Tag: Jasmin Sohrabji

  • Change of guard at Omnicom Media Group India: Torie Henderson to lead from Singapore as Jasmin Sohrabji takes on global leadership role

    By A Correspondent

    Jasmin Sohrabji

    Omnicom Media Group, the media services division of Omnicom Group Inc, has named Torie Henderson as CEO of Omnicom Media Group South East Asia and India.  Henderson, who moves into the new role from her position as President, Global Account Management, Omnicom Media Group Asia Pacific, replaces Jasmin Sohrabji, who has been appointed to a global leadership role within Omnicom Media Group. Sohrabji had taken charge as CEO of OMG SE Asia and India in May 2013.

    Commenting on the appointment, Cheuk Chiang, CEO, Omnicom Media Group, Asia Pacific, said: “Our success as a network is clearly determined by the strength of our people and leadership. In Torie we have a great leader, whose experience in client, talent and market development will assure that we continue the momentum that Jasmin and her team have built in our fastest growing region.” Thanking Sohrabji, Chiang said: “As we welcome Torie in her new role, we are thankful to Jas for her great work and we wish her all the very best as she takes the world stage,” Chiang added.Henderson will be based in Singapore, reporting directly to Chiang.

     

    Torie Henderson

    During her 11-year tenure with Omnicom Media Group, Henderson has held a number of leadership roles, including heading OMD International in Hong Kong and serving as the CEO of Omnicom Media Group Singapore.  An advocate for service excellence, innovation and ground-breaking media partnerships, Henderson helped grow the breadth of Omnicom Media Group’s client roster while also expanding the depth of its existing relationships with leading regional and global marketers. A strong believer in the value of training and mentoring as a critical component of organizational effectiveness, she has served as the Chairperson for Campaign Asia Pacific’s MediaWorks programme for four consecutive years.

     

    Defining her priorities in her new role, Henderson said, “Over the past several years, Omnicom Media Group agencies in South East Asia and India have delivered strong and consistent growth, as well as many of the industry’s most award winning campaigns – my priority will be on developing the tools and talent required to accelerate growth, drive innovation and inspire creativity.”

    Sohrabji joined Omnicom Media Group in 2007 with the mandate of setting up OMD’s India operations.  With more than two decades in the industry, Sohrabji has collected multiple accolades and distinctions, including recognition as “Agency Innovator 2009” (The Internationalist, UK), “Agency Head of the Year” (Media Magazine, Asia) and “Woman Achiever of the Year- Advertising” (GR8 Magazine, India). In September 2013, she also brought in PHD to India with Jyoti Bansal at the helm.

     

  • Madison BM creates a warm TVC for Amul Bodywarmer

    By A Correspondent

     

    Madison BMB has conceptualised a new TVC for Amul Bodywarmer. The TVC features a young north Indian couple, at home dealing with the harsh winters.

     

    With the winter approaching, the objective of the TVC was to bring the focus back to Amul Bodywarmer and the convenience of a bodywarmer in everyday life.

     

    Apart from the TVC, Amul Bodywarmer will also reach out to its consumers via outdoor, print and various other points of contact.

     

    Said NavinnS eksaria, Director, JG Hosiery: “In a world where exaggeration is a suspension of disbelief, we wanted to keep away from the exaggeration and follow the keeping it simple theory. We wanted to communicate the multiple aspects of warmth & unisex garment delivered through sweet & humorous story, which has been achieved“

     

    Said Raj Nair, CEO and Chief Creative Officer, Madison BMB: “Amul Innerwear and Bodywarmers have historically had a legacy of creating clutterbreaking work. We told ourselves that the work needs to be fresh, simple in ideation and yet totally stand-out in execution. We believe that we have achieved that.” 

     

    For more information,  please contact Mr.  Raj Nair – 09820505335

     

  • Sudhir Nair to head digital mandate at Omnicom

    By A Correspondent

     

    Sudhir Nair

    Omnicom Media Group India has appointed Sudhir Nair as Managing Director – Digital. In his new role, Nair will drive the digital agenda for the network and its brands – OMD and PHD as well as lead its growth and momentum.

