Tag: Joseph George

  • Lowe Lintas does it in 2015 too!

     

    By A Correspondent

     

    The 2015 Global Effie Index was released last week and Lowe Lintas + Partners, India was declared the Most Effective Agency in India and in Asia Pacific. And #3 in the world! The agency was #1 in India and Asia Pacific in 2014 too.

     

    Rank

    INDIA TOP 5

    APAC TOP 5

    GLOBAL TOP 5

    1 Lowe Lintas + Partners, India Lowe Lintas + Partners, India Sancho BBDO, Columbia
    2 Ogilvy & Mather Pvt Ltd Ogilvy & Mather Pvt Ltd FP7/DXB
    3 McCann Worldgroup, New Delhi FCB New Zealand Lowe Lintas + Partners, India
    4 Publicis Communication Colenso BBDO/Proximity New Zealand Ogilvy & Mather Pvt Ltd
    5 DDB Mudra Group Whybin\TBWA FCB New Zealand

    (Source:www.effieindex.com)

     

    Into its fifth year, the Effie Effectiveness Index identifies and ranks the most effective agencies, marketers and brands by analyzing finalist and winner data from more than forty national & regional Effie Award competitions. For the 2015 rankings, it compiled over 3,100 worldwide Effie winners and finalists between January 1, 2014 and December 31, 2014.

     

    Joseph George

    Infact, Lowe and Partners too, for the first time ever broke into the Top 5 in the Network Ranking. It was ranked # 4 globally.

     

    Sharing his views on the achievement, Joseph George, CEO, Lowe Lintas + Partners, India said, “Ofcourse I am delighted. It ain’t easy to do this 2 years in a row. I am happy just seeing this as a reaffirmation yet again and most so for own selves, of the type of work we want to do, like to do and are good at!

     

     

  • Hari Krishnan appointed CEO of Lowe LDB Sri Lanka

    By A Correspondent

     

    Lowe and Partners Worldwide has announced the appointment of a new CEO for Sri Lanka. Hari Krishnan, a former protégé of Lowe Lintas has been appointed the CEO of Lowe LDB Sri Lanka. He would be reporting to Joseph George, CEO of Lowe Lintas + Partners, India.

     

    Hari Krishnan

    Hari Krishnan joins the agency from GREY where he was the Sr. Vice President & Business Head for South. His new mandate would be to drive Lowe LDB Sri Lanka into being a leading creative powerhouse in the country. The only “Superbrand” in the Advertising category in Sri Lanka, Lowe LDB manages a diverse portfolio of brands across various categories from Detergents to Insurance to Telecom. The agency was also the most awarded agency at the Effies in 2013 and together with Unilever is the most awarded partnership in the history of Effies in Sri Lanka.

     

    Commenting on the appointment, Joseph George, CEO of Lowe Lintas + Partners, India said, “It’s good to have Hari back into our fold after all these years. Having learned the nitty-gritty of the business since his formative days at Lowe coupled with his vast exposure across other agencies in senior roles, Hari Krishnan is perfectly placed to lead the agency in Sri Lanka. Over the last five years, Sri Lanka has seen high GDP growths and the country is at an exciting inflection point now.”

     

    Sharing his views on making a return to his alma mater, Hari Krishnan said, “I started my career with Lintas in India in ’96-97 and learnt my fundamentals from the great University of knowledge that is Lowe Lintas. So I’m extremely happy and thrilled to be back. It’s a homecoming of sorts in that sense. It’s an honour and a challenge to lead such an operation and I’m really looking forward to partnering the young, talented team there in driving the philosophy of ‘Populist Creativity’ and taking Lowe LDB to greater heights.”

     

    Hari Krishnan has almost two decades of work experience; nearly all of it in advertising besides a stint as Vice President, Marketing with Star TV. He has experience across multiple categories/consumer segments, in leading large multi-functional teams and in leading a P&L operation to success. In his last job at GREY India as Sr. Vice President & Business Head, Hari spearheaded the transformation of the agency operations in South including leading the agency to a spree of new biz acquisitions including DELL India, ITC Foods, Stovekraft, Fortis Healthcare amongst others.

     

  • Yes, Lowe Lintas India is the #1 creative agency in the whole world!

     

    By A Correspondent

     

    We knew that Lowe Lintas is one of the foremost agencies in the country. That many of its works have bagged international laurels. But what we didn’t know is that it’s the No 1 creative agency in the world.

     

    That’s a huuuuuuuge accolade. Don’t believe it?

     

    Well, here’s the news:  Based on their performance in effectiveness and strategy competitions, WARC 100, an annual ranking of the world’s best marketing companies and campaigns, has announced Lowe Lintas India is the No. 1 creative agency in the world. The study focuses on marketing that makes a difference, driving business performance or changing consumer behaviour. This is the first time an agency from India has landed the top spot.

     

    The rankings are compiled based on the winners of 87 effectiveness and strategy awards from around the world. Unilever was named No 1 Advertiser of the Year, with two of their campaigns (both created by Lowe Lintas) making it to the Top 5.

     

    Lowe Lintas India accumulated 212.9 points while AMV BBDO UK took the second spot at 191 points and Colenso BBDO NZ that collected 147.6 points to finish third. This accolade is another addition to the strong run that the agency has had over the past few months. Recent successes of Lowe Lintas on global platforms include Ad Age International Agency of the Year, the American Jay Chiat Awards and WARC Asia, all of which were firsts for India.

