Tag: HT Media

  • HT Media hands over complete portfolio mandate to Dentsu Impact

    By A Correspondent

     

    Dentsu Impact has won the creative duties for all brands from HT Media – including Hindustan Times, Hindustan (Hindi), Mint, Shine.com, HT Campus, Career Plus, Study Mate, English Mate and Bridge School of Management. With this move, Dentsu Impact becomes the prime strategic and communication partner for HT Media handling communication for all brands from the group, barring its radio brands Fever FM &Nasha FM, which are handled by Ogilvy & Mather.

     

    The HT Group, which has so far worked with multiple agencies for different brands, initiated a process of consolidating all the brands with one single agency sometime in November 2016. Post an exhaustive pitch process, in which some of the country’s top agencies participated, HT finally decided to award the duties to Dentsu Impact.

     

    Commenting on the association, RajanBhalla, Group Chief Marketing Officer, HT Media, said: “We wanted to move to a single partner for our diverse brand portfolio. Dentsu was already handling Hindustan, Mint and Shine.com and their team has done excellent work for the last few years, hence the decision to go with them.”

     

    Amit Wadhwa, President, Dentsu Impact, said, “This is a big win for us and an important one. When a group like Hindustan Times decides to award its entire portfolio of brands to one agency, it shows the level of trust as well as spirit of partnership from both ends. We are extremely excited and are rearing to create some interesting work.”

     

    Added Soumitra Karnik, National Creative Director, Dentsu Impact: “It’s a fabulous start to this year for us. Winning all the brands of HT group is something any creative agency would kill for. Along with this great news also comes great responsibility. We are quite committed to doing some great work on each brand.”

     

  • Mint moves from Berliner to broadsheet, launches new campaign

    By A Correspondent

     

    Leading business daily Mint has undertaken a significant makeover. As has been rumoured for a while, the paper has moved on from the innovative Berliner to the standard broadsheet. The fonts have been changed. The masthead is the same – lowercased, but heavier. The political coverage increases at the back of the paper, with the last page being positioned as the second front-page.

     

    The change of format of course means a slight increased in editorial content as also a friendlier size for advertisers.

     

    Commenting on the launch, Rajan Bhalla, Group CMO HT Media Limited said the “new Mint is going to be the most awesome read with high quality, superior and credible journalism on one side and great packaging and design on the other”. “In the new avatar it’s going to be wider, broader and deeper with an innovative backless design comprising two front pages. Our refreshed positioning on the back of the promise of ‘Mint being the most awesome daily’, will be ‘Mint or Nothing’,” he said.

     

    Mint, a part of HT Media or the Hindustan Times group, was launched with much fanfare on February 1, 2007. It is published Monday through Saturday, with the Saturday edition being essentially an easy-reading ‘Lounge’ section. The cover price of the paper is Rs 6 (as against Rs 4 charged on a weekday last week).

     

  • HT Media on a high, launches Nasha

    By A Correspondent

     

    HT Media Ltd has launched its second radio station, Radio Nasha 107.2 FM, in Delhi. Billed as a cool retro station, it will mainly play Bollywood music from the 1970s, ‘80s and ‘90s. The launch of Radio Nasha 107.2 FM in Delhi is the first of the Phase III radio launches from HT Media Ltd, which had acquired 10 new frequencies across Delhi, Mumbai, Hyderabad and UP during the Phase III auctions.

     

    According to company sources, the new station garnered a lot of appreciation on social media during its test transmission that started on February 26, 2016. With the launch of Radio Nasha 107.2 FM in Delhi, HT Media Ltd. will be the only company in India operating two stations in Delhi. Fever FM plays contemporary hit Bollywood music. The two differentiated radio stations will offer advertisers a choice of two sets of audiences to meet their needs better, notes a communiqué.

