Tag: GroupM

  • With Raksha Bandhan in mind, Facebook to launch online shopping fest with GroupM

    By A Correspondent

     

    Social networking site Facebook is looking to tap the rising enthusiasm in India for online shopping by launching a shopping festival named Tied Together on the occasion of Raksha Bandhan. The plan involves setting up a website in association with media agency conglomerate GroupM between August 12 and August 29, the day of the festival.

     

    Media agencies said Facebook’s pitch note said brands can “unlock the power of social media that can reach 10 crore potential customers through this event.” Facebook’s role will be to use its subscriber base and social networking platform to drive traffic to the shopping site.

     

    Participating companies will have to pay a fee that will be shared by Facebook, GroupM and other media agencies. Facebook, which has 11.2 crore users in India, is said to be looking for a title sponsor at an asking rate of Rs 3 crore and a principal sponsor at a similar rate besides associate sponsors for Rs 1.5 crore each.

     

    Facebook and GroupM didn’t respond to emailed queries.

    “Online shopping festivals have become a popular trend in India, especially with the rise in the number of ecommerce companies, which are driving the growth of online shopping in the country,” a media planner said. “Facebook should be viewed as another media vehicle which has a huge database that can be utilised for commercial purposes.”

     

    Last October, Google held a shopping festival in association with GroupM and Amazon called the Grand Diwali Mela. A year before that, Google launched the Great Online Shopping Festival. Earlier this year, Google held the Great Indian Travel Festival (GITF) in association with media agency conglomerate IPG Mediabrands. In July, Magicbricks joined hands with GroupM and Google to launch a property festival that will be called the Great Online Home Festival. “Companies like Amazon, Flipkart and other ecommerce companies can host an online festival on their own website. But companies like Google and Facebook need to create a new one to host a shopping festival. The idea is to create online intellectual properties (IP) and to make them annual events,” said another media planner.

     

    Companies like Google and Facebook charge advertisers on a “per click” basis that ranges between 50 paise to Rs 100 and Rs 2 to Rs 20, respectively, “depending on the customer-targeting options that they choose,” said the planner. They will charge a fee for sponsoring these festivals on their website. “For media agencies that associate with such events there are no immediate financial returns and it is a long-term plan,” he said.

     

    Source:The Economic Times

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

    Licensed to republish

     

  • Maxus wins Paper Boat mandate

    By A Correspondent

     

    Sanchayeeta Verma

    GroupM media agency Maxus has bagged the media mandate for Paper Boat. This win comes after a multi-agency pitch by the Maxus Bengaluru team headed by Sanchayeeta Verma, South Head, Maxus.

     

    Commenting on the occasion, Parvesh Debuka, Marketing Head, Paper Boat, “’My love affair with Maxus began some time ago. I was bowled over by their charm (and the data analytics). I think it will be lots of fun working together.”

     

    Commenting on the win, Verma said, “We are extremely delighted to have Paper Boat with us. Our vision is two-fold – one to make the drink extremely popular and increase their visibility. The second would be to communicate their brand proposition of „memories‟ through an effective media mix and creative strategies. Our approach will be both strategic and tactical for meeting our goals!”

     

  • ISDI WPP School of Communication launched in Mumbai

    By A Correspondent

     

    WPP and the Indian School of Design and Innovation (ISDI), a fast-growing recognized leader in arts and design vocational education, jointly announced the establishment of the ISDI WPP School of Communication.

     

    Located on ISDI’s state of the art campus in the heart of India’s business capital, Mumbai, the ISDI WPP School of Communication marks WPP’s first foray into the Indian education sector. The partnership will help create India’s first professional three-year undergraduate diploma program in communication based on a unique work-study model that will bring together a strong academic and creative curriculum combined with practical application.

     

    The admissions process is currently underway through an online application form. The school recently hosted its first Accepted Students day where students and their parents had an opportunity to interact with the leadership team and faculty. The inaugural batch will commence in August 2015 with the first cohort of 60students.

