Tag: HUL

  • L’Oreal India appoints Shalini Raghavan as CMO, Consumer Products Division

    By A Correspondent

     

    L’Oréal India has announced the appointment of ShaliniRaghavan as Chief Marketing Officer for its Consumer Products Division (CPD). Raghavan will be responsible for driving overall marketing capability and strengthening digital initiatives to build a strong strategy for L’Oréal’s CPD brands – L’Oréal Paris, Garnier, Maybelline New York and NYX Professional Make up.

     

    In her new role, Raghavan will report into Jean-Christophe Letellier, MD – L’Oréal India and will oversee marketing, media, public relations and digital functions. “L’Oréal is the world leader in beauty for over a century and has grown this category in India with a blend of enterprise, insights and first to market innovations. I am deeply passionate about the beauty business and the opportunity to build on L’Oréal India’s leadership position is an exciting journey that I look forward to,” said Raghavan on her appointment.

     

    With over 15 years of experience in the beauty industry, Shalini joins L’Oréal from Hindustan Unilever Limited (HUL). She has worked in leadership roles in marketing and business development of brands such as Lux and Lakmé, and was recently the Global Brand Director (Asian and African) of Dove Masterbrand.

     

    Commenting on the new appointment, Jean-Christophe Letellier, Managing Director, L’Oréal India said, “Shalini is an experienced marketing professional with a deep insight into the beauty business. Her international experience and knowledge of building organisational capacity in strategy, innovation and marketing will be prized as we look to grow our presence across the country.”

     

  • Always nice to have peer appreciation: GauravJeet Singh, HUL (+Video)

    The Best Media Client of the Year crown went yet again to Hindustan Unilever Limited (HUL) at Emvies 2016. Minutes after accepting the honour, MxMIndia spoke with  GauravJeet Singh, Head, Media Services, HUL about the secret behind HUL’s success and much more.

     

    Yet another Emvies Best Media Client title. What is the secret of your success over successive years?

    I think there are two-three reasons. Great work comes from great partnerships. I think the kind of media partnerships we have with our agencies Mindshare, PHD- the rapport has been extraordinary and they have done some extraordinary work over the years. The way they work so closely with the brand teams to bring alive what the brand stands for, I think that just opens up the doors for great appreciation. That is a big reason why we manage to do so well in awards every time.

     

    With so many clients and so much of advertising activity, how is it that HUL wins the award every time?

    I think it is right that it is consistency that is very critical in any work that you do and a big part of that consistency comes from the fact that we are so sharply in the brand. We keep telling our brand story year after year and bring it alive in various ways. We do it at scale, making sure that we get to the right consumers with the right message and because we do it so consistently, it essentially works to a great extent to the advantage of the brands. I think that is the reason why they do get appreciated. For us, the bigger appreciation is the consumer’s love for our brands and that keeps us encouraging to do more and more around that space.

     

     

    The focus is more on media innovation. Is that right?

    Innovation for innovation sake is of very less use, it is the sharpness of bringing alive what you want to do on the brand. That itself is one of the roots of innovation. It could be bringing branded content. But I think we do not prescribe what the root should be, what we do prescribe is the end and the end is that we should be able to tell great brand stories, take up brand stories to consumers in a fashion that is appreciated and loved by consumers.

     

    How much do awards matter to you?

    The biggest award that we get is the kind of love consumers have for our brands and that is what we work for. But it is always nice to have peer appreciation for the work that we do and it is inspiring and pushes us to do more. You get appreciation for something consumers responded to positively and loved it. That is the reason why we feel awards are important.

     

  • HUL tops Zee Mindspace Awards winners

     

    By A Correspondent

    Video by Santosh Jangid

     

    On Saturday, amidst a cross-section of the advertising and marketing fraternity, Zee Entertainment Enterprises Limited announced the winners of the first edition of ‘Zee Mindspace Awards’ with the aim recognising brands that have captured maximum ‘MindSpace’.

