Tag: Leo Burnett

  • Dheeraj Sinha to join Leo Burnett as CSO South Asia

    By A Correspondent

     

    Leo Burnett has announced the appointment of Dheeraj Sinha as Chief Strategy Officer. Dheeraj will be based out of the agency’s Mumbai office and will be responsible for planning across South Asia.

     

    In a career spanning 17 years, Dheeraj has worked with McCann Erickson, Euro RSCG, Bates and Grey. In his last role, he led the strategic planning function for Grey in India, South & South East Asia.

     

    Saurabh Varma, Chief Executive Officer – South Asia, said, “We are really excited that Dheeraj is joining us at this critical juncture in our evolution as an agency. We have incredible momentum as a team and both Raj and I were in the hunt for a partner. We wanted someone who can join us in our crusade to change the communication narrative in India. With Dheeraj we hope to get radical convergence around our purpose and radical divergence around how to get there.”

     

    Dheeraj Sinha commented on his joining, “There’s great energy around Leo Burnett in India, and I am looking forward to be a part of it and adding to the momentum. In my conversations with Saurabh and Raj, what stands out is their commitment to the product and culture, leading to growth, rather than the other way round. There’s also a serious ambition to create work that’s in line with how the world has changed. They have evidence of having done such work in the recent past. I see this as an opportunity to collaborate and build something that we can all be proud of.”

     

    Dheeraj has worked on brands and businesses across markets such as Malaysia, Singapore, Indonesia, Vietnam and Bangladesh. He has spent time across categories on brands like Sensodyne, Indian Army, Britannia, 3M, ITC Juices, Maybank, Telekom Malaysia, Grameenphone, Reliance Mobile, Colgate, MasterCard, LG, DBS Bank, Tata AIA, TVS, Virgin Mobile, Max Bupa, Fiat, Reckitt Benckiser, Emirates, Dabur, Marico and CavinKare.

     

    Dheeraj is the author of two books on the Indian consumer market:  “India Reloaded – Inside the Resurgent Indian Consumer Market” and “Consumer India – Inside the Indian Mind and Wallet”.

     

    He is also a three times winner of the prestigious Atticus Awards and has won several effectiveness awards, including the Jay Chiat Planning Award, the Asian Marketing Effectiveness Award, Yahoo Big Idea Chair APAC Effies and the Effie awards in India.

     

  • Rajeev Sharma exits Leo Burnett

    By A Correspondent

     

    After spending more than 23 years at the agency, Rajeev Sharma, National Planning Director, Leo Burnett, has decided to move on to explore newer avenues.

     

    Rajeev joined Leo Burnett in 1994 as Vice President based out of the agency’s Delhi office and after three years in the role he moved to Mumbai to lead Planning as National Planning Director.

     

    For 23 years, Rajeev spearheaded strategy for many brands and partnered them in their success for years together. Some of the brands he has worked on include McDonald’s, Godrej Consumer Products, Bajaj Auto, Heinz, Complan, Glucon D, Thums Up, Maaza, Minute Maid, Limca, Reebok, Ariel, Ezee, Cinthol, Bajaj Electricals, HDFC Life, HDFC Bank, Anchor, Sony Entertainment Television, Tata Capital, Dabur, Pillsbury, Iodex, etc.

     

    Rajeev has played a significant role in building Leo Burnett’s reputation as India’s most trusted integrated communications company that has a sharp focus on strategy.

     

    He is also instrumental in bringing Leo Burnett’s best global practices to India.

     

    Says Rajeev Sharma, “After 23 years, it is time for me to bid a fond farewell to a fabulous organisation, amazing colleagues and equally amazing clients. I am proud of what the agency stands for, for what it has achieved and what it is in the process of becoming. The momentum we have gained recently will give us the scale and the capability to play a big role in the transformation the industry is going through. As I prepare for the next chapter of my life, I shall watch with great satisfaction, the success Leo Burnett is sure to notch up in the future.”

     

    Adds Saurabh Varma, Chief Executive Officer – South Asia, Leo Burnett, “Rajeev set up Leo Burnett’s planning function from scratch and since then has led a robust team that has grown many brands in complex market scenarios, in the process winning many awards. Under his leadership, we produced some of the most iconic and culturally rooted campaigns by approaching consumers through a human lens. I thank Rajeev wholeheartedly and wish him the very best for his future endeavours.”

