Tag: Hero MotoCorp

  • L&K Saatchi & Saatchi unveils campaign for Hero’s Karizma XMR bike

    By Our Staff

     

    L&K Saatchi & Saatchi, a part of Publicis Groupe India, has conceptualised the launch campaign for Hero MotoCorp’s premium and iconic bike Karizma XMR. Titled #LiveTheLegend, the campaign pays homage to the rich legacy of Karizma, known for revolutionising sports biking in the country.

     

    Said Kartik Smetacek, Chief Creative Officer, L&K Saatchi & Saatchi: “The one thing that became apparent the moment we started working on this brand was that this is not another bike, this is the Karizma. Even a decade later, the name commands something more than respect, it commands reverence. The campaign sought to harness this brand love, to stir it, grow it and create an aura for the next avatar of this legendary name.”

     

  • W+K boosts Hero MotoCorp’s EV brand Vida

    By Our Staff

     

    With its entry into the EV market last year in October 2022, Vida and its electric scooter Vida V1 is all set to raise the bar with a national launch across multiple cities with its creative platform Make Way conceptualized by Wieden+Kennedy India.

     

    Commenting on the campaign, Santosh ‘Paddy’ Padhi, Chief Creative Officer, Wieden+Kennedy India, said: “It was important for us to set a unique tone and personality for brand VIDA, within the Hero family and also in the category. While other brands are still selling the EV category, we decided to up the game by tapping into the new age mindset and behaviour in our narratives. The brand film is an ode to the changemakers who made this world more meaningful, while we kept VIDA V1 at the core of our narratives. In both films, the casual, candid, slice of life storytelling was well captured by both the directors, it was much needed for us to be energetic, effortless and authentic as these are some of the pillars the brand is built upon.”

     

  • Democratising luxury

     

     

    By Avik Chattopadhyay

     

    On July 3, Harley-Davidson launched the x440 motorcycle in India at a starting price of Rs.2.27 lakh, in partnership with Hero MotoCorp. Two days later, in partnership with Bajaj Auto, Triumph, yet another luxury motorcycle badge, launched the Speed 400 at a starting special offer of Rs.2.23 lakh.

     

    While the auto-journalist fraternity had been expecting competitive offers by both luxury brands on their measured re-entry into the Indian market, they were sure taken aback by the price points. This was in Royal Enfield territory, they unanimously exclaimed. For a moment, the RE stock price also dipped, the boffins at Dalal Street taken aback by the aggressive posture two traditionally legendary luxury brands had taken.

     

    Two quintessentially exclusive brands had taken the decision to ‘democratise luxury’!

    It was almost as if they were paying a tribute to a man who had disrupted the haute couture world a few decades ago by democratising fashion and making his label affordable to millions of aspirants. Pierre Cardin’s birth anniversary was on the July 2.

     

    A flurry of questions come to mind.

     

    What makes a traditional luxury brand go democratic?

    Is it driven by the left or the right brain? Is it to primarily increase market share or to endear oneself to a larger base of customers?

     

    In the implementation of the decision to democratise, does the brand remain the same or a new one is created? If the brand is retained, does the promise and experience remain the same? If a new brand is created, does it operate independently of the mother brand, or is there an umbilical cord?

     

    Lastly, has it worked?

     

    First and foremost, one must be clear about the ethos of the word “luxury” before we even make an attempt at finding answers. Does luxury mean the experience or the exclusivity or the price point? Or is it a combination of all? Or does being luxurious not necessarily mean it is only meant for a few and comes at a commensurate price point to ensure exclusivity? I remember an interaction I had with my boss Frederic Fabre in Peugeot. We were working on a new car for India, way back in 2011, against a very competitive price point. When the prototype was shown I was taken aback by its styling and luxurious interiors. Frederic smiled and said, “Whatever is cheap does not need to look and feel cheap!”

     

    Luxury, according to me is a state of mind, at any price point. For, the benchmarks are different for different socio-economic strata. If a brand decides to address only one stratum, so be it. If it wishes to address multiple strata, it is most welcome.

     

    Mercedes-Benz offers the A-class alongside the S-class, at two different price points, with different performance characteristics and creature comfort features, but with the core luxurious experience remaining intact in both. The A-class offers an experience unmatched by others in the same price band. The experience keeps getting enhanced as one goes up the ladder. The moment Mercedes-Benz took the strategic call to explore a segment at a lower price point than the A-class, it realised it had to compromise with its experiential promise. Hence it created a new brand called “Smart”.