    Hindustan Unilever led the awards tally with wins across five categories, followed by LG Corp with three category wins, Mondelez and Coca-Cola with two category wins each. The winners were decided on the basis of a nationwide survey that was carried out by Nielsen, evaluating 288 brands across 36 categories. The awards ceremony was held on the second (and last day) of #ZeeMelt 2016.

    https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=zJEcze7oMls

    Speaking at the awards function, Punit Goenka, MD & CEO, ZEEL said, “Zee Mindspace Awards is a property which gives marketers a true reflection of their efforts sown in building brands. The very essence of the awards is its USP – the winners are not chosen by a jury but by the consumers themselves. The structured research conducted across the nation by Nielsen has empowered the consumers to select the most recalled brands as the winners, in a unique and transparent process. Congratulations to all the deserving winners!”

     

    Said Sunil Buch, Chief Business Officer, ZEEL who spearheaded the initiative, “For any brand to get into the Mindspace it requires all the elements of marketing and sales to come together. Today there are standalone awards for creativity, marketing, media etc. but none that holistically represents the orchestra required to get into and stay in the mind of the consumer. The Zee Mindspace Awards 2016 are the first to recognise the success of all the elements that go into occupying the Mindspace.”

     

    Added Prashant Singh, Managing Director, South Asia, Nielsen: “Zee Mindspace Awards is the first forward-looking, future-oriented awards property that looks at not just a part of the marketing process, but at the entire outcome. After an extensive online survey of over 12,000 consumers, it was impressive to see which brands in India command the maximum consumer ‘mindspace’ based on our parameters of top-of-mind recall, popularity, the kind of advocacy the brand commands, the desire to own the brand and finally the buzz it generates.  Congratulations to these winners who have managed to carve the maximum mindspace in consumers’ minds.”

     

    The awards event was hosted by actor and television presenter, Gaurav Kapur

     

    List of winners of ZEE Mindspace Awards 2016 across categories:

    Category

    Brands

     

     

    Air Conditioners

    LG

    Airlines

    Air India

    Banks

    State Bank Of India

    Bathing Soap

    Dove

    Biscuits

    50-50

    Cereals/Oats

    Kellogg’s

    Chocolates

    Dairy Milk

    Cold Beverages (Aerated)

    Coca-Cola

    Cold Beverages (Non Aerated)

    Maaza

    Confectionaries (toffee, gums, mint)

    Cadbury Choclairs

    Deodorants

    Fogg

    Fabric care items [Washing powder/soap, fabric softeners]

    Surf Excel

    Face Wash

    Himalaya

    Fast food chains

    McDonald’s

    Four-Wheeler

    Maruti Suzuki

    Hair Color and Dyes

    Garnier

    Hair Oil

    Parachute Advansed

    Life Insurance

    LIC

    Mobile Service Providers

    Airtel

    Mobile/Smartphones

    Samsung

    Moisturizer/Body Lotion

    Vaseline

    Mosquito Repellents & Home Insecticides

    Good Knight

    Noodles/Pastas

    Maggi

    Online Shopping

    Flipkart

    Packaged Savoury Snacks (chips, extruded snacks, bhujiyas/ namkeens)

    Lay’s

    Paint

    Asian Paints

    Refrigerators

    LG

    Shampoo & Conditioner

    Dove

    Skin Cream

    Pond’s

    Tea/Coffee

    Tata Tea

    Toothpaste/Toothbrush

    Colgate

    TV Sets

    Sony

    Two-Wheeler

    Honda

    Tyres

    MRF

    Washing Machine

    LG

    Water Purifiers

    Aquaguard

  • Former HUL ED Punit Mishra to helm broadcast at ZEEL

    By A Correspondent

     

    Punit Misra, former Executive Director – Sales and Customer Development at Hindustan Unilever (HUL) will be take charge as CEO - Domestic Broadcast Business at Zee Entertainment. Misra will report to Punit Goenka, MD and CEO, ZEEL for his role. His appointment is with effect from October 1, 2016.

  • So how did HUL fare in JFM 2016?

     

    By A Correspondent

     

    Hindustan Unilever Limited (HUL) is India’s largest Fast Moving Consumer Goods company with its products touching the lives of nine of 10 households in India.  Now that’s a short descriptor about the company in its press statement. But enough reason why it’s good to look at the January-March quarter results. For, in many ways, HUL sets the trend in the FMCG business, and notwithstanding the onslaught of Patanjali, HUL still sets the trends (and spends) in the country.

