Tag: Kyoorius Awards

  • ‘Brilliant show, but media wrote about absence of agencies at Goafest, not Kyoorius’

    It was a big thumbs up for the Kyoorius Advertising and Digital Awards held on Thursday evening in Mumbai. Clearly, the first edition of the D&AD-backed awards got other similar shows in India to do a quick rethink. Shobhana Nair spoke to a few members of the frat to get their view.

     

    Abhijit Avasthi National Creative Director, Ogilvy India:

     This is very thrilling and they did well in the first edition. This is an awards show which people will look up to because of the nature of the show, the composition of the jury, the structure, the fairness, the neutrality at which this is done. This is truly world class act and makes me feel proud to be a part of the advertising industry.

     

     

     

    Shantanu Bhanja, Business Head and Vice President -Marketing, HT Media:

    I love the fact that it was done with so much precision, finesse and execution. We saw real passion during the entire show. And that’s how the award show must be done. This made us feel good about supporting it. It sets a standard in India on how ad awards should be executed and how well they can be put together flawlessly.

     

     

    Manish Bhatt, Founder Director, Scarecrow:

    It’s ecstatic, brilliant, mind-blowing and better than Cannes. Hats off to Rajesh for single-minded thinking and organizing this. I have not seen something like this in 14 years whether in Cannes or anywhere. This inspires everyone.

     

     

     

    Anil Jayaraj, Chief Marketing Officer, Pidilite Industries:

    The scale is impressive but even more than that the authenticity of the awards is important. Kyoorius has got a great formula and if they get that well, then this is going to be the awards in the future. I would not like to compare but this was very enjoyable. I think the audience had fun, winners had a real sense of achievement and the show was very glamorous.

     

     

    Arvind Sharma, President, Advertising Agencies Association of India and Former Chairman and CEO India Subcontinent at Leo Burnett:

    It was well-organized and it is a very good initiative. D&AD has its expertise in visual communication and which is what these awards are about. I think there’s place for these awards in the bigger scheme of things. Advertising as a business is becoming more diverse and there will be role for awards show that recognizes different parts of advertising. This is going to be one that recognizes visual communication. But there is and there will be only one festival because it takes a lot of time, effort and energy to organize a three-day festival with 2000 people coming to a place like Goa. All of them are going to exist to serve their purpose well. Organizing an evening and organizing a festival for three consecutive days and nights are two different things. This is a good show and I wish this becomes a long term property in India.

     

    Srinivasan Swamy, CMD, RK Swamy and Hansa. Also, President, IAA India and Chairman, Goafest 2014 :

    At the end of the day, we have to celebrate whenever good things are done. Rajesh is a good friend of mine and has done a good job. But when I reflect on the criticism on Goafest, every media talked about the number of agencies not participating in Goafest and created a fuss about it. But nobody questions the number of agencies missing in Kyoorius. To my mind, it’s unfair. It’s a wonderful show and I celebrate every moment of it. I am not questioning the quality of this show. What would have made me happier is to see the work that’s winning the award. It’s not a long evening and so it would have been easy to incorporate some more time to show the work that’s winning. I feel that was lacking.

     

  • Ogilvy wins big at Kyoorius Awards

     

    By Sandeep Puraname

     

    The Kyoorius in association with D&AD, announced the winners of the 2014 Kyoorius Advertising & Digital Awards at the awards ceremony at the NSCI Indoor Stadium in Mumbai. The night was a celebration of the best in Indian creativity with an attendance of over 1200 creative professionals from the advertising and digital spheres and clients from across India and some from around the world.

     

     

    Curious about the Awards terms?

     

    Like the D&AD awards internationally, Kyoorius Awards have no gold, silver or bronze, and it is the jury’s prerogative to award more than one Blue Elephant in a category, or none at all.

     

    In-book: Work that stands out above the rest and meets the three judging criteria, for being 1) An original and inspiring idea, 2) Well-executed, and 3) Relevant to its context. Amongst the best pieces of work in the year, in-book winners are the nominees for Blue Elephants.

     

    Blue Elephant: Checks off all three criteria and reaches the Kyoorius Awards benchmark of creative excellence. Recognised as a symbol of the very highest creative achievement.

     

    Black Elephant: Best of Show. The ultimate prize. Work that is truly ground-breaking amongst all the judged work.

     

    Masters of Ceremonies Kamal Sidhu and Suresh Venkat conducted the proceedings accompanied by Dutch performer Ken and the Indian rock band The Other People and DJ Hiren.