     

    Joseph George

    Said Joseph George, CEO, Lowe Lintas + Partners: “We hold WARC in very high regard. This recognition is both extremely satisfying and spurring. We have had a terrific run on creative effectiveness this year across the globe; and all the accolades have further reinforced our belief in the type of work we want to do and believe in.”

     

    Campaigns created by Lowe Lintas India took two of the Top 5 spots on WARC100 as the World’s Best Campaigns. Kan Khajura Tesan, (created in collaboration with partners including PHD and Netcore), has been named the World’s Best Marketing campaign while ‘Help a child Reach 5’ for Lifebuoy was ranked 4th. Again, these are the only campaigns from India to feature in the World’s Top 10.

     

    Now will we see Prime Minister Narendra Modi making a call to Joseph George or R Balki to congratulate them for having earned laurels for the country? Or better still, hire the agency to promote its campaign in Bihar. Learnings from ‘Kan Khajura Tesan’ should come in handy 🙂

     

     

     

     

  • What ad veterans have learnt from the younger lot

     

    By Delshad Irani

     

    At work, like in any human tribe, there are two kinds of people – the Elders and the Young. The latter, of course, are eager to conquer the world. The elders, who have been there and done it all (or so they’d like to think) remind the impatient youth, Rome wasn’t built in a day.

     

    ‘No schnitzel, Sherlock!’ is the response, generally. While it’s not the elders’ job to shatter the young’s exaggerated sense of self-belief, it is however their duty to voluntarily impart pearls of wisdom and teach a lesson or twelve. That is if the children aren’t of the know-all variety with brains like sieves.

     

    However, at no other point in history has there been such a high premium on youth and the mad dash to make everything from buttocks to board rooms look younger is testimony to that fact.

     

    Yet, rarely are inhabitants of corner offices conscious of the learnings they’ve gathered from the younger tribe. It might not seem so but there are some important lessons to learn. And we’re not talking about teaching grandma to text and abbreviate every word known to man here.

     

    In advertising agencies, there are endless corridors of hormone-fields. It’s one of the youngest industries, where millennial minions slave day and night to create ads for unrelenting and often unreasonable clients so their award-winning bosses can scale the Palais in June, every year.

     

    So whoever said the millennial is fickle or needs constant validation and expects “Look maa, I drew within the line!” to be followed by a treat and a cuddle or that they are as loyal as a mercenary is nucking futs.

     

    Well, there are exceptions. But amid the myriad of contradictions, millennials have come to represent quite effectively, the new generation of adwallahs. They too have priceless wisdom to share with the generations that preceded them, even if they aren’t quite aware of this yet.

     

    In an attempt to bring these to light, Brand Equity asked advertising’s “seniors” about the valuable lessons they’ve learnt from their juniors.

     

    Striking the right work life balance, not being averse to risk and cultivating a very low embarrassment threshold, are just some of the beautiful learnings but let’s not get ahead of ourselves.

     

    Read on to see the lessons advertising’s heads have learnt from the legs that prop them up.

     

    Prasoon Joshi, Chairman Asia Pacific & CEO of McCann Worldgroup India

    What I have learned from the younger generation, is the work life balance. My generation (or at least speaking for myself) were very extremist, single minded and did too much work. We’d go to Cannes and it was like a project: go and return.

     

    The younger lot tie it up with travel and exploration. With youngsters, right from the start, there’s a more holistic approach to life. They believe it’s good to take breaks, even short ones. And so to someone like me, with a crusader mentality, I’ve learned a lot.

    Moral of the story: Take as many breaks as HR will allow.

     


     

    Bobby Pawar, Director and Chief Creative Officer, South Asia, Publicis

    The lessons I’ve gathered from my youngest colleagues? Holy-moly, where do I begin? Tenacity. Irrational passion. Being curious of the changing world. Trusting my instincts as much as my experience. Experiment. When to step in. When to sit on the sidelines and applaud. Rediscovering that this business is supposed to be fun. Patience. The list grows almost every day.

     

    I believe, if you aren’t learning from the people you are with, you have the wrong people, or more likely you have the wrong attitude. One day at work we were discussing ideas. It was a big brand, big brief, big budget, big stakes. This kid had an idea that sounded cool, but it was pretty much out there. And I said, I don’t think we can take a chance like this on a billion dollar brand. The kid looked bummed. He remained quiet for a bit, while we chatted.

     

    Then he said, “Bobby, failure is temporary, success is permanent.” I said, “Getting fired is temporary too, but it stings.” Everybody laughed. What he said haunted me. The next day I caught up with him and we spent time trying to make his idea work. Let go of your professional prejudices. A new marketing order is coming and it will be shaped by those willing to shape it and be shaped by it.

    Moral of the story: Don’t save your precious aphorisms for Twitter, try it in conference. Even if it sounds dumb. Never stop being bold and curious. Christopher Columbus wouldn’t have gotten far if he weren’t a nosy fella.

     


     

    Ambi Parmeswaran, Executive Director and CEO, FCB Ulka

    The youngsters taught me how use technology to solve problems. Sometimes what looks difficult is really a piece of cake.

     

    The younger lot have innovative skills that they bring to the table. It’s great interacting with trainees from management and creative. They are supposed to make a 20 minute presentation to us at the end of their stint, and I remember a boy making a video presentation in the form of a daily diary to his mom. It was great because of the ‘We haven’t seen this before’ feeling.

     

    Their approach to work is very different, which we often criticise, but there are plenty of takeaways. I remember the time when an employee was moving on from our agency, and I asked him to give me a call in case he wasn’t happy at the new place. I told him there was nothing to be embarrassed about and we could definitely work something out for him if he decided to return. “Why would I be embarrassed?” he asked me. And he was back in six months.

