Tag: Maheshwer Peri

  • Mirum to provide Salesforce to Careers360

    By Our Staff

     

    Mirum India, the digital marketing solutions agency from the WPP Group, will implement Salesforce Marketing Cloud services for Careers360, the educational products and services company run by Maheshwer Peri.

     

    Mihir Karkare

    Said Mihir Karkare, EVP, Mirum India: “Mirum is a Salesforce go-to partner for Marketing Cloud implementations in India and has a great experience in implementing marketing automation solutions in the EdTech space. We are excited to work with Careers360 and eager to collaborate with them on this project.”

     

     

  • MxM Live with Maheshwer Peri…

     

    Red hot chatter with Maheshwer Peri, Chairman and Founder, of Careers360. An entrepreneur, dreamer and worker. And may we add an activist and do-gooder.

     

    A Top 25 rankholder in CA, he joined SBI Capital Markets and moved to join the Rajan Raheja business group. He moved to Raheja’s foray in the media with Outlook in 1995. In this interview, Peri looks back at his beginnings in the media, why he refused to have his name on the masthead for some years, his view on Vinod Mehta and Outlook – then and now. And more.

     

    Watch on…

     

     

  • Coffee & Conversations with Rahul Kishore: Week #2: Maheshwer Peri

    By Rahul Kishore

     

    Maheshwer Peri strikes you as no-nonsense , gritty with a fun side, hard taskmaster kind of guy when you first meet him. He is. But with a smart and funny side. A guy who’s totally on the ball with all that is going on around him whether it be politics, news channels, print or his love: Education. I met him over a cup of coffee and began by asking him:

     

    Do you consider yourself lucky?

    Yes! All my breaks have come because of luck. I was  an investment banker with Hathway Investments and we decided to get into the publishing business and Outlook was born. I became a publisher by chance. Got into education by chance too. Luck has a role if you grab it. Bosses were good to me but they couldn’t have been otherwise also. I am humble, nice to work with, retreat easily if I feel it’s right to do so and not a sycophant at all.

     

    The beliefs that define his ‘Outlook’ in life?

    I am ethical he says. It’s a good business practice these days to survive. Those who say ethics for any other reason are not right. We live in an extremely transparent world where the slightest mistake can be easily highlighted. It can completely result in the collapse of the business.

     

    Punctual.I hate people waiting for me.I always am punctual.

     

    I am not surrounded by ‘yes’ men. If we go for a presentation as a team, it’s difficult to tell who is the leader of the team. Gradually that happens, but I allow any and all to lead if we feel that is the right way forward. People are encouraged to say what is right.

     

    How does he destress?

    With his kids, he says.The younger one especially. Walks often to Sanjay Van from Vasant kunj where he lives. He has chosen a middle class locality deliberately to reside in as he wants his kids to grow up imbibing these very values. He often gets off his car and walks home if the mood takes him. Every two years, he takes off to a healing farm to detox and clear his mind. Also makes his business plans here. Holidays once a year mostly in game parks in India.

     

    If a movie were to be made about his life, who would he want to play him?

    Ayushman Khurana is his answer. Why, I ask. Because he’s normal. He’s human, has no halo. Has a child in him, like I do. Also can act stupid at times. He can also show the fighter and grit in me. His answer floored me…

     

    Dream job?

    Lawyer, he says. You will find him practising law and helping the poor once he retires. Getting a law degree is very much on his mind, he says. Also wants to educate people and harness the fire in their belly. This fire, he says, is wasted in stone-pelting, rebellion and aggression. This needs to be harnessed. The politicians have failed us. We should channelise this into some constructive activity. That would be something I would like to achieve

     

    If Bill Gates walked in with a hundred million, what’s the one big idea that Mahesh would offer to change the world with the money?

    The words demographic dividend excite him. People think building roads is investment, education is social welfare. Actually we need to invest in people. Educate them. Invest in people instead of plants and machinery.

     

    Work pattern that works for him?

    I work six days a week. My phone is always on and I reply almost in under 30 minutes each time, if busy. Sunday is an off day. I have a small team and I work with them closely, he says.

     

    One word that describes him

    Outspoken. Being a typical Arian, this bluntness comes out. He is a no-nonsense guy. No time to waste on unnecessary social graces.

     

    A CEO he admires?

    Azim Premji… a near-instant instant response.

     

    Loves the social side, the philantrophy, his simplicity and his sense of ethics.It is okay to be like him and still make those billions.