     

    BMW and Audi too stretched the brand downwards with their X1 and A1 respectively.

     

    Similarly, when Louis Vuitton decided to experiment with a new consumer segment of the young and the restless which was not an advocate of traditional luxury, it created a separate brand called ‘Trash & Soul’. Though the brand did not last for long, it was surely a bold step of a talismanic luxury brand to think outside the box, literally.

     

    Pierre Cardin tried the same with mixed results. He wanted to make his label accessible to people down the socio-economic chain. For this, he franchised his name across product categories, right from perfumes to ballpoint pens and even keyrings. His logic was that millions across the world wanted a piece of his creation, so what if they could not afford his couture. They could certainly belong to the global Pierre Cardin family by even owning a keyring.

     

    Does it always work? For Mercedes-Benz it did. For Pierre Cardin, it did not. For the simple reason that the former was intent on not compromising with the ownership experience while the latter, sadly, lost the plot there. Cardin had a terrific idea terribly executed. I would want to definitely own a pen carrying his famous logo and signature at Rs 1000 but would not want to buy it from the local stationery store. I would aspire to walk into a Pierre Cardin store that houses all his creations and rub shoulders with someone buying a Rs.10,000 linen shirt, carrying the same logo. I become part of the same family and I walk out feeling as exalted as the other gentleman.

     

    Brands like Armani and TAG Heuer possibly learnt from this blunder and got the implementation right. The Formula 1 watch, though eight times cheaper than the Link, was available at the same store, as were the spectacle frames, rubbing chain-links.

     

    Democratising luxury allows the brand to engage with the aspirational customer into encouraging gradual upgrades through the brand ladder…from the Formula 1 to the Aquaracer after 5-7 years finally to the Link. The customer basks in the ownership journey while the brand grows in profits, without diluting the brand essence which Cardin ended up doing.

     

    This is exactly what both Harley-Davidson and Triumph are attempting in their re-entry into the world’s largest two-wheeler market. Earlier, they were way too exclusive. Now they are within the reach of thousands who wish to own a piece of motorcycling legend. The rider on the x440 will be rubbing shoulders with the rider on Softail and feel the same pride in being a HOG family member. The day the x440 customer is treated like a Hero customer because of the price point, thee shall be a re-exit soon.

     

    And yes, I simply hate the word “masstige”. Whoever has coined it has the same sense of warped humour as the one who coined the word ‘phygital’. What H-D or Triumph or M-B or TAG have done do not make them masstige brands. They remain iconic luxury brands. Just that they have democratised the luxurious experience to reach out to many more aspirants. And prove that Monsieur Cardin was conceptually right, after all!

     

  • Dentsu wins media mandate for Vida electric scooter

    By Our Staff

     

    Dentsu India has won the integrated media mandate for Vida electric scooter recently launched by Hero MotoCorp motorcycle and scooter manufacturer. The account was won following a multi-agency pitch and will be serviced from the network’s Gurgaon office.

     

    As per the mandate, the agency will oversee the brand’s global full-funnel marketing, which includes performance and digital marketing. It will manage Vida’s branding and performance campaigns with the best of its talent and capabilities as the strategic media partner.

     

    Speaking on the win, Anita Kotwani from Dentsu India said: “We are delighted to win MotoCorp’s emerging mobility brand Vida powered by Hero. Vida is a truly new-age global brand, that is authentic and progressive, and we are delighted with the mandate of managing it not only in India but across the globe. As dentsu, we pride ourselves in working with brands that ‘make way’ to drive meaningful progress for the environment.”

     

    Chandrasekar Radhakrishnan, Head of Business Growth, Emerging Mobility, Hero MotoCorp added: “We are glad to have dentsu India as our partner in this journey towards growing the electric mobility category across the world. Our endeavor is to create a brand that is truly global in nature, a brand that resonates with audiences from Bangalore to Bogota and Lucknow to London. VIDA is a new age brand with a distinct identity with the tagline ‘Make way’, a call to action to all change-makers to drive positive change. Our choice of partners is a clear reflection of this intent to build a global, new-age brand.”

     

  • Interbrand partners Hero MotoCorp to create Vida

    By Our Staff

     

    Interbrand, the global brand consultancy, has partnered with Hero MotoCorp, formerly Hero Honda, motorcycle and scooter manufacturers, to build the electric scooter brand, Vida.

