Tag: Maxus

  • Maxus wins big at Festival of Media

    By A Correspondent

     

    The award winning spree continues for global consultancy firm Maxus, as it has bagged a Silver award for the Utility/Public Service Award at a glittering ceremony at Festival of Media Asia Pacific concluded recently.

     

    Maxus, which has won business over Rs 400 crores in the the last one year, continues to gain recognition as the undisputed leader in their space. This also makes it their 45th award for the Power of 49 across local, regional and global forums.

     

    Maxus won the award for its much talked about campaign Power of 49- the media movement that brought about fresh and exciting rigour for the brand Tata Tea.

     

    Kartik Sharma

    Maxus South Asia Managing Director Kartik Sharma said, “Maxus has made strong and consisted efforts to become future ready and lean into change in a competitive ecosystem. This work is special as it really brings out the power of a great idea in a holistic and integrated manner and the wins are testimony to this. We are thankful to Tata Global Beverages in believeing in Maxus and giving us the complete freedom to bring this great idea to life. We are also thankful to all our media partners for their unconidtional support and making this campaign a roaring success. We are of course ecstatic about the win!”

     

  • Maxus successfully executes Blenders Pride fashion Tour

    By A Correspondent

     

    The Blenders Pride Fashion Tour has been synonymous with Indian fashion and style circuit for close to a decade now, this year particularly, the premium on ground property not just saw a massive on-ground swell but was also highly successful in increasing its fan base. Maxus through its award winning creative team came up with a post-event content strategy which managed to devise a premiere show format out of the established on ground event and transform it into interesting content.  Maxus successfully developed a four-part TV series that was aired on Star World capturing the brand message, ideas and glimpses into the on-ground event. The comprehensive campaign was able to victoriously integrate the brand’s positioning via the juicy content of the tours and took it from just a few cities and limited audience to people’s home now. The show had reached 36 million viewers through long and short format.

     

    Titled ‘Taste Life in Style’, the show became a platform where people with stylish personas decoded their individual sense of styles and professional lives, set against the backdrop of the Blender Pride Fashion Tour events. Each of the four stylish personalities brought to the show a unique flavour of a world which reflected their head strong attitude to life, their sense of style, the spaces they occupy and designs they create.

     

    Some of the many guests who got featured include big designer names such as Neeta Lulla, Rocky S, Namrata Joshipura, and Gaurav Gupta. Noted musicians like Midival Punditz, Karsh Kale, Ashvin & Ash, Anushka Manchanda too were featured at the tour. A varied mix of speakers like Boman Irani, Chetan Bhagat, Wasim Akram and Irrfan Khan were part of the same.  The star line up also included guests such as Gautam Singhania, Adhuna Akhtar, Nagesh Kukunoor and Vikas Khanna.

     

    Raja Banerji, Assistant Vice President at Pernod Ricard India, said India’s most future ready media company elevated the renowned and stylish Blenders Pride Fashion Tour to newer heights. “In our commitment towards our fans we have always strived to evolve and provide them the best that we have to offer. Our belief in Maxus to devise the most compelling content plan for the Blenders Pride Fashion Tour this year definitely helped, as through their efforts we reached an astonishing 36 million people, through long and short formats. We would definitely like to congratulate the team at Maxus and look forward to future associations.”

     

    Through the shows a large number of people would be able to get a glimpse of the renowned celebrities into their personal spaces and lives, and witness how style gets blended into their world. The Blenders Pride Fashion Tour thus is set in this context, decoding the true meaning of style through a myriad of varied perceptions.

     

    Speaking on the favourable outcome of the campaign Maxus ESP national director Shailja Vohra said, “The Blenders Pride Fashion Tour is one the most focal points in the Indian Fashion sphere and are our esteemed clients. Blenders Pride wanted to be associated with style as a positioning and with celebrities that represented its core values. Our content strategy helped them achieve just that and the essence of our role was in helping Blender’s take an established on ground event and turn it into riveting content that was sustainable, interactive and most important integrated!”

     

  • Maxus unveils social TV tracker tool- Maxus Synapse

    By A Correspondent

     

    Maxus has announced the launch of yet another pragmatic tool ‘Maxus Synapse’­ the social TV tracker that will help one plan for digital natives effectively. The tool tracks the conversations of key channels and programs, reports it in one view for planners and buyers to take quick and smart decisions that will enable them to drive their business more efficiently.

     

    The applicable tool pulls in real time Twitter data for top performing programs and online channels. The key quantitative metrics are reach (in minutes) mentions for the programs as well as conversation sentiments. These metrics would help planners track and measure what programs are dominant on social media and how the brand associations can be multiplied, leveraged and nurtured to bring out the best performing results.