     

    According to a press release, during the quarter, the domestic consumer business grew at 4%, with 4% underlying volume growth. Growth in the quarter was impacted by the phasing out of excise duty incentives, a one-time credit for excise duty refund in the base quarter and marginal price de-growth. Commented Chairman Harish Manwani: “In challenging markets and a deflationary cost environment, we have delivered another year of competitive and profitable growth. The consistency of our performance is a result of managing our business dynamically, and executing our strategy with even greater rigour and discipline. Our sustained focus on investing behind brands, sharpening our executional capabilities and driving market development has enabled us to keep winning with consumers in a rapidly changing market.”

     

    Here are the specifics:

    Soaps & Detergents: Skin Cleansing was driven by strong volume growth on Dove, Lifebuoy and Hamam. In Laundry, growth was led by the premium segment, with Surf maintaining its strong double digit growth momentum. Comfort Fabric Conditioner delivered another strong performance on the back of sustained market development. Household Care performance was led by Vim liquids. The quarter witnessed price deflation in this segment, albeit at lower levels, arising from actions taken earlier to pass on the benefit of lower commodity costs to consumers.

     

    Personal Products:  The reported growth for this segment was impacted by the phasing out of Excise Duty incentives, a one-time credit for excise duty refund in the base quarter and the residual impact from the re-alignment of channel spends. Skin Care delivered broad based volume growth across Fair & Lovely, Pond’s and Vaseline. The performance of Fair & Lovely was led by BB cream, whilst growth in Pond’s and Lakme was driven by the premium portfolio. Hair Care registered another quarter of volume led growth, with Dove and TRESemmé leading the category performance.

     

    In Oral Care, Close Up continued to do well, while Pepsodent core was relaunched in the quarter. Color cosmetics sustained innovation led double digit growth with Lakme Absolute and 9 to 5 strengthening its position in premium make up.

     

    Beverages: Tea registered broad0based growth, driven by market development and strengthened brand equities across the portfolio. Lipton Green Tea maintained its strong growth momentum. Bru Coffee delivered another quarter of double digit growth.

     

    Packaged Foods: Market development continues to be a key driver of growth for this segment. Kissan delivered another robust quarter on both ketchups and jams, while the solid growth on Knorr was led by Instant Soups. Ice Creams registered double digit growth driven by sharper in-market execution on Kwality Walls and the extension of Magnum to new cities.

     

    Water: Pureit delivered double digit growth led by the strong performance in the ‘Reverse Osmosis’ segment. The portfolio was further strengthened with the launch of the ‘Pureit Ultima with Oxytube’ device in quarter.

     

    Margins:  Lower input costs resulted in 240 bps reduction in Cost of Goods Sold. Brand investments were sustained at competitive levels; overall A&P was up by Rs.65 Crores (+40 bps). Profit before interest and tax (PBIT) grew by 11% and PBIT margin improved by 115 bps. Profit after tax before exceptional items, PAT (bei), grew by 13% to Rs.1031 Crores. Net Profit at Rs.1090 Crores, was up 7% with the growth rate impacted by the higher exceptional income arising from the sale of subsidiary in the base quarter.

     

    Financial Year 2015-16:  The Domestic Consumer business grew by 4% with 6% underlying volume growth. Reported growth was impacted by -110ps arising from the phase out of excise duty incentives. Profit before interest and tax (PBIT) grew by 10% with PBIT margin improving +90 bps, despite the net excise duty impact of -50bps on PBIT. The consistency in margin improvement was delivered even as we continued to make significant investments behind our brands (A&P was up 160bps). Profit after tax but before exceptional items, PAT (bei), grew by 6% to Rs 4078 crore. Net Profit was at Rs 4082 crore, with the growth rate impacted by the higher exceptional income arising from subsidiary and property related sales in the previous year. The strong track record of cash generation was sustained with cash from operations exceeding Rs 5000 crore for yet another year. The Board of Directors have proposed a final dividend of Rs. 9.5 per share, subject to the approval of the shareholders at the AGM. Together with the interim dividend of Rs. 6.5 per share, the total dividend for the financial year ending 31st March, 2016 amounts to Rs. 16 per share.

