandate for Nature’s Essence

    By Our Staff

     

    Mullen Lintas has won the creative mandate for Nature’s Essence, a skincare and haircare brand backed by Samara Capital. The new campaign is part of the revamped brand strategy, crafted by Futurebrands.

     

    Said Amit Chopra, CEO – Esme Consumer: “For more than 20 years, Nature’s essence has helped women discover their real beauty through its range of Facial Kits, Gels, Creams and Face washes.  Our first campaign, “Hello Beautiful”, encourages every woman to discover their inner beauty by embracing the best that nature and technology has to offer.”

     

    Added Garima Khandelwal and Azazul Haque, CCOs, Mullen Lintas: “Nature’s Essence’s range of beauty products for everyday skincare make you meet your new beautiful skin, as though you meet yourself for the first time. We won the business with the strategy of making beauty a conversation with self, talking to the new confident audience that is not seeking or cares for external validation or admiration for her newfound beauty, but making herself her biggest fan and admirer.”

  • Tresa Paul takes charge of DY Works as Alpana Parida moves on

    By A Correspondent

     

    Design Thinking firm DY Works has announced the appointment of Tresa Paul as its new CEO and Managing Director. She takes charge from Alpana Parida who has moved out to pursue entrepreneurial opportunities. Paul was until recently Head of Products & Marketing (APAC) for Bonzai Digital, the Singapore-based programmatic creative technology platform and Senior Vice President at Ogilvy India right before.

     

    Said Santosh Desai, CEO and Managing Director – FutureBrands, which owns a majority stake in the company: “For the past 10 years, DY has done memorable work in brand design and packaging rooted in deep cultural insights with the best brands in India. This next phase is about leveraging the current position and ensuring DY moves into its next chapter of growth and impact. I  couldn’t be more delighted to welcome Tresa to lead DY into its next journey.”

     

    Added Paul: “ I am excited to take charge of DY Works. DY’s approach of design thinking, cultural insights and semiotics in futureproofing brands is well known. Our added focus will be on design and its impact on systems and communities as a whole while we continue to do what we do best. I look forward to designing this new journey with Team DY.”

     

     

  • Can the new Nestle CEO restore confidence in Maggi?

     

    By Kala Vijayraghavan & Ratna Bhushan

     

    More than allegedly selling Maggi with excessive lead content or mislabelling packs, perhaps Nestle India’s biggest transgression in the run-up to the noodles hitting the fan in early June may well have been the inadequate communication with government and regulators. Small wonder, then, Suresh Narayanan, the 55-year-old Indian managing director at Nestle India, who’s been brought in to douse the fire, talks about “stepping up engagement with the government.” This, of course, will be in addition to taking “all necessary steps to engage with the consumer,” and the “first task” of getting “Nestle as an organisation to regain its self-confidence.”

     

    Narayanan’s predecessor, Etienne Benet who took over in October 2013, replaced another expat, Antonio Helio Waszyk. To be sure, Nestle India has almost always had expat CEOs since it began operations in the country over a century ago; and Narayanan is the first Indian in that role, although he has come in from an overseas Nestle outpost (the Philippines).

     

    Having an Indian at the helm is doubtless good for perception, credibility and communication, with regulators, consumers and even employees, reckon human resource experts. Says R Suresh, founder of RGF Executive Search: “Some European companies tend to have a mindset that expats should be at the helm of the company. But for Nestle India, which wants to get Maggi up and going, an Indian as CEO is a great decision.” D Shivakumar, chairman of PepsiCo, feels two strengths of Narayanan will come to fore at Nestle India. “He excels at customer management and boosting the morale of those who work with him.”

     

    The new CEO, though, will be the first one to remind you that he does not have “a magic wand,” and the journey back to normalcy promises to be a long, winding one. Nestle posted its first loss in over three decades for the April-June 2015 quarter (of Rs 64.4 crore compared to a net profit Rs 288 crore in the corresponding quarter a year ago), thanks to the disruption in the instant noodles business. Consider what Maggi is up against: the 30-year-old brand with over 75 per cent market share has disappeared from shelves, virtually overnight. The national food regulator has banned sale of Maggi noodles nationally citing excessive lead levels, more than the permissible quantity of 2.5 parts per million; mislabelling on packs which declared ‘no added MSG (monosodium glutamate, a controversial flavour enhancer); and for selling Maggi oats masala noodles without product approval. Nestle has insisted that neither its noodles nor pasta contain added MSG, adding that many packaged foods contain hydrolysed groundnut protein, onion powder and wheat flour, all of which contain glutamate. The matter is in the courts.