     

    The focus was clearly on the awards, as 114 in-book winners were announced, with 75 in Advertising, and 39 in Digital. In-book winners were also nominees for Blue Elephants, and among the 114 entries nominated, the two juries awarded 37 Blue Elephants – 24 in Advertising and 13 in Digital. Senior industrypersons presented the awards.

     

    Ogilvy & Mather emerged as the most awarded agency, with three Black and seven Blue Elephants and 45 In-book wins.

     

    Across the advertising categories, 24 Blue Elephant winners included campaigns by Grey Worldwide, Ogilvy & Mather, Publicis India, Sapient, DDB Mudra, Happy Creative Services, BBDO, Ideas@Work, Scarecrow, BBH, Soho Square, Creativeland Asia, First December Films and Candid Marketing.

     

    And at the digital awards, 13 Blue Elephant winners included works by Hungama Digital Services, Creativeland Asia, Fractalink Design Studio, Webchutney, Sapient, 120 Media Collective, BBH India, DDB Mudra, NicheMinds, and Ogilvy & Mather.

     

    Four Black Elephants were awarded to groundbreaking work that redefined the category it was entered in,  by creating a new conversation with its audience, or a transformational impact on the industry.

     

    DDB Mudra was awarded a Black Elephant for The Last Telegram (Category: Direct Response), a direct  response campaign that saw an opportunity to commemorate the final day of India’s telegram service by reminding Birla Life Insurance customers to think about their future.

     

    Ogilvy & Mather took home three Black Elephants in 3 categories –

     

    • The Good Road – Created for Bangalore Traffic Police and Castrol India (Category: Technological Innovation). In the campaign, a helmet was designed to remind bikers about road safety and motorbikes would only start once the helmet was worn by the rider.
    • CleftToSmile – Created for Operation Smile India (Category: Use of Social Media). This social media campaign transformed a simple combination of keyboard characters into an identity and highly successful Twitter campaign for Operation Smile India’s Cleft to Smile initiative.
    • Google ‘Reunion’ – Created for Google India (Category: Online Branded Films). Ogilvy & Mather  created a film that highlighted Google’s search engine by creating a touching story with the India-Pakistan Partition as a backdrop.

     

    Tim Lindsay
    Rajesh Kejriwal

    Tim Lindsay, CEO of D&AD commented: “D&AD is very proud to be partnering with Kyoorius in India. I hope we’ve brought some rigour and transparency to the judging process. Certainly the standard of work  has been fantastic – something we saw demonstrated at D&AD’s own professional awards three weeks ago in London, where Indian agencies had multiple in-book and nomination successes. Our commitment to  this partnership is long-term. We look forward to an increased involvement with the Indian creative community as we develop our New Blood programme with Kyoorius.”

     

    Said Rajesh Kejriwal, Founder CEO of Kyoorius: “Considering this was our first year for the  Advertising Awards & Digital Awards, the response has been outstanding. The 988 entries across  Advertising and Digital are further validation of the Kyoorius Awards format, and our association with D&AD. We will continue to provide a neutral and transparent platform for the Indian creative industry.”

     

    “During the jury sessions, we saw a strong desire from jury members to constantly weigh in and consider the cultural context when judging the work. The importance of staying relevant to the Indian market was never overlooked, especially with the international jury.”

     

    Alongside the Elephant winners all nominations will be featured in the Kyoorius Advertising Awards Annual  and the Kyoorius Digital Awards Annual — distributed across the fraternity and to corporate for creative inspiration

     

     

     

  • List of Blue Elephant Winners – Digital

    KYOORIUS ADVERTISING AWARDS: IN-BOOK

  • @ Kyoorius awards tonight: drinks thru event, drivers will be served dinner, Merus fm 10.30pm onwards. And many awards

    By A Correspondent

     

    It’s the lesser details and the D&AD backed jury process which will make the difference. A few months before the event, Kyoorius founder and CEO Rajesh Kejriwal and his team conducted an extensive research on what people love and loathe at ad and media awards events.

     

    The result will be for us to see this evening at NSCI.  We asked people in the Kyoorius team and they promise the evening to be on an epic scale. It will be a format and scale that is different and probably the first in the industry in terms of the feel, ambience, the detailing on how guests would like to be kept occupied, the scale of the display area, etc.