     

    Priti Murthy

    Commenting on the launch Priti Murthy- National Director, Insights Maxus India said “We at Maxus are committed to bring out the best innovations for the industry. Research has found that earned social media ‘reminds’ people to watch an episode after the live airing, thereby making it imperative for us as media planners to see the audience data more holistically than in silos. It was the recurrence of these conversations that gave birth to the idea of Maxus Synapse.”

     

    “With Synapse one will be enabled to track and measure the performance of TV programs vis-à-vis the social chatter around them. This will also help understand the lift generated by social media and analyse the qualitative viewing of niche audiences which is minuscule compared to GECs. We also would like to thank our partners from the Frrole Team who helped develop the tool,” she added.

     

    Amarpreet Kalkat Co-founder, Frrole said, “Maxus is an innovator and a thought leader when it comes to employing data and analytics for the benefit of its clients. At Frrole, we are privileged to be the social data partner for another industry-leading initiative from Maxus that would not just be a trend-setter, but would also drive significant increase in ROI on media spends by Maxus clients.”

     

  • Maxus bags media mandate for ICC Cricket World Cup 2015

    By A Correspondent

     

    Maxus has won the media investment mandate in India for ICC Cricket World Cup 2015 Australia and New Zealand. Maxus has previously handled four campaigns in India for the International Cricket Council (ICC), including the ICC Cricket World Cup 2011, ICC World Twenty20 Sri Lanka 2012, ICC Champions Trophy England & Wales 2013 and ICC World Twenty20 Bangladesh 2014

     

    ICC Cricket World Cup 2015, which will commence on February 14th, will conclude in Melbourne on March 29th, during which a total of 49 matches and 14 participating nations will test their mettle.

     

    Commenting on the win, Kartik Sharma, Managing Director, Maxus said, “Cricket is one of the important sports in India and the frenzied excitement and popularity it has is unprecedented as compared to other sports. Maxus is extremely proud and excited to manage the media duties for the ICC Cricket World Cup 2015. The World Cup is the pinnacle of one day cricket expected to draw tremendous excitement all over the world.”

     

  • Leaning into change with Kartik Sharma

     

    For the Maxus South Asia Managing Director, last year was a huge high for more reason than one: 20-plus new clients, Rs 300 crore+ business, many awards, including the biggest of them all – the Emvies. Pradyuman Maheshwari caught up with Kartik Sharma who completed a year at the helm earlier this month.

     

    Fond memories of 2014?

    Last year was fantastic in many ways. Apart from the role change for me personally, we got many new leaders into the system. Anand Chakravarthy, Navin Khemka, Monaz… a lot of internal teams got promoted. Business was fantastic! We earned about Rs 300 crore of new business, we had 20-plus new clients added to the roster.

     

    Vis-à-vis the rest of the industry?

    Different agencies have got new businesses. Twenty-plus is a big number for us. We haven’t had so many wins in a single year. We focused the beginning of 2014 on 3-4 key pillars – people strengthening, new business and product. Product, in terms of how we deliver client delight every single day.  A lot of emphasis on strengthening products. We launched Resolve which is a global proprietary planning tool and Moribus, our behavioral science unit.

     

    How was it stepping into Ajit Varghese’s shoes?

    Both internally and personally I don’t think anyone was trying to make any kind of comparison. Each leader has a different style of working. For not even a single moment when I stepped into the role, had I even thought of how Ajit would have done it or this is what I need to do. That puts artificial pressure on you. A directional understanding on what you want to do for Brand Maxus was very clear from Day1. Then you actually set out to do it in the best way possible, using your own way of working.

     

    If you were to compare your style of working with his, what would be one key differentiator and the one thing in common?

    Obviously, each of us come with a different perspective to business, Ajit has his own way of wearing his lens and looking at situations. I have my own lens and somewhere we complement each other. Even now, whenever there are challenges, we talk and try and solve a problem.

     

    The perception is that Ajit is very aggressive in his approach, even in the way Maxus has to be projected, whereas you are cool and calmer?

    That’s the way we are. The way we convey our thoughts is different. I’m equally aggressive when it needs to be. There’s an external side and there’s an internal side. It’s how you convey it. We express it in different ways for a common goal. I can’t change my style. This isn’t a surprise feedback. That’s the way I am.

     

    Ajit had you around. Do you have any one as your second-in-command?

    I have the entire Maxus team with me. I’m not just saying it for the sake of it. I have a very strong team, a very diverse set of management team members, which is actually helping me. We talk to each other on a daily basis. We understand all of them as people first. There’s a huge level of understanding and comfort, as individuals, as professionals, which actually helps us solve all problems.

     

    Having Anand from broadcast, Navin from another network makes it a melting pot of various cultures?

    We always wanted to have a very diverse set of people, not just agency people. That was a very conscious decision. They bring in freshness, different points of view, which is very critical at this stage of building a business.