    Moral of the story: Never criticise before thinking. And if one is ever in need of a smashing presentation, commission the millennials in your employ.

     


     

    Joseph George, CEO, Lowe Lintas

    Their belief in the spirit of “moving on”, it allows you to not get stuck with any issue (good or bad) for too long. It allows you to accomplish a lot more. And it makes you a lot less emotional and more objective. It also allows you to stay focussed in meetings and conversations instead of the hangovers of an earlier issue or a previous meeting still clouding your head.

     

    Many times, we seem to dismiss and brand this trait of the youth as being fickle and superficial. Or even accuse them of being disinterested. It took me a long time to realise that those were erroneous and lazy conclusions. I was interviewing this young planner ( I personally interview all planners coming into Lowe Lintas ), and as we concluded with me saying that HR will get back to him, he said in a matter of fact way “to not let his youth come in the way of his salary or indeed his designation!” There are three brand lines that sum them up “Move on”, “Impossible is nothing” and “Poochne mein kya jaata hai”?

    Moral of the story: Life’s too short to cry over yesterday’s headlines, delusion of grandeur is a millennial condition and there is no such thing as a stupid question

     


     

    Josy Paul, Chairman, BBDO India

    One of the greatest things that my youngest colleagues have taught me is to be more authentic. They value that in themselves and they seek that from me. It helps me relax in their company and be who I am. It brings out the best in all of us. I feel the younger generation is a reminder medium of who we once were. They remind me of the strengths that I had, and have now forgotten. They revive and rejuvenate my authentic side. They point out things I once told them when I was a visiting faculty in their colleges. And they don’t let me forget. It’s a great source of energy.

     

    “We work differently from how you work. You guys work really hard and are obsessed with excellence about work. But excellence for us is how we manage both work and life. We need more breaks, more away-time. That’s how we create excellence at work. For you work is everything. We work for life” – Hemant Shringy, senior creative director, BBDO Ashram, age 29. It’s an insightful jolt and a beautiful truth, and I have accepted it. It is important to me. Which is why I remember it. Reverse internship, osmosis and learning are part of my world. I spend at least two hours a week speaking at colleges. The best thing that an experienced generation of marketers can learn from millennial marketers is to let go! The best way to contribute is to get out of the way.

    Moral of the story: Be real and weekends are not just Saturday to Sunday.

     


     

    Kawal Shoor, National Planning Director, Ogilvy & Mather

    I like their naivete and candour the most. I especially love their language, as yet un-corrupted by the dreaded ad lingo. And fresh language is often a window to new thoughts. No ‘target audience’, no ‘strategy’, no ‘360 degrees’ no bullshit. When they talk formally, they are pretty predictable and ordinary ; maybe they say what they think they’re expected to say, but when they let go, when they just chat with you, when they talk about how people are, and why they are the way they are, is when they can really say interesting things.

     

    The biggest life lesson is that there are no rules. Yes, there are a few rules on how you anchor a thought f o r clients to feel comfortable with them, but for creation of new thoughts and ideas, there are absolutely no rules. I also think today’s young are a lot more confident, sometimes even before they’re able.

     

    Exactly the opposite of how I was, or still am. And then I have a 14 year old at home who’s my anti-aging insurance. There’s a daily crash course I get on staying young. There are times I fail, times I pass, but I can’t say life’s boring.

    Moral of the story: Speak without thinking.

     


     

    Sunil Lulla, Chairman and Managing Director, Grey Worldwide India

    “I work harder.” It was a simple statement made to me by a fresher at JWT in the late 80s. It expressed the strength of the individual and the difference one can make to one’s success. i.e. Work Harder, than anyone else, until success is yours. He was working really late hours and was undertaking very simple and humble tasks. It was late and I asked him to stop working and go home and complete it the next day. This response, “I work harder”, got me to agree, smile and adopt this attitude.

    Moral of the story: Forget what was said about frequent getaways, work your backside off.

     


     

    Subhash Kamath, Managing Partner, BBH

    There are many lessons I’ve learnt from some of my young colleagues. Most importantly, I’ve realised that their youth is very different from how mine was. They’re growing up in a very different society, they’re far more optimistic and daring, far more capable of taking risks and exploring newer things than I was. And thanks to the digital age, they seem far more connected and have much better access to information than I did.

     

    Sure, it’s much more competitive now than it was in the 80s, but I think today’s youngsters are upto it. Our generation was taught to play safe, hold on to our jobs, save for a rainy day etc. Today’s youngsters have grown up in a more plentiful society. They have many more options to choose from, more entrepreneurial opportunities.

     

    Talent and ideas get rewarded more easily today than it did in my time. So the same values and priorities that I had don’t necessarily work for them. The one anecdote I remember very vividly that would perhaps illustrate this change was when, some years ago, I was doing an exit interview of a young star who’d decided to leave the agency. She had been doing extremely well, her colleagues and clients loved her, and she’d just been promoted with a hefty increment. But a month later, she put in her papers. I was completely taken aback. When I asked why, she said the job was keeping her too busy and that she was not getting any chance to spend time with her family and friends.

     

    Trying to give her some sagely advice, I explained that even I had to go through this phase in life. That it was important to give it one’s all at this early learning stage to build a long term career. That one day she’ll be able to balance it having come on top of this service business.

