Tag: Mountain Dew

  • Mountain Dew unveils new campaign

    By Our Staff

     

    Mountain Dew, the beverage brand, has partnered with motivational speaker and social media influencer and podcaster Ranveer Allahbadia. As part of this association, for the next two months, the show will be called Mountain Dew Darr Ke Aage Jeet Hai stories on The Ranveer Show with a special segment called ‘Darr se Jeet Tak’.

     

    Speaking on the campaign Akankshaa Dalal, Category Head, Dew, PepsiCo India said: “As a brand, Mountain Dew has always championed the indomitable spirit that propels individuals beyond their fears to embrace victory. Our partnership with Ranveer Allahbadia and The Ranveer Show is a testament to our commitment to inspiring the youth of India. Through the ‘Darr Ke Aage Jeet Hai’ stories, we aim to fuel the courage that resides in every individual, encouraging them to triumph over challenges and redefine their limits. This collaboration is not just about overcoming specific fears; it’s about reaching a diverse audience, recognizing that fears are subjective and unique to each person. We hope to inspire people across the board, fostering a collective sense of courage and determination that transcends individual boundaries.”

     

  • Leo Burnett gets Guru Randhawa for Mountain Dew

    By Our Staff

     

    Beverage brand Mountain Dew has unveiled a new music video with Punjabi singer and youth icon, Guru Randhawa. The video celebrates the indomitable spirit of Punjabis, an extension of Mountain Dew’s mantra of ‘Darr Ke Aage Jeet Hai’. The campaign has been conceptualised by Leo Burnett.

     

    Speaking on the anthem, Vineet Sharma, Category Director, Mountain Dew, PepsiCo India said: “Mountain Dew has always inspired youth to conquer their fears with courage, and win! Punjab and Punjabis have always been known for their bravery and courage. With the new anthem, we salute the land of Punjab and the people of Punjab for their courage. We are thrilled to have Guru Randhawa as the voice, Sneha Khanwalkar as the music director and Irshad Kamil as the lyricist for bringing alive this song of courage of Punjab. Nooran Sisters and Lazer X contributed towards the anthem. We hope that this song will inspire the youth of Punjab to believe in themselves, and conquer with courage, soaring higher than ever before!”

     

    Added Mayuresh Dubhashi, Group Executive Creative Director, Leo Burnett: “As Punjab is known as the land of the bravehearts and Mountain Dew is synonymous with courage, creating an anthem that integrates both, was an exciting brief to work on. We are proud to have brought it to life with this gripping anthem and it’s been amazing to work on such a powerful campaign that takes the brand proposition to the next level.

     

  • Hrithik shoots atop Burj Khalifa for new TVC of Mountain Dew

    By Our Staff

     

    Mountain Dew has unveiled its new TVC featuring brand ambassador Hrithik Roshan. The film has been shot on the top of the Burj Khalifa in Dubai.

     

    Said Vineet Sharma, Category Director- Mountain Dew & Sting, PepsiCo India: “Mountain Dew has always saluted the spirit of risk taking and pushing boundaries to achieve success beyond fear & self-doubt. This year, the brand reiterates that real heroes are those who face challenges head-on and emerge as winners. We are confident that the ‘Darr Se Daroge Toh Kuch Bada Kaise Karoge’ narrative in our new campaign will strike a chord with the consumers and the action-packed sequence featuring Hrithik on top of the world’s tallest building – Burj Khalifa will reinstate our ‘Darr Ke Aage Jeet Hai’ philosophy.”

     

  • Akshay Kumar to be brand ambassador of Sting

    By Our Staff

     

    PepsiCo India’s energy drink Sting has announced Akshay Kumar its brand ambassador in India. The collaboration is expected to extend the brand’s ‘Energy Bole Toh Sting’ mantra. Akshay Kumar will feature in the brand’s new TVC campaign in the coming year.

     

    Speaking about the announcement, Vineet Sharma, Category Director, Mountain Dew and Sting, PepsiCo India said, “We are delighted to associate with Akshay Kumar as the face of our brand, as he is an epitome energy. His mass appeal cuts across geographies and we believe his unique, electrifying persona will further deepen brand connect with the consumers. We look forward to working with him and are confident that consumers will love him in the new energetic Sting avatar.”