     

    William Woduschegg
    William Woduschegg

    Said William Woduschegg, Executive Director – Interbrand New York:  “The most meaningful work is work that inspires and creates a positive impact on everyone and everything. Vida not only provided us with the opportunity to be part of something bigger and better but to contribute to progress in the relentless effort to save our planet. Partnering with Hero MotoCorp and making an Iconic Move by building a global EV brand with experiences that motivate and captivate a generation that wants to make a difference was simply amazing.”

     

    Ashish Mishra
    Ashish Mishra

    Added Ashish Mishra, CEO India, and South Asia, Interbrand: “The Brand Purpose is built on a simple insight – that sustainability needs to be universal to be effective, not a niche play of the developed nations alone. For the planet to really escape the scourge of climate change, the whole world needs to be included in the transition to a conscious mobility ecosystem. Vida has focused on a rigorous development of the ecosystem beyond products. We believe, this is the best time for Indian brands to deploy purpose at scale. A time to leverage our manufacturing capacities backed by world-leading technology and brave brands unafraid to lead. Brands that are not content with merely amassing large volumes in the Tier-2 value markets but are determined at playing and winning at the global centre stage.”

     

  • W+K powers Vida V1 campaign

    By Our Staff

     

    Electric scooter Vida V1 has been launched with an ad campaign across Delhi, Bengaluru and Jaipur. The campaign, led by the brand platform of “Make Way”, was conceptualised by Wieden+Kennedy’s Delhi office, and is expected to cover formats both offline and online.

     

    Speaking on the new campaign, Chandrasekar Radhakrishnan, Head – Business Growth, Emerging Mobility Business Unit (EMBU), Hero MotoCorp, said: “Our endeavour is to create a brand that is empowering, inclusive and optimistic. Vida is a truly new-age global brand that resonates with customers across the world and is authentic and progressive. Vida has a distinct brand identity with a tagline ‘Make Way’, which is a call to action for the global changemakers. The pre-launch brief was to bring out our philosophy of being right, rather than rushing to be the first in the market. Subsequently, the launch will focus on bringing out our philosophy of driving change and introduce our segment disrupting propositions to grow the category.

     

    Commenting on the campaign, Santosh Padhi (Paddy), Chief Creative Officer, Wieden+Kennedy India, added: “There is always a different high, when you get to launch a new age product or a brand, which is the ask of the society or need of the future. We are extremely happy to have found a great brand voice for Vida which is sticky, quirky and youthful. We are happy the way the pre-launch and launch has panned out and we all at W+K are excited to take this wonderful narrative forward in the coming months”

     

  • Hero MotoCorp rolls out ‘Grand Indian Festival of Trust’

    By Our Staff

     

    To mark the beginning of the festive season, Hero MotoCorp, manufacturer of motorcycles and scooters, announced the launch of Hero GIFT- the Grand Indian Festival of Trust. The theme for the mega-campaign this year is ‘India, Let’s Celebrate, Phir Se Dil Se’, which reflects the excitement with which families in the country are preparing for the normal festive season after a hiatus of two years.

     

    Commenting on the initiative, Ranjivjit Singh, Chief Growth Officer, Hero MotoCorp said: “Serving the personal mobility needs of 100 million+ customers, Hero MotoCorp has been considered a trusted member of Indian families. We are hopeful that the Hero GIFT will provide a huge boost to the buyer morale, thus contributing to the spirit of revelry, happiness and excitement. This will be accompanied with thrilling new benefits that reaffirm customer trust, allowing them to take home iconic Hero products and the love and happiness that comes along with them.”

     

  • Linu John joins MotoCorp business at Publicis Media

    By Our Staff

     

    Linu John
    Linu John

    Publicis Media has announced the appointment of Linu John as head at Platform HMCL. Platform HMCL is built to cater integrated media offerings for its client Hero MotoCorp. The unit consists of a team that manages media planning and buying, along with providing dynamic content, analytics, data, activation, performance and programmatic solutions.

     

    Said Jai Lala, CEO, Zenith India: “Platform HMCL aims to deliver strong business outcome and grow brand impact. Given the dynamic nature of media environment it will be crucial to continue driving experimental solutions backed by data, technology and analytics to provide business outcomes. Known for her extensive skill sets and experience, we are confident that Linu will lead the mandate by concentrating on integrated planning, business growth of HMC and digital transformation for HMCL.”

     

    Added John: “Being agile in learning helps people to evolve in life and overcome difficult situations. It’s the mantra that helps me to be competitive and impactful. With the same aim, I join the Hero MotoCorp business at Publicis Media. I look forward to expanding Platform HMCL capabilities and drive high momentum for the business.”

