Tag: Mahindra & Mahindra

  • Mahindra commemorates 25 Years of Kargil Vijay Diwas

    Mahindra & Mahindra Ltd has announced the launch of ‘Hearts to Bravehearts’, an initiative to commemorate the 25th anniversary of India’s victory in the Kargil War.

    Said Veejay Nakra, President – Automotive Division, M&M Ltd: “We are deeply honoured to commemorate the 25th anniversary of the Kargil victory with our ‘Hearts to Bravehearts’ initiative. This campaign is not just about remembering our heroes but about celebrating the freedom and peace they have secured for us. By sending our heartfelt messages to the brave soldiers who protect our nation, we aim to show them that their sacrifices have not only brought us safety but also endless smiles and a peaceful life. Mahindra is proud to be a part of this significant journey, reinforcing our commitment to exploring the impossible and supporting our nation’s heroes.”

    M&M has tied up with Faujiana as a partner to engage with Kargil war veterans to spread awareness and drive citizen participation through its extensive network. Along the way, the drive will also foster goodwill through the involvement of eminent journalists and celebrities, amplifying the campaign’s emotional resonance.

  • Mahindra unveils new visual identity and logo

    By Our Staff

     

    Mahindra & Mahindra unveiled its new visual identity including a new logo that will differentiate its SUV portfolio. The new visual identity, notes a communique, is in tune with the company’s focus to be makers of sophisticated and authentic SUVs. Actor Naseeruddin Shah has lent his voice and music composers Ehsaan-Loy have rendered the music for the brand film. The brand identity was designed by the Mahindra Design Team.

     

    Speaking about it, Rajesh Jejurikar, Executive Director, Auto & Farm Sector, M&M Ltd., said: “An important facet of leading change is articulating the transformation of our brand. Our new visual identity is a manifestation of what we stand for as we build a truly differentiated and authentic SUV brand for personal exploration and adventure. This new visual identity is designed to evoke the powerful emotion of freedom.”

     

    Highlighting the roadmap for the visual identity implementation, Veejay Nakra, CEO, Automotive Division, M&M Ltd. added: “It’s not only a new logo but a representation of the rejuvenated spirit at Mahindra. What better platform than the new XUV700 to showcase it to the world. The visual overhaul of our identity will be carried in a phased manner across our SUV nameplates, and across virtual and physical touch-points where our customers interact with us.”

     

  • Asha Kharga joins M&M

    By Our Staff

    Mahindra & Mahindra has announced the appointment of Asha Kharga as Chief Customer and Brand Officer for the Group. She will steward the Corporate Brand and will oversee the Group’s e-commerce platform M2All, Mahindra’s innovation agenda and Mahindra Racing.

    Said Dr Anish Shah, MD and CEO, Mahindra Group: “Mahindra has a rich history of innovation, and care for its stakeholders. However, customer expectations are constantly evolving. Asha’s rich and diverse experience will help our businesses stay at the cutting edge of customer experience.”

     

     

  • Mahindra urges people to #CutTheCrap with new campaign

    By A Correspondent

     

    The Mahindra Group reinforced its long-term commitment towards the environment through the launch of a new campaign that builds a case for waste management. Its new #CutTheCrap campaign has been launched with a film that equates the problems caused by single use plastic bags to weapons of mass destruction.

     

    Highlighting the purpose behind this new campaign, Vivek Nayer, Chief Marketing Officer, Group Corporate Brand, Mahindra & Mahindra said:- “Through our new #CutTheCrap campaign, we are putting our Rise For Good philosophy into action to bring about greater environmental awareness and societal change. We have consistently focused on bringing issues concerning the environment to the fore, and waste management is a crucial topic within this. Our aim is not only to sensitise people but to also enable them towards behaviour change.”