     

    The ISDI WPP School of Communication is WPP’s second education initiative globally. In 2011, WPP in partnership with the Shanghai Arts and Design Academy established the WPP School of Marketing and Communications in China. The program has just successfully completed its fourth year with 220 students enrolled.

     

    WPP and WPP companies, which are globally recognized for their in-house training and development programs, have worked closely with ISDI to develop the School’s curriculum and hire full-time faculty. Radha Kapoor, Founder & Director, ISDI, will lead the School’s board of directors. Additionally, senior staff from WPP companies will serve as part-time faculty and act as mentors. Internship and training opportunities will also be provided to students. An Executive Council has also been set up to oversee the smooth functioning of the 3-year program. ISDI is represented by Dr. Indu Shahani, Dean HR College, Radha Kapoor & Siddharth Shahani, Directors, ISDI; and WPP India by Ranjan Kapur, Country Manager, Paul Mower, Country Finance Director and Madhukar Sabnavis, Vice Chairman & Country Head of Discovery & Planning, Ogilvy & Mather.

     

    While the list of visiting faculty will be marked by celebrated names such as Piyush Pandey, Executive Chairman and National Creative Director at Ogilvy & Mather, and Roshan Abbas, Managing Director at Encompass Events, the program directors will include the likes of Madhukar Sabnavis, and CVL Srinivas, CEO at GroupM for South Asia, among others.

     

    Commenting on the partnership, WPP CEO Sir Martin Sorrell said, “Amid strong growth in the wider economy and, more specifically, in our sector, India is facing a pronounced talent shortage, one that is expected to become even more acute in the future.” He added, “As the leading communications group in India and the world, WPP is committed to helping India to further develop the already high level of creative and professional talent in this sector.”

     

    Speaking on the supply-demand gap for fresh talent in the industry, Ranjan Kapur, Country Manager – India at WPP, said, “We employ approximately 15,000 people (including associates) and on an average, we need 3,000 new recruits every year, including replacements and first timers and this school is just a small beginning. We hope to expand this to be able to cover a significantly large part of our requirements and turnout 400-500 young men and women every year from our school. Our first batch of 60 students is just the beginning.”

     

    The School will offer students a three-year undergraduate program, wherein, the first year comprises of basic marketing and communication subjects and the second and third year offers students four major specialisations to choose from- Advertising and Communications, Media, Activation and Digital Marketing and Public Relations. WPP Lectures will run from Monday to Saturday, in the afternoons. Throughout the three years, students will be taught and mentored by top professionals from WPP and the industry, will work on live projects, build a portfolio, develop practical work skills, and have the opportunity to intern with WPP companies and get international exposure through student exchange and study abroad programs.

     

  • Research firm Rentrak ties up with WPP’s Interactive Television to collect box-office data

    By Pritha Mitra Dasgupta

     

    Media research company Rentrak has entered into an alliance with WPP’s cinema advertising unit, Interactive Television (ITV), to try and overcome a roadblock it has hit in India over collecting box-office data.

     

    The company is unable to collect data from PVR and Inox, two of the biggest local cinema chains. PVR, which has a nearly 70% market share, wants Rentrak to pay a fee to get access to its theatres, while Inox will sign up only if PVR does so too, said top sources at GroupM, WPP’s media-buying group.

     

    Rentrak has a tie-up with GroupM and its agencies in the US. The box-office data will be useful for advertisers while considering displaying ads in movie halls. So far only two cinema chains, Carnival and Cinepolis, have inked deals to share box-office data with Rentrak in India.

     

    Rentrak hopes its association with ITV, which buys space for ads in theatre screens on behalf of companies, will help it overcome the hurdle. It believes with the pact, which is in exchange of exclusive data, it will get access to movie producers and advertisers, who can, in turn, help it in convincing PVR and Inox to come onboard.

     

    “ITV is supporting Rentrak in getting access to cinema owners across the country. For cinema advertising to become bigger and take its rightful place in the media mix, it needs to become more accountable and measurable,” said Ajay Mehta, chief executive of ITV. “Box-office data will give advertisers clear measures and ways to calculate the RoI (return on investment).”