     

    A digital evangelist with more than 15 years of experience, Nair moves to Omnicom Media Group from Grey Global where he set up their digital offering incorporating a holistic and comprehensive set of services for leading brands across multiples sectors. Under his leadership, Grey Digital transformed into an agency delivering award winning, effective work with the distinction of having won the Agency of the Year accolade, twice at the Indian Digital Media Awards (IDMA) besides other accolades. Post Grey, Nair set up a full service creative agency 21N78E. Prior to that, Nair has spent time at Duckshake.com, Booz Allen & Hamilton, Repro India Limited and VANS Info & Investor Services.

     

    Commenting on his appointment, Jasmin Sohrabji, CEO India & SEA of Omnicom Media Group, said, “As a network, Omnicom Media Group has witnessed a huge growth in digital across all platforms – search, display, social, and mobile offerings in India. Sudhir’s proven track record of delivery will keep our momentum going with a focus on further growth and innovation. Sudhir will work collaboratively with the business units and agency leads to further our digital mandate.” “As a network, we are committed to investing in talent to ensure that we are ahead of the curve when it comes to digital expertise and we are thrilled to have Sudhir on board,” added Jasmin Sohrabji.

     

    Nair commented, “Digital has transformed the advertising and marketing industry for the better. Thanks to the digital revolution, customer engagement has been taken to another level leading to more meaningful brand and consumer connections. In this exciting landscape, I am delighted to join Omnicom Media Group, a network at the forefront of digital innovation. I am looking forward to work closely with both the experienced as well as young talent that exists within the agency to strengthen our offering and make it more future facing.”

     

    Nair’s appointment is effective immediately and he will be based in Mumbai. Nair moves to the position vacated by his predecessor, Avinash Jhangiani, who has taken the role of Chief Innovation Officer within Omnicom Media Group India.

     

  • Tech is fine, but relationships will always be there: Jasmin Sohrabji

     

    Omnicom Media Group CEO India and South East Asia Jasmin Sohrabji says the agency goes public only when there is a need, like the establishing of its second agency, PHD. But who needs a constant spotlight when you’ve got a full trophy case and several ‘firsts’ in the industry to your name, particularly in the digital and mobile space, she tells Pradyuman Maheshwari. Hmmm. Read on…

     

    There is a perception that both you and OMD are extremely low profile. That you are doing great work, but you never talk about it!

    I set up a brand which didn’t exist in India, so there was some conscious effort to establish the brand. In the first four or five years, everything we did — every win, every office opened — we made it into a PR story. Once the brand was established, the focus was on internal consolidation of the second brand and the group. That’s why I think you won’t see the sort of media coverage we sought earlier. We did it again when we launched our second brand, PHD, year before last. We did the big Cannes wins that we had last year. And while we’ve been inundated with awards we’ve won, particularly for PHD, we didn’t PR the whole thing. By that time, we believed our fraternity and our potential clients, already knew us.

     

    Others who are well-established, are also high profile. Is this [reticence about PR], then, OMD’s personality?

    No, it’s not a personality and it’s not even my personality. We go in cycles of doing PR when we need to. We went through a cycle of establishing OMD, then establishing our second brand. Now the focus is on the overall group, and we will make a big group hiring. When we hired Shavon Barua as Managing Partner for PHD, we did some PR around that. But I think maybe you are right, to an extent we have not [gone public much].

     

    How is OMD doing? And PHD? What is your self-assessment?

    We’ve done very well in the last few years we’ve been there. Our growth has never been under 25 to 27 per cent. We’ve done very well both in terms of organic growth as well as new business. Not all of it is announced, or can be, sometimes. It’s not just the growth per cent, but we’ve established ourselves quite well across markets. When OMD launched, it was first a Mumbai entity, and later went to the south and Delhi. With PHD, it’s the other way around. We won the HP and SC Johnson [accounts]. The geographical balance is something I’ve always valued, because if you’re going to establish yourself as a group and grow, you can’t be seen as a one-city, one-market business. If you look around, many of the agencies – not just the top ones – have struggled to establish themselves in the south, west and north zones. I think we’ve been fortunate with our brands. Though OMD is stronger, PHD is relatively new since it’s been around for only two years. And so it still needs to be established and that’s why you’ll see more buzz around that.

     

    Other agencies have branched out into various areas like outdoor, digital, even activations. What about you?

    So have we, and on that we’ve done a little more conscious thinking. We’ve been one of the key agencies in the digital space, and it’s helped because of the kind of clients we’ve had. I think the biggest strength we had in digital is not just client and leadership, but the fact that because we were relatively new and launched in the heart of the digital era. In our case, digital didn’t come as a little add-on to offline; we’ve evolved it as a product as we’ve grown.