     

  • Publicis Media bags Hero MotoCorp mandate

    By A Correspondent

     

    Two-wheeler major Hero MotoCorp has appointed Publicis Media as its media agency for both traditional and digital media duties.

     

    Publicis Media has created a bespoke platform – ‘Team Hero MotoCorp’ (Team HMC) – that will be in charge of the account and will harness talent from across the organization, both for the mainline and new-age mediums.

     

    Said Gurinder Singh Sandhu, Head of Marketing, Hero MotoCorp: “Publicis Media was selected after a very thorough and competitive pitch process with strong presentations from several agencies. We are excited about this new partnership and the potential of ‘Team HMC’ in helping us drive even stronger consumer connect and grow brand impact.”

     

    Added Tanmay Mohanty, CEO of Zenith India and the executive sponsor on Team HMC: “Hero MotoCorp is one of the most prestigious accounts in terms of both scale and complexity. We are excited to partner Hero MotoCorp in their marketing journey where data and tech will complement the strong strategy, planning, buying and content verticals to further strengthen the Integrated Marketing play. ‘Team HMC’ will mobilise the most apt talent and capabilities from across Publicis Media globally, for this partnership. We look forward to delivering strong business outcomes for them and unlocking new consumer connections across social, digital and traditional mediums.”

     

     

  • JWT elevates Shujoy Dutta as Head of Planning, Bengaluru

    By A Correspondent

     

    Shujoy Dutta

    Shujoy Dutta has been appointed as the Head of Planning for J Walter Thompson’s Bengaluru office. Dutta has been with J. Walter Thompson for over nine years and in his last role at JWT Delhi, he has been the planning lead on brands like Airtel, Hero Motocorp, etc to name a few.

     

     

    Bindu Sethi

    Announcing the appointment, Bindu Sethi, Chief Strategy Officer, J Walter Thompson said; “Shujoy, is an author and a story teller. The humans in his stories are people you want to love or trample; the response is strong and emotional. He constructs his brand stories to get noticed, to shift behavior. Shujoy, is a treat for clients and colleagues. I look forward to seeing Shujoy build strong brands and stronger client relationships.”

     

    Commenting on his new role, Dutta said; “I’m very excited about my new role. This city has tremendous potential and JWT Bangalore packs in significant Creative firepower. So, I look forward to forging new partnerships and creating a bouquet of memorable work, and of course, consuming lots of filter coffee.”

     

     

  • Hero MotoCorp is title sponsor of Nidahas Trophy

    By A Correspondent

     

    Hero MotoCorp Ltd is title sponsor of the T20 tri-nation Nidahas Trophy tournament.To be held in Sri Lanka from March 6-18, the series is being organised to celebrate the country’s 70 years of independence.

     

    The tournament will feature three teams from the subcontinent – India, Bangladesh and hosts Sri Lanka. The Trophy will be played at the R Premadasa Stadium in Colombo and will be called Hero Nidahas Trophy 2018.

     

    Speaking about the association, Pawan Munjal Chairman, MD and CEO, Hero MotoCorp said: “Cricket continues to be one of the most popular sports in Sri Lanka and we are glad to extend our association with Sri Lanka Cricket. Hero MotoCorp is a youthful brand and has been associated with a variety of sports for over two decades now. This partnership will further enhance Hero’s brand entrenchment in Sri Lanka, which is an important global market for us. I look forward to yet another successful and exciting tournament ahead and wish all the teams the very best of luck.”

     

    Expressing excitement about the association, Jerome Lee Jayaratne, Chief Operating Officer, Sri Lanka Cricket said: “Hero as a brand has carved its niche and legacy in the market. We are extremely glad to have them as the Title sponsor and look forward to an enriching affiliation for both stakeholders.”

     

     

  • Hero MotoCorp unveils its FIFA U-17 World Cup campaign

     

     

    Hero MotoCorp, the national supporter of the ongoing FIFA U-17 World Cup has a TVC and digital drive coinciding with the tournament. The campaign has been conceptualised by Law & Kenneth Saatchi & Saatchi.

     

    Said Debarjyo Nandi, Senior Vice President, Law & Kenneth Saatchi & Saatchi said about the film: “It’s rare to find work and something you love come together. So this one was special for me personally. It was also a revelation to discover the amazing football talent that exists out there. Thanks to Hero being true to their cause for football, this amazing talent pool came together for this film. It was an absolute joy to work with people who are also as passionate about football.”