Tag: Kingfisher

  • Zoo Media agencies bag Kingfisher mandate

    By Our Staff

     

    Iconic beer brand Kingfisher has awarded its creative and branded content mandate for its flagship products ‘Kingfisher Premium’  and ‘Kingfisher Ultra’,  to multiple agencies within the Zoo Media network. The mandates were won following a multi-agency pitch.

     

    The creative mandate was won by FoxyMoron and will be handled by the agency’s Gurugram office. The branded content mandate was won by the network’s video content solutions agency, The Rabbit Hole, and will be handled out of its Mumbai headquarters.

     

    Commenting on the massive win, Pratik Gupta, Co-Founder, Zoo Media & FoxyMoron, said: “In the thick of intense competition, Zoo’s agencies have stood out for their insight-driven, creatively layered, integrated strategies. Our teams are geared to make the brand contemporary and relatable to young urban India.”

     

    Added Debabrata Mukherjee, Chief Marketing Officer, United Breweries: “We are excited to have  the Zoo Media network as a partner and look forward to doing some impactful work together.”

     

  • Kingfisher continues association with latest edition of IPL

    By A Correspondent

     

    For the 12th edition of the Indian Premier League, brand Kingfisher continued its association with various teams. Kingfisher’s latest IPL communication features top players across five teams singing a rap song.

     

    Said Kundan Joshee, Senior Vice President & Managing Partner from Wunderman Thompson: “The strength of a brand is in how it carries on and refreshes its proposition for younger and newer audiences. And this new commercial from Kingfisher in the form of a rap music video does just that.”

     

    Speaking on the campaign, Gurpreet Singh, Divisional Vice President of Marketing, UBL, added: “We understand the dynamic audience and the rap culture which has recently gained momentum in India. Our latest campaign highlights the game of cricket as more than just a sport, but as a medium which brings diverse people together with great pomp and show.

     

     

  • Kingfisher banks on humour for the Indian Prank League

    By A Correspondent

     

    Kingfisher has introduced the Indian Prank League as part of its IPL campaign “Divided by teams, united by Kingfisher”. The Indian Pranks League comes with a series of video commercials featuring players from Sunrisers Hyderabad, Mumbai Indians, Rajasthan Royals, Kolkata Knight Riders, Kings XI Punjab and Royal Challengers Bangalore, who are seen pulling pranks off at their teammates.

     

    Commenting on the campaign, Samar Singh Sheikhawat, Chief Marketing Officer, United Breweries Limited, said: “For years, Kingfisher has been a catalyst in bringing rival teams together with a fun element off the fields to establish the brands campaign line for the IPL, “Divided by teams, united by Kingfisher”.

     

    Added Kishore Tadepalli, SVP & Managing Partner, J Walter Thompson Bangalore: “Despite the rivalry between teams, the players are thick friends with each other. They constantly pull each other’s legs, crack jokes and have a laugh off the field. Kingfisher brings the camaraderie alive for the sports fans and gives them a sneak peak to their lives beyond Cricket.”

     

     

  • Kingfisher stirs up a musical storm for ‘Woofer’

    By A Correspondent

     

    Kingfisher Storm, the latest offering from United Breweries Limited, launched its first TVC in association with Woofer, the hit Punjabi song produced by BeingU Music. The song kicks off BeingU Music’s initiative, ‘Global Punjabi Movement’, to put Punjabi music on the global map.

     

    Commenting on the association, Gurpreet Singh, Assistant Vice-President, Marketing, United Breweries Limited, said: “’Woofer’ is a spectacular collaboration of international artistes coming together for a groovy ‘Punjabi Global’ single. The genre and Woofer’s music video resonate well with Kingfisher Storm’s attitude and style. Storm stands for all that is trending and spirited. The youth continue to seek content, relevant to their taste, and Storm’s association with ‘Woofer’ is sure to hit the sweet spot. We expect this song to be the ‘hit song’ at every party.”

     

    Advertising agency Triton Communications has executed this campaign along with the requisite communication for Kingfisher Storm’s launch and promotion. Talking about the journey, Virendra Saini, Executive Director, Triton Communications said: “We have been associated with Brand Kingfisher for more than a decade, and with every new brand launch there is an attempt to engage the audience, in the most relevant way possible. The latest association with this international super hit music video has been a successful one. This song has the swag factor, which is a perfect fit for Kingfisher Storm, for it resonates well with today’s youth and their confident style. The peppy music video ‘Woofer’ amplifies this association, which is in line with its brand values. Within 48 hours, the music video became a huge success, with 10 million views. Till date it has garnered more than 41 million views, and still counting. Working on the campaign was a unique experience. This gives us, and the brand, a push in the right direction.”