     

    Said Harshad Jain, CEO – Radio and Entertainment at HT Media Ltd, ‘Currently there is no radio station that does justice to the excitement, romance and attitude of the magical eras of 1970s-90s. Radio Nasha 107.2 FM will be the first ever radio station packed with passion, fuelled by Bollywood celebrities and driven by RJs with a style that will be young, energetic and classy. Radio Nasha will make retro ‘cool’ and create a station that be the destination station for listeners. We look forward to delight listeners with innovative content and presenters that will be industry first on radio.’

     

    It may be recalled that Big 92.7 FM has made rapid strides by switching to the retro format in 2014.

     

  • Coffee & Conversations with Rahul Kishore: Week #4: Shantanu Bhanja

    It’s is very difficult to pin Shantanu Bhanja, Chief Digital Officer of HT Media, down to anything. He operates out of Gurgaon and Delhi and is super-busy. But he’s forever courteous, agreed to meet at short notice, and once you are with him, he is at ease and gives you all his attention. I think the time he has  spent in London and Lisbon helped!

     

    I started by asking him:

     

    Are you lucky?

    Yes, Life has been good. Fun things have happened along the way. He worked with Reckitt in London and Lisbon. His bosses have been nice to him although he has taken care to choose his bosses carefully!

     

    The beliefs that define him?

    He read in Reader’s Digest that it’s nice to be important, but it’s more important to be nice. He follows it. I have not known of anyone in the industry say negative things about him. He is very courteous, soft-spoken and genuinely makes you feel nice, even if it’s with an impish grin. Whatever you do, do it with a 110% of what you can bring to the table. No half-measures for him.  Ethics: Life needs it. The world is so open. Everything is so transparent. Can’t afford to be non-ethical. It’s not like Shantanu to not be genuine.

     

    How do you destress?

    Shantanu takes three holidays a year. Two of these are international. One is in the UK with a large part of his family being there. If he is really stressed whilst at home, he takes refuge with TV and likes to surf the internet. Reading is a long time love as is theatre. Work is worship for him, so he never lays off it.

     

    If a movie were to be made about his life who would play him?

    He said ME. That is, Shantanu himself! Acting is a hobby and he has essayed the roles of Professor Higgins and Shylock. When pushed, he said Farhan Akhtar or Aamir Khan. They are smart and intelligent and that would be required to play him, he says.

     

    If Bill Gates were to walk in and say here is a 100 million, give me one big idea and it’s yours?

    He has the big idea in his new digital job, though he will not share it for now. It would come in very handy, he says for his new business venture. The digital business can create large business ides, he says.

     

    Dream job

    Doing what I am doing today, else I would have moved on. I work for long stints with companies. He completes eight years this year at HT

     

    Favourite animal and why?

    Tiger, because it’s majestic, powerful and a leader.

     

    One word that describes him?

    Passionate

     

    And, lastly, a CEO he admires?

    Steve Jobs is an almost instant reply. He loves everything about him. His ideas, the fact that he was a visionary, passionate, driven, obsessed and a perfectionist.

     

    Coffee & Conversations with Rahul Kishore will henceforth appear on Mondays

     

  • BCCL scores maximum metals at Publisher Abby

    By A Correspondent

     

    The Publishers Abby category of the Creative Awards at Goafest 2015 may have got a lukewarm response from the print players  – some of who have in fact partnered Goafest in the form of sponsorship, but it’s a sound beginning nevertheless and in an industry where there aren’t too many awards for print publishers, this could well see growth in forthcoming years.

     

    There were 62 entries in all from across 10 publishers and 17 metals were awarded. There were four Golds, six Silvers and seven Bronze metals.

     

    Bennett, Coleman and Company Ltd (The Times of India group) bagged three Golds, three Silvers and one Bronze. The Dainik Jagran group followed by one Gold, two Silvers and one Bronze. Lokmat bagged one Silver while HT Media and Chitralekha bagged two Bronze metals each. The Dainik Bhaskar group bagged one Bronze. Among the publisher brands, The Times of India scored the maximum.