     

    Rentrak tracks box-office information from more than 1.25 lakh cinemas in 40 countries. The company directly collects and compiles box-office data on real-time at the theatre and gives it to stakeholders after further processing. “Through us distributors not only will get access to box-office data, it will help in better release planning, programming, determining release windows, and also understand audience preferences,” said Rajkumar Akella, managing director of Rentrak India, while confirming the alliance with ITV.

     

    According to ITV, India needs a scientific methodology to measure box-office data as cinema advertising — ads played inside cineplexes and multiplexes — accounts for more than Rs 400 crore in annual revenue and has grown at about 15% annually in the past three years.

     

    “We expect it to grow at a compounded annual growth rate of 20% over the next three years,” said ITV’s Mehta.

     

    Source:The Economic Times

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

    Licensed to republish

     

  • Motivator appoints Vijayant Dhaka

    By A Correspondent

     

    Vijayant Dhaka

    Motivator has appointed Vijayant Dhaka as National Head of Digital Trading. His role will involve streamlining digital channel planning strategies and integrating new trading platforms and practices, besides leading the trading desk for clients.

    Dhaka joins Motivator from Ignitee Digital which is now a part of New Digital, Singapore, where he was involved in driving business growth by tapping into performance media clients. He has also been an early stage team member at Octane, and founding team member at Policybazaar. At Policy Bazaar, he set up a customer facing team while at Octane, he was the business head and drove international expansion into South East Asia, Middle East & South Africa.

    Commenting on his new role, Dhaka said, “With ever growing digital and mobile penetration in India, we are up for challenging yet exciting times ahead, next 3-5 years will revolutionize the media industry. Motivator thinks alike and is well poised to move at a faster pace than the industry, with investments in right technologies and people. I’m looking forward to this journey.”

     

    V.Narayanan

    Dhaka will be based out of Gurgaon and will report into V.Narayanan, Chief Growth Officer.

     

    Speaking on this development, V.Narayanan said, “Motivator has restructured its digital offering to put new media at the centre of the agency’s offering. Vijayant’s appointment is part of Motivator’s plan to accelerate & enhance the value through better trading and partnership practices. He would play a pivotal role in driving digital efficiencies by cloning best in class processes of GroupM and forging new partnerships that transcends our innovative digital offering to our clients.”

     

  • Mindshare is #1 as per latest RECMA ratings

    By A Correspondent

     

    Leading marketing services agency Mindshare emerged as the No 1 media agency in India as per RECMA’s latest qualitative assessment for all leading media agencies in India. Mindshare has scored high on the parameters of Client Profile, Momentum, Competitive Pitches and Resources to emerge as the leading agency in India.

     

    Said Ashutosh Srivastava, Chairman, Emerging Markets at Mindshare: “I’m pleased to see this endorsement from RECMA for the agency’s position in India. Mindshare continues to be at the leading edge there – in harnessing data to power more creativity and innovative use of media platforms for marketers, and bringing to life its proposition of Adaptive Marketing”.

     

    Gowthaman Ragothaman, Chief Operating Officer, Mindshare Asia Pacific added, “I am particularly satisfied with the recognition on structure and vitality. We continuously re-engineer our teams in line with the changing demands from our clients as well as the media and marketing landscape. Our suite of services now reflect a full-fledged marketing communications company”

     

    Speaking on the new ratings by RECMA, Prasanth Kumar, CEO, Mindshare South Asia said, “This is a win for each and every member of the Mindshare team. Mindshare has always been the leader in innovation, and we believe it is extremely vital for us to prepare ourselves and our clients for a relevant tomorrow. With our adaptive marketing philosophy, we have ensured our clients have the competitive advantage, and their communication is superlative. We are grateful for their belief in us, to deliver on our common goals of brand building. We are proud of the fact that our clients continue to work with us on initiatives that are continuously pushing the boundaries of media investment and communication, as we successfully redefine the media industry in India.”