     

    What animal do you like?

    Elephant. Elephants are humble, keep to themselves and are not bothered by anyone.

     

  • Facebook posts get Suhel Seth to give up Rai doctorate

    By A Correspondent

     

    He is one of India’s best known faces on television panel discussions. Suhel Seth, ad man-turned-communications consultant and managing director of Counselage, was awarded an honorary doctorate by the Rai University last week.

     

    But  a Facebook post by Maheshwer Peri, Careers360 CEO-promoter and may we call him an ethical education activist, got him to give it up as there was outrage over Mr Seth’s accepting the recognition from a university which, as Mr Peri put it, “is most likely to abuse it to reach out to ignorant students”. “How I wish our celebrities acted a bit responsibly and did their homework,” Mr Peri’s post on Facebook added.

     

    There was much outrage after this initial post on Facebook with many people casting aspersions on Mr Sethi’s credibility. Almost an hour after the initial post by Mr Peri, Mr Seth reacted with:  “I had no clue…will return this immediately” and later added: “In fact even at the damn convocation I said this was a fraudulent event…I was told that this was a legit university and so on… but I agree… it is a fraud and I will have nothing to do with it…”

     

    After Mr Seth’s pronouncement, there was an expression of delight at the decision. “Bravo Suhel Seth,” exclaimed one post.

     

  • Growing to No1, ethically: Maheshwer Peri

     

    By Ananya Saha

     

    After spending 18 years as the publisher of the Outlook group, Maheshwer Peri launched Pathfinder in 2009 with the aim of making it India’s largest and most credible career counsellor in five years’ time. While still a mentor with Outlook, he has been associated full-time with Pathfinder since April 2012. Mr Peri rewrote the plans for the magazine, closed a publication, injected positive energy and weaned out negative energy.

     

    With an aim to reach students on a platform-agonistic way, Pathfinder’s magazine Careers 360 offerings are available in print, web and mobile. And it is succeeding. The webpage of the magazine has recently overtaken the more established portals, becoming India’s largest education and career portal.

     

     In a freewheeling conversation with MxMIndia, Maheshwer Peri, Chairman and Founder, Pathfinder Publishing, talks about the publication and the high digital notes it has been striking. And whether his ethical standards have come in the way of advertising.

     

    How has the journey of Careers 360 shaped up?

    It has been fantastic for one simple reason: there was no one who was competition. There was no one who approached the genre at all in terms of journalism, content and student. Everything you had in the market till that point in time was marketing or advertorial features that were coming up because there was an advertiser waiting. There was no one who made a model which is to say that student will buy this product, which is suited for the student and not for the institute. From that perspective, it was a complete paradigm shift.

    Even today, the content that you see is created because there is an advertiser around. They are advertising and marketing features. This is a first product that has been created with student in our mind. That is why the journey has been good, since there was no one as competition.

     

    Does the magazine attract a different set of advertiser then?

    The advertiser had multiple options. In any business, or publishing business, you need to create something that attracts readers. Once the reader is there, the advertiser follows. In any niche, if you are to create content because of which a set of loyal readers follows you, the advertiser follows. They cannot avoid us – that is the stage at which we are.

     

    Has the print run of the magazine increased as well?

    The initial print run was very high earlier, of the English and Hindi magazines of Careers 360. It was about 1,80,000 but today we print about 1,30,000-1,40,000 copies. We sell about 1,20,000-1,25,000 copies of which 30,000-40,000 are school and college libraries.

     

    Have you broken even yet?

    No. It’s an investment phase. The reason why I think it is a case study… there has never been a case in India that a single stream of content has been monetised over multiple platforms. The articles that we do are backed by data. And that data has to be complete. So we decide how much of that should be put into the magazine, and the balance we put on the web. There are journalists who create content, which is suitable for the magazine, for our almanacs and guidebooks and for the website, and going from there to the physical career workshops that we do.

    The challenge is if I were to say if the magazine would break even, it would not. Because I am still going though the phase of seeing how many more platforms I can grow to and keep investing in those platforms also. It is definitely going as per my plans and projections.

    On the digital space, we are the No 1 website in the country. One or one-and-a-half-year ago, when I started this journey, I had 4,000 students on the site each day. Today we have guaranteed 100,000+ each single day.