     

     

  • NDTV Good Times refreshes, adopts #LiveYoung positioning

    By A Correspondent

     

    Lifestyle entertainment channel NDTV Good Times has refreshed itself and adopted the #LiveYoung positioning from earlier this week. In the new avatar, the channel will take a fresher, edgier and more relevant approach to its programming targeted towards the young and the young at heart, notes a communiqué.

     

    Smeeta Chakrabarti

    So what we see is a new logo, icons, idents and colour palette that reflects a “hip-cool on-air” look.   Elaborating on the channel refresh, Smeeta Chakrabarti, CEO, NDTV Lifestyle said, “After an in-depth research and a deep dive into our consumers’ mindset, the channel has recharged its offering. The new visual and content strategy is a direct result of these initiatives, and we are confident that they will resonate and connect with our viewers”.

     

    Said Channel Head Arati Singh:  “The programming of the channel has become more impulsive, interactive and action oriented with a younger and edgier attitude. Keeping in sync with the young and young-at-heart viewers, we have reworked on the visual appeal by introducing vibrant icons reflecting the different content and mood of the programming on-air.”

     

    As part of its refresh, NDTV Good Times aims to be in tune with viewers’ lives through the week and at different times during the day by introducing dedicated categories such as; ‘Good Night with Good Times’, ‘Good Food with Good Times’, ‘Good Travel with Good Times. Additionally, Kingfisher Supermodel 2013 and Bachelor’s Kitchen with Aditya Bal have been reintroduced with a brand new flavour, with more to come in the next few months.  Highway on My Plate, one of the more popular shows on the channel is scheduled to be seen in a younger avatar, we are told.

     

  • Anil Thakraney: Mallya’s image is working against him

    By Anil Thakraney

     

    All that’s gone wrong with Kingfisher Airlines has been discussed enough in the media (I too have posted on this in the past), so there’s nothing more to add. One can only grab a Kingfisher beer, sit back, and quietly watch the airline go down the tube. Clearly, there’s no scope for a turnaround, so utterly horrid is Dr Mallya’s business model.

     

    However, I think the reason why there is so much public anger against Kingfisher is not just because the innocent employees remain unpaid, not just because the wife of an unpaid staffer killed herself, it’s because of Vijay Mallya’s own flamboyant image. All those yachts, the lavish parties, the wild IPL celebrations, the frantic air kissing… it’s all come back to haunt the man. And these images are being beamed right next to the images of protesting employees on the news channels. That his equally high-life living son has been posting floozy tweets is adding to Mallya’s already overflowing mug of woes.

     

    The colourful imagery is projecting the man to be deeply insensitive to his starving employees (even if that’s not the case), and that, for any organisation chief’s image, is akin to corporate hara-kiri. The Indian junta will never accept the idea of a man having a good time while his ‘family’ suffers. This goes against the grain of Indian culture. And in the absence of public sympathy, whatever little hope Mallya has of a government-led bailout begins to fade. What is truly incredible is that in the face of such a mega challenge, he continues to be bombastic!

     

    The least Vijay Mallya must do now is to come down to earth (like his aircraft), roll up his sleeves, meet up with his angry employees and personally clean up the mess. If that means filing for bankruptcy, then so be it. Time for arrogance and ego is up. It’s time to do some dirty work and take hard decisions. And if he does this even now, some of Mallya’s dying reputation may yet get salvaged.

     

    And oh, while the booze tycoon is at it, he must ensure his air-head son stays off Twitter for a few decades.

     

    ***

     

    PS: Wonderful interactive video from Old Spice. You can use the keyboard to decide which instrument you want the musician to play, and how he must play it. It’s gone totally viral, 18 lakh hits at last count. And do note that the brand isn’t directly selling anything. This clearly is the future of viral marketing.

     

    [youtube width=”400″ height=”220″]http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=yZ15vCGuvH0[/youtube]
  • @dvantage Digital

     

    By Ravi Balakrishnan

     

    Never mind the famous introduction to Charles Dickens’ A Tale Of Two Cities; digital agencies today can afford to stop at ‘It was the best of times.’ Because, there has been no better time to be in this space. For one, marketers no longer need to be coaxed into going the digital route. Also unlike mainstream advertising, almost every new campaign or assignment has the scope for interesting, maybe even ground-breaking work; considering best practices are yet to be carved in stone. And finally it makes a lot of business sense. Through 2012, independents in this space both in India and overseas are being picked at a rapid clip and the people doing the picking are some of the biggest names in the marketing communications industry.