     

  • Mahesh Babu to be brand ambassador of Mountain Dew

    By Our Staff

     

    Mountain Dew announced actor Mahesh Babu as its brand ambassador. This partnership between Mountain Dew and Mahesh Babu will further increase brand reach and bring alive the popular ‘Darr Ke Aage Jeet Hai’ philosophy of the brand.

     

    Commenting on this latest development, Vineet Sharma, Category Director- Mountain Dew & Sting, PepsiCo India said: “We are proud to associate with Mahesh Babu, a name that defines the courageous, daring, and bold persona of the brand and its consumers across India. He is a true embodiment of the brand’s philosophy of ‘Darr Ke Aage Jeet Hai’ and enjoys a mass following across audiences nationally. Mahesh will be instrumental in deepening consumer connect in the region as we look to expand the brand’s footprint. We are excited for Mountain Dew’s journey in 2022 as we gear up to showcase the actor in fear-defying avatars which is bound to leave fans inspired and pumped!”

     

     

  • Judging Communication Differently

     

    By Sanjeev Kotnala

     

    A TVC or DVC or any other video needs to be judged in its totality. We all have our own palate for judging them and brand them as good or bad. We must realise, there will be frames you did not like and could have been done better. The casting, editing, script, dialogues, direction- there are multiple possibilities of areas to excel and go down.

    If communication is achieving its objective and is strategically sound for the brand, then everything is fine, and critics can go take a walk. However, we are in an industry where we value judgment and get affected by the buzz around the communication. We forget that the real test is in the market.

    Every communication cannot be award-winning, but it should be an award-winning output for the time, money and media weights deployed behind it. Hence always maintained that one must invest more in creative product to ensure the best production even at the cost of losing some media investment. A good product exposed fewer times will give a better result than a Bad product exposed many times. No argument there, yet we all end up making the same mistakes.

     

    What if the audience does not watch it completely?

    That is the area where the creative and the planning must take the blame. If the audience doesn’t watch long communication as a habit, then the communication should be trailered to their acceptable length. And suppose the audience watches longer versions but is partial to you in not watching your creative completely. In that case, you know where the finger must point. This should not make you go after the myth called perfection because at some stage the input of time and efforts will start hitting the law of marginal returns.

     

    But audience will judge

    Oh, despite whatever we all may want, the reality is that the audience is bound to generalise and slot a communication. Brand it, likeable and enjoyable, good or bad and the desired message may reach them, or it could be lost forever. Brands that do multiple communication in a process divide their risk.

    In recent times, I have watched a few communications which caught my attention. It may be their concept, art, execution or even edit that first clicked with me. And honestly, with almost all of them, I found some issue. In cases where I did not really know the answers, I used one of the two favourite client comments. ‘Kahi Kuch Kami reh gayi’ and ‘Maza Nahi Aaya’.

    So here I share a few of them.

     

    Colloquial Communication:

    This is one of the better pieces of communication. It is simple and speaks in a language and a tone that is so universal. It is iterative, but it is not dull. KAANO PAR ZIMMEDARI  is such a subtle take and summarisation of request to wear the mask.

     

    Skin in the Game:

    Motilal Oswal Mutual Funds new communication is about building trust within the investing public. Here, the traditional wisdom is amplified; ‘Trust the owners who Trust Their Business’. It is a logic that no one can counter. The brand claims that the company and the promoters are the largest investors in their AMCs equity funds.

     

    Pride in Local Talent & Quality:

    Pepperfry promotes ‘Swadeshi Sale’ while celebrating Indian artisans and adding the assurance of superior quality. The films promise edgy style and design, traditional expertise passed through generations and International quality from Ratangarh. Again simple communication which is loveable and trust inspiring. Time to check out some furniture from Pepperfry.

     

    Positivity:

    There been too much Positivity and Immunity. Brands talk motivational when the audience is fighting to keep the head above the water. Positivity now sounds repetitive and irritating. The PHONE PE commercial is too late in the day talking of possible normalisation of the situation. Stating that we will get comfortable with the new normal as we did with the old. Montage shots tick up all the right situations and do make you feel better. Love the two-generation interacting over PhoePe. Definitely, the brand could have done better.

