Tag: MullenLowe Group

  • Prateek Bhardwaj is CCO & Head of Creative (India) at Lowe Lintas

    By Our Staff

     

    Lowe Lintas, the creative agency of MullenLowe Lintas Group, has announced the restructure of its creative leadership, with the appointment of Prateek Bhardwaj as CCO and Head of Creative (India).

     

    Under the new structure, PB will now supervise all of Lowe Lintas’ offices, which include Mumbai, Bangalore, Gurugram, and Kolkata, and will partner Subramanyeswar S, the group’s now-not-so-recently appointed CEO. Amongst other changes, Sagar Kapoor takes charge as Chief Creative Officer, Global Brands, and will also oversee the Mumbai creative operations.

     

    In response to the announcement, Subramanyeswar S, Group CEO – India & Chief Strategy Officer – APAC, MullenLowe Group said: “Prateek is a powerhouse of big ideas. He is one of the most celebrated and decorated creative leaders in the country presently and his work sparkles with the personality of a man who knows he is interesting enough on his own. His elevation comes at a time when clients are walking the tightrope between big data and big emotion and I’m sure he will make his idea revelations at this intersection the only (business) metric that will matter. A great quality of his is that he also cares about other people’s creative success as much as his own, maybe more. He’s an artist, explorer, storyteller all rolled into one and his taking charge as the Creative Head of Lowe Lintas India gives me the hope that the best years of big ideas from us are ahead.”

     

    Bhardwaj 24-odd years of industry experience, having won numerous accolades for his work, including the Grand Prix at Cannes Lions and Jay Chiat Awards, and the Black Pencil at D&AD. His notable campaigns include Sprite (Bujhaye only pyaas, baaki all bakwaas), Kinley (Boond boond mein vishwaas), Nescafe (stammering comedian), the launch of tech platform Kaam Wapasi during the pandemic, Vim Black (Vim’s satirical ad campaign), and the recent #TestedBySamsonite series. Prateek has also been a creative entrepreneur who founded and ran Eleven Brandworks out of Mumbai and Gurgaon.

     

  • It’s official now: Exit Amer Jaleel and Virat Tandon, Enter Subbu as new Group CEO

    By Our Staff

     

    S Subramanyeswar
    S Subramanyeswar

    MullenLowe Group has announced the appointment of S Subramanyeswar, aka Subbu, as the Group Chief Executive Officer of MullenLowe Lintas Group India, effective immediately. MxMIndia was the first to report on Amer Jaleel and Virat Tandon moving on.

     

    In a strategic realignment from the previous model, all functions of the group will now report to Subbu. In addition, Subbu will continue to directly lead the Strategy function for the Group in India and maintain his role as Chief Strategy Officer for the MullenLowe APAC region.

     

    Alex Leikikh
    Alex Leikikh

    Speaking about the new era, Alex Leikikh, Chairman of MullenLowe Group and Executive Vice President of Interpublic Group, said: “During these transformative times where we are all facing many challenges, I believe, there is no better person to lead MullenLowe Lintas Group than Subbu. He is a proven leader with hard-core strategic skills, business imagination and the ability to bring people together. Subbu has a global perspective on how brands, communication and technology will intersect in the future. He’s also a big believer in brand purpose. This combination is exactly what we need as the company enters the next chapter.

     

    As we move into this new era, I want to thank Amer Jaleel and Virat Tandon for their dedication, passion and leadership throughout the years for us and all of our clients. I wish them the best on their next endeavours.”

     

    Since joining the company in 2011, Subbu has played a leading role in MullenLowe Lintas Group becoming the No.1 agency in India and APAC, and No.2 globally on the Effie Index ranking. MullenLowe Lintas Group was also awarded ‘Agency of the year’ several times at India and APAC Effies, and by Tambuli, Campaign South Asia, Ad Age, and WARC with Subbu helming the leadership from the strategy end.

     

    Excited about his new responsibility Subbu said, “Lintas is one of those extraordinary institutions to have truly impacted Indian society for decades through big, bold, culture-leading ideas based on a decisive stand taken by the brand. I couldn’t be more honoured to have been given the charge to lead the company at a very important time. The opportunity that lies ahead in an ever-expanding world of possibilities is limitless, but to seize it, we must focus precisely, move at a rapid pace, and be transformational. A big part of my job is to widen our creative and strategic aperture to innovatively apply technology and talent to solve new problems for clients, for people, and the world at large. I’m excited, grounded on the challenges, and upbeat, all at once.”