     

    The RECMA country Qualitative Evaluations offer an extensive and up-to-date assessment of the media agencies based on a set of performances indicators.

     

  • Motivator hires Kavita Acharekar from Nielsen

    By A Correspondent

     

    Kavita Acharekar from Nielsen has joined Motivator, in its Mumbai Office, as Client Leader (Business Engagement Team). Motivator is a media agency of GroupM.

     

    With nearly 10 years of experience, Kavita would be leading client relationships across Motivator Mumbai’s key businesses.

     

    Trishul Bhumkar, General Manager, Motivator, shared, “As a part of getting talent and skills ‘outside in’ we are happy to have Kavita join the team. With a good decade of research experience, Kavita will being a new dimension to the way we view consumers. With these diverse skills amongst our team members, we are better equipped to look at same problems in newer ways for our clients”.

     

  • Facebook and GroupM host inaugural FMCG Forum

    By A Correspondent

     

    Facebook along with GroupM has introduced ‘Brand Bazaar’- the inaugural FMCG Forum in India. The goal for this forum was to rethink the possibilities of the digital medium for brands in the FMCG category, the largest contributor to the Indian advertising expenditure. The Brand Bazaar forum was held in Gurgaon and Mumbai.

     

    The forum was a mix of presentations and panel discussions by experts from Facebook, GroupM, creative advocates and brand custodians. After an introduction by Kirthiga Reddy, Managing Director, Facebook India and CVL Srinivas, CEO, GroupM South Asia, the event began with a keynote address by Ashutosh Srivastava, Chairman and CEO – APAC & Global Emerging Markets, Mindshare. He raised themes in his presentation- the usage of data to effectively target consumers via digital media and creating relevant content to capture the consumer online.

     

    Commenting on the FMCG Forum, Kirthiga Reddy, Managing Director, Facebook India said, “The FMCG community in India has always been at the forefront of marketing. Now, with the consumer shift to digital and mobile, the whole ecosystem is redefining marketing once again. This forum is the coming together of experts from across the spectrum — marketers, media & creative agencies, researchers, and publishers — to leverage the power of personalized marketing at scale to build brands and move products off shelves in a mobile-first world.”

     

    CVL Srinivas

    CVL Srinivas, CEO, GroupM South Asia said, “At GroupM we are constantly prepared to give brands an edge in an evolving advertising industry. The main reason to create an industry forum such as ‘Brand Bazaar’ is to talk about the most relevant aspects of advertising in the FMCG category- from investment and creativity in digital advertising, smart usage of data to target consumers or develop new channels of distribution for products. We found a partner in Facebook to work with us to address new ideas and concepts at this forum.”

     

    This was followed by a panel discussion on Return of Investment on Digital. The panel in Gurgaon comprised Gaurav Jeet Singh Head Media Services- South Asia, Hindustan Unilever Limited, Balendu Shrivastava, Facebook, Dolly Jha, Nielsen, Kartik Sharma, Managing Directory Maxus, South Asia, Uday Kagal, Milward Brown, and moderated by Sunder Muthuraman, Global Chief Strategy Officer, Gain Theory. The ROI on Digital session in Mumbai included panelists Priya Nair, Executive Director, Home Care, Hindustan Unilever Limited, T Gangadhar, Managing Director, MEC Global South Asia, with Balendu and Uday.

     

    The second panel discussion was on Creativity and Content in Digital Media. Moderated by AnantRangaswami, Editor, Storyboard- CNBC TV 18, the Gurgaon panel included RuchiraJaitley, Senior Director, Social Beverages, PepsiCo, Joy Poole, Facebook and Fergus O’ Hara, Facebook. The Mumbai panelists were SrinandanSundaram, VicePresident and Category Head for Skincare, Hindustan Unilever Limited, Kunal Jeswani, CEO, Ogilvy & Mather India and Abhijit Avasthi, former NCD at O&M.

