By Jaisurya Das
Holy Cow! It’s 2016…
Ladies and Gentleman, here’s a very warm welcome to a wonderful year ahead with your favourite buddy, Dear MxM in Season 2.
I certainly did, with much ale and pasta, laced with some insipid and horrendously jarring programming for the eve. No wonder then that most people want to head out into the storm of traffic and air laced with alcohol and revelry!
Marvellous job the new traffic head in my city did, right from campaigning against drinking and driving at all the major pubs to floats with crash-crumpled vehicles at important intersections. And ‘on your face’ this campaign was, and rightly so! Am sure this saved over a hundred lives.  Tip my hat to you Mr. DCP for truly establishing the supremacy of ‘on the ground ‘ campaigning.
On the ground it’s a different ballgame and the odds are tough but there is little wastage. Aspiring marketers and brand managers must face reality on the ground. White boards, cabins and jargonistic strategy are good internally, but no more. Sales takes effort, more like burrowing skills, and experiential thinking powered by the marketplace. Nothing else will do.
But then it’s the era of the mobile. So, one will have to app-iffy these ago old doctrines and get them in sync with current user/ consumer behaviour unless of course you can work on the audience themselves.
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And this is where the functioning of the brain and neural networks will come into play !
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Just as forecasting is a bygone era, so is understanding of audience, no matter how sharp a shooter you are. Your legacy means nothing. All that matters today is your relevance and ability to deliver today. Yes, the audience isn’t predictable anymore and they flirt with all that comes by. Age cohorts, preferences, character matches and MHI (mean household incom ) are of no relevance any more and have been long reduced to rubble.
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For instance, how is it that the average teen can text, listen to music, eat a bowl of chips, and study on the laptop all at one go and yet seem coherent ?Try doing all that, just the thought will tire us out. No, its not age, it’s brain and they way it is programmed.Â
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Marketers grapple with this kind of clutter and yet have to be ‘in the face‘ for the brand to sell. Sustainable audiences are a thing of the past, or so it may seem!
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The answer is loud and clear and understanding of the brain is critical and will assume more and more significance as time goes by.
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Wake up to this new reality now, or possibly never!
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On that note, it’s time we get to this week’s Q&A where you ask and we answer!
Read on my friends…
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I work with a leading media company and am considering doing an executive MBA Programme. But I am told that an EMBA is of not much use and only a full-time one is worthwhile. Your view, Sir?
Thanks a lot for writing in to Dear MxM, where we attempt to find method in the madness that is life.
This is not really true. An executive MBA is certainly considered as an additional qualification and in fact the bulk of the professionals who enrol for these programmes are company-sponsored.
As you may know, it’s highly unlikely that a company will sponsor someone for a programme that makes no difference to their work.
Having said that, it’s important that this is done from a college or institution of learning that is worth its salt ! Finally, it’s about what is taught, how you learn and how you decide to take it ahead into your professional life.
Yes, in comparison to a full-time MBA, there may be a difference but that’s what executive education and learning is about. I must add, that I have screened many MBAs who aren’t a patch on some who may have only the executive education to back them.
Go ahead and do it, buddy. Just ensure it’s from a leading management institute that believes in imparting quality education. All good wishes to you.
I have been offered a job in Mumbai out of my college placement. But the salary offered doesn’t allow me a decent home. What’s the point of working? Why are media folk paid so low?
At first, my congratulations to you! I agree that media ought to pay more at entry level, however this is pretty much the case with all industries. Advertising, as you would have noticed, is also low at the entry point.
It is indeed tough to balance budgets in a new city and more so Mumbai where accommodation costs the earth. Yes, it’s a matter of time before you move up the salary chain and earn a handsome packet to look after all your needs.
I haven’t yet figured what the rationale is, for low entry level salaries, but I assume the industry has a valid reason for doing so.
So, media folks aren’t really paid low but yes, at the entry it’s much lower than what is ideal. As far as your second question is concerned the answer is with you..
There is no point in anything we do, unless we believe, it will do us good !
Sir, at what stage of your career did you think that media is what excites you? What made you think you will do well in the media?
Hey, thanks for writing in to Dear MxM !
That’s an interesting question! While it’s all very ‘cool’ to say that media excited me from Day 1, the fact of the matter is that it took a couple of years before I could say that this is it!
So, this is my ‘ calling ‘ happened in Chennai when I was elevated to a team head (when I worked with an industry leader) and realised that my professional existence is now more than just about me.
I believed that I should be able to share and impart some part of my craft to my team and this is when the business suddenly looked exciting…
Yet, I know, so many people who were super-excited, the moment they set foot into our industry. So there isn’t a time frame, Its all about adaptability, maturity, tenacity and a whole load of patience.
To answer the second part of your question; I really didn’t know I would do well, and this remains unanswered even after three decades in this industry.
What really is the definition of doing well? I have always been baffled by this question!
It it about earning huge sums of money? Or is the title and all that goes with it? Or is it to have you spoken about often?
I really don’t know since ‘doing well’ is a relative term and has several connotations 🙂 So, yes, nothing told me that I was doing well in media, In fact, I would love to know whether my career is defined as ‘doing well’.
Actually either way it’s fine. I had a lovely time and I still enjoy my involvement in this industry.
Nothing more matters. Amen.
I was vacationing in Ahmedabad recently and loved the city. But I don’t know Gujarati and am bad with languages. Does this mean I can never move to any city, other than my own?
Oh boy, this sounds almost political …whoever gave you this warped idea, my friend !?
India is probably one of the significant nations, when it comes to mobility of its population.And language hasn’t been an impediment at all across states.
Please don’t be diffident, my friend. Go ahead and move to any city you’ll do great even without the local language. After all, it’s finally about you and your adaptability !
Let’s look at our PM Modi for instance ; He probably travels more than most pilots do and yet does phenomenally well to represent our country. No language, nothing. Just human connect that the hallowed corridors of power haven’t seen. Hats off to this level of international bonhomie.
No, I am not in Mr.Modi’s PR team, nor do I have anything to do with any political party but it’s just so apparent that it needs mention.
Be yourself, be human and leave the rest to your environs. All the very best to you in your new port of call! God Bless.
It’s wonderful being in a new year that holds much promise for all of us. Sometimes all it takes, is a page turned over in the calendar to make you feel the sunshine ! So bask in it my friends while the universe gives you the best it has to offer.
Be happy, be well.
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Till the next week then, it’s Sayonara !
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Your questions are just a week away from being answered…
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All it needs is a mail to editor@mxmindia.com with ‘Dear MxM’ in the subject line!
Jaisurya Das, maverick and media evangelist, eats, sleeps and makes love to brands. His consulting interventions are aimed at making brands powerful and sustainable. He is also the Contributing Editor of MxM India. The views expressed in this column are his own.
