Tag: Ogilvy India

  • 82.5 Communications partners Sabka Dentist for World No Tobacco Day

    By A Correspondent

     

    Ogilvy India agency 82.5 Communications and Sabka Dentist came together to create a unique set of animated GIFs for World No Tobacco Day (May 31). The objective was to imply that smoking deteriorates one’s teeth and they aimed to communicate this message in a fresh fun way.

     

    Said Sumanto Chattopadhyay, Chairman and Chief Creative Officer, 82.5 Communications: “We have created some thought-provoking GIFs for Sabka Dentist on the occasion of World No Tobacco Day. Quirky and shareable, they’re an apt way for the brand to communicate on social media.”

     

     

  • KFC launches digital campaign for spicy grilled chicken offering

    By A Correspondent

     

    KFC has launched its latest ad campaign titled #DilMeinGrill. The digital campaign for its offering Smoky Red, is a quirky take on popular Bollywood tunes.

     

    Talking about the campaign, Moksh Chopra, Chief Marketing Officer, KFC India said: “We love surprising our consumers by adding our own flavour to all things popular and trendy, that is what we call the KFC twist on otherwise mundane things. The take on the ‘grilled’ aspect of Smoky Red through a pun on popular Bollywood numbers was both quirky and befitting. The #DilMeinGrill campaign also presents the Colonel in a never-seen-before avatar and is sure to get KFC fans grooving.”

     

    Added Shailender Mahajan, Senior Creative Director, Ogilvy India: “We wanted to make the campaign unique and distinctive so that ‘Grill’ as a word sticks in the consumer’s mind. Hence, we built on the association of ‘Dil & Grill’ with catchy Bollywood numbers that immediately strike a chord. Consumers also get to witness a quirky side of the Colonel in this campaign.”

     

     

  • Facebook partners with leading creative agencies to boost short-form video creativity

    By A Correspondent

     

    Facebook India has launched ‘Thumbstoppers’, an initiative to “redefine” short-form mobile video creativity in the country. This initiative is in partnership with senior professsionals from Wunderman Thompson, Ogilvy, Leo Burnett, McCann and Mullen Lintas – to “transform storytelling for mobile advertising”.

     

    The initiative sees the participation of Sukesh Nayak, Chief Creative Officer at Ogilvy India, Senthil Kumar, Chief Creative Officer, Wunderman Thompson, Rajdeepak Das, Chief Creative Officer at Leo Burnett India, Garima Khandelwal, Chief Creative Officer, Mullen Lintas and Ashish Chakravarty, Executive Director, and Head of Creative at McCann Worldgroup. In partnership with Facebook, they will support skilling of their teams, helping them understand and think mobile-first, and execute short-form videos more seamlessly. Thumbstoppers will see experts from Facebook visiting top agency offices in the country to empower them with the required skills and education to create effective short-form video campaigns for their clients.

     

    Speaking at the launch of the Thumbstoppers campaign in Mumbai, Sandeep Bhushan, Director and Head of Global Marketing Solutions (GMS), at Facebook India, said, “Advertising on Facebook has driven significant business results for all our advertisers – large and small. The opportunity now is to drive the impact even harder with storytelling built for mobile. Facebook’s Thumbstoppers is our partnership with the creative agencies to inspire and showcase short stories that evoke emotions in under 10 seconds”.

     

     

  • Pantaloons unveils latest summer campaign, ‘Holiday in Style’

    By A Correspondent

     

    Pantaloons has unveiled its new campaign, ‘Holiday in Style’ for this summer.

     

    Talking about the new campaign created by Ogilvy, Ryan Fernandes, Vice President, Marketing and E-Commerce, Pantaloons – Aditya Birla Fashion and Retail Limited said: “Planning a holiday is hugely exciting. This holiday season, Pantaloons launched a new campaign ‘Holiday in Style’ to enable its consumers to travel in style. The campaign resonates with the consumers’ need for stylish clothes which helps them always be social media ready. Our endeavour is to strengthen our connect with millennials, and be a part of their moment of style journey.”

     

    Added Sukesh Nayak, Chief Creative Officer, Ogilvy India: “Life is a series of big or small changes and every change opens up new possibilities. Pantaloons believes that a consumer should be able to own and celebrate these moments of change. This holiday season we wanted to encourage millennials to style their change. We chose to bring this alive on TV by showcasing an endearing story of a girl on a solo trip and how she is never really alone.”

     

     

  • Greenply introduces India’s first women carpenters

    By A Correspondent

     

    Greenply has launched its latest campaign that highlights how it can bring about a small but actionable change in the journey towards ensuring empowerment and equal opportunities for women in India.