     

    To which she coolly looked me in the eye and said “But what makes you think I want to lead the same life as you did? I want to do it differently and enjoy both work and play now, not later.” I honestly had no answer to that. Just the strong realisation that things have indeed changed. This generation looks at things very differently. And the worst thing a senior person like me could do was to think of my own upbringing and youth in evaluating today’s generation.

    Moral of the story: Don’t evaluate the world through the prism of your life. It’s not that great a life, after all, if a millennial doesn’t want it.

     


     

    Rahul Jauhari, National Creative Director, Everest Brand Solutions

    I guess the number one lesson is that these kids don’t take shit for too long. They are not as tied down by stuff like loyalty to boss/agency as we used to be. So if they don’t get a good deal (monetary or opportunity) they move on. They have innumerable options – advertising copywriting is not bigger or smaller than content writing or opening a wedding ideas shop with friends or something else.

     

    I guess fundamentally, they are experimenting more than we did, they take less load than we did/do. Long ago, after I finished seeing a complete fresher kid’s folio, he asked to see mine. I kicked his butt for not doing his homework, but loved the attitude. We are in a people’s business.

    Moral of the story: You can’t take designations and dignity to the bank.

     


     

    Mythili Chandrasekar, SVP & National Planning Director, JWT India

    The youngsters absorb so much from the world around at a blistering pace, and are intuitive culture and technology experts. They challenge conventional wisdom and it is good to be constantly tested. Free flowing and lateral thinking is something we can learn. Some very young colleagues have stunned me with their depth of work and speed of learning.

     

    While one cannot generalise, I do find disrespect for dress codes, time and casualness in tonality ends up working against youngsters being taken seriously. They certainly seem to have better work life balance, and are able to switch off far more easily – too late to learn that! After a point it’s not about age, but character. Those who are tenacious, unrelenting, passionate, bold, and thorough are those who stun you and teach you every time.

    Moral of the story: Study hard, study fast. Dress for comfort, but save the ‘Frankie Says Relax’ t-shirt for under the comforter.

     


     

    Pratap Suthan, Managing Partner and Chief Creative Officer, Bang In The Middle

    This was when I was a CD in Grey Delhi in about 1999. I had a trainee for about six months – he was really good at his job and had a lot of spunk. I wanted to hire him as a junior writer, but apparently we didn’t have the budgets. I kept delaying telling him because I wanted him on board, till the time he asked me what the status was.

     

    When he realised that the branch head couldn’t bring him on board, he walked into his office, gave him a piece of his mind and got out, only to start his own agency. That boy is Sidharth Rao of Webchutney. That day I learned that if you are convinced about something, you should stand by it no matter what anyone says. All it takes is belief and some spine.

    Moral of the story: Never listen to your branch head. And go with the gut every time. (At your own risk.)

     


     

    Sumanto Chattopadhyay, ECD – South Asia, Ogilvy India

    The most obvious fact is that the young colleagues are digital natives and we are digital dinosaurs. That is one area I have learnt everything from my juniors; I harass them and pick up a lot of internet and socialmedia related things from them. I can now ideate on digital campaigns today, and the only reason I can is because I had juniors who were complete whizzes at this. They’re born into it and have been using technology since the time they were in school.

     

    Another thing that is amazing is their comfort level with all kinds of apps and software to get things done. They find ways to easily put together a little film for a presentation, for instance. These little things seemed so difficult but they’re not; they helped me break that barrier. We belong to the doctor-lawyer-professor-bano generation, where we were told to pursue our passions only after first securing an academic degree and a steady job.

     

    Our mentality was to stick it out whether or not you’re enjoying your job. While there are good and bad sides to this way of thinking, I am going to say that the changes in the world and economy give youngsters the option to not waste their time at a place they aren’t having fun. The flipside is that they decide in three months that they don’t like advertising and quit. Three months! At least give it a year?

     

    Sure, go ahead and explore if you like something or not, but three months is too short a time. Some people are too hasty in deciding if something is working for them. They just need to find their happy medium. I like that they explore and have the confidence, but just take your time.

    Moral of the story: It’s never too late to learn.

     


     

    Narayan Devanathan, Executive Vice President and National Planning Director, Dentsu India Group

    The natural ease with which they carry themselves, knowing their place in the world (at the centre). Their ability to keep me grounded with an “Ae, kidhar ja raha hai, pehle good morning toh bol de.” Knowing how to be wrong with complete confidence, and most of the times, with a good idea of what failure looks like. Being completely comfortable with uncertainty, with “maybe” as a valid life choice.

     

    Work hard, party harder (I haven’t been able to apply this as effectively as them though.) But time and again, the young ones have taught and reinforced to me the idea of embracing uncertainty. “We’re dating currently, but he’s at IIM Ahmedabad and I’m here in Delhi, and I’m not sure if we’ll be in the same city after he finishes. I might find somebody else by the time he comes back. Or he might. Ya, I know we’ve been together for five years, but who knows what will happen tomorrow? I’d like to marry him, but that’s too far away.”

     

    This was a 20-year-old intern who worked with me several years back. I have no idea who she is with right now, but I don’t think she’s worrying about it. The value of persistence: A girl applied for a position in a previous job of mine, and after I met her, I was pretty sure I wanted to be on the same team. Except we didn’t have the budget to hire her then. So I told her, “Listen, I’m pretty bad at keeping in touch. But call me regularly. And if I don’t answer, message me. And if I don’t respond even then, email me.” She did all three for three weeks continuously.