     

    Last year, one of the biggest highs was the Emvies. In fact when dna interviewed Ajit when his elevation was announced and when we asked him if there was an unfinished agenda, he said it was winning the Emvies. Twenty-plus clients, Rs 300 cr-plus business, top talent… would you say coming out tops at the Emvies was the biggest high of the year?

    It’s one of the biggest highs. We’ve always wanted to win Emvies. It’s recognition coming from clients. It was very important for us. When a client or a larger universe, ecosystem says that you’ve done a good job, it helps us to see ourselves in a very objective way. Some of them are even competitors sitting and rating you. That was an important aspect for that. We’ve come very close to winning in the last four or five years but we missed by a whisker. We wanted to win, with a big margin, which happened! There was a lot of hard work at the back of it.

     

    How much of winning the Emvies is a joy more because you’ve beaten sibling Mindshare?

    I think more than beating, we’ve always wanted to win. Our goal is not just to beat Mindshare. It could be any agency for that matter. Mindshare is a great agency, we respect them.

     

    In your typical bouquet, how much of the work is full-service?

    It is increasing, if you’d asked me this a couple of years ago, it was little. Now, more and more have seen merit in doing it through us, I don’t recollect a number but it is definitely more than it was two to three years ago. At least about 10% plus.

     

    That’s a significant number! 10% of Maxus business is full-service. But, does it worry you that 10% of Ogilvy’s or any other agency’s business also could be full-service?

    We’re in a competitive world where the competition is not just creative agencies. We’re in an interesting space where everybody is competition in some way. Media owners, creative agencies, IT companies, there could also be a lot of boutique companies who could pay huge competitive consultants. The ecosystem is too large to worry about competition. That worry will never make you perform to your best. All you have to do is, run as fast as you can.

     

    Does the fact that programmatic buying and that you’re going to have number crunching outsourced, are these the things that are worrying signs for an agency like yours?

    No, we will be part of this in the next few years and we’re building skills in each of these areas. It’s not a major concern at this stage. It’s a major concern of the business. As the business is changing, the same question about creative, 8-10 years ago, nobody would’ve thought media agency and creative. We’ve seen the shift happening that media agency can also make creative. It’s more and more of getting ready and leaning into change.

     

    Leaning into change is the credo of Maxus. What are the leanings you are looking into for next year?

    Leaning into change is a philosophy, a guidepost for us to change ourselves and also the clients we work with, get ready to see and do things which have not been done before. An example of that is Moribus.  There is no previous benchmark of how a behavioral science unit should be. Even when we started creative as part of our offering in digital, there was no prior things saying these are things you can or cannot do. Each of those elements to me, is about leaning into change.

     

    What’s the target for this year?

    We would like to continue the momentum from 2014. We will be aggressive in our pitching. We don’t want to speculate a number. But, definitely, we want good business. Digital continues to be the focus and things like programmatic will gain more prominence in the next two years. You’ll also see a lot more focus coming in on content initiatives, Power of 49 was one stellar example, but we’re doing many more. A lot within the next 3-4 months will come on product also.

     

  • Leaning into change: Lindsay Pattison

     

    When we met her in Mumbai a few weeks back, a senior GroupM official had alerted us that she was the Global CEO-in-waiting.  Lindsay Pattison has been successfully leading Maxus in the UK for five years, taking it in that time from a ranking of 14 to a No 7 position, and from 30 people to now over 250. She has also held the global Chief Strategy Officer role for the last two years, overseeing product, planning, marketing, new business and effectiveness.

     

    And now Pattison replaces Sakhuja as Global CEO of Maxus. She will co-locate between London and New York and will report to GroupM Global President Dominic Proctor. “I am thrilled to step up into this role,” she said in the communique announcing her appointment. “I love the energy of Maxus and I relish opportunity that comes from our unique and fortunate position as the challenger brand within GroupM.”

     

    Pattison, who will be succeeded in the UK CEO role by Nick Baughan, currently the MD, joined Maxus in October 2009 in the newly created position of CEO to drive the agency brand to a new level, both in the UK and as part of the global management team. In August 2012, she was named as the new Global Chief Strategy Officer for Maxus, working alongside her duties in the UK. She would take direct responsibility for global planning, data and insights, digital, marketing and new business functions.

     

    In between her travel from London to New York, Pattison took time off to respond to the questions from Pradyuman Maheshwari

     

    Having seen Maxus grow from a small, smart media agency to one of the world’s brightest, your sentiments as you take charge as CEO of the agency?