     

    The Answer Changes Everything:

    What do you want to do when you grow up? A question we all have answered in childhood ( when we knew nothing), professional studies interview, job interview, marriage meeting and many more times. The question did not change, the answer does. What about what you want to do post-retirement? That’s HDFC INSURANCE asking the question, #Whenyougrowup. The idea does not tease as the story is out quite early. It misses the feeling of freedom and at my own terms.

     

    Side Track:

    The two brands which have expertly experimented within their zone are Snicker and Mountain Dew, yet their communication always had a freshness. However now SNICKERS  is confused and MOUNTAIN DEW turning Patriotic. Somehow I liked the International ad of snickers better. What is your opinion?

     

     

    Opportunity Hunting:

    A viral hit. Shared on WhatsApp with regularity. You would have seen it. Roger Federer Surprised two school-going fans Vittoria Oliveri and Carola Pessina in Italy by playing a  match on rooftops. The brand Pasta brand Barilla made it happen and rightly contextualised the message, “pasta brings people together.”

     

     

  • Mountain Dew gets Sukhwinder Singh for anthem

    By A Correspondent

     

    Beverage brand Mountain Dew is saluting India’s resilient spirit this Independence Day with a rendition of the timeless anthem of patriotism, ‘Yeh Desh Hai Veer Jawaano Ka’ from Saregama. Mountain Dew’s take on the powerful anthem has been composed by music producer/composer Ram Sampath, and features vocals from singer Sukhwinder Singh. The lyrics of the rendition, written by lyricist Swanand Kirkire, reiterate the brand philosophy of ‘Darr Ke Aage Jeet Hai’ and salutes the nation’s spirit of emerging victorious in the face of fear.

     

    Talking about the new anthem, Naseeb Puri, Director, Mountain Dew & Energy, PepsiCo India said: “India’s collective resilience has enabled our nation to achieve victory in the face of fear time and again. This Independence Day, we salute this very spirit of being courageous and overcoming fear, a philosophy that Mountain Dew has always stood for. The Darr ke Aage Jeet Hai ® anthem is our ode to the spirit of 1.38 billion Indians and we are delighted to have partners such as Saregama, Sukhwinder Singh, Ram Sampath, Wunderman Thompson and Swanand Kirkire on board to help us take our message across the country. The lyrics of the anthem aim to inspire the nation and ignite the self-belief that we will emerge victorious from these trying times.”

     

    Added Harsh Maheshwari, Executive Creative Director, Wunderman Thompson said: “Now more than ever India’s legendary legacy of winning against all odds can inspire us and lift our spirits. That was the idea to create an anthem that reminds us all – Darr Ke Aage Jeet Thi, Darr Ke  Aage Jeet Hai.”

     

     

  • Mountain Dew salutes Risk Takers of India through latest initiative

     

     

    Mountain Dew is set to bring its philosophy of ‘NaamBanteHain Risk Se’ to life through an initiative that salutes the real Risk Takers of India. The new TVC salutes the real life heroes and Risk Takers of India for rising above the ordinary and seeks to inspire the youth of today to do the same.The initiative is based on a powerful insight from Mountain Dew consumers who said that they don’t want to end up ordinary and that greater risk means greater success.

     

    Speaking about the campaign, Vipul Prakash, Senior Vice President- Beverage Category, PepsiCo India says, “Mountain Dew has always been about celebrating real heroes by encouraging people to break out of the ordinary to make a name for themselves.Through ‘Risk Takers of India’, we want to drive a purposeful message around breaking out of your boundaries to rise above. It is our way to salutethe unsung Risk Takers of India, who have overcome challenges and brought accolades not only to themselves but the country as well. Their illustrious journeys set an example for everyone and Mountain Dew is proud to present this platform to encourage youth to take risks.”

     

    According to Senthil Kumar, Chief Creative Officer, J Walter Thompson India: “The creative idea was to push Mountain Dew’s core idea of taking risks even further. We decided to go real and authentic and get inspired by real life heroes. And came up with India’s first biopic in Indian advertising. It is our way of recognising and acknowledging these risk takers in real life who battled the elements and came out on top. It is our attempt to inspire the youth of India to go out there, take a risk and make a name for themselves. And what better way to do that than by showing the journey of man who did it for real all alone ,nonstop across the seven seas…and became the first and only Indian to do so.”