     

    The one player that’s yet to announce a key purchase so far, Omnicom, is said to be keenly watching the Indian market, with a representative visiting practically every month. An industry insider is confident of at least three more acquisitions being announced before the year is through.

     

    Amar Deep Singh

    Not bad at all considering that many of today’s hottest targets started life a little over a decade ago, as a ragtag bunch of entrepreneur driven specialist shops. Many of them began either before, during or immediately after the great dotcom bust of 2000. It seemed a quixotic endeavour. Through the early years, most mainstream advertising and media agencies opted to ignore the space entirely. Says Amar Deep Singh, CEO, Interactive Avenues, “Traditional agencies missed the bus while advertisers saw value in using digital media. They now find it easier to buy than to build. It’s a win-win for both, because it gives traditional agencies digital expertise and it helps digital agencies get scale.”

     

    Today, even as ‘old’ shops like Indigo Consulting and Hungama Digital Services get picked up by the likes of Leo Burnett and JWT, agencies and their holding companies are casting the net wider. While Ignitee which has survived two name changes and 12 years in the business is an obvious choice, even the three and a half year old 22 Feet which has worked on Titan Fastrack, Kingfisher and Lenovo is being approached. Brijesh Jacob, founder and director of 22 Feet, admits, “Every offer is tempting because it’s either an agency you adored growing up or someone that’s done awesome work.”

     

    CVL Srinivas

    In the fray are creative and media agencies, larger digital shops, holding companies and even IT firms. But among the first two, there’s a rivalry that’s as old as the days of unbundling. They have squabbled over who gets more face time with marketers and more recently over credits at award shows. And now, many senior practitioners on both sides are convinced that their firms are quite literally the best support system for a digital shop.

     

    Media agency heads often argue that considering digital is a measurable, accountable, result driven medium, what better partner than a business that concerns itself daily with these very issues? Says CVL Srinivas, chairman, SMG, “Media agencies are ahead of the curve when it comes to digital. We hear this from clients and not just agencies.” Sudha Natrajan, founder of media consultancy, TMC and a veteran of Lintas Initiative Media believes, “The lines between creative and content, and analytics to chase, understand and convert consumers, do not exist. The talent and understanding in a media agency is more apt to capitalise on this, rather than a creative agency. Creative agencies have stopped understanding media a while ago; some are making a feeble attempt to understand the digital medium, but are failing.”

     

    Sudha Natrajan

    The creative agencies on the other hand argue that in the absence of ideas and content, there’s unlikely to be any consumer response worth measuring. Says Arvind Sharma, chairman and CEO, India subcontinent, Leo Burnett, “Agencies produce TV commercials and hand these over to media agencies who release them. But if you need to manage content on a live basis, just handing it over is not the future.” He believes media agencies can possibly work only in the short run and on specific clients where the communication is less dynamic.

     

    Mr Sharma counters the media agency claim about being result driven with, “Human beings are persuaded by content. In a simple thing like door-to-door retail, change the message and the productivity levels are up from 20% to 80%. Around the world, who are the bigger winners of Effies, creative or media?” Madhukar Kamath, group CEO and managing director, DDB Mudra says a tad philosophically, “I disagree with the point of view saying either digital or activation should rest with a creative or media agency. It resides with whoever thinks like a full service agency; addressing brand issues.”

     

    Arvind Sharma

    While pretty much everyone is speaking (or has spoken to) everyone else, a pattern is emerging where the more content and social media driven digital agencies find a space within a creative network and the more result and search engine optimisation focused shops opt for media companies.

     

    It’s an arrangement that Atul Hegde, CEO, Ignitee finds essentially flawed: “They should be doing the opposite. Why shouldn’t a media agency acquire a strong creatively led agency? It will bring completely varied skill sets.” Some digital heads claim they don’t have a dog in the fight between creative and media. This is especially true since it’s quite impossible to go in for unbundling in digital. Says Chhaya Balachandran Aiyer, founder and managing director, BC Webwise, “It will have to be pure play; agencies are okay either continuing independently or merging with an existing digital arm.”

     

    Atul Hegde

    The agencies themselves have earned the right to be spoken to on their own terms. The offers are a lot less diffused than they used to be. While previous conversations were primarily about money, these days, companies attempt with varying degrees of success to draw a roadmap. And given how digital firms have grown in size and scale and the frequent inability of the acquirers getting richer, the founders can take pride in their creations continuing to exist as standalone brands for the foreseeable future.