     

    I managed to wrangle a budget out of the management to get her on board after that. I hope I apply these lessons regularly. But those who work with me will probably be able to better speak about the impact. In life, I definitely am more actively trying to embrace the uncomfortable, the uncertain. As I said elsewhere sometime back, I’m discovering the joys of confusion. Clarity is overrated, if you ask me.

    Moral of the story: Don’t date anyone at IIM-A. Embrace uncertainty and confusion every morning and there’s no shame in being stalkerishly persistent. However, try and stop short of a restraining order.

     


     

    Pratap Bose, former COO, DDB Mudra Group

    I remember once going through my worst crisis ever on the IBM account, and by the end of the evening it looked like we would lose the account through a horrible mishandling which had the worldwide IBM CEO and CMO threatening hell and high water.

     

    At 9 o’clock in the evening, when I was in the depths of despair and totally at my wits’ end, a young colleague came over and said to me, “Sir, why don’t you go home and sleep on it? It never seems so bad in the morning after you wake up.” To this day, I follow that advice I learnt from my younger colleague. In life, no matter how disastrous or how enormous the problem, it always seems smaller after you have slept on it.

    Moral of the story: Snoozes, not weekend getaways are the pillars of success.

     

    (With Inputs from Ravi Balakrishnan, Amit Bapna, Shephali Bhatt, Mukta Lad & Priyanka Nair.)

     

    Source:The Economic Times

    Copyright © 2015, Bennett, Coleman & Co. Ltd.

    All Rights Reserved, Licensed to republish

     

  • Lowe Lintas is runner-up at Ad Age International Agency of the Year 2015

    By A Correspondent

     

    On a roll since January 2014, when it was declared the Effie Agency of the Year, Lowe Lintas + Partners followed it up right through the entire year with impressive performances at APAC Effies, Tambuli Awards, Cannes Lions, AME, Jay Chiat, WARC , Campaign APAC and many more.

     

    And now, 2015 too seems to have started off with a bang as the agency was declared by Ad Age as Runner Up “2015 International agency of the Year”.

     

    The Ad Age International Agency of the Year award is one-of-a-kind that honours the best agencies of the year across the world, regardless of discipline or specialty. With a host of achievements that need to be factored in including business, creative product, in market performance, industry recognition, talent management, culture etc, its one of the toughest juries to please.

     

    Michael Wall

    Michael Wall, Global CEO, Lowe and Partners Worldwide said, “Our Indian agency certainly merits this recognition.  Their work is brilliant. They are one of the most Effective agencies for their clients on a global scale.  They are a really high caliber team.  And they deliver in one of the most complex and competitive markets in the world.  It is a special group and it is always a pleasure to spend time working with them.”

     

     

    Joseph George

    Commenting on the announcement, Joseph George, CEO, Lowe Lintas + Partners said: “Very rarely does it happen in the life of an agency when so much of its work gets noticed and talked about across the globe in the same year. And add to that, the number of effectiveness awards it won across the world. Considering that we were tested on a spectrum of barometers from product to business to talent to culture, this recognition by Ad Age is truly special and spurring at once.”

     

  • Lowe Lintas + Partners announces second edition of its apprenticeship program – LLAP 2

    By A Correspondent

     

    Lowe Lintas + Partners has announced the rollout of the second edition of its training program – Lowe Lintas Apprenticeship Program in India.

     

    As one of the leading communication agencies in the country, Lowe Lintas + Partners has always supported unique training and recruitment initiatives that aims to broaden its already diverse talent pool. Thus was launched a unique 18-month training program in August 2012 known as the Lowe Lintas Apprenticeship Program (LLAP). The objective of the program is to seek out the oft-overlooked talent available in non-metro cities, identify those with potential and give them the opportunity to succeed in the marketing communications industry. In the first edition, the agency reached out to eight cities across India and received enrollment from about 3000 students. In fact, the apprentices from the first batch of LLAP are currently working as full-time employees across various divisions in the company and are shaping their careers as advertising professionals.

     

    Building on the success of LLAP 1, the agency plans to broaden the initiative by visiting more colleges for the second edition of the program. Thus Lowe Lintas + Partners has moved off the well-trodden path of recruiting from ranked B-Schools, and approach Institutes and Colleges in smaller cities that are making a name for themselves on the parameter of educational excellence. These colleges are evaluated basis the faculty and management focus on the overall development of the student, the opportunities for self-expression provided, and where students are focused on achieving excellence, rather than a singular emphasis on placements. Graduate students with backgrounds as varied as Geology, Zoology, Computer Science, Physics, Commerce, Dentistry, Management, Economics, Engineering and Journalism apply for this program.

     

    The second batch of LLAP will start on July 1, 2015 with the recruitment process currently underway.

     

    Joseph George

    Sharing his views on the program, Joseph George, CEO, Lowe Lintas + Partners said, “This is an important and exciting talent initiative for the Lowe Lintas + Partners, which is investing a significant amount of time and resources in this course. The program is intensive, practical, and represents an absolutely unique opportunity to tap into the tremendous potential of the smaller cities of India. The group of students finally selected represent extreme diversity – different academic pursuits, varied socio-economic backgrounds, they all come from different parts of the country, their personalities and interests are divergent. But what is common is the hunger to achieve, the willingness to put their all into this program with the unshakeable belief that they will succeed.”

     

    Michelle Suradkar

    Of the total applicants, 25 students will get a chance to train for 18 months at Lowe Lintas + Partners. “Apprentices receive training on a wide range of topics related to creative thinking, branding, consumer insight generation, advertising appreciation, and design. These classroom sessions combined with reading assignments, live projects, immersion stints and hands-on experience on live accounts, ensures a packed 18 months,” added Michelle Suradkar, HR Director, Lowe Lintas + Partners.