     

  • FCB Ulka appoints Saad Khan as VP, Strategic Planning

    By A Correspondent

     

    Saad Khan

    FCB Ulka Advertising announced the appointment of Saad Khan as Vice President, Strategic Planning. Saad has spent over 17 years building brands and has worked with some of the biggest advertising houses in India like Leo Burnett, Lowe Lintas, Dentsu Marcomm and Euro RSCG. In 2011, he founded ‘Marketing Unplugged’ along with Suman Srivastava.

     

    Commenting on Saad’s appointment Suman Srivastava, Vice Chairman – Strategic Planning, FCB Ulka Group said, “Saad is one of the most creative planners that I have ever worked with. Many creative people have told me that they love working with Saad because he makes their job easy. To me that is the highest compliment that a planner can get. I have worked with Saad almost continuously for the last 10 years and it is great to have him as part of the strategic planning team at FCB Ulka.”

     

    Suman Srivastava

    Saad started his career as a management trainee at Leo Burnett. His passion for brands and finding innovative strategic solutions for clients led him to being given independent charge of Coca-Cola regional and key account businesses. He has a rich cross category experience having worked on brands like Coca-Cola, Wills Lifestyle, Honda, Jack Daniel’s, Voltas, Max New York Life, Volvo and Reckitt Benckiser. Saad loves to challenge formulaic marketing. Being inspired by the fresh wave thinking happening in the sphere of behavioural economics and consumer understanding, Saad brings in a larger perspective beyond just advertising. He strongly advocates the philosophy of ‘helping businesses innovate’.

     

    Speaking on his new role, Saad Khan, Vice President, Strategic Planning, FCB Ulka said, “Excited to be back in the business of advertising after consulting. It is like coming back to the alma mater.  There is a lot of energy and fervour at FCB Ulka which is infectious, and this agency culture driven by Rohit Ohri and Suman Srivastava, will propel me to do work which is distinctive and brave and will help client businesses stand out and grow.”

     

  • Leo Burnett crafts new philosophy for HP Lubricants

    By A Correspondent

     

    Zindagi Chale Smooth, a modern narrative designed by Leo Burnett India for HP Lubricants, highlights the brand’s sheer strength and the role it plays through its superior technology in smoothening people’s lives. The company is able to achieve this through presence across various segments like automotive, defence, farming, mining, shipping industries, railways and more.

     

    Created by Leo Burnett, the new positioning Zindagi Chale Smooth marks a shift in the brand’s marketing focus from being perceived as an engine oil company to a humane brand; one that builds innovative products and technologies for today’s consumer.

     

    Zindagi Chale Smooth is a human expression of the brand’s core offering. An animation film is being used to launch the thought ‘A to Z, Aapke Kaam Aate Hum’, which breaks category codes and highlights the company’s diversified and large scale operations through which it touches the lives of millions, making HP Lubricants a super brand.

     

    Saurabh Varma, Chief Executive Officer – South Asia, Leo Burnett, said, “HP Lubricants had not undergone a brand refresh for a very long time. Given the current market scenario, we wanted our joint efforts to build a modern narrative that gives the end consumer an accurate idea about HP Lubricants. A company that has strong presence across sectors and not just engine oil.

     

    A to Z Aapke Kaam Aatey Hai helps build higher emotional affinity and rightly captures what the brand stands for, which is to power India. And this is not just a communication change, but a part of a larger exercise being undertaken by us to align this purpose right down to packaging design.”

     

    Raj Deepak Das, Chief Creative Officer, Leo Burnett, added, “Most people do not know the incredible products HP Lubricants has and the role the brand plays in our everyday life. We wanted to do that in a simple and human way.” Zindagi Chale Smooth is an integrated effort spanning across digital, print, retail, cinema, outdoor and TV.

     

    While the TVC has been launched, print, retail, cinema and digital campaigns are expected to go live post 8th March 2016.

     

  • Leo Burnett wins General Mills

    Leo Burnett has bagged the integrated communications mandate for the entire product portfolio of General Mills in a multi-agency pitch. Most top agencies participated in the process, notes a communique. BBDO India serviced the account until this development.