    Now the challenge for me is; since I have become the largest website in the country, the largest website has 10 crore of ad revenues and sitting on 5 crore of data. And I do that, yes, I will make money. That is the next step for me. Now that I have got the audience, I will monetise that.

     

    What are the factors responsible for the growth of the web presence of the magazine?

    I realized that the content we are creating for the magazine is not being leveraged. It is just limited to the magazine, so for me the challenge is how I invest myself in a way that the content I create can reach out to plenty more audience.

    Today 2-2.5 million students come to my portal every month. That is 30 percent of the audience of that category. Today if 1.4 million students have opted for engineering, and one million students have come to my portal, it captures 70-80 percent of the students. For each of the verticals, I need to say that I reach out to more than 30-40 percent students. And that is with the guidebooks, almanacs, counselling workshops, magazine, and digital portal.

    If you look at the content creators in the country, we are the largest content creators. There is no one who comes close to even 10 percent of what we do in the marketplace. The reason why student come to us, they have more and enough value to add to their decision-making.

     

    Has the strategy for magazine changes over the year?

    Strategy has changed to the extent that the moment we talked about digital. The typical thing that journalist does is goes and collects information, edits it, and puts out a 1,000-word story. This is not exactly career-driven journalism thing here. It is actually lot of data also. We are not just advisors; we are counsellors to the students. And counselling means two-fold integrity for us: financial integrity where no one is able to influence the way I right. The other big part of integrity is that we have covered everything so that student makes an informed decision, which means I have not omitted anything because of lack of research. It is important that the student does not suffer because you did not inform him of a very good option, which he otherwise should have known.

     

    Are you considering any brand extensions in the near future?

    Online we have lots of products. There is student space. There is mock counselling on our Engineering page. Each student pays Rs1,499 to take our advice. It is based on the data and information that we have collected in the magazine for our website. If a student comes and asks, ‘I have got a JEE rank of 11,000, what should I do?’ I give him seven options because I have cut off of all colleges in the country, which no one has. All that information that we research, collate is sitting with us. In my opinion, we are the best position advice student what to do. if the student’s choice if for five, I will make it eight. We optimize students’ choices, include one or two that he doesn’t know or remove what I think are bad for him. It is for him to decide where he wants to join, because I am not an agent.

     

    And is the counselling handled in-house?

    We have counsellors. We appointed a BPO company in Bangalore, which created all data for us. So the data is for more than 6,000 colleges and it cost a lot of money to create the data. I cannot do the data myself. We have journalists, a set of digital content creators, and data people, which is a BPO, working from Bangalore. Increment in further content creation would take 1x cost to become 1.5-or-1.8x cost. But the 1y of revenue can become 3y. That is the whole objective here: how do you add 10-20 percent investment in cost to add another stream of revenue that gives you one more ‘x’.

     

    You also closed down Competition 360. Why?

    When I moved from Outlook, I actually had three publications: Careers 360 English and Hindi and Competition 360. Competition 360 was dealing with competitive exam in the market like Competition Success Review or Pratiyogita Darpan. What I realised was there were many who were doing far better job than me, whereas in career-side, there was no one who was doing it. It is important for me to focus on something that I see as my path. So today my path is that I want to be India’s largest career counsellor; I want to be hand-holder for this country’s biggest student community. The moment that is decided, I am not getting into the job space and competition space. I am not going there because there are people who are already doing wonderful job out there and they will continue to do that. It doesn’t need me.

     

    You’ve been asked this earlier, but in the light of the strides you’ve taken: Outlook was going great guns under your leadership so what prompted you to start Careers 360?

    At some level, there are many people who will do Outlook. Aspirationally, Outlook is there. In India, and it has nothing to do with me or Outlook, you will see a lot of people getting into mainstream media or celebrity media. You would not see anyone coming into a morbid area, which is education. It’s standardized and regulated. But if you look at the demographic dividend that India has, the biggest demographic dividend would be when you handhold the students to nurture them otherwise it will become a nightmare. Someone has to handhold them otherwise we are sitting on a time bomb.

     

    What exactly is your role at Outlook now, and has it changed in the past one year?

    I am still the Mentor and Publisher. In fact, in March it was to get over but it got extended I am continuing for one more year. Me and my promoters have a fantastic equation. I will not influence that they remove my name. As long as they want, I will be around. Whenever they call me, I will be there. Period.

     

    Who handles the sales and marketing for Careers 360, now? Is it being handled by Outlook still?