    To reiterate my quote before I am thrilled to step up into this role. I love the energy of Maxus and I relish the opportunity that comes from our unique and fortunate position as the challenger brand within GroupM. I am most energised by our people; we have people with PACE; passionate, agile, collaborative and entrepreneurial and we take those values and behaviour very seriously. It all comes from having brilliant colleagues, solving client challenges At Maxus we have a mantra to lean into change. In fact it’s really to lead change for our clients, navigating the complexity and embracing the possibilities offered in a digitalised, mobile, always-on media landscape. It’s an incredibly exciting time to lead a media agency.

     

    You have been Chief Strategy Officer since the last few years and hence have been shaping the course of the agency’s business for a bit. Is there something that you would like to see happen over the next few months and years?

    We still need Growth - in our people as they broaden their skillsets and help our clients business navigate the multifarious opportunities in today’s media landscape. We want a win-win in the success of our clients’ businesses as without them we are nothing. And of course more growth for Maxus globally as the smallest and fastest growing media agency worldwide outright, and of course the fastest growing agency within GroupM.

     

    You were in India just a fortnight back. Any thoughts on Maxus Team India?

    Maxus India is a shining star in our global network. As the dominant agency in the Indian media scene, we’re in a tremendous position because of the incredible passion and energy of Kartik (Sharma) and his team in all our offices. I was delighted to see our teams in action as we met with several of our key clients. I could see the mutual respect and the strategic value our clients get from Maxus. And there is a palpable entrepreneurial zeal in our team in India - whether that is developing world leading commumications platforms such as the ‘Power of 49’ for Tata or developing fascinating partnerships with academia, Moribus. There is a restlessness to keep striving for better that is a real delight to see.

     

    Is the new digital, programmatic order scary for media agency businesses such as yours?

    Digital, and programmatic buying as a subset, is all about opportunity. I know it can be somewhat overwhelming for some clients - but our role at Maxus is to be a trusted advisor in this space and work with our clients to make the most of the opportunities on offer, to help them lean into change rather than be fearful of change. With programmatic specifically in mind, there is a huge benefit to clients working with Maxus and GroupM, where I see amazing talent and deeply impressive tech supporting our clients in their business goals.

     

    While new clients and great work are fine, eventually it’s the bottomline that shareholders are looking at. Any immediate thoughts on how you are looking at pushing profitability in your tenure?

    Well I think the answer to continued profitability is to focus on your clients’ needs and ensure you are delivering great work with great people - it’s a virtuous cycle. That’s how we’ve grown Maxus faster than any other media agency network over the past 5 years, and that’s what we will continue to do.

     

    And lastly, as he makes way for you, a word on Vikram Sakhuja as Global CEO?

    Vikram has been a breath of fresh air to Maxus, bringing an entrepreneurial zeal to our agency and in his own words, brought ‘systems to scale, whilst retaining the soul of a start-up’. I am looking forward to working with him closely in the future.

     

    First appeared on dna of brands dated October 21, 2014

     

  • From Maxus to? Q&A with Vikram Sakhuja

     

    By Pradyuman Maheshwari

     

    There was some reason for gloom in the advertising and media services fraternity on Thursday. Media services conglomerate GroupM announced the appointment of Lindsay Pattison as Global CEO of Maxus. But, more importantly, she replaces Vikram Sakhuja, who will remain in the group, but the position is not announced. What one is waiting for is the announcement on Mr Sakhuja, and as GroupM insiders who know him, he is someone who is going to be looking up and will be in to much bigger things.

     

    A million Indian hearts sank when they heard of you moving on from Maxus CEO, we told him. For, for the world of advertising and marketing professionals here, it was matter of great pride to have one of their own on the world stage. So, next is what? Am sure there’s an ace up your sleeve, but that’s a question which I guess everyone appears to be asking. “No reason for hearts to sink,” Mr Sakhuja – Vikkie to friends – said, matter-of-factly and responded to MxMIndia’s questions.

     

    To borrow from a well-known Hindi film song of our time: yeh kya hua, kaise hua, kyun huaaa?

    To also borrow from a well-known song – Main toh chala jidhar challe rasta – only in this case I have an idea of what the manzil is.

     

    Your sentiments on handing over charge? What according to you was the most satisfying moment and/or high of your stint as Global CEO?

    Always satisfying when an internal succession can be planned. Maxus is in great hands with Lindsay. Highpoint was to continue the Maxus growth juggernaut. I wanted to double the size of the agency in three years. After two years we are well on track for that.

     

    Any unfinished agenda? Something that you would like to have done?

    Oh, lots to be done. We are positioning Maxus as an Agency that leans into change. We have embarked on a process to build culture, systems, talent and capabilities that allow us to responsibly question status quo and provide innovative brand solutions in an always-on real-time world. And to come across as a compelling Agency to Advertisers. That is an ongoing and exciting journey.

     

    You spent the last year-odd based in the US. Working here in India v/s the US?