     

    According to the senior Kyoorius honcho we spoke to, some 1110 RSVPs have been received from industry and clients alike. The total gathering is expected to be in the region of 1350 including over 250 senior people from clients and probably the largest gathering of creatives from agencies this year.

     

    Smaller details like having Meru Cabs organised for people from 10.30 onwards, to organising dinner for all the drivers of guests, to having an interactive smoking area, to having the bar inside the venue and drinks available through the three hours of show with eats floating around. The food menu has been specially created for the evening.

     

    What we have also heard is that there will be no extended entertainment acts or panel discussion held as part of the awards do. No chief guests either. Just a quick presentation

     

    As for the awards, well, they will be declared only at around 10pm. Winners have not been informed in advance.

     

  • Curious about Kyoorius? Meet Rajesh Kejriwal

     

    Alert: this is a looooong, loooooong interview. But after reading what Rajesh Kejriwal,  founder and CEO, Kyoorius says about his advertising awards show scheduled to happen on Thursday, June 12, you’ll be convinced that there is much method to his passion for communication. A disclosure: MxMIndia is a media partner of the Kyoorius Awards,but that didn’t prevent us from asking some ticklish questions 🙂

     

    This should’ve possibly been our last question. But, tell me, if I am from the advertising business, why should I come for the Kyoorius Awards night on June 12?

    We’re aiming it to be the biggest celebration of creativity in India ever. It’s an area where you’ll see a lot of interaction between industry people, meet-and-greet and with clients also. What we’re curating is a very entertaining fun-filled evening. Not entertainment, but entertaining.

     

    I wouldn’t have asked you to compare yourself with any other award function but the fact that you said “biggest ever celebration of creativity” implies you saying that your awards night will be better than the others…

    I’m not saying that I’m going to be better than the others. My aim is to make sure that I’m good. How others project themselves is a different story but you’ve to understand the difference. Kyoorius is one single awards night. The others have a much bigger conference plus multiple awards nights. There are different logistics that come into play in both. Both have their own space. For me, the focus is only the awards.

     

    Over the last few months, there have been many comparisons between Kyoorius and the Abby. People have been talking about the judging procedure, who’s participating in Abby and at your event, etc etc. What’s your view? How would you compare the two? Since you were there at Goafest and witnessed the Abby awards and you know what you’re going be offering, tell us how Kyoorius will be different.

    First, I don’t think we should compare the two. In India I think there’s ample scope for two awards to co-exist as long as they are positioned differently. And my own personal perspective is that the Abby is a popular awards show and we’re more in the mould of a critic’s awards.

     

    The judging criteria, the trophy criteria are all very different. At Abby, there’s a Gold, Bronze, Silver. For every entry, you typically aim to get one Gold, one Silver, One Bronze. Three awards. In our case it’s different. We’re celebrating the Best of the Best work which means we give a trophy to everybody who’s done justice to a particular piece of work. This is the criteria that we’ve set at very high threshold levels. There are categories in which there are about 8 to 9 winners in our awards which you’ll see on June 12t. There are categories in which there are no winners. So there’s no demarcation that you have to award a maximum of three. And that I think is critical because at some point in time if you have 9 or 10 great pieces of work, how do you judge which one should get a gold, which one silver and which one a bronze? The jury decides. It’s an experienced jury. Every great piece of work should be rewarded, not just three great pieces of work within the list of great works.

     

    Tell us more about your judging process. You have some people in your jury who were also there at the Abby jury. And there were international jury members who had the Indian jury helping them out with context.

    Personally, having an Indian jury isn’t enough because you must celebrate work from India that is of global standards. Which is not to say that an Indian jury can’t really think of global standards, but what I mean to say it must touch a chord with international folks too.

     

    You’re talking about creative work. If you see a work, especially in print and outdoor, there’s no cultural difference. The piece of work is either really good, it catches the attention of everybody, internationally and locally and we’d like to award those who strike a chord internationally as well. It must be for all audiences. Any piece of advertising must be made for all audiences.

     

    I was speaking to a digital jury member and he mentioned that the focus at Kyoorius wasn’t as much on digital techniques but more on the idea behind the ad.

    One of the criterion which we feel very strongly about is that it must be an original idea and that it must have relevance to context. That forms a crucial part of our criterion. And juries were asked to debate on that and then vote. This also means that we must have an Indian jury to explain the concept to an international jury.

     

    So before the award happens in Thursday, do the jury members know who’s won?

    No. Other than three people in the world, nobody knows.