     

    You were among the first one to bring in mobile too.

    We’ve done a lot of firsts in digital. That’s been our key strength. We’ve focused on creative and content, in terms of both alignments as well as internal hiring, in digital. We’ve not done that much in the offline space. We focused on mobile too, very early on. I think the out-of-home space is an area we haven’t built, in-house.

     

    There are rumors that Mudra Max might merge with OMD

    When there is something to share, we’ll do it. Right now, there isn’t. Mudra is one of our partners. We’ve never gone the route of just one alignment because a lot of the clients are looking for a whole mix. So the pitches happen separately. The agency selection process is also quite different, and doesn’t always come as a part of the mix. So if you win the business, it doesn’t mean that you [automatically also] win digital and outdoor.

     

    Technology is virtually ruling the way business is done today. Is that a worry

    God, no! I think it’s great. It’s a huge positive for various reasons. New media has driven technology into the future. Old media has not seen the change as much yet, but it will. The change we’ve seen, however, are just in the efficiency of tools. We’ve not seen a smarter technology, just tool efficiency which means I can get my teams to finish their runs faster and spend time on the more interesting parts of brand communication. Although we haven’t seen a big technology change in the offline space, I believe it’s just a matter of time before they merge. It’s my belief that the more we go into technology, the smarter the machine becomes and the more important it is for us to then keep ahead and be smarter than the machine. The day we let the machine decide, I think we’ll have lost a large part of the value we bring to the client. We operate a lot on gut, so I think, we need to be smarter and always one step ahead of technology.

     

    And relationships do matter, don’t they?

    See relationships will always be there.. They will go up and down in terms of relevance, but will never go away. But if people let technology decide or guide their plans and think therefore they’ll sit back and see a run being done I think somewhere that, that individual or that agency will not be ready and prepared for the future. My expectation is, the more we advance in technology, the more quality people we’ll attract, the better our industry will be. Think of the kind of work that’s happening in our space today.. What was the conversation all you media people came and asked us about 10 years back? Every conversation is that do we have enough talent available. Why are people going and joining channels? Why are people going away to Asia? Remember all those conversations? Today who has that conversation? Today, we can attract very good talent because of technology. Because today our industry seems so much more in the front rung of decision-making.

     

    Are you able to attract talent from top B-schools and such?

    Top B-schools are not easy right now because of cost reasons. Top B-school graduates expect to get paid more than someone who has five or seven years of experience in our industry. We can’t give entry-level people those kind of salaries. So I may not be able to get that kind of talent yet, but in future I think we will. There is only plus and plus coming for us. The kind of work that we are seeing, that our network is doing globally in combining both offline and online data to better our strategies and such. When I see that, I wish I was still a planner at that time.

     

    You’ve been on the Cannes jury and you know that not too many Indian agencies make it [there]. So how do you rate our work versus the rest of the world?

    Firstly, I did media and we only get to see about 20 per cent of the work that’s out there. I didn’t see too of the India work, but I do know there was work like the Touch The Pickle Campaign this year, which generated a lot of talk. So while I think we have huge potential, we’re not up there on storytelling, when compared to work done globally. I don’t think the work is such a big issue with us as much as the way we tell our stories. If you’ve to wait for the idea after almost a minute into the video, that’s not good.

     

    OMD is not too active on the awards circuit in India, especially the Emvies

    OMD has not been as high profile as PHD. Yes, we aren’t at the Emvies. We don’t dominate that. Only PHD has been doing it, we’ve not been doing it.

     

    Any reason why?

    There is no reason; it’s just not happened. But this year we have. I’m going to send you a list of this year’s wins of OMD because I think you’ll be a little surprised.

     

    Do awards matter?

    It’s client specific. I feel the quality of your work, your team, your efficiency and savings takes precedence over winning awards, but it’s good PR. However, I don’t think that’s the reason we could be winning. Our product has so many elements to it; a big part is on savings, rates and negotiations. I don’t think [awards are] winning us pitches. So it’s important, but not the most important for a new business, for sure.