     

    It may be rememebered that Leo Burnett was instrumental in launching the Pillsbury brand in India. According to sources, with Pillsbury facing the heat in the market, there is need for a new creative thrust and hence the need to look at change of agency.

     

    On the decision to choose Leo Burnett as the creative partner, Salil Murthy, Marketing Director, General Mills India, has said officially: “Getting the right creative partners on board is an important first step in realising our growth potential in India. There is incredible opportunity for us as Indian consumers are increasingly opting for better quality food products that make their lives healthier, easier and richer. Our products across Pillsbury Atta, Cake Mixes, Chocolate Spreads and RTC food mixes deliver exceptionally well on providing great taste and convenience in cooking with our unique quick and easy to prepare food solutions. Looking ahead, we will expand our product portfolio and back that with strategic communication to truly win with consumers. Leo Burnett is best placed with capabilities across the communication spectrum to deliver that and we hope to see some exciting integrated work.”

     

    Said Saurabh Varma, CEO – South Asia, Leo Burnett, “In the era of changing consumer trends and lifestyles, we have a clear mandate to redefine the purpose for General Mills and boost consumer preference and loyalty for all their brands, namely – Pillsbury, Nature Valley, Betty Crocker and more.”

     

     

  • Leo Burnett promotes Saurabh Varma to CEO South Asia

    By A Correspondent

     

    Jarek Ziebinski, Chairman & Chief Executive Officer (CEO), Leo Burnett Asia Pacific announced the promotion of Saurabh Varma, currently CEO of Leo Burnett India, to CEO for the agency’s operations in South Asia. The appointment, effective as of November 17th 2015, sees Varma charged with responsibilities for Leo Burnett agencies across Mumbai, New Delhi, Bangalore, Chennai, Sri Lanka, Pakistan and Bangladesh.

     

    “South Asia is an important region for Leo Burnett from our global strategy perspective. With Saurabh’s appointment, we want to further enhance connectivity of our operations across these dynamic markets to drive business growth for our clients and the agency” said Ziebinski. Continued Ziebinski,” Having been at Leo Burnett for close to a decade, Saurabh has consistently proven himself in his roles as the regional chief strategy officer and recently as CEO of Leo Burnett India. He is without a doubt, the best candidate to lead our South Asia operations to the next level.”

     

    Varma added, “We have incredible operations across Pakistan, Sri Lanka and Bangladesh. I look forward to working with some incredibly talented leaders to build new age specialist functions across all markets and create larger futures for our clients.”

     

    Prior to his role as CEO of Leo Burnett India, Varma was the Chief Strategy Officer for Asia-Pacific where he oversaw all heads of strategy and planning directors in the region. Since he took over the helm as CEO of Leo Burnett India two years ago, the agency has consistently delivered double-digit business growth. Under his leadership, Leo Burnett also doubled the size of Indigo Digital Consulting’s business and successfully expanded its operations, launching Indigo consulting in New Delhi. He also launched Leo Experience across Mumbai, Delhi and Bangalore, and more recently shopper practice in Mumbai. As a result of his work, Leo Burnett now has a strong leadership team across all specialisations in India and solid plan for growth in the next three years. Varma was also instrumental in establishing the new affiliate partnership in Pakistan with AdCom, one of the largest independent advertising agencies in the market.

     

  • Leo Burnett wins HPCL biz in multi-agency pitch

    By A Correspondent

     

    Leo Burnett has won the creative mandate for Hindustan Petroleum Corporation Limited (HPCL) in a multi-agency pitch. With this, Leo Burnett will continue to partner the brand in helping them achieve their business objectives.

     

    Rakesh Hinduja

    Confirming the win, Rakesh Hinduja, Executive Vice President, Leo Burnett India, said, “I’m delighted that the strategic roadmap we presented during the pitch process was spot on and in complete sync with the client’s vision. This is an exciting phase both for the brand and for us, where the objective is to adopt a fresh communication approach and create a new language which consumers across the country could relate to in a much better way. I’m optimistic that with our multidisciplinary team working seamlessly on the account, we will surpass the client’s expectations and help the brand attain greater heights of success.”