     

    Mountain Dew Risk Takers of India will showcase the stories of five real-life risk takers – Deepa Malik, ArchanaSardana,Arjun Vajpai, SatyendraVerma and Bhakti Sharma. Each of the five heroes recognised by Mountain Dew have overcome hardships and risked their lives to rise above the ordinary and make a name for themselves.

     

  • Bang Bang Films unveils new commercial for Mountain Dew

    By a correspondent

     

    Conquering challenges has always been the proposition with which Mountain Dew has treaded ahead in the soft-drinks market, a fact that has been captured appropriately through its several campaigns released in India. Taking the proposition further, Mountain Dew has unveiled a new campaign that preaches to individuals to push their passions to the limit, allowing them to conquer their fears along the way.

     

    The new TVC for Mountain Dew, shot by Bang Bang Films features a young boy who faces his fears, and triumphs with the help of Mountain Dew and his own can-do attitude. Despite falling, breaking bones, friends who laugh and parents who nag, his persistence eventually pays off and he successfully completes a daredevil stunt in front of a large audience.

     

    The creative duties for Mountain Dew in India are handled by Taproot India and the script is the brainchild of Chief Creative Officer, Agnello Dias, and Associate Creative Director, Mayuresh Dubhashi.

     

    Directed by Danish filmmaker, Martin Aamund and produced by Bang Bang Films, the spot is both realistic and dramatic at the same time. The daredevil stunt in question was done in Delhi, where a dirt bike track was created with a ramp built entirely from scratch, at a location which had never before been used for a shoot.

     

    Mayuresh Dubhashi, Associate Creative Director, Taproot India commented, “Everything about this project was a challenge. Right from the brief to the script and then its execution. The reason is that Mountain Dew has moved on to a more cerebral nature of fear. And that makes it a lot scarier. A physical version of fear can be overcome with sheer will, but it takes something special to rock your own boat and challenge your status quo. After 3 days of a hectic shoot with Martin and a resilient Bang Bang team through crowded Delhi streets, huge setups and unpredictable weather, the film has managed to do just that.”

     

    Speaking about the film, Roopak Saluja, MD and Founder, Bang Bang Films said, “With the problem solved by Mountain Dew moving from physical fear to cerebral, Martin was the best suited Director for the job given the deftness with which he handles inner monologue and self-reflection.  The result: a gritty, gripping and realistically slick spot that tells a great story.  It was a mountain of a job given all the challenges but I’m glad we’ve more than managed to give it its dew”.

     

  • The Anchor: 10 TAPROOT! TVCs that you want to watch over and over again

    By A N Chorrea

     

     

    [youtube width=”400″ height=”220″]http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=nIuGHTAwi1g[/youtube] Airtel: Jo Tera Hai Wo Mera Hai

     

    The new Airtel ad may seem a little inspired from the original and hence not as refreshing, but it has caught on with the youth, and guess that’s what matters.

    [youtube width=”400″ height=”220″]http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=pIAKKtlyi6g[/youtube] Fox Movies: Subtitles

     

    Okay, it may take a second for you to get it, but when you do, you can’t help wanting to watch it over and over again.

    [youtube width=”400″ height=”220″]http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=v2FviMZkX5s[/youtube] Nirma Ambulance (New)

     

    Woman power at its best… in fact it may want you to sock those men where it hurts most. (Pssst: now would you really do what the women did if you were in your finery?)

    [youtube width=”400″ height=”220″]http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=xeg27rv__04[/youtube] A Day in the Life of India – The Great Indian Circus (The Times of India)

     

    It’s part of the Day in the Life of India series… nicely crafted.

    [youtube width=”400″ height=”220″]http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=WWq3101hotA[/youtube] Mountain Dew – Dam

     

    How did he do it!? We bet every time you saw it, you had a new theory on how the young man would’ve overcome fear.

    [youtube width=”400″ height=”220″]http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=rVb01vfbVEw[/youtube] Mumbai Mirror

     

    Award-winning ad… need we say more.

    [youtube width=”400″ height=”220″]http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=kxz4WvGG7uA[/youtube] TOI Chennai – Wake up to The Times of India

     

    This is the ad that woke up The Hindu… guess that’s what matters.

    [youtube width=”400″ height=”220″]http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=hZIFj3VF9KU[/youtube] Pepsi World Cup Cricket 2011 promos

     

    These were fun, weren’t they… remember the Helicopter Shot?