     

    Where do you see yourselves in 2020? How do see the business shaping up

    Earlier, I was a seeing a lot of data analytics and insight-informing strategy work. It was being done a lot more efficiently with technology in the digital space. Now all the conversations are looking at data across, because while digital makes sense in the evolved markets, data leading to insight-leading to solution-leading to optimisation may not work in India where there are a large number of activities happening offline. Four years later, I hope we will not be having these conversations and will have better integrated [online and offline] media. So there will be people who understand data well, and there’ll be people who can ideate and optimise from that data. Technology will help drive it, and I think people will eventually become online, rather than offline, specialists.

     

    Do you think going forward, media buying will get integrated as against just print or television or digital…

    I think it should. I really think it should because today you can afford the isolation but or the separation but I think as we go forward if there is a conversation… a buyer should know a conversation about buying a video versus buying a channel. And why am I paying this versus that? How can there be two separate conversations? It should be a video conversation. It shouldn’t be this channel and that Youtube kind of conversation.

     

    In terms of the kind of media you do, how do your digital spends compare with the rest?

    Our digital is way higher than the industry average. I think our digital spend is more than a component; the skew is more than 20 per cent of our overall.

     

    Over media investments?

    As a percentage of our overall media investment. We are very high on digital which is why our focus has been so much on the kinds of platforms we are launching, the technology we are investing in, the people we are hiring. When you think of long-term investment in other media, there’s an industry average. Everyone’s spends have similar amounts of outdoor and activation in their mix. But they are not growing at the same rate. Today, we are all at one level. Two years later, I might still be spending only 10 per cent on these mediums. But when you look at digital, it may have moved from one to five to 10 or even 20 per cent.

     

    Going forward, what new things can we expect from you?

    Now that our second brand is also established, I think the focus will be on consolidating individual brands and consolidating as a group. The work that we are doing in digital, research and technology, will be of benefit to all the brands. Earlier, we were carrying out initiatives for individual brands. We’ve hired a senior investment lead because it was time for us to compete at a group and brand level. Earlier we did have brand-level investment and trading leads. But now we feel the need to do a lot more of our initiatives, not just at the brand but also the group level. We recently launched a study called Touch Point Analysis, an OMD initiative. There’ll be more things which will benefit both groups.

     

    Is it the knowledge you provide or is it finally the kind of discount you offer?

    There is no one person or client in a pitch. There are multiple kinds of clients. For some, your rates have to be the best. For others, it could be the quality of your future thinking. How much are we able to read the future in our industry, and the quality of our people, is driving the pitches. That’s why clients want to meet more of the people going to be involved in the business.

     

    In your business, you can’t be isolated from the environment around you. Do you look at how others are playing? And where do you want to be, say, two years from now?

    Of course we do. When we started out eight years ago, we were very clear in our minds that we had to quickly catch up [with others] in terms of scale. Clients want to give their business to someone who is well established. The focus at that time was to ramp up very quickly, which we did really well and balance the geographies. We’ve seen agencies who’ve just focused on one market or another, and not been able to maintain their momentum over the long term because they’re seen as a Delhi or Mumbai agency, not a national one. Today, while we look at other agencies, we don’t look at what someone is doing right or doing wrong. I don’t think any agency styles itself on another agency. People just compare to see where are we on digital versus someone else on digital, or talent, or buying capabilities.

     

    And where would you say you are?

    We are always No 1 on everything. We’ve built a strong business for ourselves.

     

    This interview first appeared in dna of brands on August 24, 2015

     

  • Omnicom appoints Amol Dighe as Head of Investment India

    By A Correspondent

     

    Omnicom Media Group has announced the appointment of Amol Dighe as Head of Investment, Omnicom Media Group India. The appointment in India follows senior hires for the function in markets like Singapore and Hong Kong.

     

    Mr Dighe will lead strategic insight and analysis over the OMD and PHD investment portfolio to ensure the best possible client outcomes are secured across all media platforms. In addition he will be involved with special development projects across South East Asia.

     

    Prior to his new role at Omnicom Media Group, Mr Dighe has a depth of experience working with Unilever in a Regional Buying and Operations role for the Asia Pacific Region, working with Star TV Network to establish their Client Service Strategy and Planning unit and working with Group M India spanning over nine years. Most recently he was in a leadership role in Jakarta with Mindshare Indonesia.