     

    Says Vikas Tandon, CEO of Indigo Consulting, “Being part of Leo Burnett gives us a chance to be at the table when a strategy is formulated at the top management level.” And yet he argues, “It would be foolish to not leverage the equity of Indigo.”

     

    Chhaya Balachandran Aiyer

    Gulrez Alam, COO, Resultrix says “We are the leading buyer of Google in India and Performics is the biggest buyer of Google worldwide. We will be representing Performics in India.” However the name remains unchanged even post merger with the Publicis Groupe firm – Alam says the only addition will be the line ‘a Performics company.’

     

    There are others who have been in conversations for years and are yet to hear anything they really like. Mr Hegde admits, “There have been no compelling offers; no network that can add value to our growth plans. Being independent is our strength today, allowing us to work across agencies and brands. One of the biggest things about acquisitions is someone comes to you for what you are. Once they acquire you, they try to make you who they are.”

     

    Vikas Tandon

    Besides, there’s a bit of scepticism about what value an acquisition really brings to the table. An industry insider believes Webchutney is pretty much unchanged and the same applies to Quasar. For the moment though, it sure feels good to be wanted. And digital agencies with their PC, Mac and Tab saturated offices, internet meme based humour and boisterous geeky staff are the unlikely belles of the ball.

     

    Source: The Economic Times

    Copyright © 2012, Bennett, Coleman & Co. Ltd. All Rights Reserved

     

  • Vodafone, Pepsi & Kingfisher most recalled brands in IPL 5: Ormax

    From the MxM Infodesk

     

    The top recalled brands during IPL 5 are Vodafone, Pepsi, Kingfisher, Volkswagen and Hero, according to the findings released by Ormax Media’s Cricket Advertising Recall & Effectiveness research – Day After Cricket (DAC),

     

    The last week of IPL 5 however saw Pepsi lead the recall charts, touching a score of 44% on Unaided Recall, the highest achieved by any brand this season.

     

    Volkswagen and Kingfisher were the only brands which feature among the Top 10 brands in terms of both Unaided Recall and Ad Likeability.

     

    The Top 3 most liked ads were: Gems – Raho Umarless, Sprite – Raasta Clear Hai and Mazaa – Har Mausam Aam. Interestingly, none of these three campaigns featured a celebrity.

     

    The most recalled innovation sponsorship asscoation recalled was Karbonn Kamaal Catch. DLF Maximum Sixes and Vodafone Star Of The Match are a distant no. 2 & 3.

     

    IPL 5 Top 10 Brands Recalled

    Rank

    Brand

    1

    Vodafone

    2

    Pepsi

    3

    Kingfisher

    4

    Volkswagen

    5

    Hero

    6

    Coca-Cola

    7

    DLF

    8

    Idea

    9

    Nokia

    10

    Tata Docomo

     

     

    IPL 5 Top 10 Most Liked Campaigns

    Rank

    Brand

    1

    Gems

    2

    Sprite

    3

    Mazaa

    4

    Volkswagen

    5

    Cadbury’s Dairy Milk

    6

    Yatra.com

    7

    Kingfisher

    8

    Mountain Dew

    9

    Lays

    10

    Slice

     

    Day After Cricket is a consumer based day-after recall study, conducted among IPL viewers across six cities: Mumbai, Delhi, Bangalore, Hyderabad, Chennai and Kolkata. The TG for the study was Males 15-40 years and Females 15-34 years old.

     

  • Reduce Your Carbon Footprint: Radio Mirchi

    By A Correspondent

     

    Radio Mirchi’s RJ Raaj – Majja Run patron –  dressed as a green crusader in a black robe with a huge life size cut out of a foot all made from recycled biodegradable products to spread the message of reducing carbon emission in Bengaluru. He won the first place at the Kingfisher ‘Run in Costume’ Green Crusader segment.

     

    RJ Raja went out to spread the message on how each one of us can take a green oath by reducing the carbon emission in our daily lives by adopting simple practices such as turning the lights, televisions and computers off when not in use, keeping fridge doors closed, drive less, do the weekly errands in a single trip or pay bills online, walk, bike, ride the bus or carpool and so on.

     

    Excited about his win, Beat Raja Raaj said: “It is a great high to win the contest for the second time in a row. I have always been an avid follower of green practices in my daily life and hence took up the carbon footprint concept.”