     

    Basis their performance and ability to excel on the job, the Apprentices stand a chance to secure a permanent job at Lowe Lintas + Partners. During their apprenticeship the students will be provided with a stipend along with accommodation in Mumbai.

     

    After visiting Aligarh University a few days ago, the next stop on the selection tour is Bhubaneswar where the agency has already received enrollment queries in excess of 2000 students. Selections will happen between the 8-11th  of December. The agency is expecting enrollments to the tune of 5000 students for the second edition of the program.

     

    The final rounds of selection will be conducted in April and May 2015 through panel interviews with business and creative heads of the agency.

     

  • Lowe Lintas + Partners crowned APAC’s ‘Most Effective Creative Agency’

    By a correspondent

     

    Lowe Lintas + Partners emerged victorious yet again in the ‘Effectiveness’ category as it was bestowed the Special Award: Effectiveness Creative Agency of the Year’ at Tambuli Awards. The agency was also the recipient of the coveted Grand Prix award for its work on ‘Help a Child Reach 5’ under the Insights and Strategic Thinking category for its client Hindustan Unilever Ltd. The awards were held last week in Philippines.

     

    Along with the two wins, Lowe Lintas + Partners also won 2 Silvers for ‘Help a Child Reach 5’ under the Established Brand category and for ‘Mobile – From a Wall to a Bridge’ under the Integrated Mobile-Led Program category. Both the awards were for campaigns done for Hindustan Unilever Ltd.

     

    Sharing his excitement on winning the big awards at Tambuli, Joseph George, CEO, Lowe Lintas + Partners said, “I am absolutely thrilled that we are carrying on in 2014, where we left off in 2013. We were declared Most Effective Agency in India in 2013 and now, the most Effective Agency in Asia Pacific. This is testimony yet again to the shared philosophy and belief in the type of work we and our clients believe in.”

     

    Apart from the above recognition, the agency also won 3 Bronze metals for work on ‘Help a Child Reach 5’ under the Creative Effectiveness category, ‘100% Natural. Seeded.’ under the Small Budget Brand category and ‘100% Natural. Seeded.’ under the Integrated Promo and Activation-Led Program category.

     

    Vikas Mehta, CMO, Lowe Lintas + Partners added, “Tambuli is a special award, because it recognizes, not just effectiveness, but also the social impact brands create. At Lowe Lintas +Partners, we see brands as agents of positive social change. Winning the top honour at Tambuli is a great reinforcement of our philosophy. We are thankful to our clients for their support and the University of Asia & Pacific for these awards.”

     

    The accolades at APAC Tambuli Awards come on the back of a series of wins that Lowe Lintas + Partners won at the Asian Marketing Effectiveness & Strategy Awards, held in Singapore recently. The agency had won the Platinum award for work on ‘Lifebuoy – Help a Child Reach 5’ for its client Hindustan Unilever Ltd. along with three more medals at the prestigious award show.

     

  • Lowe Lintas & Partners’ digital division – LinTeractive, relaunched

    By a correspondent

     

    Post its association with IPG’s full-service digital agency Interactive Avenues last year, Lowe Lintas & Partners has announced the relaunch of its digital division – LinTeractive.

     

    Apart from its focus on offering solutions to clients across digital platforms, what will set LinTeractive apart will be its focus on brand strategy and creative throughput that will form the core of its digital strategy. The end offerings will be delivered seamlessly across multiple platforms by teams of domain specialists comprising strategists, technologists and creators.

     

    LinTeractive will be managed by Mr. Vikas Mehta, Chief Marketing Officer, Lowe Lintas & Partners, who has been entrusted with an additional responsibility of heading the relaunched division.

     

    Speaking about the relaunch activity, Mr. Joseph George, CEO, Lowe Lintas & Partners said: “The relaunch marks Lowe Lintas & Partners’ broader vision of strengthening its group offerings and our proven ability to deliver in-market success for our clients. LinTeractive will work closely with brand teams and Interactive Avenues in conceiving and executing ideas that consumers want to belong to and get involved with.”

     

    Outlining the agenda for LinTeractive in India, Vikas Mehta, CMO, Lowe Lintas & Partners said: “With LinTeractive, we are making a decisive move towards mainlining digital and embedding it into the core of all our offerings including advertising, PR, activation, brand consulting and so on. We believe that digital disciplines have become too crucial to brand success to be treated like a specialist-only function.”

     

    LinTeractive will add a layer of brand and consumer engagement expertise on top of the usual capabilities offered by most digital agencies including search, social, web|mobile, technical development, analytics, campaign activation and digital media.

     

    The new division will work with existing clients of Lowe Lintas & Partners on digital integration as well as with independent clients as a full-service digital agency. Interactive Avenues would continue to partner ‘LinTeractive’ for execution in areas like SEO, SEM, technical development, and online media planning and buying.

     

    The relaunched division would function with offices in Mumbai and Delhi with plans to open the Bangalore arm soon.

     

  • Lowe Lintas registers 100 business wins in 15 months

    By a correspondent

     

    In a year that was relatively sluggish for the industry, Lowe Lintas and Partners announced today that they registered over 100 business wins in the past 15 months. These wins have come across its seven divisions and nine offices in India.