     

    Jasmin Sohrabji
    Harish Shriyan

    Speaking on Amol’s appointment, Jasmin Sohrabji, CEO Omnicom Media Group India and South East Asia said, “Amol is a terrific addition to the team, bringing invaluable experience to further strengthen our Investment team. Leveraging his experience across the region he will additionally play a key role in special development projects in South East Asia.”

     

    Welcoming him to Omnicom, Harish Shriyan, COO Omnicom Media Group said, “As we consolidate and gear up for the next level of growth, we are excited have Amol as part of our management team that will enhance our client delivery capabilities in India.”

     

    Said Mr Dighe: “I am delighted and excited with this opportunity of working with the growing Omnicom Media Group team to add greater value to our client offering and making our business more robust for the future.”

     

    Commenting on the appointment, Paul Moreton, Chief Investment Officer, Omnicom Media Group APAC, said, “With our business growth, we are privileged to have the ability to attract quality talent. Amol will continue to develop our offering – delivering expertise in an area of increasing sophistication.”

     

    The appointment is effective immediately.

     

  • Creativeland Asia, Parle Agro likely to part ways?

    By Pritha Mitra Dasgupta

     

    Advertising agency Creativeland Asia (CLA) is apparently on the verge of losing the Parle Agro business, an account that it has handled since it was founded in 2006. Several senior executives we spoke to;including employees of both companies indicated that Parle Agro has decided to move all its brands, including Bailley, Hippo and the recently launched Café Cuba. According to a senior advertising executive with a rival agency, agencies have been invited to pitch for the Appy Fizz account, which was with Grey before Parle Agro shifted it to CLA.

     

    Sajan Raj Kurup

    Sajan Raj Kurup, the founder and creative chairman of Creativeland Asia, is married to Nadia Chauhan, JMD & CMO of Parle Agro. When contacted, both Mr Kurup and Ms Chauhan denied that the accounts were being moved. In his response, Mr Kurup said, “Creativeland continues to handle all Parle Agro brands.”

     

    In her email response, Ms Chauhan said, “Kindly note that as on date, our brands are still with CLA. We do however have some interestingly new assignments running parallel (as always is the case with an FMCG) with some international and domestic firms of considerable repute.” Ms Chauhan also added that Parle Agro flagship Frooti is being revamped, and “therefore we have hired an international design agency.”

     

    Jasmin Sohrabji

    OMD continues to be the media agency of Parle Agro, although Jasmin Sohrabji, Managing Director at OMD, did not respond to the calls or messages sent regarding Parle Agro accounts.

     

    Although CLA was formed primarily with the Appy Fizz account from Grey and Frooti account from Everest, it quickly added Audi, Café Coffee Day, MTS and several others to its portfolio. While it lost the Audi account in 2014, a top official said, “The agency is likely to get a major account from the Godrej stable which is currently with Mudra.”

     

    Source:The Economic Times

    Copyright © 2014, Bennett, Coleman & Co. Ltd. All Rights Reserved

    Licensed to republish

     

  • Chief Digital Officer: A fancy meaningless designation or a crying need of the hour?

    By Amit Bapna

     

    A recent Gartner study in the US predicted that by 2015, 25 per cent of organisations will have a CDO and that the chief digital officer may be the most exciting strategic role in the decade ahead. While such statistics are often swept aside by Indian head honchos as a US reality, the wave may reach Indian shores faster than expected.

     

    Though a relative late starter, digital has made swift inroads into the Indian marketplace. Brands are upping the ante on digital allocations. No Indian marketing head can have a conversation without talking about how serious they are about digital. They’ve even moved to saying “It’s not the wave of the future but what’s happening right now!” which is an improvement.

     

    But where are all the CDOs then? Globally, organisations as diverse as Starbucks, Metropolitan Museum of Art, BBC Worldwide, Amnesty International are known to be already deploying the services of a CDO. While the title is yet to gain vogue, some companies are making a few non-cosmetic changes.

     

    PepisCo tweaked its structure to make digital a strategic vertical reporting in directly to the head of marketing. Earlier, it resided with individual brands. Deepika Warrier, vice president – Po1 (Power of 1) marketing, PepsiCo India, is clear that digital needs to be incubated by the CMO as it requires focused mentoring to build interactions with other business functions. Their team is led by Rishi Dogra, who along with the digital mandate is involved with a unique concept called Pepsi Labs. He works with co-creators incubating, experimenting and testing new content ideas. PepsiCo claims to have doubled its digital budget from last year.