    Tremendous learnings from the US. The thing that hits you is scale. Also the realisation that a large part of the global economic world does operate from a NY or London.

     

    Given a chance, would you like to work here in India or elsewhere in the world? Preferred location?

    Honestly, am pretty open, depends on the assignment. Needs to be a place where my wife is comfortable going to, and she’s open. As they say, watch this space.

     

    And one extra question: you’ve achieved much already, what’s the next challenge for you? Or something that you would like to achieve, workwise?

    Two things excite me. Making media more accountable especially in the area of effectiveness, and unlocking the business potential of the content-technology-platform space.

     

     

    Lindsay Pattison takes charge as Global CEO for Maxus

     

    By a Correspondent

     

    Media services conglomerate GroupM announced the appointment of Lindsay Pattison as Global CEO of Maxus. Pattison will co-locate between London and New York and will report to Proctor. She replaces Vikram Sakhuja, who will remain in the group, but the position is not announced.

     

    Under Mr Sakhuja, Maxus was the fastest growing agency in the world and expanded its network footprint and added major new accounts such as NBC Universal and L’Oreal. The announcement was made by GroupM’s Global President Dominic Proctor who was in India recently.

     

    Ms Pattison has been successfully leading Maxus in the UK for five years, taking it in that time from a ranking of 14 to a No 7 position, and from 30 people to now over 250. She has also held the global Chief Strategy Officer role for the last two years, overseeing product, planning, marketing, new business and effectiveness.

     

    “Lindsay has a proven reputation as a leader and is held with enormous regard both internally and by her clients,” said Mr Proctor in a communique. “She exemplifies the spirit and ambition of the Maxus culture and we are confident she will take the network into the next stage of growth.”

     

    Said Ms Pattison, “I am thrilled to step up into this role. I love the energy of Maxus and I relish opportunity that comes from our unique and fortunate position as the challenger brand within GroupM. At Maxus we have a mantra to lean into change. In fact it’s really to lead change for our clients, navigating the complexity and embracing the possibilities offered in a digitalised, mobile, always-on media landscape.” “It’s an incredibly exciting time to lead a global media agency, particularly across Asia where the opportunities for growth are extremely high and our people fantastic. In fact, I met our brilliant Indian team a few weeks ago, and I’m looking forward to working with the amazing talent we have across all of our APAC offices.”

     

    Ms Pattison, who will be succeeded in the UK CEO role by Nick Baughan, currently the MD, joined Maxus in October 2009 in the newly created position of CEO to drive the Maxus brand to a new level, both in the UK and as part of the global management team. In August 2012, she was named as the new Global Chief Strategy Officer for Maxus, working alongside her duties in the UK. She would take direct responsibility for global planning, data and insights, digital, marketing and new business functions.

     

    Ms Pattison is involved with industry events and is now a member of the WEF Global Agenda Council on the Future of Media, sits on the WACL Exec committee and has contributed to events including the Facebook Influencer Summit and Google Zeitgeist.

     

    Prior to Maxus, she worked at PHD for five years and in media for over 18 years. Ms Pattison has also worked client-side at Sony Ericsson, after starting out at Young & Rubicam in a full-service environment.

     

    When she was in India recently, she met with MxMIndia briefly and spoke of how she had met with clients,understood their aspirations and challenges. The leadership team with her conducted a training programme called the Mating Game and of course she mentioned on Maxus India is a shining star and among the Top 5 globally in revenues.

     

  • Product fails when commercial imperatives get in way of editorial integrity: Proctor

     

    By Pradyuman Maheshwari

     

    Dominic Proctor took on the role of President of GroupM Global in January 2012. Prior to that, he spent a decade-and-a-half years as CEO of Mindshare Worldwide, the GroupM agency he had founded in 1997. With billings of over a 100 billion dollars that constitutes around 30 percent of all global media, GroupM is the holding company for all of WPP’s media agencies – notably Mindshare, Maxus, MEC and MediaCom amongst others.

    Excerpts from an interview with Dominic Proctor while he was in Mumbai around a fortnight back.

     

    This is your third visit this year. What brings the GroupM CEO to India so often?

    I think it’s rather patronizing to speak about India as a market for the future. It’s a massive market now, and for us it’s a very significant part of our global company. It’s obviously going to get bigger and better as the economy and the population develops but we come to the present as well as the future.

     

    You’ve been coming here for over a decade-and-a-half. What do you see as the significant difference between then and now?

    Much more open-minded. I think those days were characterized by fairly closed minds in the marketing services industry. The status quo was everybody’s friend and therefore it took longer than most countries to get business going here. The thing about a closed economy or a closed mind is that you don’t get the fresh oxygen of ideas as in other markets.

     

    The disadvantages of a closed economy is there isn’t much business, but when you have an open environment, the competition also gets stiffer, right?