     

    Leo Burnett was empanelled by HPCL in 2008 and since then has been their creative partner.

     

  • BTL Baatein: Vandana Verma, Leo Burnett… Powered by VISCOMM

    Vandana Verma has worked with leading organisations in the two decades that she has worked in the marketing services sector. Teamwork Films, TIC Integrated Marketing Services, Big Live, Ogilvy & Mather where she headed North at Ogilvy Action Live, Mudra Max (VP and Country Head, Mudra Celsius) and since 2012 as with Leo Burnett where she is now Executive Vice President and Head of Experience. In this edition of BTL Baatein, Vandana Verma speaks on how experiential is the oxygen brands need to survive in the marketplace, and more…

    What is the importance of BTL in the world of advertising and promotions?

    Experiential is the oxygen brands need to survive in the marketplace. While mainstream advertising works as an announcement platform for most brands, experiential initiatives help brands cover the last mile and trigger purchase decisions.

     

    What would you say is that the importance marketers given to BTL activity in their overall marketing plan?

    Marketers today understand the need for Experiential. They do realise that experiential solutions is the only way to deliver communication that is targeted at a specific kind of audience. It gives marketers a chance to tailor their message in a more personalised way and establish a stronger connect with consumers.

     

    ROI measurement on traditional platforms is fraught with issues, but not in the case of Experiential. Tracking down campaign performance in an accurate manner is easier and less complicated in Experiential and that’s a huge plus. Marketers are increasingly becoming fans of Experiential. No wonder we are seeing so many agencies enter this space.

     

    In Experiential, one can gather feedback easily and take corrective actions immediately in case of any crisis.  Something mainstream advertising can never achieve.

     

    Are there certain types of marketers who have a greater affinity for BTL? (eg FMCG, durables, auto, etc)

     

    My answer would be NO. The average spends on experiential across brands is about 35-40%, which has risen from 15% three years ago. Activations are most commonly used for sales promotions, branding, launches, channel partner appeasement, channel expansion and lead generation. There are different objectives for different activities. These requirements would remain across categories of marketers.

     

    Typically what is the break-up of spends….ATL v/s BTL?

     

    35-40% BTL, balance ATL and Digital.

     

    Can you also specify the range of activities that you propose to undertake as part of the below-the-line advertising and promotion for your clients?

     

    Leo Burnett Experience is a specialist unit that offers holistic experiential solutions to clients including activation, events and exhibitions and rural marketing across metros and 5,000 small towns and cities. We function in an integrated manner by collaborating with a multi-disciplinary team of strategists and creators.

     

    In terms of generating results esp from consumers and in B2B, do you find BTL a more sureshot avenue than ATL?

    Strategy driven experiential solutions have always guaranteed results for our clients. Going forward we will explore new ways of solving business problems for our clients.

     

    While sales and salience are good indicators of its success, what are the attributes you/your clients look at to measure the success of a BTL campaign?

     

    ROI is an obvious measure and every client would use that as a measurement tool, but what clients also look at is the quality of engagement your idea brings to the table. Experiential also seamlessly enables integration across all other media. Most agencies struggle in this regard as they lack the skillsets and the capabilities to enable real integration. Integration of specialists to solve a single brand problem. That’s what makes us unique.

     

    There are many organisations who often do new launches almost entirely on BTL aided with an outdoor and/or digital blitz? Your view on this. Given rising media costs, do you see BTL managing on its own, without ATL?

     

    We are still at an early stage where clients do not truly understand the role of BTL in growing their business. Most still treat it as just one part of the media mix. However, we at Leo Burnett, are blessed with some clients like Bajaj Auto, Mc Donalds, ITC foods, Coke etc., whom we have partnered in their journey building where BTL plays a substantial role.

     

    I don’t think any major brand entirely depends experiential to achieve what it wants to in the marketplace. Integration is key.

     

    Do you have a view on BTL? Would you like to engage in a conversation on BTL marketing and promotions? Write to us at editor@mxmindia.com with BTL Baatein in the subject line

     

  • Leo Burnett launches Leo Burnett Experience

    By A Correspondent

     

    The Leo Burnett Group India announced the launch of Leo Burnett Experience, a specialist unit that will focus on rural marketing, activation, events and exhibitions across metros and 5,000 small towns and cities.