     

    Added Robby Mathew, Chief Creative Officer, FCB Interface: “The idea was to help the viewer see the harmless looking plastic bag from a whole new perspective. By equating it with some of the deadliest weapons known to mankind, we drew attention to the looming threat that is already upon us. And who better than Mahindra, with their track record of relentlessly focusing on waste management, to take this message to the world.”

     

     

  • Tata tops Brand Finance 2019 rankings

     

    By A Correspondent

    Tata Group (brand value up 37% to US$19.6 billion) is once again India’s most valuable brand, according to the latest report by Brand Finance, the world’s leading independent brand valuation consultancy.

    Mumbai-headquartered Tata Group is one of India’s largest conglomerates, operating in over 100 countries, across 5 continents. The Group’s dominance is clear with its brand value totalling more than second-placed LIC’s (up 23% to US$7.3 billion) and third-placed Infosys’ (up 8% to US$6.5 billion) brand values combined.

    Said David Haigh, CEO of Brand Finance: “Tata Group is to be commended for its ability to scale new heights, as it is not only India’s most valuable brand, but has also recorded faster growth than any other top 25 brand, with an impressive 37% increase. The Group’s brand presence across autos, IT services, steel and chemicals continues to go from strength to strength and remains a pioneering force to be reckoned with”.

    Banks register solid growth

    Fourteen banking brands feature in this year’s Brand Finance India 100 report, with India’s three largest banks all registering solid growth:State Bank of India (up 34% to US$6.0 billion), HDFC Bank (up 19% to US$4.9 billion) and ICICI Bank (up 41% to US$3.9 billion).

    The banking sector is currently undertaking a major shift as a result of an increase in spending on infrastructure, technology and innovative customer experience tools, all of which have the potential to contribute to heightened brand values across the board for banks. Advancements in technology have brought mobile and internet banking platforms to the top of their game, keeping them well placed to serve their varied customer base against the backdrop of a well-regulated robust environment.

    India 100 Social Media Post.jpg

    Mahindra & Mahindra jump into top 5

    From farm tractors to financial services to cutting-edge IT services, Mahindra Group is going from strength to strength, its brand value growing 35% to US$5241 million and thus sealing its position in the top 5 for the first time. Mahindra group has been making strong inroads into US markets and is setting some strong global ambitions.

    ADAG suffers steep drop

    Anil Dhirubhai Ambani Group (ADAG) has witnessed the steepest drop in brand value, falling 65% to US$559 million and dropping 28 positions in the ranking. The brand has witnessed continuous erosion in its value creation due to increased pressure from various group businesses and is currently facing some stiff questions from its stakeholders.

    Jio is India’s strongest

    In addition to measuring overall brand value, Brand Finance also evaluates the relative strength of brands, based on factors such as marketing investment, familiarity, loyalty, staff satisfaction, and corporate reputation. Alongside revenue forecasts, brand strength is a crucial driver of brand value. According to these criteria, telecommunications brand Jio (brand value US$3.6 billion) is India’s strongest brand with a Brand Strength Index (BSI) score of 87.01 out of 100 and a corresponding AAA brand strength rating.

    Reliance Jio is making headway towards becoming India’s number 1 telecommunications provider. It seems likely that the brand will retain its low-price strategy as it continues to grow, gain and retain a solid reputation across its Indian customer base. Impressively, challenger brand Jio, is the highest new entrant in this year’s Brand Finance India 100 2019 in 14th position.

    New entrants

    Aside from Jio, 6 further brands have made their debut into the ranking, across a variety of sectors.

    Growing off the back of a huge organized retail opportunity in India, hypermarket chain DMart (US$937 million) has entered the ranking in 33rd position. India’s homegrown FMCG brand Patanjali (US$614 million) continues to make waves and steal market share from its multinational competitors and has entered the ranking in 51st position. Further down the table, new entrants Chennai Petroleum (US$258 million), Indian Overseas Bank (US$248 million) and Max Life Insurance (US$240 million) are all ones to watch for the year to come.