     

  • Subbu is now CSO of Mullen Lowe APAC

    By Orur Staff

     

    S Subramanyeswar
    S Subramanyeswar

    MullenLowe Group has announced the elevation of S Subramanyeswar (better known as Subbu) as Chief Strategy Officer for the Asia-Pacific region. He will continue to lead strategy for brands at MullenLowe Lintas Group as its Group Chief Strategy Officer.

     

    Since joining Lowe Lintas in 2011 as National Planning Director, Subbu has led major strategic thoughts or shifts for multiple brands across the clients that the group works on in India.

     

    James Fox
    James Fox

    Speaking about his elevation, James Fox – Global Chief Strategy Officer, MullenLowe Group said: Subbu’s promotion is much deserved as he is one of the finest marketing minds in the region. He is a true leader for his team and his clients, helping them achieve new heights professionally and commercially. I am very proud to have Subbu as part of the global planning council, leading MullenLowe Group’s strategic charge across Asia-Pacific countries.”

     

    Virat Tandon
    Virat Tandon

    Added Virat Tandon – Group CEO, MullenLowe Lintas Group, India: “In the 10 years that he’s been at MullenLowe Lintas Group, Subbu has played a huge role in not just improving and innovating the planning product, but forging strong partnerships with colleagues at the agency, clients and academia. Not to forget his big role in putting us on the global map of effectiveness! Having worked very closely with him over the last 10 years, I have to say that he is clearly one of the top brand strategists in the world. I am extremely happy that Subbu will take his amazing brand of strategic planning beyond South Asia and into all of Asia-Pacific.”

     

    Excited about his new role within MullenLowe Group, Subbu said, “I’m honoured, humbled and fired up. It’s a huge opportunity and that’s very exciting. At the same time, I’m also grounded on the challenges that lie ahead. And it is that trip and the constraint that also brings out the passion and fierce obsession in me, to do great culture-leading work. I’ll take the rich learning that I had in my ten years at MullenLowe Lintas Group – India, an ecosystem or the fulcrum of marketing, forward.” Subbu will be based in Mumbai, India, as he takes up the Asia-Pacific charge with immediate effect.

     

  • 6 SXSW trends & how they implicate brands

     

    South by Southwest (SXSW, in short) is an annual congregation of nteractive, film and music professionals who assemble for a slew of conferences and festivals that typically happen mid-March in Austin, Texas in the United States. SXSW was established in 1987 and has grown considerably over the years. According to the ‘About Us’ section on sxsw.com which we recommend you access, “SXSW proves that the most unexpected discoveries happen when diverse topics and people come together”. Hmmm.

     

    The 2017 edition – the thirtieth in the series – took place on March 10 to 19. The 2018 edition dates have been announced: March 9 to 18. Even if you can’t make it to an SXSW, it’s always good to keep track on what happened and who said (and did) what. Presenting here a ‘trendwatch’ by the folks at MullenLowe Group, which in India, as we know, is called the MullenLoweLintas Group. Read on…

     

    (Note we haven’t erred in not putting a space between Mullen and Lowe… that’s how it’s written)

     

    By MullenLowe Group

     

    SXSW was born in 1987 when an intimate group of thinkers and music lovers recognized a need to discuss the future of entertainment and media. That first year, 150 registered attendees unexpectedly grew to 700 on opening day, and the undeniable charm of Austin set the stage for what is now one of the preeminent events at the intersection of the interactive, film and music industries, with over 72,000 people in attendance.

     

    Being able to attend SXSW is both a privilege and a necessity. The quality and diversity of learning opportunities is only limited to the number of hours you want to spend in talks, meet-ups or workshops, armed with an open mind, a notebook, a backup battery and lots of water and snacks on hand. From our time in Austin we’ve identified six trends and how they implicate brands. Virtual Reality, voice recognition interfaces and robotics sparked the hunger and amazement that technology feeds us, while activism, emotions and ethics kept us feeling inspired and connected as human beings. Each of these topics will dramatically change the way consumers engage with brands moving forward.