     

    Leo Burnett Experience has a pan-India presence with a team of 40 professionals working on some iconic brands in the country such as Dabur, Vodafone, Uninor, McDonald’s, ITC Foods, OnePlus, Amazon, P&G, Fiat, Axis Bank, Ruchi Group, and Bajaj Discover.

     

    Leo Burnett Experience offers a unique solution for brands and operates under its global philosophy of PLAY, BUY, SHARE. Vandana Verma, Executive Vice President, Leo Burnett Experience, will oversee the division’s operations. She will report to Group CEO Saurabh Varma and will be based out of Leo Burnett India’s Mumbai office.

     

    Apart from Vandana, the leadership team of Leo Burnett Experience includes Nishith Sharma (National Creative Director), Ankit Grower (Head of North and East), Pratik Maitra (Head of South), Sandesh Shetty (Head of National Operations) and Kiran Dodiya (Head of West).

     

    Commenting on the occasion, Saurabh Varma, CEO, The Leo Burnett Group India, says, “One of our key HumanKind pillars is participation. It is my belief that the future is in creating experiential platforms. Our unique methodology of PLAY, BUY, SHARE gives Leo Burnett Experience a truly differentiated offering. Already it is the fastest growing part our business. And our ambition is to add technology to create immersive experiences for consumers.”

     

    Vandana Verma, Head of Leo Burnett Experience throws some light on the division’s unique offering, “ROI is the biggest black hole in India’s experiential industry. None of the existing agencies seem to effectively manage crisis and identify likely risks that affect ROI. At Leo Burnett Experience we give foremost importance to foreseeing risks and managing real time crisis to maximize the output for clients. Our revenue growth has been significant in the last 18 months. Going forward we will build on this momentum and surpass the industry average growth of 25%. We define our objectives clearly and develop strategies based on HumanKind’s philosophy of building brands and changing human behavior using creativity. As for the most exciting opportunity – it is the rural markets, where brands are increasingly demanding strategy based experiential services – a big gap in the industry which we will address. These are surely exciting times at Leo Burnett Experience.”

     

  • HDS appoints Surya Narayanan as Biz Head

    By A Correspondent

     

    Surya Narayanan

    Hungama Digital Services has brought on board Surya Narayanan as the Head of Business.   Surya comes in with over 12 years of experience of having worked across geographies in countries like India, Indonesia, Kenya and West Africa. Besides digital marketing, Surya has the experience of working in traditional creative agencies including JWT and Leo Burnett.   Announcing his appointment, Carlton D’Silva, CEO and CCO, HDS, said, “Surya has made the perfect and successful transition between traditional and digital advertising. Not only does he have a great business mind but he is an ideas man too. This is quite a rarity and it is this business & medium knowledge that Surya will bring to HDS to enable us to reach greater heights and wins moving forward.”

     

    Surya has developed and executed campaigns for leading brands such as McDonald’s, Diageo, Standard Chartered Bank, Vodafone, Safari.com, Airtel and AEGON.

     

    “After having worked in various online and offline agencies in India and abroad across the last 12 years, it’s good to be back home. I am very excited to work with the young and dynamic team at HDS. It would be my honour and privilege to work with Carlton and the talented team at HDS. Looking forward to apply the learning of the past decade in this new challenge”, said Surya Narayanan on his joining HDS.

     

    Prior to HDS, Surya was the General Manager, West Africa for Squad Digital based out of Ghana. Outside a regular workday, Surya loves to read, watch movies and enjoys his coffee.

     

  • Fortis rolls out first ever brand campaign

    By A Correspondent

     

    Fortis Healthcare Limited (Fortis) has launched its pan-India brand campaign TVC with ‘Excellence Uncompromised’ as its central theme.

     

    This is Fortis’s first multi-platform brand exercise, spanning television, digital (web & social), print, outdoor, and cinema. The television commercial (TVC), created by Leo Burnett will be aired on all General Entertainment and News channels from July 31, 2015. The ad film will be screened in cinema halls and across all digital platforms.