     

    Joseph George (Joe), Chief Executive Officer – Lowe Lintas and Partners said, “2013 was the culmination of an aggressive three-year new business plan that was put in place in early 2011; resulting in us, signing up upward of 300 new businesses in this period. Fantastic work leading to in-market success of our existing brands has played a disproportionate role in helping us earn the confidence of new clients. I have always believed that doing well on existing business is the best strategy to acquire new business.”

     

    Some of the clients acquired in this period include Hero Motocorp, myntra.com, STAR TV, OLX, Heinz, Bharat Matrimony, Onida, Expedia, bookmyshow, Milma, Coir Board, Bharat Benz, Max Bupa, Finolex, Gyproc, Apollo Hospitals, Wockhardt, Bharat Forge, MCX, Heinz, Rajasthan Tourism, Nutricia, Mahanagar Gas, Dr. Reddy’s Labs among many others…

     

    Lowe Lintas and Partners, IPG’s largest operation in India, partners about 250 clients. Some of whom, amongst India’s most successful and marketing savvy companies – Aditya Birla Group, Arvind Brands, Axis, Britannia, Croma, Dabur, DLF, Essar, Future Group, Godrej, Havell’s, Hindustan Unilever, ICICI, ITC, Johnson & Johnson, Maruti, Micromax, MRF, Nestle, Croma, Tata Tea, Tanishq, Times Group, Videocon to name a few.

     

     

  • Maa, Meri Maa!

     

    By Delshad Irani & Amit Bapna

     

    There was a time a Hallmark card with Happy Mother’s Day scrawled on the front, and yes, “Thank You” on the inside, would have worked for Ma. Now advertisers are making every day Mother’s Day if commercials on the telly are anything to go by.

     

    Hallmark just won’t cut it anymore. If one really appreciates the woman who spent laborious hours just to give you life,  the only way to show gratitude is this: Hire an award winning director, preferably Alejandro González Iñárritu, and Ludovico Einaudi to provide musical score, for a commercial shot on multiple continents to document candid everyday Mommy moments: Washing the battered jersey, making lunch, driving back and forth from school, swimming, skiing or boxing class.

     

    But there’s a prize for all the hard work. If washed and chauffeured well enough, the best kid will be rewarded a gold medal at the next Olympic Games. Well, not you and I, of course. (We aren’t all made up of that special Olympian stuff, Ma.)

     

    The film ‘Best Job’ and its follow up ‘Pick Them Back Up’, part of P&G’s global campaign ‘Thank You, Mom’, are two universally acclaimed commercial films. (See box.) Apart from single-handedly providing a sales-boost to tissue-paper manufacturers the world over, they have also revived the discussion on how advertisers speak to and communicate with women in their role as mothers.

     

    Communication directed at mums has generally not been as exciting, or insightful as advertising aimed at men. Xavi Bech de Careda, chief strategy officer – TBWA\India attributes it to the concept of a ‘working woman’ who is financially independent being of a relatively recent vintage.

     

    And so, advertisers turn on the mommy water-works one moment and unleash the tiger mom during the next ad break. According to Katherine Wintsch, founder & CEO, The Mom Complex (a mom-dedicated unit of the US based The Martin Agency), there are five, very common mistakes advertisers make in ads depicting moms: 1) She’s always happy.  Especially when cooking and cleaning. 2) Her children are obedient angels. 3) She loves wearing cardigans and capri pants. 4) Her wardrobe often matches the brand colours of the product she’s promoting. 5) She loves talking to the camera. We can see one or all of these in many mom related ads.

     

    The supermodel mom, whose perfection is infuriating (say real moms) and the ma who knows-it-all. (We speak, fairly fondly, of Lalitaji’s samajdari still.) Then we have a heart-to-heart with the best-friend-mom whose emotion-detector is 100% accurate (take that, John Larson, inventor of the polygraph.) We even have moms who are the entertainment, but hardly ever the entertained.

     

    Interestingly, marketers have only recently begun to valorise motherhood. They’ve unleashed a horde of campaigns that celebrate the ma in every woman. But the biggest mistake advertisers make is idealising motherhood. Karthi Marshan, executive VP & head – group marketing, Kotak Mahindra warns in celebrating the woman’s role as mom, we frequently diminish her identity as a person, and risk focusing on the stereotype of dishwasher, cook, laundry lady, support system, et al.

     

    Not just that, making a mom the “hero” of an ad, is a dangerous proposition. A global study by The Mom Complex across 17 countries, revealed the number one emotion all moms share in common is doubt, more specifically self-doubt.

     

    Says Manjari Upadhye, VP – marketing, Cocoa Beverages, Mondelez International, “Advertisers more often than not, bring out her worst fears and anxieties. However, they have also started portraying a more real picture of today’s mom and that is a good start.”

     

    The very idea of parenthood for mothers has changed. It extends beyond just wiping away their child’s snot and fears and obsessing about their height and weight. The growing power of the working mom makes her an even more relevant decision maker in brand choices for the family, and this presents a whole new set of opportunities and challenges.

     

    Says Mr Marshan, “Agencies and advertisers are still navigating the greenfield cum minefield this evolution presents. We get it wrong as often as we get it right. While phenomenal upsides exist in recognising the vital role a mother plays, risks abound as well.”

     

    There are, however, rich dividends for agencies and brands which can manage to tap into the unique struggle, humour and emotion that come with motherhood. Millennial mothers, especially, have no trouble admitting they’re human and make mistakes, hence the popularity of the Twitter hashtag #MomFail.

     

    It’s also becoming more of a team sport. According to a study by McCann’s Truth Central “88% of moms say that when they hear an interesting idea or piece of advice about being a parent they want to share it, and 37% say they want to share it with as many parents as possible.”