     

    Please also read a report in DNA titled ‘Hind Unilever feels the drought pinch’ at:  http://dnai.in/dmec

     

  • It’s Mindshare (& PHD) again for HUL!

     

    By A Correspondent

     

    Media agency Mindshare’s India operations will continue to handle the non-digital media duties for FMCG major Hindustan Unilever. The WPP agency has been appointed by Unilever in 60 markets in its global media agency review which it conducts periodically. Omnicom’s PHD will continue to oversee the digital spends for HUL in India.

     

    “We just celebrated 20 years of a great partnership. This news brings in a momentum to instill new thinking and adaptive way of engagement with consumers. We are completely poised to take on this challenge of discovering inventive ways of achieving key goals of Unilever,” said Prasanth Kumar, CEO, Mindshare South Asia.

     

    Added Amin Lakhani, Head, Mindshare Fulcrum South Asia, which oversees the HUL business: “We are delighted to continue our partnership with Unilever. As the team, we embark on creating futuristic marketing solutions for all the Unilever portfolio brands. Greater consumer engagement with content in a real time environment and bespoke integrated media planning will be our topmost priority. The team is excited to be the lead partner to Unilever in their next phase of growth.”

     

    Just last week, Mindshare celebrated 20 years of partnership handling the media duties of HUL in the presence of Sanjiv Mehta, Managing Director and CEO, HUL and Mindshare Global CEO Nick Emery. A communiqué from Mindshare on PR Newswire quotes Emery saying: “Unilever is not only one of the world’s largest advertisers, it is one of the most progressive. It is a great privilege and also a great reflection on our teams that we now work with Unilever in 60 markets across all continents.”

     

    Mindshare has been confirmed as Unilever’s media agency partner in Europe, North America, South East Asia, South Asia and Africa.  PHD and IPG agency Initiative will also execute media spends for Unilever in certain international markets. . It’s been mostly status quo for Unilever’s media mandates, except, as per an Ad Age report, that some European markets have moved from PHD to Mindshare and the all-important Australian market has moved from Mindshare to PHD. China, it may be noted, will be with PHD, as will be Taiwan, Hong Kong, New Zealand and Australia. Initiative will direct Unilever spends in Latin America and Greece.

     

    PHD officials were not available for comment.

     

    In Arrangement with MxMIndia.com

     

  • It’s Hindustan like never before for HUL

     

    By Kala Vijayraghavan & Sagar Malviya

     

    In February 2014, a manager of Hindustan Unilever Ltd (HUL) doing his rounds in Medaram village in Warangal district of Andhra Pradesh (now Telangana) stumbled into Sammakka Sarakka Jatara, a biannual tribal religious congregation. Some 10 million people had gathered at the festival that year. The manager was quick to alert the head office of the potential of the four-day festival. It fitted well with a new initiative that Sanjiv Mehta, CEO since 2013, was planning to kick off at the home & personal care giant. Called ‘Winning in Many Indias’, or WIMI, its objective was to transform HUL from a four-branch structure at the front end into 14 distinct consumer clusters.

     

    The new structure will see many HUL managers spending more time out of their cubicles to cover smaller markets across India. The hope is that this will make Unilever’s India subsidiary nimbler and more proactive in responding to insights from the market, and to competition, particularly of the regional variety.

     

    The Jatara in Warangal was perhaps the first experiment with the WIMI initiative: HUL undertook a sampling exercise at the festival for Rs 5 packs of Fair and Lovely that are meant for rural markets. The stall activation, sampling and sales, say HUL officials, resulted in an instant bump in the franchise’s numbers (the company won’t share exact figures). By the fourth quarter of 2014-15 (January-March), WIMI – along with 2,000-odd HUL managers – was on its way.

     

    The 14 clusters are based out of seven physical locations and five sales branches; a new fifth branch for the central region has been carved out from the Hindi heartland of central Uttar Pradesh, Madhya Pradesh, Rajasthan, Bihar and Chhattisgarh, comprising over 500 million people. The first step for WIMI was a pilot that was done in the south branch by creating separate consumer clusters TAP (Tamil Nadu and Andhra Pradesh) and KK (Karnataka and Kerala).