     

    The campaign’s objective is to build equity for ‘Brand Fortis’. Hospital choice in India is primarily driven by the choice of empanelled doctors, and there’s little that any healthcare provider has done to create its own brand. Thus, this is a first endeavor not just for Fortis but a first in the healthcare industry, whereby the aim is to build positive associations and expectations from the ‘hospital brand’, that leads people to trust every doctor that they see at that hospital. Fortis wants to build this positioning and create preference by highlighting its superior medical expertise and proven clinical excellence.

     

    As part of the campaign, Fortis has also launched Hands of Hope initiative to provide life-saving medical treatment to the underprivileged children suffering from critical conditions. Everyone can participate in this noble initiative by logging in to the microsite via their Facebook or Twitter accounts. Every new member becomes a Hand of Hope. The more number of people that join this virtual human chain, Fortis will be able to undertake those many more medical interventions at its own cost, as for every person joining, Fortis is going to contribute 1 Re towards treatment of children in need of live saving healthcare solutions.

     

    The TVC captures the story of young Amar Agarwal who suffers from end-stage heart failure at a tender age. His parents run from pillar to post in search of treatment for their only child. They are turned down by couple of doctors due to lack of expertise to treat such critical illness. In the end, a doctor refers the family to Fortis where the child undergoes a complex heart transplant and giving him a new lease of life.

     

    “We wanted to tell the story of our brand in the most believable and humane way, especially because the TVC is based on a true story of a Fortis patient. Hence we looked at a very real style of storytelling. Thus what we’ve ended up creating is almost like a short film or a docu-drama, where the Brand is just a meaningful participant in the story, as against a typical ad commercial” said Gaurav Dudeja, Head – Marketing, Fortis Healthcare.

     

    Ravpreet Ganesh, Executive Vice President, Leo Burnett added that “We thought its best to tell the story from a patient’s lens and not from the brand’s perspective. The idea was to establish an emotional connect with patients and their families. Thus, the emotion of hope became center stage of this campaign. Hope is all a family has when they are living with a disease, and we through our campaign we have tried to establish how Fortis intervenes to keep this emotion of Hope stay alive.”

     

  • Tough & wanting to be in the Top 5

     

    Saurabh Varma, CEO, Leo Burnett, was considered an ‘outsider’ when he took charge of the network of agencies 18 months ago. But that didn’t stop him from taking some bold steps in acquiring talent, setting goals, and generally shaking up an organisation that was doing well. But, as Varma tells Pradyuman Maheshwari, just being among the best in India is not enough. He wants Leo Burnett’s India operations to be counted among the Top 5 in the world in two years. And he doesn’t mind being the tough taskmaster boss as long as achieves results.

     

    It’s been a year-and-a-half since you came in. How has been the journey so far, between Leo Burnett then and now?

    It’s been 18-odd months but it seems like a lifetime. For us, the journey always starts with a shared belief and common purpose for collaboration. If you ask any of the leaders or youngsters who have joined us, in the last 18 months, we’ve managed to make sure everybody understands what our shared belief is. As an organisation, we want to become among the Top 5 creative agencies in the world by 2017. Once you have that overall vision, it’s about having a clear strategic roadmap to get there. And that is a function of structures, systems, people, the talent you hire, how you brand yourself in the marketplace and the kind of product you create. In the last 18 months, we’ve been very focused on our growth strategy, which is around integration and specialisation. Integration is not equal to generalisation; it’s not an idea that travels across different media. True integration is when you have a bunch of specialists working together to create magic. We’ve been focused on building our specialist pillars one by one, making sure they have the ability to work with each other. Every client wants integration, but not at the cost of not having specialisation.

     

    Burnett wasn’t doing badly when you took charge. So why the need to reinvent and fix things?

    In 2013, we were already the Creative Agency of the Year, but our benchmark was India. We were not looking to become the best in the world. Now we are. If you don’t refocus on a new strategic mission, on a new ambition, you will become complacent and not move forward. That’s why the need to reinvent.

     

    For us, this journey is a function of three things — people, product and profits. Profits are critical in the overall scheme of things, because our belief is, great creativity across centuries has only happened when you have prosperity. On the people front, we’ve made some significant changes. When I joined, everybody wanted a sense of comfort as far as creative leadership was concerned. There were some standard names floating around in the market, and everybody advised us to go for them.