     

     

  • Embracing the New Consumer

     

    By Shruti Pushkarna

     

    The Advertising Club’s popular annual event, Media Review 2014 was held at the DLF City Club, Gurgaon on Thursday (Dec 18) evening. In its 60th year, the Advertising Club decided to tweak the format of the media review in its latest edition. Unlike the previous editions, there were three eminent speakers speaking on varied topics. CVL Srinivas, CEO South Asia, GroupM spoke on ‘Redefining the role of media agencies in a borderless world’. HT Media CEO, Rajiv Verma also spoke on similar lines, differing only in restricting his topic to redefining the role of ‘print’ media. The third speaker, Shashi Sinha, CEO, IPG Mediabrands spoke on, ‘Separate and Together: The future is about being specialist and holistic’.

     

    There was a lot of talk of redefining and reinventing the roles of media agencies in the new digital era and what to expect of the future trends but Mr Sinha, summed it up in a most appropriate way when he said, “We have to manage our present in order to reinvent our future”. He emphasised on the need to tell stories in a way that they evolve and reinvent the future automatically.

     

    As in any other forum that takes place today, there was talk of integration, the need to align different cultures and different mediums to effectively send out a message. There was also anxiety expressed on whether older mediums like Print will hold value in the growing digital world. But the concluding remarks hit the notes of optimism that rode on the back of realigning and in assimilation of various models present today, to arrive at that ‘magic model’ of communication.

     

    Redefining the role of media agencies in a borderless world

    CVL Srinivas, CEO South Asia, GroupM opened his session speaking about the evolution of the media agency and trying to define a ‘borderless world’.

     

    He compared the evolution of man with the evolution of media agency, which he said was presently in its fifth stage. The first stage of media evolution, according to Mr Srinivas, happened in the mid 1990s when media buying shops were being set up in India. The next stage came when media planning business moved out of the creative agencies. After which most media agencies started to diversify, setting up allied businesses, beit outdoor or digital, in order toprovide what they called, 360-degree solutions.

     

    He said, “We started off as a little chimp who is standing right in the back, as being the backroom office and I was one of the chimps when I’d joined the industry in the early 90s, following the client servicing guys wherever they went, hoping to get my five minutes to present my 80-odd slides. From then to now, it’s been quite a journey. But where we are today is at a very interesting stage. Whatever changes have happened in the last four to five years have forced media agencies to take on an entirely new avatar.”

     

    Trying to define a borderless world, Mr Srinivas cited the example of a Facebook map which stands for a connected world. Since the world we live in has all the customers connected and well informed, there is an urgent need for brands to not just stay relevant but also remain meaningful. Mr Srinivas said he sees an opportunity for agencies in this newly connected world, He said, “Today it’s not enough to be a trusted adviser of clients. Agencies can move up the value chain by moving from advising clients to leading clients.”

     

    In the digital era, added Mr Srinivas, a lot of disruption is taking place because of exceedingly available data and technology. He also mentioned some disruptive trends that agencies can take advantage of by designing content strategies around them. One of them was multi-screen viewing, which as a study by Milward Brown on ‘ad reaction in India’ states, is a growing trend in the Indian market. More and more Indian consumers are involved in multi-screen viewing. Milward Brown notes that by 2020, it’s estimated that about 50 to 60% of mobile owning population of India will have smartphones. Mr Srinivas added, “If you put that alongside with the kind of decreasing involvement in TV viewership, the whole ball game completely changes.”

     

    Another disrupter is e-commerce or m-commerce as some would like to call it. Mr Srinivas observed that because now consumers are using a digital gadget to close the loop, agencies have an opportunity to interact with the consumer up to the last mile.

     

    Brands are also getting into publishing and that is turning out to be a disrupter too. They are standing for functional benefits. The more content a brand can keep sending out, the more they can interact with the consumers. “Brands realize that it’s important to become a franchise of content because then a consumer interacts with the brand in so many more ways”, said Mr Srinivas.