     

    The forum also had speakers on E-Commerce: opening a new channel of distribution for FMCG companies. In Gurgaon this session was with I Srinivas Murthy, CMO of Snapdeal and in Mumbai with MihirMukadam, Vice President, Marketing at LocalBanya.com

     

  • HT celebrate leadership status at GroupM in Delhi NCR

    By A Correspondent

     

    Even as there is an advertising war between The Hindustan Times (HT) and The Times of India (TOI) on readership supremacy,  HT organised a celebration party for “being the No.1 newspaper in Delhi NCR for the fourteenth time in a row” at the GroupM office at Cybercity, Gurgaon last week. The celebrations saw executives unwinding with a game of footfall, beer pong and beer chugging competitions.

     

    Saket Sinha, Principal Partner, Mindshare, GroupM, said, “I congratulate Hindustan Times, everyone is really happy. Thank you for giving us a wonderful Friday evening.”

     

    Gopal Krishan, Senior Director-The Exchange, Mindshare, GroupM, said, “The event was really nice. The party really brought two big media giants-GroupM and Hindustan Times together. Everyone enjoyed getting together, engaging in fun games.”

     

    The evening of celebration was enjoyed by people from most of the Group M agencies including Maxus, Mindshare, and Motivators among others and they all came together to congratulate HT for its win.

     

    Next, do we see a TOI party at GroupM’s Delhi office?

  • Madison Media snaps up Snapdeal wef July 1

    By A Correspondent [updated]

     

    Madison Media Plus, a part of Madison Media Group, has just announced the win of Snapdeal. The account – run by OMD – was won after a multi agency pitch. The account will be handled out of the agency’s Delhi office. Madison Media will now be the Media Agency of Snapdeal effective July 1, 2015 but work on the account will start almost immediately, informs a communiqué.

     

    Said Srinivas Murthy, Senior Vice President – Marketing, Snapdeal.com on selecting Madison Media, “We are very happy to have Madison partner with us on media going forward. They bring tremendous experience across categories, with learnings across multiple growth industries that can be leveraged for us. Madison is known for the high quality of media professionals and we look forward to them helping us drive our business to new heights.”

     

    Sam Balsara

    Added Sam Balsara, Chairman & Managing Director, Madison World, “I am delighted that Snapdeal after an exhaustive competitive review has found Madison Media to be worthy of handling this large and demanding account. Today Madison Media offers an unparalleled depth of leadership, with unmatched experience and expertise and this will be further strengthened with the joining of VikramSakhuja in a few months as Group CEO of Madison Media and OOH.”

     

    Madison Media Group has won a host of new businesses in 2015including Viber, Lenskart.com, Zivame.com, Metro Cash & Carry, Gaana.com, Cricbuzz.com, Amul Hosiery, DHFL, Bandhan Bank, amongst others. The gross billing of Madison Media Group is about Rs 3750 crore, adds the communiqué.

    As reported earlier, the digital mandate for Snapdeal has been bagged by GroupM arm Mindshare.

     

  • #ZeeMelt15: Multiple screens, many needs

    By Labonita Ghosh

     

    Digital is mainstream

    Adam Ostrow, Chief Strategy Officer, Mashable

    “In 2015, digital culture is the mainstream culture,” says Ostrow. Statistics show that the size of the online market has quadrupled in the last couple of years, he points out. Among other curious findings is the fact that about 38 per cent of two-year-olds now use mobile devices. However, while ad revenues for TV and broadcast are rapidly shrinking, as per research by Google, about 56 per cent of digital ads are never seen. Ostrow points out a few key trends in the media and advertising space. Social media has become primarily a mobile activity, he says. People are turning to social platforms for news and entertainment. “To succeed in 2015, you have to be relevant in your feed, you have to be able to draw attention in seconds,” he says. Nowadays, on a social media page, posts from advertisers and any corporate house are competing with posts from friends and family. You have to find a way to stand out of the crowd, he says emphatically, adding: “In a world where everyone is a content creator, data provides your competitive edge.”