     

    Commenting on the occasion, Sangeeta Rath, Station Head – Radio Mirchi said: “We have been very actively participating in the World 10K for the last five years and every year RJ Raaj designs looks that are very topical in nature. This year it was the green message, it is commendable of RJ Raaj to come up with this unique and meaningful depiction! Kudos to him for winning second time in succession.”

     

  • Kingfisher set to recount its ‘Brand Journey’ with Facebook Brand Timeline

    By A Correspondent

     

    Kingfisher, one ofIndia’s top 10 brands on Facebook, has proved yet again that it is one of the most digital-savvy brands in the country. It is the first brand inIndia to adapt Facebook’s ‘Brand Timeline’, giving its consumers ample reasons for a qualitative interaction with the brand.

     

    The switch to Facebook Timeline comes not just as a new look but a strategic move to engage with its consumers more qualitatively while also highlighting the milestones and narrating the story of the brand that was never told before.

     

    The Kingfisher page has been positioned as a facilitator of ‘Good Times’ and strategically does not promote beer, considering the profile of the Facebook users. The Kingfisher Facebook fan page currently enjoys more than 3.3 million likes.

     

    Commenting on the new move, Samar Singh Sheikhawat, Senior Vice President, United Breweries Ltd said: “In the rapidly evolving world of digital communications, the changes might be multiple but the crux remains the same – finding innovative and instantaneous ways of touching the lives of consumers. At Kingfisher, we’ve always strived to set these benchmarks by moving on to new platforms swiftly and utilizing the inherent strengths of the medium to forge a deep, meaningful relationship with our consumers. In keeping with that philosophy, Kingfisher was the first Indian brand to adopt the recently launched Facebook Timeline on February 29. Our endeavour now will be to use the key features of the format in a uniquely creative manner and make the consumer interactions on Facebook richer and more memorable.”

     

    Facebook Timeline went online in September 2011. It offered Facebook users the joy of revisiting their lives with a collection of photos, posts and apps facilitating a digital autobiography! Facebook has now rolled out the Timeline for brands which will transform the way brands communicate and interact with consumers drastically. The latest format provides brands with new options for self expression, allowing them to narrate their corporate story with milestones, highlight the brand’s key campaigns and so on.

     

    Kingfisher made its entry into Facebook in April 2008 and has been successful in constantly engaging with its consumers for the last 4 years. The numbers of fans have been growing in leaps and bounds year after year, a clear indication of the ever increasing popularity on Facebook.

    Initiating, fuelling and sustaining conversations remains to be the key challenge any brand faces on social media – Kingfisher is perceived as the benchmark in this space with consistently high levels of interactivity. As a result, currently the brand’s Facebook page flaunts more than 3 million fans, making it one of the top 5 brands on Facebook inIndia. Incidentally, this also makes Kingfisher the second largest beer brand globally on Facebook.

     

    On the other hand on Twitter, Kingfisher has a fair presence with about 17,000 followers. Though Twitter is a fairly new channel in the social media universe of brands inIndia, Kingfisher is perceived as a thought leader and as a brand that listens to consumers, not just talk. This is reinforced by even some of the top global blogs on social media mentioning Kingfisher’s Facebook & Twitter presence individually as amongst the best uses of social media inIndiaby brands.

     

  • The King in troubled waters

    By Ranjona Banerji

     

    Whoever picked the guests for the Kingfisher segment of the Newshour last night, obviously did not gauge TimesNow editor Arnab Goswami’s mood right. More than half the panel spoke out in favour of the besieged airline while Goswami was adamant that no one owed Kingfisher anything for its bad management practices. Even worse, the people of India had been inconvenienced (or at least the flying public) and that was unacceptable.

     

    Vijay Mallya on TimesNow was quite a departure from his normal braggart self as he petulantly explained that he was dying to pay everyone but couldn’t since the income tax department had frozen all Kingfisher accounts. He did acknowledge that he did have some tax dues but…

     

    From all the par-for-the-course studio histrionics, one thing was clear – some urgent analysis of the aviation industry is required.

     

    Obviously, television cannot provide it…

     

    The first edit in The Economic Times seems to feel that a government intervention or bailout is unacceptable and Kingfisher has to sort out its own problems. It even calls for a suspension of licence. This is in keeping with Goswami’s line but does not follow that of Kingfisher’s well-wishers within the travel and aviation industry who keep bringing Air India into the picture. As ET points out, “The state of the industry and the fate of Air India should not be allowed to cloud the issue.”