    That’s capitalism… that’s cool, that’s fine.

     

    How do you see the digital business in India vis-à-vis the rest of the world?

    The rise of digital platforms has been of fundamental importance to media and marketing and our business in India. It may have started rather slowly, but the important thing is it’s changing in the same way as the global, digital economy is. Each country starts in a different place and has a different speed. The direction is more or less the same.

     

    But the spends here are not as much as in the rest of the world.

    That’s exactly my point. They will catch up.

     

    Is it because the best creative brains don’t work for digital here? They work for television commercials instead?

    That’s not the reason at all. The reason for varying speed is the differential uptake of digital media by consumers. In the end, rupees follow the eyeballs.

     

    Could the spend be getting distracted by the many offerings in digital- search, social media, conventional banner ads etc?

    It’s a sign of growing up. It’s a sign of a platform maturing and moving in different directions to its usual requirements.

     

    If you were to self-assess, what would be your own assessment of GroupM in digital given that Unilever, one of your biggest clients, is not with you?

    I’d give ourselves a 7 on 10 and wouldn’t give anybody else much more than that, because I think there’s a lot of headroom to grow. Some of our direct competitors have been rather quick to assume the way of solving the problem is primarily through acquisitions. We’ve made some acquisitions and we’ll make some more. Acquisitions alone aren’t the main driver. The main driver is the fact that the whole world is becoming digital and therefore our business needs to become digital.

     

    In digital, both media and creative agencies have turned full-service. Would you hence say your competition is not necessarily media agencies like yourselves but also an Ogilvy, JWT, Leo Burnett…

    I think it goes way beyond that. Our competition for client attention, demand and revenue is not just from other agencies and other types but also from consultants, specialists and clients themselves who do things inhouse. Our competitive set is very broad indeed. That’s a sign of our business growing up and fighting on a lot of fronts. That’s good.

     

    Is there a need to reinvent yourselves given the way businesses are growing? Is there any one thing you’d like to do in terms of reinventing?

    We reinvent ourselves constantly. The most challenging thing in reinventing is of course training and development of talent. I’m very happy to say that our talent retention record in India is very good compared to other markets.

     

    Are you able to attract the top talent given the very high remuneration levels at B-Schools? Especially since your clients have them…

    That’s a challenge for us. I’ve been on platforms talking about the fact that we need to continue to move up hierarchy of partners to clients, because we need to earn the revenue that will pay for the A-list talent. There’s no doubt that other competitors for talent, example, Google, can have deeper pockets than us. I think people join us not just for that reason. A lot of them join us for varied life and varied training. It’s the environment. This year, we won the Porter prize for best places to work. To me that’s just as important, if not more, than our ability to pay a few more dollars to a few more people. People come here not just for that. They come here for the working environment, training, grounding in business. It’s really important to not forget that when you’re working in a media agency, you have the privilege of looking at a lot of different clients across a lot of different marketing platforms in media. That gives you tremendously good grounding for a business career.

     

    What happens is people use your organisation as a jumping board to move elsewhere

    That’s fine. I don’t mind that. That’s why I’m pleased our people aren’t jumping ship.

     

    Talking of higher remuneration, if a GroupM can’t achieve that, who can? You are a market leader, and have a longstanding relationship with clients.

    We can and we do. Our income rate and clients are increasing. We’re of increasing value to our clients. The more value we are to clients, the more revenue we can make, the more we can attract talent. It’s a virtuous circle.

     

    GroupM today is a lot more than just a media agency in India and the rest of the world. How much of your focus is on businesses such as Dialogue Factory and your association with sporting events and other BTL activity?

    A lot of it. One thing common to all countries is that the bedrock of our business is media planning and buying. It’s always been clear to me that unless we can get that fundamental activity right and be efficient and effective for our clients, then we have no ability and no permission to expand our service offering. We absolutely have the ambition to broaden what we do in our agencies. Sports marketing, digital consultancy, data analysis, we could go on. It’s becoming more and more broad because the clients demand is for agencies to have more and more specialist insight into the opportunities, to make sure that the specialist insights are integrated.

     

    In the current scenario where digital has overtaken print media spends, what is your view of the future for spends in print versus the rest?

    If your print business stays fresh, relevant and interesting, that’s where the eyeballs will go. The challenge simply isn’t just to abandon all traditional media platforms and just follow the digital dollar, the strength of a print brand, the attractiveness of its editorial, the freshness of its presentation are critical. If you lose those things, you lose your audience not just from print, but digital as well. Your brand suffers.

     

    One of the peeves of print publishers is that the advertisers forever want innovations. Like in the papers you have these jackets, one or two or more pages of advertising over the front page, taking away the interest of the reader?