    There are 4-5 people in my team, two of them were in Outlook. One, I always had arrangement with Outlook that I will never poach a single person from there. And I have stuck to it, and will even going forward. But these were people who were handling Careers 360 in Outlook. And they have moved with me.

     

    What is your next target for Careers 360?

    Within the next two years, Careers 360 would be India’s largest career counsellor. I would want to say that about 20 percent of students in India take a decision because Careers 360 influenced them. The day I start influencing the decision, and already we are doing it and handhold the students and also tell the institutes what students think about it: I have done my job. In India, regulators want to control without giving freedom to the private guys and institutions do not want any control. The balance is between them: the regulators need to give bit of freedom while institutes need to understand that their freedom is going to be limited by what regulation would want.

    We are aiming to achieve this balance.

    In a larger sense, this country has to start invest in its youth. And I hope more mainstream publications understand. Health, religion and education and jobs are the biggest things for people in India. In every mainstream media, these are supplemented by marketing activities. People like us come in because mainstream media has somewhere ignored it.

    Apart from the great things that Careers 360 is doing, you are also becoming very ‘activistey’.

    As Outlook, whatever I say was Outlook. It was a news media. There is no identity as Maheshwar Peri; it was only an Outlook publication. My view need not be Outlook’s view. In certain positions, you don’t have your own voice. It is the position that carries the voice. And I did not want any confusion between Outlook’s voice and my voice, so I was never active then. I was very conscious of the fact that whatever I speak is going to be taken as voice of Outlook. And now that the burden of Outlook is not with me, I have my own voice, which is what is coming out.

     

    Given your ethical stands on many things, has your advertising suffered?

    Yes, but that is again a conscious call. Whenever you take a stand, there are bound to be a set of people who will not stand with you. The current market situation is: I will give you an ad what will you give me in return. Not that is much more prominent in education sector. All these institutions are colleges are looking for ratings and rankings and some kind of coverage. And there are people who do that in the market. But again I say that once you create the content, which makes the reader stick to you, the best of the advertisers cannot avoid you; and then the other follow because the best advertisers are with you. There is a change that you need to crack. It takes a lot of time, perseverance and stamina. That is something I always had. When I launched it, I said I will create a DNA where nobody can change the credibility of the magazine or question the credibility of the magazine.

    So initially, when people were saying “Why don’t we have those guys and these guys”, I said, “Let’s create a DNA first, come what may”. It means lot of cost, money, time. But all those things are fine. Once we create the DNA, even when we go out unless we go to a new advertiser, the old advertisers know that they cannot bend us.

     

    Very recently, I went to an advertiser in the northern part of India. He looked at the magazine, and said, “Obviously, we cannot buy you.” So I was very intrigued and asked him what made him say so. He said, “Typically when we give an ad, our ranks are very high. In your magazine, we have given our ads in your magazine, but our ranks are very low.” That is the image that has reached the advertiser, for each time and every time, and I think we have managed to do that.

     

     

  • Publish or perish: Indian Magazine Congress 2013 to discuss future of mags in digital era

    By Ananya Saha

     

    The digital era is turning up the heat on print publications, especially magazines. One of the most prominent of titles to succumb was probably Newsweek, which has gone digital-only. (More here: http://www.mxmindia.com/2012/10/could-indian-mags-go-the-newsweek-way/) For most publications, it is a choice between moving ahead with technology or perishing. ‘New Directions. New Opportunities’ is thus the theme for the 7th Indian Magazine Congress, which will be held in Mumbai on Feb 14-15.

     

    Maheshwer Peri

    Maheshwer Peri, Chairperson, Programme Committee, IMC and Chairman, Pathfinder Publishing, explained, “Increasingly, the tablet has made magazines earn revenue through digital also. Similarly, metrics have come up measuring circulation on the tablet, and hence lot of magazine publishers are also monetizing it for advertising. The revenue model supports zero-cost. This year’s congress will explore new opportunities that arise out of new media.”

     

    Mr Peri added, “Last year, we did not dwell too much on the tablet even though we focused on digital a lot. Now, we want on focus on the tablet revolution. There is a lot of research and groundwork that has happened where magazine publishers have monetized this medium.”