     

    **

     

    The alleged rape of a woman in Kolkata gets curiouser and curiouser. The behaviour of West Bengal chief minister Mamata Banerjee and her minister Madan Mitra – blaming the victim and claiming a conspiracy to destablise the government – has been roundly criticised. Indeed, Mitra’s comments about the woman being out drinking deserve wider condemnation – he should surely be treated on par with the Andhra Pradesh police officer and Karnataka minister for making such sexist and dangerous remarks.

     

    **

     

    In The Indian Express, Abhijit V Banerjee, Ford Foundation International Professor of Economics at the Massachusetts Institute of Technology and director Abdul Latif Jameel Povery Action Lab makes an impassioned plea for allowing the British government’s Department for International Development continues its “good work” in India and for India not to get carried away by nationalism. This is a subject which needs to be debated more stringently in India. Do we still need foreign aid, does aid work and should not India manage its own problems. My instinct is not to agree with Banerjee and to side with the nationalists…

     

  • Brand Kingfisher in the red

     

    By Tuhina Anand

     

    The King of Good Times is battling bad times, and all eyes are waiting to see how much the whole bailout issue will cost Brand Kingfisher. Right now, the airline business of Kingfisher is under deep scrutiny and the media focus has only heightened the negative atmosphere. Public memory, of course, is short and all ‘bailout’, ‘bleeding’ and ‘those who die must die’ phrases will be forgotten once Vijay Mallya is able to arrange the corpus to manage the airline’s functioning. Remember, Jet Airways employees’ protests against job cuts some years ago didn’t do much harm to the brand in the long run.

     

    Kingfisher, known primarily for its beer, is unlikely to be affected. The brand has been there for a long time and people vouch for it. Even in this scenario, it’s the airline business that is under the scanner. The airline business is diversification of the core business, hence the impact on Kingfisher the brand would not be much. But when it comes to Kingfisher Airlines, people – especially frequent flyers and privileged guests wooed with the airline’s promise of an extraordinary experience – would stay away, considering flight cancellations and the consequent inconvenience.

     

    Expressing his view, Harish Bijoor, brand expert and CEO of Harish Bijoor Consults Inc, said, “Kingfisher is a dominant brand in the Indian context. The brand for a start is a beer. And from there on has developed the brand equity of brand Kingfisher Airlines. To that extent, the recent sets of issues in aviation tends to hurt the equity of Kingfisher Airlines more than the beer. The airline is a service brand that touches the lives of hundreds of people. The beer is a product brand. To that extent there is less of an issue there.”

     

    “The negative publicity that hits Kingfisher airlines is really about the pains of the traveller more than anything else. A traveller faced with flight cancellations at the last minute is impacted the most. This is where the biggest pain point of Kingfisher Airlines’ brand equity vests,” added Bijoor.

     

    So at one level where the crisis has hit most is the frequent travellers, but that is more of a short-term problem. In fact, the brand has taken a beating but not as much. Even V Balasubramanium, Director at RainMan Consulting, is of the opinion that the brand would have been affected if the issues were that involving ethics or credibility but something like a ‘bailout’ and being cash-strapped will not impact it long-term as people already know that the airline industry is bleeding and the same goes for Kingfisher Airlines. So while the issue has not come as a surprise, it’s true that the rumours about large-scale layoffs or the airline shutting operations don’t exactly help Mr Mallya’s case.

     

    One view that also emerges is that whenever UB has tried to diversify and move away from its core business of alcoholic drinks, they haven’t really succeeded. Ramanujam Sridhar, CEO, Brand-Comm said, “The next two to three months will be critical for Kingfisher, and how they manage to emerge out of this crisis and do damage control. There will be close scrutiny and overcoming this will be a challenge. There is a negative undercurrent especially among those who have raised eyebrows over the extravagant lifestyle and now the financial mess. I think it’s a wait and watch policy and the next couple of months will be make-or-break as far as the Kingfisher Airlines brand goes.”

     

    As it stands, the Kingfisher brand which is primarily associated with liquor will not be impacted in any case, as it will have its loyal followers, but for the airline business, which is actually a brand extension, it’s time to be cautious and move carefully. “Kingfisher needs to get off the pedestal and talk and emote with its users and those sitting on the fence with reference to its usage. It’s important to be transparent and admit folly where folly lies. In reality nothing succeeds like success. I do believe this is a temporary blip in the brand equity fortunes of Kingfisher Airlines. With some degree of fund infusion, it will be business as usual,” concludes Bijoor.

     

    Image: Grab from Kingfisher Airline TVC