     

    Talking of new trends in audience planning, CVL Srinivas said, “We have to move from contextual planning to audience planning with the help of data and the digital. Manual processes will give way to automated processes. We also need to build different communities within the organization.”

     

    CVL Srinivas concluded his session by once again emphasising the importance of reinventing and redefining the role of media agencies and the need to take advantage of every new point where you can touch the consumer directly.

     

    Redefining the role of print media in a borderless world

    HT Media CEO Rajiv Verma started his session on a similar note as Mr Srinivas. He also started by talking oh the history of media and how it has shaped up through the centuries. He divided it into three eras, Pre Media, Mass Media and Infinite media. He confessed that all this talk of the ‘cool digital world’ has had him worried about the future of print but since the infinite media we live in is younger than our kids, he still had some hope. He said, “Infinite media is younger than our kids so it’s not even a blink of an eye in the entire chronologue of media evolution. Therefore it’s just the beginning.  And there’s scope for all mediums to coexist.”

     

    He talked about how reporting has changed over the years and yet the essence remains the same, finding out accurate information and putting it out there. “From one half-hour news bulletin in a day to the days of embedded journalism that began with the Iraq war to today’s day and age where the model of reporting has shifted from ‘one to many’ to ‘many to many’, we have come a long way,” he said.

     

    In a borderless world, media is no longer acting as a filter. It has become more ubiquitous.  He reiterated Mr Srinivas’ point of massive amount of disruption that is taking place today, which presents huge opportunities for business.

     

    But Mr Verma wasn’t all that optimistic as Mr Srinivas as he stated that the digital has its own problems. He said, “In the age of digital reporting, before the truth gets known, the virality takes over. The lines between blogs, tweets, photos are blurring; becoming a mish mash of data and information. The war for ad $s is leading more to noise rather than to news. And the pressure of ad $s is leading to trivialization of news.”

     

    He emphasized on the unique characteristics of print media, like, the written word is still the most trusted word. He said print can go beyond straight facts, presenting a range of views and building a sense of community among its readers.

     

    He concluded on an optimistic note stating that print will coexist along with other media given its unique characteristics. He said, “While all these disruptive forces are at play, the real question that comes to mind is that print media will have to go back to basics in figuring out its comparative advantages, what is exactly is the audience it’s trying to serve and try to go more hyper local in serving that audience because that’s the only unique characteristic of print media which differentiates it from others.”

     

    Separate and Together: The future is about being specialist and holistic

    The last session saw Shashi Sinha, CEO, IPG Mediabrands, reiterating the points made in the previous two sessions, adding a few new ones.

     

    Shashi Sinha, CEO, IPG Mediabrands, started the session with the word ‘Integration’. He talked of his own career where he started off with advertising and what integration meant in those days, and then talked of the need to integrate not just ideas and processes, but to integrate, mindsets, culture and philosophies, in order to remain relevant.

     

    He also emphasized on the need to embrace the new consumer. He said: “Consumer wants to be the protagonist, he/she wants to be at the center of communication. He/she doesn’t want to be bored with information. Just tell them how it impacts them and how can they participate.So there’s a need for consumers to be constantly engaged and constantly touched.”

     

    He added that what’s important in today’s ever-changing media environment is the need to tell a powerful story. He said, “The success of any model depends on the story and its storyteller. You have to play it together to tell a story. We have to manage the present and as we manage the present, the stories will evolve for us to reinvent the future. And keep your stories simple.”

     

    He concluded by saying that while we live in an increasingly specialist world, without integration we will not be able to remain relevant to the new age consumer. He said, “In this specialist world, where you have Starbucks, Café Coffee Day and Barista, I still have my coffee from the baker.”

     

  • Shine launches new advertising campaign

    By A Correspondent

     

    Shine.com has put up a good show this year that saw them launch a portal exclusively for IT jobs (tech.shine.com), increase their database to 15 million, venture into e-learning offerings for candidates and substantially increase their new client count apart from improving satisfaction levels of existing clients.