     

    But you opted for a rank outsider…

    Yes, and it was driven by strategy. We operated without fear, because when the agency is already going through a big change in the leadership at that point, to make one more significant change and change everything, is risky.

     

    Did you have the full support of your international offices on that?

    Absolutely. I’ve had the blessing to do what is required to create a model organisation. For us to hire a 35-year-old Chief Creative Officer was a bold move, but it was a function of our ambition to be among the Top 5 in the world.

     

    Were your clients okay with it? You’ve had some pedigreed, long-standing clients. Did they require any convincing?

    I think the question is not whether they were fine then. The question is whether they are fine now. Obviously, we needed to have conversations with clients and share the reason we were making such a big shift. We needed to convince them about our strategic direction, and why it would benefit them in both the short and long term.

     

    People, product and profits are the mainstay of any business. How have you performed on these?

    I’ve already mentioned one part on the people front. The other part is, if we look at our teams across the board – the business directors, strategic planners or creative leadership team –. there’s a new team in Bengaluru, and a new leadership in Delhi. All of this is a function of knowing we need people who are digital by blood and understand modern paradigms. The industry is full of prima donnas, especially in India, but we’ve steered clear of them. One of the keys to driving integration is a focus on people who can collaborate with each other. So we’ve hired what we call the ‘Positive A’ types – those who have the ability and guts to deliver, and also have a positive spirit about them.

     

    Was it easy bringing this about? Or was it tough getting the old-timers to believe in this whole new philosophy?

    When you have a clear strategic roadmap, and you share your vision continuously with the teams, they start getting a sense of confidence that you genuinely believe in that vision yourself. They look at the leader to see whether he has the confidence to deliver against that vision. When they start seeing results, it creates more momentum.

     

    We’ve heard stories that Saurabh is a very tough guy, a taskmaster and all of that. Is all of that true?

    I would think that would be absolutely true. I think we have ruthlessly pursued a single agenda to be the best creative agency in the world.

     

    So what comes first, the carrot or the stick?

    No it’s not about the carrot or the stick, it’s about decision-making, it’s about making sure that everybody is aligned to a single vision, and I think if you look at what’s happened with us, most of the people have stayed back because they believed in that vision.

     

    All of us, on the outside, were closely following the many changes taking place [at the agency]…

    Most people have stayed back because they believed in the vision. People who did not are the ones we felt were not going to add to the energy and the momentum that we wanted, and are not with us anymore.

     

    Was it easy getting a few of the older guys to exit?

    A lot of what you call the ‘old guys’ are still in our system and they’re thriving and succeeding. I think what people want to see is a shared belief and a shared destiny, and everybody who exists here, believes in that.

     

    What about profits? How are you doing in terms of your bottomlines?

    Right now, we are the fastest-growing Leo Burnett agency in Asia. We are growing twice as fast as the industry average, and I wouldn’t be surprised if we are the fastest-growing agency in the country at the moment. We have huge momentum as an agency and this happened because of focussing on our clients, solving their problems and doing great work, that’s all.

     

    How has the change in strategy impacted your other arms like Orchard and Indigo?

    So like I said, first, we’re united by that single ambition, which is to be among the Top 5 creative agencies in the world. Second is the function of deciding what the unique purpose of each company is: What is the leadership we need in that country and how we’re going to grow. If you look at Indigo, we are blessed that it’s a build agency. About 18 months ago, we were only a Mumbai agency. Today, we are one of the best holistic digital agencies in the country. For us, Indigo has been a unique growth story, but that’s only one part of it. The second part is integrating it with Leo Burnett as a network. Till18 months ago, there were hardly any shared clients; Indigo and Leo Burnett had their own sets of clients. Today, we have integrated across the board on clients for whom we do multiple things, from search, social and retail to activation and ATL. There are teams from Indigo, from our park shopper unit, from activation unit all working together seamlessly to create solutions.

     

    Wouldn’t it have been better if you had to integrate Indigo within Leo Burnett to make it fully forward-looking?