     

    Speaking at the launch, Sukesh Nayak – Chief Creative Officer, Ogilvy India, said: “The seeds of patriarchy are sowed so deep that we still express wonder when we hear of women working in certain professions. Carpentry is one of them. We wanted to seize the opportunity to drive home the flaws in our ways of thinking. That’s why we chose Women’s Day as the right time to catapult this event.”

     

    Added Rajesh Mittal, Managing Director – Greenply Industries Limited (GIL) said: “Our partnership with Archana Women’s Centre is to provide expertise in various training programs such as mechanical skill, knowledge about newer techniques and critical thinking skills, which will develop the women workforce to meet all challenges of carpentry. At every phase, we attempt to find ways to empower and include women workforce in our ecosystem, where they can lead the plywood industry forward.”

     

     

  • Ogilvy and HUL partner to help people ‘Start A Little Good’ at Kumbh

    By A Correspondent

     

    Empowering the boatmen community of the region, HUL has joined hands with Kumbh Mela authorities in keeping the Sangam clean this year. The river is only accessible by boat and considering the volume of visitors, a substantial amount of littering ends up polluting the river. To address this challenge, Hindustan Unilever partnered with Ogilvy to conceptualise a simple and innovative solution – ‘Swachhata Ki Sawari’ that aims to keep cleaning the river unceasingly.

     

    The mechanism involves simply attaching two nets on either side of 100 boats, which ferries devotees to and from the Sangam. Once the boat is in the river, the nets which are closed at one end, collect floating garbage during the journey and once it reaches the shore to disembark passengers, a team of cleaners remove the garbage from the nets and reinstall clean nets. The cleaners then transport the collected waste to the designated garbage area on each ghat.

     

    Explaining the idea, Kainaz Karmakar and Harshad Rajadhyaksha, Chief Creative Officers, Ogilvy India (West), said on this project: “Simplicity is the most difficult thing to achieve. This idea achieves that. Practical, low cost and highly effective, this innovation turns everyday boats into vehicles of cleanliness.”

     

    Added Priya Nair, Executive Director, Homecare, HUL:  “‘Start A Little Good’ and ‘Swachhata Ki Sawari’ are all about finding simple yet effective solutions to tackling growing issues like plastic pollution and waste management that we face today. We hope that this initiative will benefit in keeping the Sangam clean during the Kumbh and create awareness amongst consumers”.

     

     

  • So is 82.5 old wine in a new bottle?

     

    Last week, Soho Square, the second agency from the Ogilvy India stable, was relaunched as 82.5. The new agency also subsumed all of Bates’s business. 82.5 Communications is billed as an India-specific creative agency catering to Indian companies, Indian startups and entrepreneurs. We spoke with Sumanto Chattopadhyay, Chairman and CCO and CEO VS.Srikanth for a quick chat.

     

    Pardon the question but while you say 82.5 is all-new, for all practical purposes, isn’t it old wine in a new bottle?

    Sumanto Chattopadhyay (SC): I We knew this question would come. So is it just a Soho Square with a new name? No, it’s not. It is definitely Soho Square with a new name and a lot more because I think we are shifting gears and we have come up with a different model altogether which is to say that we are an open source platform model. Which means that apart from whatever skillsets we have as a part of our company, we are tying up with all sorts of other skills.

     

    And you weren’t that earlier?

    No, we weren’t that.

    And you couldn’t have done all of what you want to do out there?

    No. We couldn’t because we are actually changing our processes to be able to do that. See, we have been a part of the Ogilvy group. Whatever we have done has been primarily inhouse. So, what we are saying is going forward, we are not going to say no to any brief because whatever skillsets are required, we are there just to provide the brand names and to take the onus for the final result. But we will give you communication solutions which are beyond the stand of advertising solutions. But in the fast…

     

    But you still going to be the second agency of Ogilvy, Businesses that Ogilvy cannot accept, come to a Soho Square etc, etc.

    SC: As I said, while we are open source, we are not breaking away from the Ogilvy group. We are a part of the Ogilvy group and we are for the better or worse, it’s the second agency but what we are here to do from today onwards is to carve out a completely different space for ourselves as I said, which involves partnerships with Ogilvy skillsets, with WPP skillsets and skillsets which have nothing to do with either of these entities.

     

    VS Srikanth (VSS): I just want to add a little more on that point. Since, we are the other agency in the Ogilvy group, there is one more agency by the way. There is David as well. There are other brands in the Ogilvy group. Hence, if for conflict reasons if any business has to part, we are happy to take it. But that’s not what we are building our business plans on. That’s not what we are banking on. We have got our own plans. We have got our own processes. We have got our own objective, our own focus. If, by the way within the group there is a client that Ogilvy cannot handle it or David cannot handle it and therefore it is being decided that it should be handled under 82.5, we are okay with that.