    [youtube width=”400″ height=”220″]http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=dz6YylorUGM[/youtube] Aman Ki Asha

     

    Tears roll down our eyes every time we see this.

    [youtube width=”400″ height=”220″]http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=P9BlCyTD-sw[/youtube] Airtel – Har Ek Friend Zaroori Hota Hai

     

    Huge hit. Earned cult status as you don’t mind seeing it over and over again.

  • Eye on volumes, Coca-Cola to revive Citra after 19 years

    By Ratna Bhushan

     

    Coca-Cola will revive Citra, a clear-lime drink it bought from Ramesh Chauhan two decades ago but junked in favour of Sprite, in a move that analysts believe is more to target price-sensitive consumer segments than to unlock the brand’s heritage value.

     

    A person familiar with the top beverages maker’s plans said Citra will be priced about 20 per cent cheaper than existing lime-lemon drinks such as its own brands Sprite and Limca as well as PepsiCo’s Mountain Dew and 7 Up, to target a wider audience and take on smaller brands.

     

    A Coca-Cola spokesman confirmed the company is introducing Citra in “a few towns in Maharashtra and Gujarat” on a pilot basis. This will be followed by a staggered launch across other metros and bigger cities.

     

    The move has surprised industry watchers because Coca-Cola’s Sprite, the second-largest soft drink brand in the country after Thums Up, leads the lime-lemon drinks segment, which is the fastest-growing soft drink category in India’s Rs13,000-crore fizzy drinks market.

     

    Among those surprised is Ramesh Chauhan, who created brand Citra and made it popular in the late 1980s and early 1990s.

     

    “After keeping the brand in cold storage for so many years, it’s strange they want to re-introduce it now, especially when they have a strong presence in the clear-lime segment,” Chauhan said. “If they are looking for retention and heritage value, then logically even Gold Spot should be revived.”

     

    When Coca-Cola re-entered India in 1993, it bought out all Parle brands except Bisleri from Chauhan.

     

    Move aimed at mopping up volumes

    While Citra and Gold Spot were phased out to make way for Coca-Cola’s global brands Sprite and Fanta, respectively, Thums Up, Limca and Maaza were retained. Shashi Kalathil, CEO of management advisory firm Y-factor and partner at private equity fund Exponentia Capital, said the move may be aimed at mopping up volumes. “Coca-Cola probably doesn’t want Citra’s pricing to impact its larger brands. So this could be more of a pricing game and about treating Citra more as a trademark than a brand,” he said.

     

    Parle brand again

    It’s history that the US major sidelined Parle’s cola brand Thums Up to promote its own brand Coca-Cola for years before waking up to the potential of the Indian brand and backing it.

     

    Now it seems like deja vu for Coca-Cola as it is banking on a Parle brand once again to push market share in the lime segment. The Coca-Cola spokesman said Citra would not cannibalise its existing lemon drinks because there is ample room for multiple brands in a developing segment like sparkling fizzy drink in a high-potential market such as India.

     

    Devendra Chawla, president of food & FMCG segments at the country’s largest retailer Future Group, said the move will aid the growth of the clear-lime category, which is already seeing heightened brand activity. “To grow carbonated soft drinks’ per capita in India, apart from growing colas, it’s critical to activate flavours which have natural acceptance from Indian consumers such as lime and mango,” said Chawla, who formerly worked with Coca-Cola.

     

    India’s per capita consumption of carbonated drinks is just 11 litres a year compared to 34 litres in China and 675 litres in Mexico.

     

    The lime-lemon category in India has been growing 16-17 per cent a year, ahead of colas at about 11-12 per cent and orange drinks at 8-9 per cent. Apart from being a familiar flavour that Indians consume at home (in the form of nimbu paani), lime-lemon drinks are considered ideal thirst quenchers.

     

    Both Coca-Cola and PepsiCo have been promoting their brands aggressively in this segment. PepsiCo has Bollywood star Salman Khan endorsing Mountain Dew and actor Sharman Joshi for 7 Up, while Coca-Cola pushes clear-lime drink Sprite and cloudy lemon drink Limca on the irreverent and freshness platforms, respectively.

     

    Source:The Economic Times

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