     

    And who are these 3?

    Two from D&AD, one from Kyoorius. Officially. As we go along and we make the films for announcement, obviously the production house gets to know.

     

    So leaks possible?

    There are NDAs. No leaks possible.

     

    Given the process of the judging, is there reason to be happier winning a Kyoorius award than any other?

    I’m not sure whether you should feel happy about winning at Kyoorius against something else because it’s not one against the other. I think the key factor of winning at Kyoorius means our judging standards are very high…

     

    …so how many Elephants?

    I know the figure; I won’t reveal it to you (laughs). We received 988 entries, I don’t think more than 4 or 5% will turn out to be eventual winners of the Blue Elephant or the Black Elephant trophy, put together. To answer your earlier question, our standards are very high. You really must’ve done a great piece of work to won an award. That I think is rewarding enough to understand that you’re one amongst those that have done a really great piece of work.

     

    That’s easy math. So 50-odd Elephants?

    Roughly.

     

    And how many Black elephants?

    Ah! Not answering that. I’ve personally signed an NDA with D&AD so I’m not allowed to do that.

     

    One of the jury members said that approximately 20% of the entries of the winners here could be winners at international forums..

    We actually spoke to the international jury members on this fact and some of them have been at juries at D&AD, Cannes, One Show etc and most of them said that it’s sad India doesn’t put in so many entries at D&AD. There were a lot of entries here which could’ve won a D&AD award.

     

    A thousand-odd entries were sent for the Cannes Lions. Do you think you should’ve got more entries?

    I think so too but then you’ve got to realize that Cannes has been there for such a long time and this is the first year for us. A thousand-odd entries is a very respectable figure we’ve got and a very encouraging figure. That means the industry did believe in us. Now the second and more important part is to justify that belief to make it bigger next year.

     

    I don’t won’t try to draw you into a controversy on this, but did you ever feel that there were agencies divided between you and Abby? Especially since Abby was less than a month before yours?

    I do know some agencies which were not divided with us, they were with us. A lot of the other agencies were divided because of the budget constraints. I don’t think it was whether we should go here or there. It was primarily because of the budget. The timing was bad because both ended up happening at the same time and even Cannes is at the same time. So there was this two-week period when the agencies had to plan for all three awards. That became a little bit of a constraint for Goafest and for us too.

     

    Do you think next year you’ll sit across the table with the Goafest committee and possibly decide when each one will be?

    Well, we factored in the Goafest schedule this year too. I purposely kept my awards two months after Goafest. I planned our Call for Entry on the day the Abby judging starts usually. But were delayed and everything went haywire. Clearly, it makes no sense for two national award shows to be happening at the same time. We’re not in competition with each other. Both of us should aim for the betterment of the industry.

     

    Assuming Goafest happens next year in March-end or early April, when will you schedule the Kyoorius Ad Awards?

    I’m not sure but we’ll have a gap of at least a month between the two. I definitely don’t want to clash our Call for Entries or our jury sessions or our awards night. All of them should happen at least with a minimum one-month gap.

     

    Do you feel you were at a disadvantage given that the Abby is organized by the industry and there are many heads at work as against yours which you’re doing individually?

    I think the fact that many heads has both advantages and disadvantages. Sometimes being the sole deciding person is much more helpful. As an organization, they can’t have one person deciding everything. It’s a committee that decides. But having a lot of people who’re busy in their own businesses also has constraints. They are busy people. They have their own businesses to run, they’re doing honorary jobs. While it’s great that they take out time, there’s also a constraint. I think what works best for us is that while I could call on you for advice, I could call on somebody else to say hey, what do you think about this? I have a similar number of people as advisors but I’m the only decision-maker. So I can move more quickly, I can execute more quickly. They may have 10 people. All 10 of them must agree on something. Otherwise it’s a battle internally. I also may have 10 people. But I don’t have to battle against anyone. I just casually ask people, get their opinion, formulate a plan and execute it.

     

    I was speaking to a senior industryperson at Goafest who had a comment on the D&AD process. He wondered 6 or 8 jury members can do justice to 600 or 700 entries? In terms of time spent, will they be able to do justice to all entries and categories?