     

    For its part, the top brass at Nestle stresses that Narayanan has not been airdropped just because of his nationality, although being Indian has its advantages. Says Wang Ling Martello, executive vice president, Nestle SA, head of Zone Asia, Oceania and Africa: “Suresh is Indian, knows the market here, can hit the ground running. But when I scanned the world, I did not look for nationality. I looked for the skillsets… We don’t pick people depending on nationalities,” she says.

     

    A former CEO at a multinational consumer goods company points out that an Indian in the hot seat is also good for PR – a front Nestle hasn’t emerged smelling of roses not just in India but globally too. In 2010, for instance, the Swiss MNC found itself at the receiving end of flak from environment group Greenpeace – and consequently on social media – which accused it of not heeding a cry to stop buying palm oil from an Indonesian company that was allegedly consciously destroying Indonesian forests. Nestle was duly slammed on social media for its apparent arrogance.

     

    When the Maggi crisis broke in June, fingers were similarly pointed at Nestle India for living in denial, not communicating with consumers and a poor attempt at countering the criticisms on social media. The former CEO at the MNC says Nestle culturally has had condescending attitude towards the marketplace. “This is a world where leadership and brands have to be humble —to admit that, yes, we made mistakes, we will rectify them, and move on”.

     

    “It is a tough one to resolve. Nestle allowed too much delay and let doubts creep into consumers’ minds, who have moved on to rearrange life around new habits. The company failed to present a different story. It will not be easy for Suresh even as an Indian to fix the damage,” says Santosh Desai, MD & CEO, Futurebrands, a brand management and marketing consulting firm.

     

    Rajeev Bakshi, a former CEO at PepsiCo India, reckons that more than winning over the consumer, Narayanan’s biggest challenge is to win over the government. “This is not an attack from third party, unlike when Pepsi was attacked by an NGO.” In 2010, the Centre for Science and Environment had alleged that leading food brands including PepsiCo’s Lays, McDonald’s, KFC and, yes, Maggi, were guilty of “large scale misbranding and misinformation.” But today the government is the protagonist. “Nestle can’t afford to take an adversarial role here. They have to align and collaborate with the government,” says Bakshi, now managing director of wholesaler Metro Cash & Carry India.

     

    Fifty-five-year-old Narayanan, who began his career with Hindustan Unilever, doubtless has his toughest mandate yet. “Deep down in my gut, the words that come to me are, we shall overcome… we (employees, colleagues, associates) can rebuild brick by brick, together.”

     

    They’ll need plenty of help from government and consumer.

     

    Source:The Economic Times

    Copyright © 2015, Bennett, Coleman & Co. Ltd. All Rights Reserved

    Licensed to republish

     

     

  • India not Shining! So why does FutureBrands ‘Country Brand Index’ not have India in the Top 25?

    By Malini Goyal

     

    FutureBrands, a global brand consultancy, puts out an annual ‘Country Brand Index’ in which it measures the strength of a country brand on various parameters, from awareness to familiarity. The firm also looks at what differentiates a country brand on five key dimensions: value system, quality of life, good for business, heritage and culture, and tourism.

     

    The 2012 index – Future Brand’s eighth – had Switzerland, Canada, Japan, Sweden and New Zealand as the top 5. India didn’t figure in the list of 25. That may not surprise as most of the countries on that list are developed markets (countries like the UAE and Costa Rica that come in at the tail end are the few exceptions).

     

    The five key FutureBrands benchmarks may explain why India doesn’t figure in the top 25. For instance, quality of life in most metros still has plenty of room for improvement; and doing business isn’t exactly easy.