     

    SBI Life has a business vertical to tap the potential of online sales of life insurance policies. Shares Chandramohan Mehra – country head – digital business, SBI Life Insurance, “Through the channel, it distributes products exclusively developed for online business, and has gained leadership position in direct-to-consumer sales.” He was formerly the VP and head of brand at SBI Life Insurance.

     

    Jasmin Sohrabji

    Jasmin Sohrabji, CEO India and South East Asia, OmnicomMediaGroup is convinced about the case for a CDO. The reason it hasn’t happened thus far is due to scale and scope. Even among the more digital aware, spends hover at about 10 per cent, offering little or less than threshold scale. As focus (and spends) move to digital platforms, the relevance for a CDO will come into play, she feels.

     

    Adds Rishad Tobaccowala, Chairman, DigitasLbi and Razorfish, “CDOs should be the evangelist for ensuring the company remains relevant to changing behaviour. His role is important in the early years of digital to ensure a voice for tomorrow.” The case for a CDO becomes even stronger in a backdrop where digital budgets are increasing but cutting edge case studies are few and far between.

     

    Most conversations hover around aggregating fans and likes on Facebook as also prerolls of campaigns on YouTube. But has the market reached a stage where the advent of a CDO is imminent? Or is this yet another instance of India leapfrogging a few stages of development, to create its own delivery-mechanisms?

     

    At L’Oreal India, where the digital spends have been ramped by nearly 125 per cent over the last year, the function is embedded within respective brands. Satyaki Ghosh, director, consumer products division, L’Oreal India avers that they could eventually have a CDO, but he would service the entire company as against just the Consumer Product division.

     

    The CDO role needs to have a larger platform to build the digital capability of the entire organisation and the digital business, according to Arjun Srivastava, consumer practice leader – India, Egon Zehnder.

     

    Marico too is currently embracing a decentralised structure. Sameer Satpathy, EVP and business head, Marico India says, “The medium gives enormous flexibility in terms of engagement, creativity and speed.” All their brand managers are being trained and certified on using digital, in order to have an enabling ecosystem.

     

    CVL Srinivas

    Which is as it should be says CVL Srinivas, CEO (South Asia), GroupM: “CMOs need to drive digital as part of their core job. Most advertisers still look at digital as a silo and struggle to integrate it into their mainstream plans.” However digital specialist Harshil Karia, cofounder, Foxy-Moron makes a case for digital having grown too big for a CMO’s mandate.

     

    He says, “CMOs haven’t naturally taken to ‘digital thinking’ and ‘digital as an ecosystem’. It is difficult in a world where maintaining Share of Voice, pleasing brand ambassadors, coordinating to get the best out of various agencies and reporting to management and sales teams is a priority.”

     

    A private sector bank claims that only 5 per cent of its business is coming from branches. The rest is from other channels that include digital: mobile and internet as well as telebanking. In such a scenario the medium is no more just for marketing or brand building but has a huge business implication as well. The biggest need for CMOs today is to adapt or otherwise provide for the digital landscape since it will emerge as a key component of marketing strategies.

     

    Kent Wertime, COO, Ogilvy Asia Pacific, and co-author of DigiMarketing, believes “The CMO has to determine today how to integrate traditional means of marketing/channels with digital channels, the capture and use of data, and build new relationships with big digital media players/platforms.”

     

    Digital gives insight in real time through social media and its endless streams of conversations and insights. Increasingly, it will be about harnessing this information. For instance, Dell has a chief listening officer, who “listens” to what consumers are saying and feeds these insights to the CMO. So whether as an adjunct to the CMO or his equal, a company serious about the future would do well to consider the CDO.

     

    Source:The Economic Times

    Copyright © 2014, Bennett, Coleman & Co. Ltd. All Rights Reserved

    Licensed to republish

     

  • Jaldi 5 with Jasmin Sohrabji: Digital is always a focus for Omnicom Media Group

    By A Correspondent

     

    It’s been around a fortnight since the Omnicom Media Group announced the setting up of PHD, its second media agency in India. Some six years back, OMD opened shop and has since been recognized by all – competition included – as an established player in the Indian market.

    Although she didn’t reveal revenue targets, Jasmin Sohrabji, Chief Executive Officer – South East Asia and India of Omnicom Media Group spoke on the setting up of PHD, client acquisition and how digital is huge for Omnicom.