     

    View the full Brand Finance India 100 2019 report here

  • Mahindra launches #NurtureYourCuriosity campaign centered around innovation

    By A Correspondent

     

    Mahindra Group has announced the launch of its #NurtureYourCuriosity campaign. Targeted at millennials, the campaign aims to inspire the youth to be curious and innovate, while also showcasing the group’s innovation focus.

     

    Commenting on the essence of the campaign, Vivek Nayer, Chief Marketing Officer, Group Corporate Brand, Mahindra & Mahindra said: “Solutions to the world’s problems can only emerge when one asks the right questions. Only the curious ask these questions and challenge the status quo. To make the world a better place, we must nurture this curiosity and seek meaningful innovations. Our aim with this campaign is to encourage individuals to nurture their curiosity while showcasing how this is leading to innovations and the leveraging of new age technologies at Mahindra. This is yet another way by which we are enabling and encouraging people to Rise.”

     

     

  • Mahindra takes the ‘Taqdeer Badal De’ route for its commercial vehicles portfolio

    By A Correspondent

     

    Mahindra & Mahindra Ltd. has launched its first ever TVC for its Commercial Vehicles portfolio. At the core of the film lies Mahindra’s commitment to partner with its customers in their journey towards progress and prosperity, in keeping with the company’s philosophy of RISE.

     

    The storyline highlights five individuals who own different vehicles from Mahindra’s commercial vehicles range and propagates the vehicles’ ability to shape their destinies. The TVC is the second portfolio communication from Mahindra after the highly successful ‘Live Young, Live Free’ campaign which showcased its personal range of vehicles. The commercial also reinforces the Mahindra DNA of tough and rugged vehicles.

     

    Vivek Nayer

    Speaking on the new television commercial, Vivek Nayer, Chief Marketing Officer, Automotive Division, Mahindra & Mahindra Ltd, said, “Mahindra offers the widest range of small commercial vehicles which are known for their tough and rugged design, low maintenance cost and high fuel efficiency. Further, our commercial vehicle owners have a unique bond with their Mahindra vehicles. It provides them with the means to fulfil their aspirations to achieve progress and prosperity which is completely in line with Mahindra’s core purpose of Rise. With the new commercial vehicles portfolio film, we intend to further cement this partnership and the deep emotional connect that the Mahindra brand has with its customers.”

     

     

    Robby Mathew

    Robby Mathew, National Creative Director, Interface Communications Pvt. Ltd. said, “Making this TVC was challenging as the previous campaign Live Young Live Freehad already created a benchmark of its own. Through this film we have tried to communicate the aspirations of rising Indians who dream to prosper with Mahindra commercial vehicles.”

     

  • Roma Balwani quits M&M to join Vedanta

    By A Correspondent

     

    It’s possibly one of the biggest moves in the world of communications this year. Mahindra & Mahindra’s head of communications Roma Balwani has moved on to join the Vedanta group in a similar position.

     

    Her last day at Mahindra was yesterday (March 31) and she was scheduled to join Vedanta today. Ms Balwani has been Senior Vice President, Group Communications (and Chief Group Communications Officer) since 2005. She has worked with Aptech as VP and Head of Communications from 1997 to 2005 in India and Norway with a stint in between at eBookers, in Oslo, Norway.
    Confirming the news, Ms Balwani told MxMIndia that she was looking forward to Vedanta and working with Tom Albanese who coincidentally also takes official charge as CEO from today (April 1)

     

    Ms Balwani’s position is meanwhile going to be filled in by Ruzbeh Irani who has been Chief Executive – International Operations, Automotive & Farm Equipment Divisions in the group. In addition, Mr Irani has been Chief Brand Officer at M&M and has been spearheading the Mahindra Rise positioning.