     

    Seeing the increasing usage of mobile phone in job search, Shine.com is now targeting to become a ‘mobile-first’ company where the entire registration and job search process for a candidate can happen only on a mobile phone. Apart from simplifying the user flows on mobile, Shine.com has also added exclusive features on its mobile app that lets candidates leverage their personal networks to find people in companies where they want a job.

     

    Commenting on this unique feature, Amit Garg, Business Head – Digital, HT Media, said, “For us to give value to jobseekers and recruiters, we are always experimenting with new technology to create brand new solutions that would take the industry ahead. While doing so, our research pointed us to the ‘power of weak ties’, a seminal study that says that your next career move is likely to come from people who are not our closest friends but are likely to connect you to professional circles that you don’t have access to. Our new app leverages these ‘weak connections’ of a candidate and our consumer proposition says that Shine.com will come to your use where your best friends cannot.”

     

    Rohit Ohri

    Rohit Ohri, Executive Chairman, Dentsu India and CEO Dentsu Asia Pacific (South), said, “We’re really excited about the new Shine.com campaign. Conceptualised by Soumitra Karnik and the Dentsu Creative Impact team, the campaign introduces a mascot for brand Shine.com. A mascot who is an innovative thinker and a quick solution provider to everybody’s job-related problems. We’re hoping that Mr M will become a brand property that will give Shine.com memorability, relevance and ultimately leadership in the category.”

     

  • HT, TOI, others ink deal to start ‘One India Medianett’?

    By A Special Conespondent

     

    New Delhi, April 1, 2014: In a move that has been welcomed by several brands and party organisers, it is learnt from reliable sources that newspapers like Bennett, Coleman and Co Ltd and HT Media Ltd are getting together on a special project.

     

    It may be recalled that since 2005, the year when DNA was launched as were Mumbai Mirror and HT’s Mumbai edition, the two New Delhi-headquartered news media groups have got together on various projects. The HT’s print facility has been used by TOI. Then there’s a no poaching agreement between the two organisations so if an HT journalist had to join TOI, there would have to be interim employer in between. HT ads have appeared in TOI and vice versa. So while there is intense competition on the ad sales and editiorial front, there’s friendship too.

     

    Last week, HT Media and a few other top newspaper brands like Hindu and ABP got together to launch One India (not to be confused with the website company run by BG Mahesh and majority-owned by Rajesh Jain, now affiliated to the BJP). Many media planners, buyers thought it was a brilliant idea with pedigreed B-school graduates several thousand crores of adspend budgets appreciating the innovation of these media managers to create a pull for print.

     

    Buoyed by the success of this initiative, the high priests at a leading newspaper group had a whirlpool of an idea. Why not look at a combined deal for paid-for, promotional content.  Feelers were sent to competition, and after some reservations, a deal was struck so as to attract advertisers and individuals who appear on the party pages without paying. A formula has been hammered out, and the feature is likely to be announced soon.  This will be done at a tony nightspot in Mumbai and Delhi and will be held at no cost to the media organisations in question as the costs will be offset against free content space in the papers.

    For details, click here.

     

  • Mint celebrates 7th anniv with new campaign

    By A Correspondent

     

     

    HT Media has unveiled a new advertising campaign to capture the story of its business daily Mint as it celebrates its seventh anniversary this month. Notes a communiqué: “Since inception, at the core of Mint, lies ‘innovation’. From the Berliner size format to the design of the paper; from the content and presentation style to the name ‘Mint’ – everything was new, energized and refreshing!

     

     

    Rajan Bhalla

    Said Rajan Bhalla, CMO, HT Media on the Mint story said, “Before the inception of Mint all our efforts were in the direction of putting together a differentiated business daily which was fresh, clear-minded and straightforward while being extremely credible and well-rounded in its analysis of the business world. That’s how the product was born, exemplifying the concept of ‘innovation’.  It is this line of thinking that provoked the name of the paper as well – ‘Mint’. Our readership numbers, and the loyalty of our readers over these past 7 years, validates that we have been successful in providing ‘Refreshing Clarity in Business’, which is what we aim to continue doing.”

