Tag: Mumbai Police

  • Brand Engagement in the Lockdown

     

    By Sanjeev Kotnala

     

    Brand Engagement is always relevant and more so during the lockdown. Brands are using different tricks for engaging with consumers. Some of them are relevant and impactful, few original and innovative. I believe if there is nothing to say, being silliest is a better option.

    The car manufacturer shares tips on how to take care of the parked car. Banks deliver newspaper in your inbox. Antiseptic cream makes sanitisers. Porn site gives free access to premium content so that you stay at home! Soaps shouting about washing the virus and Apps are updating for smoother operations.

    Brand engagement during lockdown is part of the strategic initiative in preparedness for the post-lockdown market. Naturally, every brand wants to be on the top of the consideration-set whenever markets open. So, they need to keep the brand connect alive through brand engagement. It is known that the brands engaging the consumers now are most likely to emerge as the front runner post-coved scene.

     

    BRAND ENGAGEMENT

    It was interesting to see Durex playing mindgames in its territory. The brand also suggested an innovative way to help out the audience like using it to cover the finger while pressing buttons in the lift.

     

    On the other level, DOVE went ahead to celebrate the Beauty called Courage. It remains credible as the brand is operating within its pre-Covid coordinates defined by inner beauty.

     

    Consider, ‘TAKE THE LOAD’ by Ariel, and it falls in place. The brand is continuously thinking of engaging consumer in different ways and situations. It is an attractive proposition, but I have a problem with it. The brand still addresses housework as a woman’s load. I will discuss this some other day.

     

    Keeping the conversation going during such a crisis is a sensitive area. Some brands have learnt their lessons the hard way. The strategy and the message must remain incomplete internal and external sync. The brand can not have different visible standards or expectations across geographies, product lines and services, internal or external.

     

    BRAND ENGAGEMENT – A TWO WAY STREET.

    The brands must realise that ‘The consumer will treat you exactly the way you treat them during this period of crisis’. Remember, we live in an era of information democracy, and it is driving everyone crazy. Once the message is released in the public domain, you no longer are in control. If you are in the arena to commercially exploit the situation, your life will become miserable, sooner than later. At the same time, it is a beautiful space for brands with real purpose and empathy in engaging the audience.

     

    BRAND ENGAGEMENT – PLAY WITH RELEVANCE.

    During the crisis, sometimes it is best to remain silent. The well-informed consumer is aware of the situation. Brands are looking towards contactless delivery, but it still is no time for impact-less irrelevant engagement.

    The consumer’s transactional deal is restricted to the brand delivering the best at a reasonable price. Or the brands are playfully engaging the consumer while sending a positive, relevant message of importance. Just like the various brands supported Social Distancing by playing around with their logo’s.

     

    BRAND ENGAGEMENT – BE SIMPLE.

    One of the compelling ways beyond talk play and intent is to act the intention. Let sharing of the news surrounding the Brand Act be amplification, instead of trying to send out a video in the social space. However, when brands move beyond transactional arena to show their soft touch treating consumers as part of the extended family, the equation shifts from being purely a stakeholder to an active partner. It required empathy, care, understanding and being sensitive to the ecosystem. The brand needs to understand the covert -overt needs and continuously re-defined expectations. It is a tough and risky territory to walk. The brands that see it as only a commercial leveraging opportunity, they fail to understand the double-edged dimensions and in effect do more wrong than the right to their image.

     

    BRAND ENGAGEMENT – ACCEPTANCE COMES WITH RELEVANCE.

    Such situations like coronavirus and the lockdown demands that the brands demonstrate care and empathy. However, there is an un-stated boundary between compassion and pity. The brand operating within the bandwidth of experience and tonality have higher chances to succeed.

    Mumbai police use of citizen vigilance for Stay Home campaign makes sense. People relate to it, knowing that ultimately police can do that much only. They emerge as a partner- as a peer.

     

    Nearer home, Surf team remains true to the thought Daag Aache Hai. And extends it with Daag Bhai Ghar par Rahenge. The brand extends engagement by sharing fun activities for home on Instagram.

     

    Now, this was brilliant as it came well in the early phase when people were still thinking about how to manage work. It works for Sony It works as the scope remains restricted to helping the daily wage earners in the film and television industry. But what is the Kalyan Jewellers link?

     

    When EMIRATES tells you to stay home and assures with positivity that we will fly soon, you like the approach and the tonality. They are, in fact, not making any new point.

    https://youtu.be/IRoAQ3dmOUw

     

    On the other side, when UBER uses a similar tone to thank you for not using them, it seems forced. It is the result of earlier experience and perception of the brand ethos, culture and expectations.

     

    Vodafone used both their famous hugely loved mascots, the ZOOZOO and the PUG to deliver the message. The Pug communication still has something going for it, but the ZooZoo fails to impress.

     

    ASIAN PAINTS keeps the tone of voice consistent in ‘Jab Ghar Mai Saab Ho Toh Ghar khilkhilata hai’, #stayhonestaysafe. It remains within known brand coordinates using a picture of everyday life. Similarly, TATA SKY talks about ‘Ghar Baite Kuch Seekhe’. It is an example of excellent connect with its known educative and activity-based channels.