     

  • Southern superstar Mahesh Babu is Mahindra Tractors brand ambassador

    By A Correspondent

     

    Prominent tractor manufacturer Mahindra & Mahindra has announced its new brand association with Telugu superstar Mahesh Babu in Andhra Pradesh. The brand ambassador signifies the strong focus of the tractor major towards the Andhra Pradesh market and its steady progress towards creating a young and vibrant brand image among the next generation of farmers.

     

    Sanjeev Goyle, Sr Vice President, Marketing & AppliTrac, Farm Equipment Sector, M&M Ltd, said, “Andhra Pradesh is a critical market for Mahindra and our products are especially designed to suit the needs of this market. The Bhoomiputra 475 and 575 tractors have the largest user base in Andhra Pradesh. Mahindra has been a dominant tractor brand in the state and has been the market leader for over three decades.”

     

    Commenting on the brand association with the southern superstar Mahesh Babu, Mr Goyle further said, “We now want to connect with the next generation of farmers who are keen to use tractors equipped with technology that offer better fuel efficiency. Hence we felt the need to associate brand Mahindra with Mahesh Babu, a superstar and the youth icon in Andhra Pradesh. Both brand Mahindra and Mahesh Babu are super stars in their own industry and the celebrity fit compliments the brand value.”

     

    Commenting on the association, Mahesh Babu said “I’m very excited to be the brand ambassador for Mahindra Tractors. The company drives positive change in the lives of farmers and I would love to connect with the young farmers in Andhra Pradesh.”

     

  • The Anchor: Viren Popli on 5 things mobile advertising in India should adopt

    By Viren Popli

     

    It is not internet advertising:

    Don’t treat it like internet advertising – banners, spam, CTR, CPI. It didn’t work, doesn’t work and will not work.

     

    More co-operation needed:

    Handset manufacturer, content owner and telecom companies need to work together and maybe share 30-30-30 and give the tech/reseller 10.

     

    Don’t interrupt conversation:

    Use waiting times when we are staring at a blank screen, or listening to a dumb audio sound for advertising. Keep it out of my real conversation.

     

    Consumer is the king:

    Allow consumers to select brands he wants to hear from, and ads he wants people to see when they reach out to him. After all, many of us use brands to define our personality – give him a piece of the action.

     

    More engineers in creative agencies:

    Have creative agencies hire more engineers and put them on par with the “creative types” – create internal stress. You can’t separate the technology from the message. So no matter how interesting the idea… If the technology doesn’t deliver, neither will the message.

     

    Viren Popli is Senior Vice President – Strategy and Market Development at Mahindra & Mahindra

     

  • Can Facebook, the marketer’s online best friend ever become its ace salesman?

    By Delshad Irani & Ravi Balakrishnan

     

    In 2009, Facebook terminated the ‘Whopper Sacrifice’, Burger King’s social experiment cum marketing activation. Created by Crispin Porter Bogusky, the campaign’s premise was the more ties you sever the closer you get to your BK Whopper. The application as it turned out was a whopping success.

     

    Within a week 200,000 ‘friends’ were virtually burned out of existence from various lists. Facebook couldn’t handle the loss of those hard-earned friendships. Burger King, on the other hand, proved the point it set out to make – Americans sure do love their burgers. That same year, Swedish furniture giant Ikea spent practically nothing to create a campaign to promote its newest store.

     

    The agency Forsman & Bodenfors created a new Facebook account for the manager at the store in the city of Malmo and posted catalogue pictures of furnished rooms.

     

    Users could win furniture and other items in the photos if they beat their friends to the punch. All they needed to do was tag the pieces with their names first. Needless to say the prospect of first-to-tag-wins drove Facebookians crazy. The campaign was hassle-free, cheap and effective, just like the Scandinavian furniture it was advertising.

     

    Fast-forward to a few weeks ago. General Motors, the world’s fourth-largest advertiser and spender of $3.9 billion globally on advertising in 2010, haunted by questions related to effectiveness and ROI, pulled out its pretty penny, all $10 million of it, from Facebook’s paid-ad kitty just days before the social network’s stock went public.