    It does if it’s boring and it irritates people. So, the balance between the editorial and marketing judgment has to be more even. You just look at any country in the world,  where commercial imperatives get in the way of editorial integrity, the product fails. Media entities are brands. If you mess around too much with the brand, it becomes confusing to the consumer.

     

    Over the last couple of years, GroupM in India has seen a fair amount of changes. One is the embracing of digital has leapfrogged. We’ve had the Y-Co, a kind-of youth ‘Shadow Board’. How many processes of GroupM India have you followed elsewhere in the world?

    Y-Co is an Indian idea born here. I was at the launch myself, a year ago, and it has now been taken up in other markets. So, India is both an exporter and importer of ideas. Y-Co is an Indian export idea, made in India. Your current Prime Minister has been talking about Brand India. It’s also an importer of ideas. So, a lot of the initiatives happening here were born elsewhere. It’s an import-export business.

     

    Anything you’d like to see here in GroupM in future?

    We encourage our teams to continue to be open-minded. We encourage them to be more focused around the digital developments. As brand or market leaders in India, we’d want to be at the forefront of these and rather than wait for a market to form and join in, we’d like to form a market.

     

    Over the last year, India has seen a lot happening in the field of audience and viewership measurements. We are all set to get a new measurement regime in television and we have had an uproar over a print survey. Since you are a key stakeholder in the business, how do you advise your clients when questions are raised about the veracity of data?

    We have specialists who are able to give very special advice in very important areas. Measurement is a very important part of what we do. Return on investment is a very acute measure of our performance and return can be linked to the performance of leadership or viewership. of course, it’s fundamentally important to get it right. To me, it’s symptomatic of change. As media landscapes change, the way we measure them changes too. We intend on being a very important part of stewarding that change so that it’s fair and accurate. If it isn’t, we’re going to be rejected.

     

    A variant of this interview first appeared in ‘dna of brands’ as part of the dna issue dated October 6, 2014

     

  • Maxus wins big at Emvies 2014

     

    By A Correspondent

     

    In September 2013, when it was announced that Ajit Varghese was promoted to an Asia-Pacific role at Maxus, we asked him whether there was any unfinished item on the agenda. Knowing how fiercely competitive he is, although always gracious in praise for his competitors, we were digging for an answer he gave us. “May be winning at Emvies is an unfinished agenda,” he said with a smile.

     

    Maxus, given Mr Varghese’s spirited leadership over the years and with Kartik Sharma at the helm ever since he moved to Singapore, has ensured the Maxus flag flies high.

     

    At the 14th edition of the Emvies on Wednesday night, soon after an all-new logo of the Advertising Club was unveiled by recently re-elected President, Pratap Bose, Maxus was the clear winner. Ahead of runner-up by a good 55 points.

     

    But the icing on the cake was that not only was Maxus the Best Media Agency of the Year, it also won the Grand Emvie along with client Tata Global Beverages for the Power of 49 campaign. In fact Tata Global Beverages shared the Best Media Client of the Year with Hindustan Unilever for its seven big wins for the Power of 49!

     

    “We have accomplished a lot over the last seven years,”  Mr Varghese told MxMIndia. Unable to attend the ceremony as he was in Shanghai, the Maxus South Asia Managing Director said: “Emvies was a summit that was left unconquered. Although we came close and gave a tough fight but you know there is less room for No 2 and No 3 in life. We wanted our clients to feel the No 1 status of their work getting showcased as “the best”.

     

    And what’s his sentiment now that the Summit is scaled? “What a feeling to get it all! Agency of the Year, Client of the Year and the Grand Emvies!!!  I truly believe that today every Maxusite who is and has been part of this journey feels he or she is a winner! That’s makes us proud. Cheers to Kartik and team to continue the Maxus Creativity, Passion and Entrepreneurial spirit. A new journey has begun with a bang!”

     

    Among other notables, Samyak Chakrabarty of DDB Mudramax bagged the Gold in Young Emvie of the Year with the Silvers shared by Alka Bhavnani of Mindshare and Vikesh Jain of Maxus.

     

    As for the rest of the story, the tables below tell it all.

     

     

    Photograph: Facebook post by Gaurav Hirey, GroupM Chief Talent Officer South Asia

  • Maxus strengthens leadership teams in West & South

    By A Correspondent

     

    Maxus has announced the strengthening its regional teams across its divisions in the West and South. This is the result of the divisions winning multiple business accounts in the first six months of 2014.

     

    In the southern region, Maxus has elevated Kishankumar Shyamalan to the post of General Manager. In his previous role as Client Leader, Kishankumar was the key lead for the Tata Global Beverages pitch, ultimately converting the business in Maxus’ favour. He is the key architect of the ‘Power of 49’ campaign, conceptualized and executed by Maxus Bangalore. He also spearheaded media teams for Titan Industries, Wipro and the Kerala office. His erstwhile roles include Buying Head for Maxus South.