     

    BRAND ENGAGEMENT – CAN ALWAYS MOTIVATE.

    And when there is nothing -nothing to say and the brand still wants to keep the conversation going. They fall back on positivity to keep people motivated, usually with a dose of singing and celebrities.

     

    When you overstretch and try being arty like HUL. It snaps because of a hyper stretch. It fails to evoke similar emotions.

     

    However, when Mahindra says,- Some wheels will keep moving, you relate to it. And the treatment makes you feel so much better.

     

    BRAND ENGAGEMENT- AUDIENCE AWAIT ACTION. 

    Though travel is a bad word during the lockdown, I was looking forward to engaging relevant and sharply focussed communication from Samsonite. It had reoriented its coordinates when they made the earlier communications including the one during Kerala floods. It will be a waste of a marketing opportunity if Samsonite does not subtly engage the audience in this crisis.

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    BRAND ENGAGEMENT- LIGHTER MOMENTS.

    On the side, the crisis also made room for some absurd but thoroughly enjoyable videos. The one that is my favourites features Shekhar Gupta and @HoeZaay. He tries explaining the concept of tomorrow in a Swami Nityanand style. Shekhar Gupta may not need new audiences – but this viral must have worked for him.

  • Mumbai Police promotes self-policing in Lowe Lintas

    By A Correspondent

     

    To strengthen its fight against COVID-19, Mumbai Police – along with Lowe Lintas and Mogaé Media – got Mumbaikars to shoulder the huge responsibility to physically ensure every citizen stays put inside their homes with the force.

     

    #MainBhiMumbaiPolice, an idea conceived by Lowe Lintas, got Mumbaikars to consider themselves an extension of the force by taking on the task of self-policing thus ensuring that their family members stay inside their homes and keep everyone safe from any risk of infection.

     

    Sagar Kapoor

    Speaking about the campaign, Sagar Kapoor, CCO, Lowe Lintas said: “The Mumbai Police is working relentlessly to keep us safe in every manner possible. With the lockdown the least we can help as citizens is to partner them in their efforts, considering they are risking themselves for us out there. Hence, the #MainBhiMumbaiPolice idea. Since it is the responsibility of each and every household to look after their family members and stop them from venturing out during the lockdown. Staying true to the spirit, the whole campaign has been created by staying at home. All partners connected digitally and executed the campaign from their respective homes.”

     

    Added Carol Goyal, Executive Director, Mogaé Media: “We at Mogaé have worked with the Mumbai Police in the past. This time when the pandemic problems started, we thought we must do our bit to help the police. This is an initiative by Lowe Lintas and Mogaé Media to support the Mumbai Police. We have always volunteered to help the force and they have graciously accepted our support. The campaign was then created by our friends at Lowe Lintas to whom we owe a million thanks for working round the clock during the lockdown.”

     

     

  • Mumbai Police & Draftfcb+Ulka billboard to observe moment of silence for lost heroes

    By  A Correspondent

     

    Over the years, Mumbai Police and Mumbai Traffic Police along with Draftfcb+Ulka have spread the message of a ‘Safe Mumbai’ via a prominent hoarding spot at Babulnath in South Mumbai. This is the hoarding at the junction of the tail of Marine Drive/Girgaum Chowpatty with a road on the left leading to Raj Bhavan/Walkeshwar/Malabar Hill and to the right to Hughes Road/Peddar Road/Warden Road/North Mumbai.

     

    For the past 20 years this billboard has achieved an iconic status with some of the  most impactful & thought provoking messages on road-safety. Various campaigns created over the years have made motorists smile, sit up, take notice and buckle up/switch off their cell while driving, stick to their lanes etc. Basically encouraging citizens to be responsible when you are on the road.

     

    On the occasion of India’s 67th Independence Day, Mumbai Police and Mumbai Traffic Police in association with Draftfcb+Ulka has taken on a larger theme of paying tribute to India’s lost heroes. The hoarding urges fellow Indians to remember those who sacrificed their lives for our country by observing a moment of silence. But with a twist – asking people to send a blank tweet with the hashtag #AMomentOfSilenceForOurHeroes as a mark of respect for the brave heroes.

     

    K S Chakravarthy

    “We dedicate this Independence Day to our lost heroes. This is a brilliant initiative and we support it.”-  said VivekPhansalkar, Joint Commissioner of Police, Traffic K S ‘Chax’ Chakravarthy, National Creative Director, DraftfcbUlka Advertising said”I absolutely loved the idea the minute I saw it – it is simple, it asks for just a minute, and the novel idea of asking for a blank tweet as a symbolic ‘minute’s silence’ will, we hope, help to make people pause and reflect – for much longer than a minute – how much the nation owes those who went before.”

     

    MxMIndia View: Idea achcha hai, but too long a hashtag!