     

    Content no longer king 

    Joshua Black, CEO, GroupM

    “If you believe that content is king, you’re probably still stuck in the 80s,” says Black. “Content is not king. The days of capturing a mass audience through television are over. If you’re not in the right place, distributing your content to audiences where they are, when they want it and how they want it, you’ve failed.” Today, the consumer is in control; people no longer have to sit before their TV waiting for their favourite show. “People are also always on the go,” says Black. “They don’t live in their houses any more. They live in offices, in coffee shops or even outdoors.” So content has to reach them wherever they are. Consumers want content in a specific way too. Studies in the US have shown that large numbers of people report binge-viewing their favourite TV shows, sometimes for six or eight hours straight. Clearly, consumers want control over this sort of consumption. “Producing great content is not a strategy,” says Black. “It’s only a part of the strategy.” The bigger, more critical part is delivering it, in a custom-made manner.

     

    Too many screens

    Tom Goodwin, SVP Strategy and Innovation, Havas Media

    There was a time when the TV was the most important screen in people’s lives. Then came the laptop. Now there are tablets, mobile phones and digital watches. A host of screens are competing for our attention. So what is a marketer to do? The answer, says Goodwin, is not to make ads smaller; but to “reimagine advertising for the future not by the size of the screen, but by the richness of data all around us.” Indeed, marketers will also have to keep some other things in mind. While the phone has become a gateway to everything, it will continue to become a thinner, more personal web experience. Moreover, the debate is no longer about digital versus traditional marketing; it’s just the modern world one has to cater to. Similarly, it’s no longer TV versus video; it’s just about video being viewed on multiple and different screens. “A whole generation of people will grow up with no concept of what it is to go offline,” says Goodwin.

     

    TV is a second screen

    Huib van Bockel, Marketing and (Social) Media Expert, The Social Brand

    Just as there is a whole generation that might never know what it’s like to be offline, there is likely to be a whole generation that will never know what a TV commercial is. Huib van Bockel has actually glimpsed such a future. On a recent vacation, van Bockel sat his kids in front of a TV to keep them occupied. After some time, his six-year-old daughter came rushing to him to say the ‘film’ they were watching was bad one because it had a man who was only talking about toothpaste. van Bockel explains that children today (his included) are so used to TiVo, provisions like TVadblocker or ad-less channels like Netflix that a whole generation might grow up never seeing a TV commercial. And that will pose a new challenge to traditional marketing. “Online has already or will soon pass TV,” says van Bockel. “Unlike an earlier time, the television is now your second screen. Your mobile phone is your first. There is no longer an ‘audience’ waiting for your message.” Consumers will decide, with just one swipe of their mobile screen, if they like or dislike a product. So brands have literally one second to grab their attention.

     

    It’s all about the moments

    Parminder Singh, Managing Director for SEA, India & MENA, Twitter

    Singh feels the important thing that marketers need to worry about today are the changing rules of customer engagement. After all, the mobile phone is less of a voice device today and more of both a content provider and a content creator (even when you take a selfie and upload it, it counts as content). According to Singh, in 2015, there are eight million connected devices. By 2020, this figure is estimated to grow to 50 billion. “We are in an age of digital Darwinism,” says Singh. “Only those who are adaptable to change, will survive.” Singh does provide solutions, too. He says there are at least two ways to improve engagement. First, to find the relevant moments, and then to create great content around those moments. “Brands don’t just have target markets any more, they have target moments,” he says. As a Twitter study shows, people tweet a lot during the Oscars or the World Cup, but they also tweet about special “moments” during their day, like the sunrise or a special meal.