     

    The HUL mangers mobilised for the initiative began to move quickly. For instance, two of them on field duty in Punjab fed an insight about a significant mass market for tea in the ‘Punjab and Hills’ cluster. HUL was quick to respond, re-launching the Taaza brand after changing the blend to suit the local taste, and communicating aggressively on radio and in local media. This, claim HUL marketers, led to a spike in Taaza volume growth.

     

    Similarly, Pepsodent clove oil and salt toothpaste was launched in south India; small packs of tea and unique sampling trade deals were offered in coastal Andhra Pradesh; variable price points were created in the laundry segment to shift consumers from local brands to Rin in Uttar Pradesh; and detergent brand Wheel, which was competing with a local label brand in the mass powders segment in Telangana, was relaunched with an improved formulation, pricing and communication customised for the new state.

     

    “The numbers (of the June-ended quarter, in which total income grew by 5 per cent, in line with analysts’ expectations) reflects that the strategy is working in terms of volume growth and share,” says Mehta, who is keen to encourage a startup culture at the marketing behemoth and get young managers to keep their ears to the ground across India’s diverse markets. “It is imperative to win in all parts of our business and across all channels and geographies, in order to win decisively. We want to have the soul of a small company where speed is the currency, bias for action is the norm, where people are empowered on the frontline,” adds Mehta. “WIMI has helped us understand finer nuances about local consumers and provide us a more granular understanding of the market.” The cluster strategy is also leading to better productivity and accountability of managers across branches.

     

    At a time when rural markets – which bring in roughly a third of HUL’s top line – are experiencing a slowdown, HUL claims WIMI helped 90 per cent of the portfolio gain market share last year, much of it from regional brands. The marketer now has six brands that have crossed Rs 2,000 crore in sales, five brands that are over Rs 1,000 crore and six that have hit Rs 500 crore.

     

    Long-time HUL watchers who have seen CEOs come and go don’t rule this out as yet another ‘do, delete, redo’ strategy of a new CEO. For instance, if MS Banga (CEO between 2000 and 2005) had his ‘power brands’ strategy, his predecessor Keki Dadiseth almost single-handedly pursued acquisition-led growth. “Every new CEO brings in a new style of functioning, but I guess so long as the long term results are positive, it is good for all stakeholders,” is how an HUL veteran puts it.

     

    Mehta for his part is clear that he wants his managerial team to represent the whole of India. “Our internal population represents the different clusters of the country and we don’t just have talent from urban India but people who represent the whole ethos and fabric of the country. Insights from these young managers are being taken right into the boardroom to ensure that our execution reflects such understandings.”

     

    The 14 clusters have resulted in the creation of 14 new leadership positions to empower talent within the system. Typically, a young manager (in his 30s) leads each cluster. His mandate: to understand the local demand and competition and drive growth in non-metro geographies.

     

    “Mehta ought to be credited for understanding that focus shoots up when you break geographies into smaller markets. Managers on the ground and in touch with consumers in a diverse market such as India can throw up huge opportunities for HUL,” says Amin Babwani, a former HUL marketer who now consults consumer companies.

     

    Nitin Mathur, research analyst who covers consumer companies in emerging markets for Société Générale, says HUL has laid out a clear strategy to counter regional competition. “With 14 clusters, the focus is to increase the quality of distribution and increase bespoke products and strategies to counter local competition.” A recent JM Financial report said the central India cluster accounts for 40 per cent of the country’s population but has only 22 per cent share of the country’s GDP, which offers it (HUL) a much higher opportunity for growth relative to the rest of the country.” Small wonder then that that Mehta says he wants HUL to be “future-ready” to tap that opportunity.

     

    Source:The Economic Times

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

    Licensed to republish

     

     

     

  • Shavon Barua joins PHD as managing partner. to manage HUL digital mandate

    By Pritha Mitra Dasgupta

     

    Shavon Barua, former president of Havas Worldwide, is joining Omnicom media group agency PHD in the newly-created role of managing partner. Barua will work closely with Jyoti Bansal, managing director, PHD India. With two decades of experience in creative agencies, this is the first time she will explore her opportunities at a media agency.