     

    The main reason, though, why India as a brand doesn’t score well is that it means too many diverse things to too many people – from Bollywood to Gandhi, from the Taj Mahal to cricket. Or to put it another way: Indians just can’t seem to pin down one defining attribute – or a set of common attributes – for Brand India.

     

    That’s what a recently-released domestic study amongst young corporate executives throws up. “India is a country of contradictions – a land of opportunities and also a land of hardships,” says Tara Singh Vachani, 26, daughter of entrepreneur Analjit Singh and CEO of Antara Senior Living. In a similar vein, internet entrepreneur Alok Kejriwal, 44, dubs India as “divine chaos.

     

    It’s a car that’s being driven in water. Or, to put it spiritually, India is the soul whose body has gone missing.” And Mittu Chandilya, 33, head, AirAsia India reckons India is a socially diverse country that is trying to construct its future by carefully balancing its past and present.

     

    Clearly, for most of these high-flying young Indians, brand India is a complex entity with surprises and contradictions built in. The breadth of answers from those surveyed – the sample comprised those in the 26-35 year age band – was, well, breathtaking.

     

    For instance, to the question ‘What defines Brand India’, the most popular answer (64.3% of those surveyed) was Bollywood; the second most common answer hit the other end of the spectrum – Mahatma Gandhi (57%). The next two most popular answers too were as diverse as they come – the Taj Mahal and cricket.

     

    And what is it that makes Indians proud in the global context: while 84% reckoned the opening up of the economy made their hearts swell with pride, almost half of the sample felt that Bollywood’s high-jinks on the international stage made them feel good about themselves.

     

    In the similar vein of contradictions, some Indians prefer to see the glass half full – around 60% feel ‘incredible’ is the apt adjective to describe India – although more than half thought ‘corrupt’ was a far better prefix.

     

    And all of 83% feel India’s economic growth story has taken a beating. The culprits aren’t unpredictable: corruption, political leadership, policy paralysis and red-tapism.

     

    A Reflected Idea of India

    What do these results reveal about young Indians’ view of the country? “It is a very shallow view of India. My sense is if you did this survey among foreigners anywhere in the world, the response would not have been very different,” says Santosh Desai, CEO of FutureBrands.

     

    It is one thing for the world to see Bollywood as defining India. It is another that even Indians living in India, who experience all its highs and lows every day, too see it that way.

     

    “Their idea of brand India is an imagined one. It is not based on their experienced realities of India,” adds Mr Desai. Mr Kejriwal agrees.

     

    He feels if true this is a deceptive view that Indians have. Half of the respondents are from the North. And yet they aren’t talking about real issues like respect for women and how to drive changes.

     

    “Around 60% of them are saying an emphasis on inclusive growth will help drive change. What do people in that age group know and what do they care about inclusive growth,” asks Mr Kejriwal.

     

    In contrast, the real issues that Indians face on a daily basis are conspicuous by their absence in the survey. What about education and everything around it? Shouldn’t a young country like India with such a messy education system be worried about it and aspire to fix it, asks Mr Kejriwal.

     

    “There is an inflated sense of self that you get all through the results. I think these respondents are just ticking the right boxes – things that make them feel nice.”

     

    Partha Sinha

    Partha Sinha, director, South Asia, Publicis, an advertising agency, is also critical: “Theirs is a view divorced from Indian realities. They are simply playing back popular imageries – from Incredible India to corruption.”

     

    There are reasons why young corporate executives see India that way. One, many of them tend to live in their own urban bubbles. And the only way they experience the other India is through Bollywood and cricket.

     

    Two, many Indians are still struggling with the idea of India. While the civilizational and historical view of India for them is rich and deep, they are still grappling with what benchmarks to use to construct the idea of 21st century contemporary India.

     

    “Indians are still settling down with relatively new ideas of democracy, liberalization, market-dictated policies. Power structures have changed. Old rules are no longer relevant. We still do not know how to judge things in the new context,” says Mr Desai. As a result, Indians form an escapist view that is at once glossy, seductive and often are imageries that the world is putting out – be it corruption or Bollywood or cricket or Gandhi.

     

    Source:The Economic Times

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

    Licensed to republish