    It depends on the time. They were there for 3 full days and we were working from 8 in the morning to almost 8 in the evening. So when you look at that, there was plenty of time for them to do justice to all of them. I don’t think it makes sense to have 70 or 80 jury members for 1000 entries. There are 7 jury members, 9 different categories. When you cut across all of them, each jury member is judging 70 to 80 members in each category. That’s not relatively a large number. You’re not talking about 1000 films which could be very tiring to watch 1000 films and judge  for 7 people. We’re talking about 7 different categories and 34 sub-categories. If you divide the total number of categories, you have 30 or 40 or maximum 50 per category. So every jury member is just concentrating at one time on anywhere between 20 to 50 entries. That’s not difficult. The point here is if you curate it properly, you never have a problem.

     

    Are you happy with the way your relationship with D&AD has moved?

    Very happy. They’ve been great partners. They’ve supported us totally. Both of us are non-profit so we have no ulterior or commercial motive to do things differently or be non-credible. Whether we get 1000 or 5000 entries it doesn’t matter. The revenue matters because the surplus goes back into the industry. We’ll never lower our standards. We’re not commercial. We have no political or commercial agenda.

     

    Then why are you doing it? You aren’t an industry body. You’re not any advertising or creative association…

    Neither is D&AD.

     

    So why is Kyoorious doing the awards? If you’re not for profit, why do it?

    We’re not doing awards for the sake of awards itself. We’re doing it because we think there’s a genuine need to have a different, very credible, transparent show of very high standards. I don’t think there’s any association or any body or any individual company doing anything to stimulate the young people in the Indian industry. And that’s our goal: stimulating the entire creative industry? How can we get youngsters to be more inspired, more innovative, think differently? To do that we’ll be doing a lot of master classes, workshops etcetera..

     

    I appreciate your commitment to the quality and standards. Am just trying to figure what’s motivating you to be involved in a not-for-profit venture?

    All of Kyoorius is born out of a passion of a not-for-profit venture for the industry. We did design because design had nothing going for them and it just branched out into advertising because there’s a gap there that can also help us help the advertising professionals.

     

    That’s one helluva effort for passion!

    All the hair on my head is lost because of the passion. Not because of that business (laughs).

     

    But if you’d spent the same amount of passion on your business, you’ve possibly made a lot more money.

    If my brother was present here, he’d tell me, this is what I keep telling you. It’s a constant struggle. When we started off Kyoorious as a not-for-profit division, the whole idea was we’ll do a few meaningful initiatives to fuel a design movement in India, to fuel a creative movement in India to stimulate the industry. I didn’t anticipate this will become so big. But you could see the hunger in the audience for such type of content. And then it would’ve been very mean not to make it bigger for the people who are benefitting from it.

     

    But beyond a point, an award show like this is not really fuelling your bread-and-butter business of paper, right?

    Beyond a point, no.

     

    Is there a positive rub-off?

    There’s a positive rub-off because you’ve changed your impression from being a paper vendor to being a friend of the industry. You know people more intimately. There’s a certain amount of loyalty that comes across. But at the end of the day, it’s still a commercial business. So beyond a point as you said, it doesn’t make sense. But we’ve crossed that point now and there’s no looking back.

     

    I’d asked you this question last year around the time of the design awards and I want to ask it again. Why is it called Kyoorious Awards and why not the D&AD awards?

    One reason is that it’s an Indian initiative. It can’t be called D&AD awards. D&AD already has global awards. D&AD is now looking at partnerships like the one with  Kyoorious in Brazil and a few other countries. You can’t really have five D&AD awards happening everywhere. So, obviously the local name must be attached to it. The second point you could make is why isn’t it called Kyoorious D&AD awards? The reason is that there is a memorandum, an articles of association at D&AD which was formed a long time back. This didn’t allow D&AD to do certain things. They may change in future..

     

    We do have an EFFIE-India as well.

    All of those are American organizations which are more commercially-led. So they don’t mind. D&AD is actually an educational charity formed for the betterment of the UK creative industry. While they became global awards but it was meant for the betterment of the UK. Now they’re branching out to be a global institution. Ours is the first partnership they’ve had in 50 years. They do say it’s very difficult to find a partner like Kyoorious. They may not have similar partners everywhere.

     

    You mentioned earlier that it will be an entertaining evening but not an entertainment evening. Tell us more about the event. Will you have a stand-up comedian?!