     

    #1. Smartphones as a gateway for bigger experiences

     

    Like last year’s conference, Virtual Reality dominated the entertainment conversation at SXSW. In addition to several entertainment-focused activations, one of the biggest developments was an influx of content showing VR’s potential as an empathy tool. But clunky, expensive hardware and lacking streamlined distribution still remain big hurdles standing between the hype and the reality of mainstream consumer adoption for more immersive, interactive experiences. Affordable options like Google Cardboard and Samsung Gear provide lighter-weight virtual experiences by simply opening a VR app and sliding your phone into the goggles. The result? The phone is instantly transformed from a distracting text messaging, email and newsfeed machine to a conduit for an uninterrupted, 360-degree environment creating a heightened emotional connection.

    In addition to lightweight VR, the phone emerged as a tool for adding real world value through the abundant augmented reality apps on the SXSW tradeshow floor. Apps like Aurasma make it possible to trigger a video or additional content by holding your phone over printed collateral or an OOH board. Other mobile apps like Seek are taking the route of Pokémon Go and creating scavenger hunt-like experiences where consumers can unlock exclusive content and prizes by holding the phone over objects in the real world. The week before SXSW, Shazam announced its partnership with Zappar, an augmented reality technology that will trigger 3D holograms with a Shazam code without requiring another AR app to be installed on the mobile device, creating a simpler consumer experience that has real scale.

     

    IMPLICATION

    Innovation around smartphones has been flat-lining, but 360-degree video and augmented reality are creating new opportunities to leverage smartphones as a conduit for bigger experiences. Thinking of ways to leverage the smartphone as a means for creating bigger mixed reality experiences vs. just as one of a three- or four-screen strategy is something all brands and marketers should be doing. And for brands in the travel or entertainment category, 360-degree video is a means of creating undistracted emotional connections with consumers on a device that typically makes it harder to capture attention. Even if you don’t have a 360-degree video production capability in place, there are plenty of publishers who are already creating content in this category that you can sponsor or integrate with, and new platforms like Facebook 360 are making it possible for wider 360-degree video distribution

     

    #2. Interfaces everywhere

     

    Even before SXSW, the rise of conversational interfaces was a rising 2017 trend, making huge waves in January at CES when Amazon Alexa announced integration into hundreds of products and promised to change the landscape of how consumers access information. But there was also no shortage of content around other nonscreen-based interactions at SXSW. One of the most popular devices was Levi’s smart jacket where the sleeve serves as a remote control allowing you to navigate music playlists and accept or decline phone calls easily while, for example, biking. Lampix, a smart lamp technology, can turn any surface into a smart surface, so — a piece of paper into a functioning computer screen or your floor into a multiperson game. Rotex, a smart tattoo technology, enables you to interact with virtual reality environments without the use of a control by applying the tattoo to your arm during gameplay.

     

    IMPLICATION

    While not applicable to every product or service, brands should be thinking about ways they can evolve or add value to their products by incorporating useful digital interfaces. From a media standpoint, brands who think beyond paid impressions on a screen will be better prepared for a world where consumers are accustomed to diverse interfaces.

     

    #3. The rise of emotional data

     

    The topic of big data is no stranger to SXSW (or any other tech or brand conference for that matter). Wearables have created an influx of personal data collection, like heart rate, blood pressure and body temperature, but technologies that capture and respond to emotional data were more prevalent this year. IBM showcased an alpha product that will create customized original musical compositions based on a consumer’s taste and mood. Lily, an emerging fashion chatbot, provides fashion advice by understanding emotions, perceptions and aspirations about your body to make more personalized fashion recommendations.

     

    IMPLICATION

    Highly personalised experiences at every brand touchpoint will soon be table stakes for consumers. While many brands already have a strong programmatic strategy in place for their marketing programs, they should also be thinking about how all consumer touchpoints can be better curated, from a first visit to a retailer’s website to customer service. And as artificial intelligence continues to grow, there is greater opportunity for importing data into AI platforms to make recommendations in conversational interfaces (e.g. chatbots or Alexa Skills).