     

    01. OMD started operating in India in 2007. So why did it take so much time for PHD to take off in India, especially since it’s been here informally in the country for almost a year?

    We wanted to establish OMD’s value proposition clearly in the Indian market, and consolidate operations before launching our second brand. In the short span of six years, OMD has carved a distinct identity for itself in the market and provided Omnicom Media Group a strong base to launch PHD.

     

    02. From the year-odd that PHD has been in India, are there any learnings for the way the business is done here vis-a-vis other markets?

    While it’s still early days, we expect to see PHD India as a strong shining star within the global network given the focus on planning and digital already in our group’s DNA in India.

     

    03. The Unilever digital business is with you in India. Are you expecting other alignments to happen soon?

    Going forward there will be some restructuring and realignments for PHD India including HP, HTC, SC Johnson etc

     

    04. Is there too much reliance on these alignments happening, or is this what you expect will happen in terms of commitments?

    Global alignments provide an opportunity not a guarantee of business. Like OMD, we will grow PHD from wherever opportunities come, globally, regionally and locally.

     

    05. Digital is typically what PHD is focused on. But in India, the spends (and if one may even add trust) on digital isn’t much with the budgets of even the big spenders being very small. In what way are you looking at evangelising the medium?

    Not just at the brand level, digital is always a focus for Omnicom Media Group. In India, digital accounts for a significant percentage of our growth and we see this only scaling further.

     

    5a. Are you going to be working with creative solution providers externally or in the long run will you have some resources inhouse?

    We operate on a flexible model, with both internal resourcing as well as strategic partners.

     

  • Jasmin Sohrabji elevated to CEO, South East Asia and India @ Omnicom Media Group

    By A Correspondent

     

    Jasmin Sohrabji

    In a significant thumbs up to the progress that Jasmin Sohrabji has made as Chief Executive of Omnicom Media Group India, she has been elevated and will take on responsibilities of South East Asia as well.

     

    With an effort to sharpen focus on the continued growth of the Asia Pacific region, Omnicom Media Group (OMG) has introduced a new sub-regional structure effective Monday, June 3.

     

    Under the new structure, two sub-regional assignments covering South East Asia and Greater China are being added, in addition to Australia and New Zealand. Ms Sohrabji will continue to lead OMG India, as CEO and also take on the task of leading the South East Asian markets of Singapore, Malaysia, Philippines, Indonesia, Vietnam and Thailand for OMD, PHD and M2M – brands of Omnicom Media Group.

     

    Ms Sohrabji joined Omnicom Media Group in 2007 with the mandate of setting up OMD’s India operations and she has helped the media major grow into one of India’s fastest growing media agency today, with an impressive roster of clients.

     

    Commenting on the appointment, Barry Cupples outgoing CEO of Omnicom Media Group, APAC, said; “Asia is vibrant and the lens of the world is on this region. The media and communications industry is being shaped by seismic shifts, and the South East Asia region is at the heart of many of these changes. Omnicom Media Group SEA and India has a strong and talented leader in Jasmin. She has a clear vision that will help in strengthening our eco-system. Jas has our complete faith and trust to be an even bigger star in the new role.”

     

    Newly appointed APAC CEO of Omnicom Media Group, Cheuk Chiang said, “Bolstering our regional management capacity with a new sub-regional structure reinforces our commitment to this region. Jasmin is an asset to the senior leadership team and I am confident that under her guidance and vision, our presence in South East Asia and India will get stronger.”

     

    Said Ms Sohrabji, said, “Setting up OMD India was a huge opportunity and which the India team is very proud of. I am looking forward to the additional responsibility and working closely with the SEA team to further strengthen the sub-region.”

     

    Under the sub-regional structure, Doug Pearce, CEO of OMG China, will add Greater China responsibilities overseeing Hong Kong and Taiwan, while Leigh Terry will continue to lead OMG’s operation in Australia and New Zealand. Jasmin Sohrabji along with Doug Pearce and Leigh Terry will report to Cheuk Chiang.  OMD and PHD leadership in the region will continue in the same structure as today, with Steve Blakeman responsible for OMD and newly appointed CEO, Susana Tsui responsible for PHD. Barry Cupples will move on take the position of CEO, Global Investment and Accountability, a new role at an Omnicom Media Group Executive Board level.