     

    The new appointment at Maxus Mumbai, is of Monaz Todywalla as General Manager. Monaz will be leading client teams for Vodafone, L’Oreal, HDFC Life and Kotak. She comes with a wealth of experience across categories like FMCG, BFSI, Retail and Confectionary. Monaz joins Maxus from Madison Communications, where she worked on clients such as Marico Industries Limited, Asian Paints, Kaya and Sleek. She began her career with Lodestar where she serviced Amul and SC Johnson.

     

    Speaking about both these leaders, Kartik Sharma, Managing Director, Maxus South Asia said, “We are excited to elevate Kishan and bring Monaz on board at Maxus. We have always attracted the very best talent in the industry and have given them every opportunity to grow and prosper within Maxus. We are confident that Kishan and Monaz will be ambassadors of the PACE values of Passion Agility, Collaboration and an Entrepreneurial spirit that drives us to become change agents in a fast paced media environment.”

     

    In the first half of 2014, Maxus India has won 23 new accounts across the country worth 300 crore collectively. Over the last six months, Maxus India has garnered 23 new clients, including JK Tyres, Kotak Mahindra Bank, Unitech, PayTM, Askme.com, ICC T20 World Cup 2014, Cigna TTK Health Insurance, Musafir.com and BML Educorp.

     

     

  • Proprietary planning tool ‘Resolve’ launched by Maxus

    Maxus has announced the launch of a bespoke tool, Resolve, based on a proprietary survey of consumer insights in India. The findings of the survey are the most in-depth ever to be carried out in the country.

     

    Resolve is Maxus’ comprehensive proprietary communications planning tool built using the knowledge and expertise of the agency’s planning leaders. The tool is supported by bespoke consumer-based surveys called Compose, which go beyond simple media usage to explore consumer sentiment towards media channels and the messaging those channels employ. The tool is used by global and local clients worldwide to gain insights on particular markets.

     

    Kartik Sharma, Managing Director, Maxus South Asia, said: “Maxus’s dedication to data inspired us to create a tool to help our teams make tough decisions and have them supported with strong logic and data. The Compose surveys get behind the attitudes and behaviours of consumers – not just their media usage – and how they view specific channels to deliver specific messages. Resolve has been a success so far not only for our clients, but also helping to push our teams out of their comfort zones, to try new channels and ways of thinking.”

     

  • Behavioural science lab Moribus will help clients use research findings to sell their products

    By Pritha Mitra Dasgupta

     

    Maxus, advertising and PR firm WPP’s media agency, wants to study your behaviour and help clients use that insight to sell their products.

     

    Last week, Maxus launched Moribus, a behavioural science lab in India which will be part of its consumer insights division, Insights. Moribus will be the first of its kind lab by a media agency in Asia-Pacific and will use disciplines of behavioural science, behavioural economics, sociology, psychology and so on to solve real life business problems, said Maxus MD Kartik Sharma. Moribus has inked an exclusive deal with Mumbai University’s Centre for Computational & Social Sciences to carry out customised research projects for marketers. While the unit was officially launched a week ago, Maxus had floated two behavioural study projects about two-and-half years ago, Sharma said.

     

    “Moribus is a Latin name for behaviour and the fundamental thing about marketing is changing behaviour or making people do something which they were not doing earlier,” he said. “It is only for India for now and as we go along we may extend it to a few more markets in Asia.”

     

    While Mr Sharma declined to comment on the investments made by Maxus on setting up the lab, sources with knowledge of the matter said it has invested Rs 2-3 crore to flag it off.

     

    While traditional research is good, it sometimes doesn’t unearth some of the insights that marketers are looking for, Mr Sharma said. “People, when asked a question, will react in a certain way, and when you observe them they react in another way. So this kind of technique will also help us understand some of the insights.” Findings of these behavioural studies will be complimentary to the existing marketing plans of clients, and will not replace anything.

     

    One of the two projects it has carried out was for an impulse category product – usually, things like chocolates, perfumes, music, luxury clothing – and it was called ‘The Ego Depletion Experiment’. “The objective of the study was to understand consumer decision-making when people are under stress,” said Mr Sharma. In behavioural research, the word “economics” has a certain amount of pay off, he said. “Markeunters of impulse products would significantly increase their chances of making a sale by being present in ego-depletion moments.”

     

    For example, it could be their presence outside the classroom in colleges via counters or giving special offers during exam time.” Besides the economic payoff, this experiment doesn’t need a very large sample size. “Because when you study behaviour in a particular way, even with 30-40 people one can get very good insights. You don’t need to run a 30,000-40,000 panel, therefore it is also more cost effective to the client,” said Mr Sharma.

     

    Source:The Economic Times

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