    Well, everything that you do in life as an awards company or as a conference company has to be curated keeping in mind as to what serves the best interests of the audience there. Now there are different reasons why people come here. One of the most important reasons why people should come to such awards or conferences is networking. You meet industry people, you talk to them, you enjoy, you feel proud that you’re part of this industry. That’s necessary. You have to leave time for that. If I have to watch a singer or if I watch a stand-up act, I can go and watch that separately. That’s not the reason I’m there. I’m there to meet my people, to be a part of the industry. I need to know who’s winning or what I’m winning, cheer and celebrate the winners and have a good time and leave.

     

    I thought people in advertising want a good drink. That was the essential part.

    That’s essential but that’s part of the curation of the whole thing. It’s attention to detail. What kind of food they like? Do they like drinks through the evening or do you stop the drinks when the show starts? It’s paying attention to these small details.

     

    The all-important question:  Are drinks going to be served when the awards are on?

    Yes, in a very unique way. Different from the other award shows.

     

    Tell us more… who’s performing? Who’s the Chief Guest? Emcee?

    Well, we researched a fair bit on what people like and don’t like in award shows. I think one of the key factors is that once you start the awards, you need to just start and finish asap. People are anxious to know who’s won. There’s the anticipation. You shouldn’t break it by having anything in the middle. So we don’t have any break. We start and finish the award show in one go. The second is the small things I spoke about. You can’t stop the drinks and expect the people to be locked up in a room cheering for three hours.

     

    One last question: Now that the Kyoorious Awards are set to happen on on Thursday, do you have more enemies than friends in the advertising industry?

    I don’t I have made enemies. I’m very grateful and happy that the industry has embraced the fact that there’s space for two awards and there’s no reason one should exist and another shouldn’t. Budgetary constraints may mean both of us won’t get as many entries as we’d wished for. Goafest might still get more because it’s an industry body and it’s a body that the industry should support. But I think there’s ample scope for both and we haven’t had made any enemies so far. I haven’t made any enemies. We’re all all great friends…

     

  • We’ll look hard at strategy, what the ad is trying to do: Neil Dawson, Kyoorius Awards

     

    Save the three years in South Africa, he has spent his entire career in London. His ‘Weddin’ ad for Volkswagen Surprisingly Ordinary Prices has, for over a decade, been the most awarded print ad in history.

     

    And his ‘Fish’ commercial re-launched the Keep Walking campaign for Johnnie Walker globally. As Chief Creative officer on the Phillips account, he won back- to-back Cannes Grand Prix in 2009 for Phillips Carousel and 2010 for Phillips Parallel Lines.

     

    He was the ECD on the recent worldwide campaign for Bacardi – Untameable since 1862. With long time creative partner Clive Pickering, Neil  has recently launched London’s newest ad agency -  Dawson Pickering.

     

    Meet Neil Dawson, Foreman of the Kyoorius Awards jury. For three days starting today, Neil and a set of national and international jury, will pore over some of the top creative work done by Indian advertising agencies over the last year.

     

    On the eve of the jury meet being held in Mumbai, Neil took some questions from MxMIndia.

     

    Here we go:

     

    There’s a lot of anticipation for the maiden D&AD-Kyoorius Awards jury session. Are there any broad rules, Do’s and Don’ts that you are going to be setting out for your jury?

    One of the key points for me is that we look hard at the strategy, what the ad is trying to do. I’ve seen a trend in awards entries of ads that simply describe what the product does rather than find a new and different insight.

     

    How familiar are you with advertising in India? And your views on our advertising?

    Having done an international role on Philips and worked closely with India, I have a ‘fairly’ good understanding of Indian work. But I can’t claim to be an expert. I will be relying on my local judges to fill in the gaps.

     

    I have a general sense that a lot of Indian work is upbeat and fun – And there’s nothing wrong with that. Consumers are thankful of brands that convey a message in a positive way.

     

    While India has a rich past of storytelling and our advertising industry has attracted top draw talent, we don’t do very well at the international awards. What would you attribute as the reason for this?

    I think it’s no more than the international are harder to win than one thinks. The competition is extremely fierce. If agencies keep doing right by the consumer, awards will come.

     

    You have a good mix of international and domestic creative biggies? Have you interacted with them already? Your comments on the mix of the jury?

    I’ve judged with a few of them before so am looking forward to seeing them again. My feeling is that the jury is of a decent size and international mix to get the right results.

     

    The D&AD is very British, and one may add hence very propah. Having spent most of your career in London, what are the values that D&AD brings to an ad award? And what would you say should the winner at the Kyoorius Awards be proud of (given the standards)?