     

    #4. Humans become robots and robots become human

     

    It may seem like a paradox, but these are two clear trends. On one hand, there’s a race to make humans a better version of themselves, giving them machinelike features and skills by applying technology to overcome traits or limitations intrinsic to the human being. For example, we now have access to technology that can literally edit our DNA, and that presents the possibility of modifying the development of the human race. We are also experiencing the human brain as the new explorer’s frontier, where brain coding will take human intelligence to unprecedented scenarios: robotics at the service of movement, vision and language. As Bryan Johnson from Kernel suggested, the technology to become superhumans should be accessible to everybody as another human right, the human right of evolution. However, on the other hand, there is a race in emerging technologies to inject natural human skills into machines, that is, to make artificial intelligence more human. Technology is being applied to program robots with emotional awareness, empathy, intuition, compassion and sensitivity, as a means of making them more efficient, useful and agile machines. At the same time, humans are expecting more intimate and meaningful relationships with machines, which will be built upon their humanlike reactions but also their humanlike appearance. Marc Sagar, two-time Academy Award winner, and CEO/co-founder of Soul Machines Ltd, amazed us with his pioneering project of giving face and embodiment to virtual agents that can learn through social interaction. The future of intelligence, should that be biological intelligence, brain intelligence, or computing intelligence is just starting to be shaped.

     

    IMPLICATION

    As artificial intelligence, conversational UIs and machine learning become mainstream, brands have to remember, more than ever, that we are in the business of people. Humans’ need for connection and humanized relationships will always be at the core of our basic needs. Humans, or superhumans, for that matter, will connect with humanized brands — brands that tap into human truths and build significance and meaning people can connect and engage with

     

    #5. And technology brought ethics back

     

    Technology is not an instrument at the service of society anymore. As we have seen in many of the talks at SXSW, technology and technologists are defining the world we are going to live in. We have also seen that technology has no limits, that nothing is impossible. As Andrew Grove from Intel said, “A fundamental rule in technology says that whatever can be done, will be done.” Technology will, sooner or later, do it. As the role of technology expands, the need for ethical awareness grows with it.

    Current topics such as security and privacy, the information bubble, identity, smart cities and autonomous driving spur an ethical debate. But the level of ethics involved when we are defining the future should encompass a broader spectrum. The future of employment, identity, health, sports and the human race urgently calls for ethical expertise. An ethical expertise that can shape the world and the society we want to live in, with technology contributing accordingly.

     

    IMPLICATION

    This new ethical framework will have an impact on consumers’ frame of reference, and they will look at their world differently. It will also increase their suspicion of the world around them, including brands. It is a great opportunity for brands to ensure transparency and honesty in their relationships with their customers, and especially in addressing ethics as part of their business model.

     

    #6. Activism as a contribution to the future

     

    Even if SXSW congregates a large number of “liberals” dedicated to the most progressive industries, never before have politics and activism taken such a big chunk of the SXSW agenda. SXSW went political this year, as if there was a need for the progressive thinkers to go through a group catharsis to ventilate, do some internal evaluation and overcome the trauma of the current political climate. Beyond that, this boost of activism proves that technology and humanity are very much intertwined. Technologists who are working hard to improve the world of the future have proven to be as concerned about the world in the present. There is a sense that democracy, and therefore humanity, is in danger. And activism is as much a way to contribute to the world of the future as it is to the world of the present.

    There was plenty of Trump. CNN’s Van Jones captivated the audience by turning the conservative threat into an opportunity for liberals to work for the world they want to live in. But there was much more than Trump. Women, gender, refugees, homelessness and the overarching claim of equality were stronger topics. Jessica Shortall from Texas Competes had a very emotional and provocative talk on how to build a business development case to gain LGBT+ rights in Texas.

     

    IMPLICATION

    As seen at SXSW, activism is now a part of culture. If brands want to be a part of culture too, they cannot ignore this. Brands that don’t get involved will be left behind. There is a new consumer mindset. Consumers know that buying a brand can be activism in itself. Buying into a brand implies buying into the brand’s beliefs and principles. A brand with purpose is a brand with a very clear signpost. But consumers want that purpose to turn into action; they are asking brands to become activists.

     

    Republished with permission

    The original can be accessed at http://sxsw2017recap.mullenlowegroup.com/files/SXSW2017_Recap.pdf

    For more on SXSW, please visit sxsw.com