     

    The campaign will run in print, digital and radio.

     

  • Jaldi 5 with Nitin Chaudhry, HT Media: More than just media sponsorship of the Kala Ghoda Festival

    It was a coup of sorts for Hindustan Times when it was awarded the title sponsorship of the the Kala Ghoda Festival. Built over the last few years as the leading festival of art and culture in Mumbai, the newspaper group has attempted to go beyond the role of a media sponsor and integrate with the events. MxMIndia spoke with Nitin Chaudhry,  Business Head – West and part of the HT Media leadership team on the Hindustan Times association with the Kala Ghoda Festival 

     

    01. How is the Hindustan Times Kala Ghoda Festival different from last year’s The Times of India Kala Ghoda Festival?

    Well, a few things on the programming side have changed. We have tried to make it bigger. We have international authors coming in for the first time, as compared to Indian authors only. We have bigger stars like Farhan Akhtar this time. More importantly, we have added a very Mumbai-specific vertical. Earlier it used to be all around art and culture, but we have Urban Architecture and Design. We have installations and panel discussions some of the issues that Mumbai as a metropolis faces – whether it is unplanned growth or traffic despite the fact that we have the best public transport system in the country.

     

    02. And how much of these changes are thanks to HT’s involvement?

    In fact, this is one big difference between previous Kala Ghoda festivals to this year’s edition. We have been very involved with the designing of the whole programme right from the beginning. Other than programming, we also looked at how do we make it more accessible and spread more awareness to people because the festival happens at multiple venues and people get overwhelmed with the schedules and how to get there. We have developed an app which does two things: one is at the tap of key it gives you the calendar of every day, of every vertical. You don’t have to download one big app from the internet, all have to do is scan the Kala Ghoda logo, which is available everywhere and the app downloads on you phone, whichever phone you have.

     

    Second thing is, if you go to kalaghoda.hindustantimes.com, the microsite syncs with your Outlook calendar and you can pick and choose events. Most of these changes have happened because both of us have been talking for the last few months, wanting to make it better and more accessible to everyone. The promotional campaign was not limited to the newspaper. We have created a full programme for radio and have a live studio at Rampart Row where people walk in and talk about their experience. On the social media, we have created a Facebook page, there is a Twitter contest and there is also a photography contest.

    There’s also this huge wall which displays the pictures our photographers have taken. So we tried to bring out the role of a newspaper in a far more integral way that rather than just supplying our ad columns for generating awareness.

     

    03. The one problem with associating with events which have had a long relationship with another publication or sponsor is that people still recall the old association. Like in the case of the Screen Awards, it was Star and in the case of the Kala Ghoda festival, The Times of India was the sponsor for many years. Did you factor that when you took this on?

    Yes, it had an association with The Times of India. But what we also figured was that the association was more in the minds of the media audience than that of readers or consumers. No one called it Times of India Kala Ghoda Festival, it was Kala Ghoda Festival. But yes, nevertheless the transfer of the association and the brand will have to be done, which is why the connect can be seen throughout the city, in all media. Because we want to make the transfer of the association and the brand as quickly as possible…

     

    And is this a five-year contract?

    To begin with, it’s a three-year contract. But the intention is to make it a life-time one.

     

    04. Since Kala Ghoda is located in South Bombay, people from the suburbs are hardly able to make it there to partake in the festivities. Have you thought of doing other festivals elsewhere or will it be only this one?

    I completely agree with you. Mumbai cannot be served by one event. We talk about the western suburbs, the central suburbs, Navi Mumbai and South Bombay separately, although I would still think, the decibel level created in the market has reached everywhere. But given the commute issue, the distances and the hectic lifestyle of people, it is very difficult for people to reach the venue and we should ideallty have multiple events in multiple geographies throughout the year. And we will also be working towards that. So, for example, last year, when we launched the Navi Mumbai edition and although the scale was smaller than that of Kala Ghoda, we had a mini-cultural event in Navi Mumbai over two weekends, where we called artistes, did plays, musical recitals, and concerts in Navi Mumbai.