     

    Besides who says moms don’t have a sense of humour? The goal with marketing to moms should be to raise the bar of creativity and “stop playing it so straight. It’s boring,” says Wintsch. In fact, in another study conducted by the agency, moms went out of their way to say how much they love the advertising from Budweiser. All directed at men and none features a mom.

     

    “The concept of the mother and the father stereotypes is breaking down fast. Just as phones have become smartphones, moms have also become smart moms,” says Joseph George, CEO, Lowe Lintas, the agency behind an ad for jewellery brand Tanishq which features a young mother’s wedding. He says, “It is the time of the youth and the time of moms – these are the two segments that will rule the market.”

     

    However, as George also points out, in this celebration of mothers the fathers are the ones who are being marginalised now, “Moms are the all-rounders and dads are ending up as either the batsman or the bowler only.” Alright, we’ll say it. “Thank you, Dad.”

     

     

    British Airways ‘A Ticket To Visit Mum’

    In the business of making Moms proud and happy was a BA web-film, although not necessarily targeting mothers directly  (Spoiler alert). The airline promises to fly a Mom-made meal to her son who moved to the US when he was 17. They fail to deliver on that promise. But BA gives the son a ticket to visit his mum instead. Says Christopher Fordyce, regional commercial manager – South Asia, British Airways, it isn’t enough to focus on functionality anymore. Brands must connect on an emotional plain. The core message was that BA’s the airline which connects people around the world. And to be able to witness a mother reunited with her son, there’s not a better way to get the emotions flying and tears flowing.

     

    Bournvita’s ‘Taiyyaari Ki Jeet’

    In 2013, Bournvita released two commercials, Runner and Boxer. According to Mondelez’s Upadhye. the brief to the agency, Ogilvy, and the campaign objective was to bring out the progressive parent in every mother who has left the sidelines and is taking charge of inculcating good habits, in order to prepare the child for all eventualities in life. The Runner TVC featuring an athlete mom training her young son has already crossed a million views on YouTube. The Boxer, on the other hand, features a working-mother providing for and supporting her daughter to excel in a male dominated sport. It has clocked 315,000 views in three weeks.

     

    P&G’s ‘Thank You, Mom’

    The P&G ‘Thank You, Mom’ campaign, the biggest in the company’s 175-year history, recognises and celebrates the moms behind the athletes. It’s part of P&G’s worldwide sponsorship deal with the International Olympic Committee (IOC). According to a company spokesperson, the insight for their most recent spot ‘Pick Them Back Up’ for the Sochi Winter Olympics came from research P&G did with real moms all over the world. “From talking to moms, we learned a few things all moms share – they want to teach their kids resiliency and determination. To quote one mom from the UK – ‘Teach your child to chase a dream but not to fear failure,’ While we seek to delight as many people as we can, for this campaign, we wanted to take time to specially thank moms as P&G is, largely, in the business of helping moms. So we see our sponsorship of the Olympic Games through a special lens – moms.” Digital drove program engagement and lifts in brand social-media buzz volume; there were nearly 74,000,000 views of digital assets. The first film ‘Best Job’ drove 21,681,704 views across more than 200 countries.

     

    Google’s ‘Here’s To The Moms’

    Google paid tribute to Mummies everywhere with a film covering all those moments when mom was there for her child, from the first ultrasound to coming out of the closet.

     

    Fiat’s ‘The Motherhood’

    A genuine rap on motherhood complete with “babes, bitches and hoes,” also known as her kids, her dogs and a hose in the back seat. This video, released for the car maker’s UK market, has well over 4 million views on YouTube. It’s real, hilarious and very graphic. Here’s a sample. “Wear a nursing bra, like a bulletproof vest. Work versus home is a mental combination, with my elbows deep in infant defecation. I’m a school-run-taker, fairy-cake-baker, dealmaker, orgasm-faker, rattle-shaker, cheesegrater, nighttime waker. I’m a placater, peacemaker.”

    Source:The Economic Times

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

    Licensed to republish

     

  • Lowe & Lifebuoy win India’s first Global Effie

    By A Correspondent

     

    Lowe Lintas and Partners India’s campaign for ‘Lifebuoy Super-Fast Handwash’ was declared the 2012 Global Effies Bronze winner at New York on Wednesday. Earlier this year, Global Effies had called for entries of globally effective campaigns across the world. Lifebuoy was shortlisted earlier in the month along with brands like Nike, Google and X- box.

     

    Said Saji Abraham, Global Planning Director, Lifebuoy and Virat Tandon, Global Business Director, Lifebuoy: “Lifebuoy Superfast Hand-wash is a liquid handwash formulation that kills 99.9% germs in 10 seconds. We responded to this fantastic innovation with a simple but insightful and persuasive idea – that children are in a hurry when it comes to hand-washing; and so if your handwash cannot keep pace with them, germs on their hands will just not go. This campaign won because we were bold, competitive and consumer focused at the same time.”

     

    Joseph George, CEO, Lowe Lintas and Partners, said: “As an agency, we take the Effies seriously. And so winning, not just the Lowe & Partners Worldwide Network’s but also India’s first ever Global Effies is hugely satisfying and encouraging.”

     

    See also:

    http://www.effie.org/winners/showcase/category/43 Grand Effie winners

    http://www.effie.org/winners/showcase/2012/6695 Information on Lifebuoy ad and credits

    http://www.effie.org/winners/showcase/2012/6695 The Lifebuoy presentation