     

  • Debrief: Mumbai Police: Weak & Ineffective

    By Anil Thakraney

     

    Well, safety of women is now favourite dinnertime conversation; it was a matter of time before a public service campaign went on air. The Mumbai Police has come up with one, and there are quite a few commercials. However, it’s a classic case of noble intention let down by dull communication.

     

    The ads feature policemen talking directly into camera. They first address women, reassuring them that their complaints will be taken seriously. Later, in the same capsule, they address us deviant men, urging us to respect women. This simplicity and honesty sounds perfect on paper, but live action needs a lot more. There are many problems with this approach.

     

    For one, because each ad has been broken into two segments, as a viewer, I mentally switch off as soon as the second section starts, assuming that the same message is running in a loop. This is because the policemen, the camera angle, the set up… it’s the same for both segments. They needed to take care of this inevitability. Two, I don’t know if these guys are real cops, they look like small-time TV actors. Their names appear as supers, but this gets missed very easily. The fact that these are real cops ought to have been highlighted powerfully, credibility of the communication solely rides on that. And lastly, the treatment is ineffective because the creative is weak. As a citizen, I know this is not how cops deal with me in the police station, that all this nicety is only for the camera. Forget policemen, even the traffic cops are petty rude (ask the angry MLAs!). Which is why they needed a stronger approach, something that would make us sit up and say, ‘Wow, I didn’t know the police is nice with women complainants!’. Perhaps they should have played out real experiences of women at police stations. As for the ‘stern’ warning to the goons, it’s so thanda, I can see them going ‘LOL’.

     

    Rating: (On a scale of 1-5): 1. Tch, tch. A good opportunity wasted.

     

  • O&M creates women’s safety campaign for Mum cops

    By A Correspondent

     

    With growing incidences of attacks on women and drop in safety in public places, the Mumbai Police have reached out to the citizens of Mumbai to reassure them that they are doing their best to keep girls and women safe. This is being done in a campaign created by Ogilvy Mumbai. The agency created an integrated campaign consisting of film, outdoor and radio with integrated messaging that speaks to men as well as women.

     

    Harshad Rajadhyaksha, Group Creative Director Ogilvy Mumbai, says, “The two-pronged approach is we believe what makes this campaign different and it will also be the reason why it will work. The same ad encourages the women to come forward and not tolerate abuse in any form, and the same ad firmly warns the men that abuse will not be tolerated in any form.”

     

    The Mumbai police spokesperson in each film first addresses women and then in the second message addresses men. The messaging comprises two parts – an internal as well as in external communiqué. The internal films aim to sensitize the police to everyday incidents/fears faced by women and will be run at all Police Stations in Mumbai; the external films encourage women to report these cases and will be run on media channels. This will make sure the citizens and the force are on the same page.

     

    Abhijit Avasthi

    Abhijit Avasthi, National Creative Director Ogilvy India adds, “The most important decision was using real police officers, both men and women from within the Mumbai Police Force. The reason for this was that we wanted the campaign to be an honest conversation between the police and the city.”

     

    In each film the police officer talks candidly to the women and when we think the commercial has ended, the officer returns and talks to the men. Though the words largely remain the same for the two genders, the method of delivery ensures that the message is different for women and men.

     

    Kainaz Karmakar, Group Creative Director Ogilvy Mumbai points out, “If the message did not sound true it would not work. That was why we discarded many ideas before deciding on this. Every piece is simple and tackles a real fear in the silent victim’s mind. For a variety of reasons, the police station just around the corner is often the longest walk for a victim.”

     

    Code Red Films and Avadhut Hembade were involved in the process to shape the TV and print campaign, respectively. It was Gajraj’s idea to hold a series of workshops to help the Police Officers get comfortable in front of the camera.

     

    Gajraj Rao, Code Red Films says, “Team Code Red is proud to be associated with this Mumbai Police and Ogilvy Initiative. This campaign has the promise to bring to the fore the human face of our fellow citizens in khaki. As part of this great city, we felt we had to contribute to an environment where women feel free to reach out to the police for help.”

     

    Navin Talreja, President Ogilvy Mumbai & Kolkata says, “How can we be in the communication business and not use our talent for a cause like this? What do we expect from this campaign? Nothing will change overnight and it is reasonable to expect that. The journey from fear to faith cannot be completed in one day or with one campaign. However, with this effort we will hopefully move one step closer to making women feel like there is someone watching out for them.”

     

    Credits

    National Creative Director: Abhijit Avasthi

    Group Creative Directors: Harshad Rajadhyaksha and Kainaz Karmakar

    Creative Team: Rajeshwari Rao, Sagar Parab, Gaurav Kumar and Vishakha Modak

    President Mumbai and Kolkatta: Navin Talreja

    Account Management: Hirol Gandhi, Nikhil Mohan, Sudarshan Srinivasan and Avtar Singh Negi

    Account Planning: Prem Narayan

    Agency film production executive: Vikrant Mishra

    Photographer: Avadhut Hembade

    Production House: Code Red Films

    Producer: Subrat Ray

    Director: Gajraj Rao