     

    One of her key responsibilities will be managing the entire digital mandate of Hindustan Unilever. Last year, PHD picked up the coveted gold at the Cannes Lion festival for its HUL campaign, Kan Khajura Teshan, the on-demand entertainment channel on mobile phones.

     

    “Shavon’s leadership experience with a creative communication agency will be a great addition in strengthening our product,” said Jasmin Sohrabji, chief executive officer, Omnicom Media Group, India and South East Asia.

     

    Barua started her career with SSC&B Lintas in 1995 as account director. She moved to Rediffusion Y&R in 2000 as client servicing director and in 2004 joined Ambience Publicis as associate vice-president. In 2007, she moved to JWT as executive business director and in 2009 shifted to Euro RSCG as director. She joined Havas in 2010

     

    Source:The Economic Times

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

    Licensed to republish

     

  • La la la la, la la la la. HUL brings back bikini-clad girl under a waterfall for Liril

    By Sagar Malviya

     

    A bikini-clad girl dancing under a waterfall in the middle of a secluded, lush green valley, frolicking to a catchy tune would surely evoke nostalgia for most folks, except maybe those born in the 21st century.

     

    Now, Hindustan Unilever has gone down memory lane to choose one of the hottest Indian ads ever to relaunch its soap brand Liril – more than a decade after it went off-air but perhaps, never forgotten. The Liril girl is back!

     

    “These are the roots of Liril. They don’t change. And what we’re doing is paying homage to the Liril that we all know, bringing alive the very same elements that have been part of our popular culture through time,” said George Koshy, general manager for personal wash category at HUL.

     

    The marble green soap brand made waves 40 years ago when model and Air India air-hostess Karen Lunel wore a swimsuit and danced under a cascade to the catchy jingle.

     

    “It is an iconic ad in Indian memory and even newer people are interested in history if there is a back story as interesting as that of Liril. In a low-involvement category like soaps, Liril will stand out and surely gain share now,” said Alpana Parida, president at brand consultancy firm DY Works.

     

    After 1985, the brand was defined by models Pooja Batra, Preity Zinta and Deepika Padukone — each seen playing in the water and swimming under the waterfall. But they were merely shadows of the original ad.

     

    Also, it wasn’t the same after the 90s, when the lemon product was diluted with variants such as orange and icy blue, followed by a name change to Liril 2000 a decade ago.

     

    So what does Alyque Padamsee, former CEO of Lintas and the creator of the ‘Liril girl’ have to say about the modern rendition of the ad?

     

    “I feel vindicated because there are some appeals that are timeless. Freshness in a tropical country has an eternal appeal which is now being revived,” said Padamsee, adding that Liril promised a few minutes of freedom from the daily grind of the Indian housewife.

     

    The new campaign, featuring Brazilian model Anabelle and created by Lowe, was launched on social media last week.

     

    “‘Must have taken a lot of guts to go back’, was one particular response and that sums up our approach – stick to the core,” said Koshy.

     

    While the image of the lime and lemony zest soap brand and its ad may not have faded away, its market share did — falling from a high of over 14 per cent three decades ago to less than 2 per cent now — in the Rs 16,000-crore soap category.

     

    Source:The Economic Times

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

    Licensed to republish

     

  • HUL plans to let other firms use its mobile marketing channel Kan Khajura Tesan

    By Delshad Irani

     

    One of the country’s biggest FMCG companies, Hindustan Unilever (HUL), plans to open its mobile-based marketing platform Kan Khajura Tesan (KKT) to external advertisers. KKT, the fully advertiser-funded, entertainment-on-demand initiative helps HUL brands like Lux and Fair & Lovely engage with rural consumers in media-dark areas.

     

    These are villages that cannot be reached via traditional media like TV, radio and print, but where at least one member of the household is a mobile phone owner. “These consumers are still significant (more than 200 million in total) contributors to the sales of FMCG brands. They also happen to be key growth markets for Unilever. Reaching out to these consumers with our brand communications and offerings remains a big challenge,” an HUL spokesperson said.

     

    The KKT initiative was first piloted in Bihar, followed by Jharkhand, Uttar Pradesh, Madhya Pradesh and Rajasthan. The mobile-radio channel, which is telecom-company agnostic, has since been extended across India.