     

    In addition to that sum, the automaker spends a reported $30 million on content creation for social media. These examples make Baccarat-crystal clear what we know already – you don’t have to pay big to make an impact via social media.

     

    In India, most marketers love talking about the worth of a campaign by the number of fans, or likes received on the most recent post. But even they are starting to ask a tricky question: what’s the real worth of their campaigns on Facebook? Worth more than a burger, eh?

     

    The site itself has been trying to tell advertisers that no longer will mere presence and innovative social media campaigns cut it. If they want scale, they’ll have to shell out the hard cash for offerings like “sponsored stories”, not to be confused with “sponsored ads”.

     

    For instance, products like Reach Generator guarantee that posts by a brand stand to be seen by 75 per cent of its fans every month or an estimated 50 per cent every week. Non users of the tool will have to settle for an average of only 16 per cent of fans viewing posts on a weekly basis. Not everyone’s buying though, believing that compelling content will win any day of the week.

     

    Anuradha Aggarwal, senior VP, brand communication and insights, Vodafone India said: “Since having high engagement scores is our goal, we focus on creating content on our Facebook page rather than on advertising. We focus on creating posts and apps to enable our 3.2 million fans to create conversations and experiences around the brand.”

     

    PepsiCo’s approach is to use a combination of both, posts/promotions on brand pages and display advertising. One of the cola maker’s prominent campaigns on the site was ‘Meet Messi in Miami’ where fans had to complete a series of tasks to win a chance to meet The Atomic Flea.

     

    During the 2011 ICC Cricket World Cup, Pepsi launched an online progamme as part of the ‘Change the Game’ campaign where fans could win a dream trip across the country for all India matches. The latter initiative was listed as one of the 19 best campaigns in the world by Facebook on their success stories blog, the only Indian effort to feature on the page.

     

    According to Homi Battiwalla, category director – colas, hydration and mango based beverages, PepsiCo India, it is too early to give a conclusive opinion on new advertising properties like sponsored stories and other offers. So the bottom line when it comes to the marketing on the social network is the game hasn’t quite changed. “The primary focus remains on organic content as we believe it results in better consumer connect,” said Mr Battiwalla.

     

    For automakers like Mahindra & Mahindra, Facebook is good for what it was born to do in the first place. Well, that and to spy on “old acquaintances”. According to Vivek Nayer, senior VP, marketing, automotive division, Mahindra & Mahindra: “Rather than looking at Facebook for advertising reach, we’ve leveraged it for what the platform is inherently good at; building communities. Today at 5 million, we are the largest automotive community on Facebook in India”

     

    In the case of Unilever, the company moved from almost accidentally stumbling on the power of the site – after noting a lot of action on its first Cornetto Luv Reels page long after the promotion was over – to it being a key pillar to the launch of Fruttare, its new range for the summer. Sapan Sharma, general manager – ice creams, Hindustan Unilever, said: “There’s an advertiser login where you get all the details. In the first 10 days of launch, 1.2 lakh fans signed up and there were 1.2 to 1.5 lakh conversations.”

     

    Arch-rival P&G is not lagging either. According to a company spokesperson: “In just less than two months, we have over 690,000 fans for our Thank You, Mom campaign. This makes it the largest, most engaged-with Thank You, Mom community globally.” For the launch of Olay’s premium skin care range, Olay Regenerist, a Facebook waiting list was created, with both fashion journalists and consumers signing up for an exclusive trial on the site; in less than three weeks, over 11,400 people had registered.

     

    But as the eight-year-old Facebook enters a new league as a listed company, it needs to, and rather urgently, scale its revenues to sync with its audience. Minute, often ineffective, right-rail ads aren’t exactly a juicy bone to dangle in front of existing and potential advertisers; thus the introduction of premium ads and better placement.