    Integrity. That comes with a not-for-profit organization that has one aim: the good of the industry. We need to protect the value of creativity. Clients need to believe it is a powerful force for their business not just an agency pastime. We are going to be hard and we don’t have to fill gold, silver and bronze slots so winning at Kyoorius will be a real achievement.

     

    As the jury foreman of an Indian awards, have you prepared yourself in any way or would you say creativity has no language?

    I saw Mandela come to power in South Africa and worked in the Rainbow Nation of 14 official languages. Ideas had to transcend language. Creativity is universal, and any local nuances will hopefully be explained by our Indian jurors.

     

    One last question: this is the first time we are seeing multiple advertising awards. You have many of them in the UK and elsewhere internationally. Is there intense competition between the awards or do all co-exist? Does the existence of multiple awards impact the participation of some agencies because of limited budgets for spends on entries?

    In the UK, awards do co-exist but, yes, there’s only a finite amount of money agencies can spend, so there is competition. Amusingly, everyone claims to be part of the Gunn Report ! My feeling is that not-for-profit awards like Kyoorius should be enthusiastically supported because long-term the whole industry wins.

     

     

     

  • Ogilvy to participate in Kyoorius Awards. Leo Burnett entries in too

    By A Correspondent

     

    Okay, it’s official. Ogilvy is participating in an Indian creative advertising awards event this year.  This was confirmed to MxMIndia by Abhijit Avasthi, National Creative Director, Ogilvy via the agency spokesperson.

     

    It may be recalled that Ogilvy had chosen to not participate in the Creative Abby last year (2013) and this is the second successive year when the agency – which has traditionally dominated the awards tally – has stayed away.

     

    According to a Kyoorius official, Leo Burnett, which was rumoured to be staying away from all awards this year, has sent in entries.

     

    Although the entries closed yesterday (May 5), given some requests from a few agencies, a few entries will be accepted till early tomorrow morning (May 7).

     

    Meanwhile, the entries for the Abby at Goafest have also closed and according to numbers that Goafest organising committee members have informally told us, the aggregate number of entries for all the Abby – Creative, Media, Digital, Broadcast, PR and others – is in the region of 2700. An Advertising Club officebearer told MxMIndia that a communiqué will be issued on the numbers.

     

  • Kyoorius Awards jury meet now in Mumbai, sessions to be open for public viewing. Digital jury announced

    By A Correspondent

     

    As the deadline approaches to receiving entries to the Kyoorius Advertising & Digital Awards (it’s today, May 5), the D&AD-backed Awards has announced that its jury meet will be held in Mumbai and not in New Delhi. In an attempt to bring in complete transparency and in line with the standards set by D&AD internationally, the advertising and digital awards jury sessions will be open for public viewing after prior online registration.

     

    The jury sessions will be held at the NSCI in Mumbai from May 13 to 15 for advertising and May 16 and 17 for digital.

     

    Members of the industry and media are invited to be a part of the jury sessions and afforded a unique opportunity to view entries first-hand, understand the judging process, and watch the debate amongst the jury members, who comprise some of the top international, regional, and Indian creative minds.

     

    From defining the format and scope of the Awards, to the selection of judges and jury process Kyoorius & D&AD continue to work closely with the industry itself to facilitate and enable creativity in India. These efforts are aimed at inspiring and supporting the creative community, with a focus on creative education. All entry fees are fed back to the industry, in the form of educational programmes such as Kyoorius FYIdays.

     

    For the Kyoorius Advertising Awards the jury will be lead foreman and D&AD’s Past President – Rosie Arnold – Deputy Executive Creative Director, BBH, Abhijit Avasthi – National Creative Director, Ogilvy & Mather, Agnello Dias – Chairman & Co-Founder, Taproot India, Graham Kelly – Regional Executive Creative Director, Isobar, Neil Dawson – Partner, Dawson Pickering, Senthil Kumar – National Creative Director, JWT, Sonal Dabral – Chairman & Chief Creative Officer, DBB Mudra Group and Woon Siew Hoh – Regional Executive Creative Director, Hakuhudo.

     

    The Kyoorius Digital Awards will be led by Jury Foreman & D&AD’s current President – Laura Jordan Bambach – Creative Partner, Mr. President, Benjy Choo – Founder & Creative Director, Kilo Studio, Carlton d’Silva – Chief Creative Officer, Hungama Digital Services, Graham Kelly – Regional Executive Creative Director, Isobar and Karl Gomes – Chief Fanatic, Fanatics.