     

    Mobile is the future

    Tomi Ahonen, Author and consultant

    The average smartphone owner looks at his or her phone at least 221 times a day, says Ahonen. He should know; among other things this long-time observer of the mobile industry has written 12 books on the subject exploring practically every aspect. “The mobile industry is worth 1.6 trillion dollars [as of 2014],” says Ahonen. “It is as big as the FM radio, internet, personal computers, and television and landline business combined. And its only 35 years’ old. While all of the other media continue growing, mobile is the future.” Indeed, there will be a ‘grand convergence’ of other industries with mobile, says Ahonen. “We all know that media is merging with the internet, which in turn is merging with advertising, which is then merging with mobile,” he says. “In all, some 17 industries will eventually land in the mobile space.” That is, they will find ways to do business on the mobile platform. “And the golden age of the mobile is only now starting,” says Ahonen. So what should marketers do? Jump on the mobile bandwagon, of course, with creativity and imagination. “But don’t spam and don’t spy,” says Ahonen. “Opt in to serve your customers better.”

     

    Navigate well through fragmentation

    Martin Sorrell, CEO, WPP Plc

    Sir Martin has no doubt that mobile phones and mobile content will become increasingly more important. At the same time, so will data (“Big Data is just a sexy term that trips lightly off the tongue”). So what can agencies do to keep pace? “We’re doing a lot to stimulate creativity and programming to various kinds, including lot of native advertising and sponsored content for mobile,” says Sorrell of WPP’s initiatives. But this will only get more challenging, he cautions. Digital today comprises about 10 per cent of the market. But as it grows, the market will get more fragmented. The role agencies will then have to play is to integrate the various kinds of media and lead their clients safely through the fragmentation jungle in a safe and coordinated way. Shouldn’t be too difficult for Indian agencies, however. Sir Martin believes India has the best talent in the world in the A&M sector, and that this will always be the case.

     

    Need ‘wide’ data, not Big

    Jason Harrison, Worldwide CEO, Gain Theory

    In this session about what keeps marketers up at night, Harrison said he found a few common ‘pain points’ in this group. They often find themselves swamped by data, which can be confounding; They work in a field which is replete with jargon and terminology, whereas it needs to be less so and more simplified; They often have to deal with inconsistent answers that they receive to questions and findings, and – the worst one – everything is about speed. That is, everyone feels the need to get faster and smarter insights. The last point, in particular, can be most challenging, says Harrison. “The reality of data is that it has created expectations among marketers that we should all be able to make decisions more quickly and effectively to grow our brand,” says Harrison. The fact, however, is that Big Data – that magical thing that everyone is talking about – is a misnomer, according to Harrison. “What we need to solve a problem is ‘wide’ data,” adds Harrison.

     

    Humanise the data

    Pele Cortizo-Burgess, Chief Media Strategist, MEC

    Cortizo-Burgess is a man with a mission. He wants to change what he believes is a globally-prevalent idea, that when it comes to various aspects of marketing, media people are always given the last 10 minutes of a meeting. In other words, the least important place in the discussion. “Media is treated as a backroom practice,” says Cortizo-Burgess. “[Brands feel] we need to create the idea first, and then we will invite the media people to come and take it forward.” Whereas the media function is extremely important because “the role of the media is to insert the brand and its products into the moments when people really need an ally,” says Cortizo-Burgess. But to be effective, the media team must be able to humanise data points; they must create insights that can ‘incite’ a change in thought or behaviour and keep connecting and reconnecting the dots till they have a better understanding of the market. “Don’t ask what’s the digital strategy,” says Cortizo-Burgess, in a refreshing change from the current preoccupation of marketers to create content for smaller and more multiple screens. “It’s all about storytelling.”

     

    (with inputs from Dyanne Coelho)

     

  • GroupM makes ESP standalone agency brand, Mumbai to be ESP Properties hub

    By A Correspondent

     

    Media agency major GroupM has announced the expanding of its sports and entertainment offering under a new global agency brand, ESP.

     

    ESP will be made up of two separate businesses: ESP Properties and ESP Brands. Both businesses will be part of WPP’s media investment management company GroupM, but remain independent of its media-buying operations.