     

    According to Siddhart Rao, CEO of digital agency Webchutney, the sweet spot between organic and paid promotion is the one that will yield maximum benefit to brands looking to extract value from social media marketing platforms like Facebook. “One cannot work without the other,” he said.

     

    S Yesudas, managing director – Indian subcontinent, Vizeum, said: “I do not think all marketers know what to expect from the medium. The hurry to be on to the bandwagon gets them there. The fact that Facebook offers free advertising inventory for brands to test the medium gets overlooked. In my opinion, the medium can be successfully used to build relationships with the consumers.

     

    Targeting can be done based on profile information, relationship status, interest or based on certain words in profiles or status messages. But the truth is the brand communication will always compete with the updates, videos, etc from friends.”

     

    Indeed, it’s complicated; the relationship between advertisers and Facebook. Especially when one moves from the fluffy world of engagement to hard sales. Many retailers in the West like JC Penney, Gamestop and Gap pulled the shutters on their stores on Facebook this February.

     

    Chhaya Balachandran Aiyer – founder – MD, BC Web Wise said: “Ironically Wade

    Gerten, the founder of 8thBridge – the flower store that was responsible for the coinage of the term F-commerce as it was the first to open shop on Facebook for 1,800 Flowers – has admitted that sales never really materialised for their first or other F-outlets, adding that F-commerce deserved an F. Given the fact that F-commerce (Facebook commerce) has failed in the west for retailers, it appears that Facebook would be an engagement vehicle. Peer recommendation and product ratings are not integrated. Should it launch a brand intelligence tool which can be used by consumers – which exposes peer comments and recommendations that can be accessed by the FB community – then the ball game will change.”

     

    Venkat Mallik – president, Tribal DDB & Rapp India says Facebook’s ability to deliver sales impact has been a bit of a mixed bag: “There need to be more strong case studies demonstrating the sales or brand impact from the use of Facebook led engagement.”

     

    However while Facebook may not itself be a platform to sell it can impact sales according to some of its satisfied customers. Unilever’s Mr Sharma for instance believes there’s a definite co-relation between high levels of engagement and products sold.

     

    According to Carlton D’Silva, chief creative officer, Hungama Digital Media, “Opinions of family and friends matter when making purchase decisions decisions and Facebook activity will provide a lot of data to consumers, which can be leveraged in places where they make these decisions, causing a significant, if not direct impact on purchase behaviour.”

     

    “GM is slashing its advertising budgets by $ 2 billion, of this only $10 million or 0.5 per cent was on Facebook. They have also announced they won’t advertise on Super Bowl, either. Further, what should be noted is that GM has 8 million fans already. I am sure that they are going to continue with the engagement plans for acquired fans. It would be foolish to assume anything beyond, or assume Facebook has failed for GM, it would be just that advertising further is currently not the best bet in its media plan,” said Ms Aiyer

     

    The users of Facebook both on the agency and the marketer side each have their wishlist ready.

     

    “The analytics are available at a lag of 7 to 15 days; I’m sure it can come earlier. I’m sure there will be a time when we can talk to people from a specific city or market,” said Mr Sharma

     

    “They are hugely data rich. If in some way they get to using some of the data millions of people put in their hands on a minute to minute basis, sky will be the limit for them.This will surely come in with resistance from the users, unless they persuade them. They have to walk this path very carefully,” added Mr Yesudas.

     

    Most brands have a clear agenda from marketing spends on social media platforms like Facebook – greater outreach among target audiences through personalised interaction and engagement, leading to higher impact on conversions and sales.

     

    “It’s a perfectly reasonable expectation from a social communication platform with 900 million members,” said Mr Rao of Webchutney, “but whether brands invest enough thought, time, resources and action to engage audiences meaningfully is another question.” And one helluva question it is. Because for every whopper of a Scandinavian success story, there are at least a dozen marketing campaigns that have fallen flat on their face. So, ask not what you can do on Facebook but what Facebook can do for you.

     

    Source: The Economic Times
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