     

    The international list of speakers includes Andrew Duck, Managing Director, Audience Media; Arnaud de Saint Simon, CEO, Psychologies Magazine; Ashish Bhasin, Chairman India & CEO South East Asia, Aegis Group; Chris Llewellyn, President, FIPP; Fabrizio d’Angelo, Managing Director, Burda Holding International; Nicholas Brett, Deputy Managing Director and Group Editorial Director, BBC Magazines; Mike Lovell, International Director, Licensing, Meredith; Torsten-Joern Klein, President, Gruner + Jahr International, Germany; and Sandra Gotelli International Publisher and Head of Licensing, Mondadori, among others.

     

    The Indian delegate list includes: I&B Minister Manish Tewari; Ambika Srivastava, CEO, ZenithOptimedia; CVL Srinivas, CEO, South Asia, GroupM; Indrajit Gupta Editor, Forbes India; Rajan Anandan, Managing Director, India, Google; Satyaki Ghosh, Director, Consumer Products, L’Oreal India; and Umang Bedi, Managing Director, Adobe.

     

    “When I was putting in the content and structure for this conference, the underlying motive was to see what we can learn that we can implement in India. For me, it is all about what the speaker did and what I can learn. Speakers will shed light on distribution models, merchandising and branding as an added revenue stream, brain-mapping of readers that is not only scientific but also impressive, what India can learn from China from a person who is already present in that market and is about to enter India. We have a speaker to talk about multi-platform publishing and how to put and monetize content five times over. At the end of the two-day conference, if I implement even one of the things that are shared, it might be a turn-around for me as a publisher,” Mr Peri asserted.

     

    Provocative discussions, interesting topics and an impressive line-up of speakers: IMC 2013 promises a lot.

     

  • Careers360 goes digital to help students looking abroad

    By A Correspondent

     

    Careers360 has taken the digital route to speed up its journey towards becoming the largest career counsellor in the country. After launching Careers360, the English magazine in 2009 and the Hindi edition in 2010, the company has now turned its attention to leverage the content, data and information, to reach out to the students through their Digital initiative.

     

    After launching a career counseling portal targeted at engineering college aspirants (www.engineering.careers360.com) in July 2012, the company announced the launch of a portal for student aspirants who wish to study abroad.

     

    The company is focusing to build a strong ecosystem involving various stakeholders for dedicated verticals; In Engineering portals, Careers360 launched one of its kind, innovative mock counselling engine. To help the various stakeholders, the engineering portal has unique features like a ‘Campus Ambassador Program’ which helps students contribute college reviews and stakeholders engage students in chat sessions, counselling sessions etc.

     

    The new portal www.studyabroad.careers360.com aims to be an unbiased counsellor helping the student make a well-informed decision. The country- and course-specific content for this portal would come from regulators, embassies councils and agencies supported by the respective governments. The portal would answer the how, why, when, where, what for students in a simple but comprehensive manner.

     

    Maheshwar Peri

    Commenting on the new product, Maheshwer Peri, chairman and publisher of Careers360, said “Career counselling on studying abroad is plagued by agents also doubling as counsellors, leading to mis-selling and misleading the students. The launch of our study abroad vertical will help student aspirants interact, engage and talk to us, the regulators, the trade authorities of various governments, and universities directly through our portal and take better decisions. Our features such as chats, discussion forum and counselling sessions would help students engage and interact with the right people. We would also be launching counseling products at nominal fees that would help the students get a deeper insight into the domain before committing themselves.”

     

  • Indranil Roy to take charge from Maheshwer Peri @ Outlook from April 1

    By A Correspondent

     

    The change of guard at the Outlook group is now official. Though in the works for a few months, it happens due to president and publisher Maheshwer Peri’s decision to concentrate on his own business – Pathfinder Publishing Pvt Ltd which publishes Careers360 in English and Hindi, and Competitions360 amongst others.

     

    With effect from April 1, Mr Indranil Roy, who has been working with the Outlook group for over a decade-and-a-half, will assume all the non-editorial responsibilities that Mr Peri held. Mr Peri will, of course, continue to be on the Board and be available for advice.

     

    Speaking to MxMIndia, Mr Roy indicated that the revamp Outlook Business has seen could be visible in other brands too. For instance, Marie Claire will soon make a strong positioning statement of a premium luxury magazine.

     

    As part of the restructuring, Ms Vidya Menon will head the lifestyle and entertainment brands of the group and Mr Johnson D’Silva will head the Western region in addition to Outlook Money. Mr Roy will relocate to New Delhi.

     

    The Outlook group will continue to steer the distribution for Mr Peri’s magazines.