     

    In fact, KKT is the most popular radio station in the northern state of Bihar. Here’s how it works. Callers give a missed call on 1800-30-000-123 (the call disconnects automatically after two rings) and in return the caller receives capsules of entertainment that includes primarily local and Bollywood music, with a strong preference for 90s movie hits, and comedy shows.

     

    Besides entertainment, HUL has also added a devotional section. Of course, item numbers and devotional content are interspersed with brand communication from HUL. In the coming months, however, the channel will also air brand messages from other advertisers. But the company is keeping under wraps advertiser profiles, the exact nature of media deals and just how it’ll affect programming, if at all, in the future.

     

    “In the journey of taking Kan Khajura Tesan forward as an ever growing marketing platform we are now opening it up for brands beyond HUL’s own. This will allow the platform to grow and help marketers reach out to media dark consumers who were difficult to reach before,” the company spokesperson said.

     

    “The nature of the tieups will be on a case-to-case basis as per the requirement of the partnering brands. We have had a similar approach internally through which we have helped our brands like Lux, Closeup, Fair & Lovely use Kan Khajura Tesan to connect with consumers and make a positive impact on their equity.”

     

    The campaign, if you can call a veritable radio channel that, was conceptualised and executed in collaboration with media agency PHD India and creative agency Lowe Lintas.

     

    KKT now has the capability to push personalised content as per the user preference in addition to voice recording and voice recognition technology. HUL’s decision to throw open up the marketing medium to brands other than its own could spell the beginning of a new era for the FMCG behemoth — one that takes it from big-ticket advertiser to a media owner.

     

    Source:The Economic Times

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

    Licensed to republish

     

  • HUL partners Star, YRF, Facebook, Google etc to weave its brands into their creations

    By Pritha Mitra Dasgupta & Sagar Malviya

     

    Toiletries-to-food giant Hindustan Unilever (HUL) is partnering over a dozen content creators — from Star Network and Yash Raj Films to Facebook and Google — to produce content across channels where HUL brands can participate, perhaps subtly, as part of the conversation.

     

    Last Friday, the maker of Dove and Rin invited 13 producers including broadcasters, radio channels, film producers and top-notch digital companies to its campus to ideate how they can seamlessly weave HUL brands in their content, messages and shows, instead of just product placement and brand plugs.

     

    “As media is changing, there is a skill that needs to get evolved — as content explodes, how to tell compelling brand stories and really cut through to consumers by making sure the brand is able to tell a story that consumer can relate to,” said Gaurav Jeet Singh, HUL’s head of media services in South Asia.

     

    While the latest move of HUL, the country’s largest advertiser, won’t replace advertisements, the company is trying to partner media channels beyond obvious marketing. “Through popular culture, how can we ride on content that is designed to entertain, engage and connect? Something that is not force fit. But something that naturally fits into the content and can carry the brand story seamlessly,” explained Singh.

     

    HUL’s media agency, Mindshare, is a partner in the initiative. “As the consumer’s media consumption habits change, we understand the need to create and curate differentiated communication platforms, to build lasting brands with an engaged audience,” said Prasanth Kumar, chief executive of Mindshare.

     

    “The consumer is no longer a passive viewer, but an active participant in the brand’s story-telling journey. Brand ideas and content that resonate with the audience are further seeded by them into their own circle of influence that has a far more powerful effect,” Kumar said.

     

    With over 35 brands across food, personal care and home care portfolios, cutting through structures and processes to execute an idea quickly becomes an issue. Hence, the company through ‘Content Day’ encourages brand team members to share ideas which can be approved or perfected quickly so as to become scalable.

     

    It wasn’t easy. In the last six months, HUL has been working on the novel concept — from identifying nearly a dozen brands to sending briefs to 35 content creators for ideas. The company that initially received around 300 ideas, narrowed it to 40 with 13 companies meeting individual brand teams on Content Day for possible brand integration.

     

    Two ideas from Star Network and one each from YRF and Disney made it to the top four, which were presented to the top management and the entire marketing team of HUL. “We want to create a strong ecosystem of for branded content as that is crucial to the future of marketing,” said Samir Singh, HUL’s executive director-personal care.