     

    05. The worry is that when events such as the Kala Ghoda Festival which are all about culture, art and literature, have an association with a paper like Hindustan Times, the competition between various publications comes in the way of the coverage of the festival. And hence art and culture suffers.

    I completely agree with you. It is very unfortunate. If you look at the Hindustan Times of the last four, five or seven years, even though a rival publication was sponsoring it, we always published schedules, carried photographs of people having fun, of what is happening, and that is the spirit one should have. It is a festival of the city, ahead of it being a festival of The Times of India or Hindustan Times.

    If a small play were to happen at the NCPA or Rang Sharada, everyone covers it. Why then should we not cover an event where four or five lakh people come and have fun? It is unfortunate that the rivalry comes in the way, but that’s not how it should be.

     

  • HT Media extends ‘Brunch’ equity to ‘Brunch Night’

    By A Correspondent

     

    After the success of Brunch Dialogues 1 & 2 in Mumbai, HT Media launched ‘The Brunch Night’ in New Delhi last week to celebrate the good life.

     

    Held with the stars of Chennai Express – Shah Rukh Khan, Deepika Padukone and UTV Movies boss Siddharth Roy Kapoor, the invitees included the creme de la creme of the Capital’s glitterati. From the likes of Kalyani Saha, Harmeet Bajaj, Ayaan Ali Khan, Amaan Ali Khan, Rina Dhaka, David Abraham and Rakesh Thakore, Anuja Chauhan, Ira Trivedi, Shivani and Amir Pasrich, Sujata Assomull, among others.

     

    Talking about the reason behind building such a property, Rajan Bhalla, Group Marketing Head, HT Media Ltd. said, “Brunch stands for the “Good Life”, and The Brunch Night is a very exclusive platform for brands to connect with their premium audience with stimulating conversations and entertainment. It’s a platform that will find great connect for our consumers and advertisers with quality content, live experience and a strong proposition to build brands, amplified through our strong media offerings. With the overwhelming response to ‘The Brunch Night’, we will be planning more such events in the coming future, both in Delhi and Mumbai.”

     

    The highlight of the evening was a conversation that Vir Sanghvi had with Shah Rukh Khan, Deepika Padukone and Siddharth Roy Kapoor. The evening was hosted by Rajiv Makhni.

     

    Said Poonam Saxena, Editor, HT Brunch on the first Brunch Night: “It’s a great new platform for interacting with Bollywood stars in an informal, enjoyable atmosphere.”

     

  • HT Media gets more ‘social’ with Webitude

    By A Correspondent

     

    HT Mobile Solutions, the mobile solutions organization from HT Media Ltd. has announced the acquisition of Webitude, a social media organization based in Gurgaon. With this, the company has announced its intention to offer strong digital solutions that leverage the combined power of mobile and social media, under an umbrella brand Digital Quotient that will operate with the mantra ‘Go Mobile, Get Social.’

     

    As per Vinish Kathuria, COO, HT Mobile Solutions, ‘The Indian digital marketing landscape can be summarized by 3 megatrends – explosive growth in mobile usage, social media and videos consumption. As Digital Quotient, we’re going to be able to offer our clients a rich array of solutions across mobile and social media, and leverage the power of multimedia to help establish a strong, meaningful connect with consumers.’

     

    Santosh Kumar, Co-founder, Webitude said ‘We are looking forward to leveraging the scale and the mobile acumen of the HT group to take our offerings to the next level. While we will retain our identity as Webitude and continue to operate our agency business, we will now also operate as part of the larger group Digital Quotient – where social and mobile will together drive exponentially higher value.’

     

    Girish Mahajan, Co-founder, Webitude said: “For our existing team, who have made Webitude the recognizable name it is, this opens a whole new world of possibilities. It also means growth on a personal level, just as the business grows.”