Tag: Kajol

  • HRIPL relaunches Vasmol with Kajol as its brand ambassador

    By A Correspondent

     

    Hygienic Research Institute Private Limited (HRIPL) has announced actor Kajol as its brand ambassador for the Vasmol Range of hair colours. She will soon be seen in Vasmol Kesh Kala’s latest TVC endorsing the tagline: ‘Yahi Hai Sahi hair colour’.

     

    Speaking on the collaboration, Ashish K Chhabra, Joint Managing Director of HRIPL said: “We are privileged to have Kajol as our brand ambassador for Vasmol. Kajol is one of the most gifted and versatile actresses of our times and is a powerful role model whose mindful and thoughtful personality is looked upon by the audiences across genders and age-groups. At a time when we are renovating the brand to make it more relevant to today’s evolved as well as new-age consumers, Kajol’s personality resonates with the brand’s philosophy perfectly. Her charismatic persona is an ideal fit with the brand that is iconic and poised for significant growth in times to come.”

     

     

  • Small Brands, Big Stars

     

    By Ratna Bhushan

     

    Kajol, the actor who once endorsed brands such as Whirlpool and Yakult, now backs a little-known detergent called Woosh. The star of the recently released movie Dilwale is seen in Woosh advertisements on the sides of buses and on non-prime-time television spots.

     

    Priyanka Chopra, who plays the lead role in US television series Quantico, is pushing Hisar-based Marvel tea and DS Group’s Rajnigandha cardamom seeds. Chopra used to be the face of Hindustan Unilever’s Bru coffee. Even Shah Rukh Khan, Bollywood’s king of romance — said to be among the highest paid actors — is endorsing Aqualite footwear.

     

    With mainstream endorsements drying up or restricted to the flush-with-funds ecommerce space, A-listed celebrities are settling for regional or smaller brands, which are among the few options available for them. The trend has evoked mixed responses.

     

    “In many cases, the celebrities and their agents seem to be forgetting that quality matters over quantity,” said Shailendra Singh, joint managing director of entertainment marketing firm Percept. “While the older lot is reaching out to anything, it’s unfortunately setting the tone for the next generation. There’s a sense of what’s okay for Amitabh Bachchan should be okay for Varun Dhawan. But that’s not how popular faces should be building their brand values.”

     

    In many cases within the consumer goods space, endorsement fees, which used to run into crores, may have dried up because of diminishing marketing spends. In others, the stars are willing to compromise on their fee to stay in circulation. Cricketer Virat Kohli endorses both Red Chief footwear and luxury car Audi. Actors Akshay Kumar and Saif Ali Khan are the faces of Dollar Bigboss and Amul Macho innerwear, respectively and Ajay Devgn is associated with Vimal pan masala.

     

    “If three-fourths of the endorsement market is being taken up by the smaller brands, then for celebrities it is an available option they are willing to dip into,” said Vinita Bangard, founder of celebrity management firm Krossover Entertainment. A top celebrity manager pointed out that Shah Rukh Khan, who has lent his face to luxury brands such as Tag Heuer watches, hiked his fee 150% for a small brand that approached him.

     

    “In cases like Tag, the celebrity wants the name association because the brand adds to his or her value. But if a small brand wants sudden fame, the celebs and their agents leverage the opportunity and charge in excess of market rates too,” the manager said, asking not to be identified.

     

    Varun Gupta, managing director of valuation and advisory services firm American Appraisal, said it’s a misperception that smaller brands pay less to celebrities.

     

    “For the lesser known brands, getting a well-known face to push themselves is near-instant status and mass appeal. They are willing to pay the market price, or at times, even higher, to get a popular face,” Gupta said.

     

    While traditional advertisers including Coca-Cola, PepsiCo and telecom companies Airtel and Aircel are curtailing the use of celebrities, it’s mainly the ecommerce sites that are splurging. In August, online grocery store BigBasket.com named Shah Rukh Khan as its face.

     

    Source:The Economic Times

    Copyright © 2016, Bennett, Coleman & Co. Ltd. All Rights Reserved

    Licensed to republish

     

  • Debrief: Bournvita Li’l Champs: Going after moms

    By Anil Thakraney

     

    Makers of Bournvita, for their kiddies’ milk supplement called Li’l Champs, have roped in actress Kajol. While I am viscerally opposed to the use of celebs in advertising, in this particular case, Kajol works. Because, one, she is the mother of a young child, and two, she acts the part very well.

     

    The positioning is that Bournvita Li’l Champs is the choice of intelligent mothers, and therefore the focus is on the mom rather than the child, so there’s no pester power in this one. This strategy makes sense, as the lady of the house is most likely to be the decision-maker of this product (feminists please excuse!). The ad features Kajol conducting a whole lot of research to be able to deal with the thousands of questions her little lad regularly fires at her. And this, while struggling with the daily household chores. The VO says Bournvita Li’l Champs has the goods to improve your child’s brain power. In passing, there is a hurried mention of a special ingredient called ‘DHA’. (I say this claim needs to be verified by ASCI!)

     

    This is an ad that will work, even if it isn’t creatively brilliant. And that’s because it’s based on a good consumer insight: Today’s moms find themselves under as much pressure as their kids, not just because we live in extremely competitive times, but also because often the lady herself doesn’t know the answers. And, to appease my feminist readers, the ad would have worked equally nicely with Shri Ajay Devgn (his spelling, not mine). In fact, I suspect he would have struggled harder with the academic questions. 🙂

     

    [youtube width=”400″ height=”220″]http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=zs5SmxDozOY[/youtube]

    Rating: (On a scale of 1-5): 3. Good insight, moms will connect