     

    Sample this. In the latest blockbuster Piku, while there were several brand integration, there were two that particularly stood out: Amul milk and Red Label tea. Both these products were placed on the dining table when the protagonists in the film were having breakfast and they effortlessly became part of the movie scene.

     

    “But they can be part of song lyrics, movie title, we can co-create product with the company and integrate the brand in several other ways depending on the marketing objective,”  said Ashish Patil, business & creative head and vice president at YRF. “The unique thing about Content Day is that it is not a random one off project, but HUL wants to make it an annual event. And, it’s a cultural shift for them. It is about looking at content differently, as an important marketing tool. And it is about infusing new thinking which they or their ad agency may not be geared to do,” he said.

     

    While executing ideas into branded content could be challenging, media partners are hopeful that HUL’s move will break the clutter. “There was no strict brief and it was unstructured and gave us a lot of freedom to do as we thought. It was a proactive and innovative idea. This is an opportunity that is more open about possibilities of collaborating across brands,” said Myleeta Aga Williams, MD of BBC Worldwide.

     

    Source:The Economic Times

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

    Licensed to republish

     

  • HUL takes Knorr instant noodle TVCs off the air

    By Pritha Mitra Dasgupta

     

    The entire noodle category advertising in India stares at a complete blackout. Following Hindustan Unilever’s (HUL) decision to stop the production and sale of Knorr Chinese instant noodles, the company has now instructed television channels and other media houses to stop advertisements of the brand from next week.

     

    On Wednesday, HUL said it would withdraw the product, which it introduced in February. “On June 11, the company informed its media agency and media partners to withdraw the Knorr Chinese instant noodle commercial from Sunday,” a senior executive at a broadcast company said on the condition of anonymity.

     

    Knorr is currently running two noodle television commercials — Chinese noodles and Soupy noodles — featuring master chef Pankaj Bhadouria. “But it is only the Chinese noodle commercial that will go off air and will be replaced by other HUL brand commercials,” the executive added.

     

    While Lowe Lintas is the creative agency, GroupM is the media agency of Knorr noodles. HUL’s spokesperson, however, said it has taken the ads off air with effect Thursday. This is because it has decided to stop production and sale of the Knorr Chinese range of instant noodles till its product approval application is cleared by the Food Safety and Standards Authority of India (FSSAI), the spokesperson said. Last week, Nestle directed broadcasters and other media companies to stop its Maggi brand’s advertising from June 7, after it decided to pull the product from the market following findings by authorities that some packets contained excess lead.

     

    Media planners said with HUL deciding to withdraw the Knorr commercial, the number of noodle advertising will reduce by half. The other two prominent brands in this category are ITC’s Yippee noodle and Capital Food’s Chings. According to media planners, the instant noodles category spends about Rs 200-220 crore on advertising and most companies spend 10-12% of their total sales on advertising.

     

    “Maggi alone spends nearlyRs 150 crore and Knorr will be another Rs 15-20 crore. So, with these two brands ads disappearing, the noodle sector ads will go down significantly,” said a senior media planner.

     

    Instant noodle brand ads are mostly skewed towards television advertising and use general entertainment channels, kids channels and music channels. “The other brands like Yippee and Chings will cut down on the advertising and lie low for a while. They definitely don’t want to grab the attention for the wrong reasons,” said another media planner.

     

    However, an ITC spokesperson said the company will continue with the current marketing plans around Yippee. “There are no adverse reports on ITC’s Yippee noodles from any state and therefore marketing plans for this category remain unchanged,” said the spokesperson.

     

    While Ogilvy & Mather is Yipee’s creative agency, Madison World is its media agency. Another aggressive advertiser in this category is Chings, which is endorsed by actor Ranveer Singh. On May 27, the brand launched an ad film featuring the actor to fight hunger among school children in India, with the ‘India Ke Hunger Ki Bajao’ campaign.

     

    The campaign, conceptualised by Yash Raj Films (YRF), is a global fundraising drive initiated by Ching’s Secret (and YRF) with not-for-profit organisation Akshaya Patra.

     

    Source:The Economic Times

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

    Licensed to republish