    It already is integrated incredibly well at the moment. When you say integration, it is merged; we have one P/L, that’s the great part about Leo Burnett at the moment. We don’t have the same silos you see in some large organisations. Our ability, therefore, to create a systemic solution for clients, is far more dynamic than other agencies. The way we work on these solutions is that we have one integration manager, rather than an account manager, who runs everything and understands search, social, e-commerce, retail, and that requires a very different kind of training as far as the individual is concerned.

     

    In the last 18 months, while you have possibly been putting your house in order, you’ve been away from most industry events. Was that deliberate?

    It’s deliberate for two reasons. First, the only thing that really matters is our clients’ work. When you spend too much energy on extra-curricular activities, it defocuses you from your true objective. Second, we don’t think there is enough maturity as far as the awards in India go, to participate. There are too many factions, and we don’t want to be a part of any of them.

     

    But some amount of collaboration with other agencies always helps, right?

    We have been collaborating. The Publicis group has 13,000 people, and that’s where we want to collaborate. We have access to one of the best PR agencies, MSL, and some of the best media agencies with huge digital capabilities, like Starcom and Zenith, and that’s where we’re collaborating. We have lots of shared exercises and shared programmes.

     

    And awards?

    Every agency loves awards. We participate in Spikes, Adfest, we have a huge battalion going to Cannes – the biggest you can possibly imagine, right from youngsters to account people, HR people etc. We do believe in awards; in seminars and listening to the best people in the world really matters. It tells us what the benchmarks in the world are. What we do not want to be a part of, is what’s happening at the moment.

     

    You have the D&AD-backed Kyoorius Awards, but you didn’t participate in that either…

    I think the whole industry has not come together. I’ve been pretty vocal about my sentiments on this. Until the time awards are driven by a sense of maturity and not agendas, we will not participate.

     

    One of the things said about you not participating is because there’s not enough work that you think can win awards. Is that true?

    I am certain that if you put our best work alongside the best work of any other agency, we will be among the Top # in India any time. So that’s not the problem. The issue is what kind of awards do you believe in? We’re not an agency which believes in doing a poster for or press campaign for an award. If you see some of our work you will see what we believe in, is great work.

     

    Are you looking at any acquisitions, any more organic growth, to achieve becoming among the top five agencies of the world?

    We are continuously looking at building our specialist functions but we’re not looking at acquiring agencies for scale. That’s never been part of our strategy. For us it is very strategic; if there is an agency or a specialist function which is in line with our strategic intent, we will go for that acquisition.

     

    Coming back to your start at Leo Burnett, there were questions being asked about whether you can do it. You were not from an Indian scenario; you were put into a system which was doing fairly well, but had to reinvent. Do you think those disadvantages actually proved to be your strengths?

    I never thought of it as a disadvantage. For us it was a strategic decision. We started discussing this move four years ago. We planned for this move for the last three years. So it wasn’t done all of a sudden. The industry will say what it will; we’ve never really bothered about that. For us it’s about following through all our strategy and delivering on what we believe is the right thing to do for ourselves and for our clients.

     

    The fact that your predecessor Arvind Sharma and Co put in some great work would’ve helped?

    Yes, we’ve always focused on great work. Work for our clients and solving their problems. That’s the strength of Leo Burnett and that’s an advantage we continue to build on.

     

    And great work is possible even through a non-star creative head?

    No I think we have the biggest rock star in the making. And mark my words on that. Raj Deepak Das will be the biggest star, I’m not talking about India, but globally. I’m only betting on my belief in that, and my ability to partner with him in making that happen. So for us all, what we’ve done is we’ve strategically decided what we need to do, we believe we have the talent, we’ve identified the talent to take us into that trajectory.

     

    Are you looking at hiring more talent?

    All the time. With our growth we need to continuously find new talent to join us, and like I keep saying, talent is what we call the ‘Positive A’ types.

     

    On a lighter note, now that you’ve reached close to where you are, do you think you would be less tough on everybody, or is that something that you need to be?

    See I don’t think I’m tough, I’m single-minded. I’m single-minded in my ambition, and single-minded in my focus. That’s what I’m doing and I think some of those decisions, might not seem the right decisions at a certain point of time, and I can live with that.

     

    This interview first appeared in dna on brands on June 15, 2015