     

    According to a communiqué, ESP Properties will be GroupM’s first company dedicated to serving rightsholders from the worlds of sports and entertainment, including federations, leagues, events, teams, publishers and venues. “It will offer a thorough assessment of their commercial programs, and advise how to grow the revenue they generate through a full range of services across data, digital and content development. It will also offer global partnership sales on behalf of rightsholders, both to existing WPP brand clients and beyond.”

     

    ESP Properties will be formed through new hires, the integration of existing GroupM business units including leading sponsorship agency IEG, and the acquisition of data-driven sports marketing agency Two Circles. It will collaborate with specialists from the WPP network to deliver a full range of marketing services. It will also work with GroupM Entertainment on new programming concepts and, where mutually beneficial, provide direct finance for new projects.

     

    ESP Properties will launch with over 150 staff in hubs across New York, Chicago, London, Singapore and Mumbai, plus additional teams in Los Angeles, Sao Paulo and Dubai amongst others. It launches with a roster of globally recognised clients including the All Blacks, Cleveland Cavaliers, Valencia CF, England and Wales Cricket Board, Pele, and City Football Group.

     

    Said Sir Martin Sorrell, CEO of WPP, in a statement: “There is significant and growing demand on the part of clients to invest more in content and sports but few in our industry have had a serious response to this. Our new ESP Properties will bring creative power and commercial insight to rightsholders for the first time, providing unmatched opportunities to better tailor their offerings to the needs of today’s brand sponsors. ESP will also work hand in hand with our recent investment in Bruin Sports to provide our clients with access to many high-value media and sponsorship opportunities.”

     

    GroupM is also expanding its support for brands to plan, negotiate and activate sports and entertainment partnerships by growing the specialist teams in its individual media agencies. These specialist teams will be underpinned in key regions by the second business within ESP, ESP Brands. ESP Brands will be an evolution of the former partnerships consultancy GroupM ESP.

     

    Dominic Proctor, Chairman of ESP and President of GroupM Global, added: “The global launch of ESP Properties brings leading commercial and creative capabilities to some of the world’s most celebrated names across sports and entertainment. Sport is a driving force in media and we want to serve the market better by assisting rightsholders in optimizing their properties and creating more winning partnerships with leading brands. At the same time we will ensure we work more efficiently on behalf of brands by providing even more resources for the specialist sports and entertainment practices that are embedded in our GroupM agencies, underpinned by a central team in key regions, ESP Brands.”

     

    The new ESP Properties will be led by John Kristick, Global CEO of GroupM ESP since 2011. Kristick is a senior sports marketing executive with nearly two decades of international experience, including being appointed Managing Director for the USA Bid Committee to host the 2022 FIFA World Cup, and previously working for more than ten years in Europe serving as an Executive Director for Infront Sports & Media from its inception. The business will be led regionally by Jonathan Hill (EMEA), Laren Ukman (North America) and JinWei Toh (APAC). ESP Brands will be managed regionally in North America by Bryce Townsend and through the individual GroupM agencies in other regions.

     

    John Kristick, CEO of ESP Properties, said:  “ESP Properties’ offering is truly unique in meeting the changing needs of the world’s leading federations, events, leagues, teams and other rightsholders. We have brought together a range of experts from across GroupM, such as IEG with over three decades of experience in sponsorship consulting, and our new partners Two Circles who have been leading the way in data-driven sports marketing. By combining this strategic expertise with unmatched understanding of how to navigate potential brand partnerships, we can uncover new revenue opportunities for rightsholders worldwide.”

     

    The launch is part of WPP’s commitment to content, demonstrated by its investments in MediaPro, VICE, Indigenous Media, FullScreen, MRC, and, most recently, Bruin Sports Capital.

     

    Said George Pyne, founder of Bruin Sports Capital:  “ESP Properties provides rightsholders around the world with a very powerful combination of strategic services and sales expertise. The ability to access the group’s unmatched global resources and corporate client base will be very helpful as we create value for the relevant businesses Bruin operates. We also anticipate collaborating with ESP Properties to jointly deploy capital and create new businesses as opportunities arise.”