     

    So as of now 82.5 Soho Square is dead? It ceases to exist?

    VSS: As a customer-facing brand, it is dead.

     

    And what about Bates?

    VSS: As a customer-facing brand, Bates also won’t exist.

     

    Given that you want to be hat ke, offering out-of-the-box Indian solutions, are there existing clients of erstwhile Soho Square and Bates who you think do not fit into 82.5?

    SC: No. I don’t think so, because, actually when we were doing this whole exercise of re-inventing ourselves, one of the things we noticed was, these are the kind of clients who have largely been attracted to us. They are Indian entrepreneurs by and large or even if we have handled a multinational brand, it is because they are coming into India and they want to Indianise or they want somebody to tell them how to go about creating communication for India. So, I think that’s the space that we have been in and over the last few weeks, as we have told our existing clients about our new approach, they have welcomed it and as in couple of cases they have actually given us briefs outside of the standard advertising.

     

    VSS: No client has raised concerns, shown signs of leaving us when we broke this news to them. Actually they have all welcomed this news. There hasn’t been a problem with any of the existing clients.

     

    And would you be doing BJP again, this year? Does a client like BJP who fit into the new Soho Square, er, 82.5?

    SC: I would put it in a different way. The broader question is would we handle a political party? We would. But are we handling BJP? As of now, we are not.

     

    VSS: At the moment that is not the conversation. Ogilvy might be going through those conversations but not us. At the moment there is no BJP conversation.

     

    Both of you have worked with traditional agencies, How are you going to be different from Ogilvy? If you and Ogilvy have to go together to pitch, how would you desell Ogilvy?

    SC: I think we have to work to our own strengths. Also, in the model that we have adopted now, we are saying we are agile. And we are not a legacy system. We don’t have everything inhouse. But at the same time, we can offer you everything; it could be things that are in-house in Ogilvy, it could be things which are, skillsets from other WPP agencies. Like one of the examples that Shrikanth was talking about was shopper marketing. I don’t think that exists anywhere right now in Ogilvy group for example. It is one of the strategic tie-ups that we are doing with somebody to be able to offer this. Without having this heavy, expensive, gargantuan legacy structures, we are going to have these strategic partners, and we are going to have the onus of delivering. So, whatever is the kind of solution, I mean when I go to you, you might have a certain set of needs as again we were saying earlier that we won’t say that “Oh, this is not something we can do?

     

    Are you going to be full-service?

    SC: We are going to be full-service but through partnerships not through an all inhouse…

     

    Which anyway exists because you are a part of WPP, so you will have a GroupM for media…

    VSS: What we are saying is that we are not only going to be a part of that. I mean it’s just not the WPP partnerships, it is going to be anything else that we feel any of our clients require. Right now, we have looked at in from the lens of our current set of clients and what are some of the things that they might require. But six months down the line, we might pitch for a new business which requires a completely sort of new approach or a skill set which is not any of these things.

     

    Two more questions, I have? One is that the kind of clients you want want to have and the nature of business you have, typically have low budgets. In big agencies you have retainerships of Rs 10 lakh plus but with startups, it would be a ‘Ek lakh mein kar do yaar’. They want great stuff, but they don’t have monies to pay.

    SC: So, I think part of the way that we have been operating before today, I think the world has changed and while there are clients who want to spend the big budgets and get the big bang, there are lot of clients who want a biggish bang for a much smaller budget.  I think that is something which we have learnt to do.

     

    What is the lowest amount needed to get your meter ticking?

    SC: I think it is difficult to answer that. Because it is difficult to answer as to what is low. I just want to say this: we are trying to give the clients, the kind of clients that we have worked with, cost-saving is at two levels. We are, one, rejigging ourselves and the way we are looking at it as a platform, we are agile, we don’t have legacy structures, we don’t have huge costs. So, we can try and give you solutions. I will be relatively cost-effective. I won’t be cheap. But in the kind of solutions that we come up with, we also will aim to save the client’s money. Thus, in what we charge as in because of our structures and in terms of the kind of solutions that we provide to the client, we will try to be as competitive and cost-effective as possible. But if there is a client, like you gave the example of 1 lakh, like if I give you 1 lakh, can you do it for me, I would say 9 times out of 10, the answer to that would be no. I don’t think we can take on something which is non-profitable. We need to make some money.

     

    Any specific business targets you have or have been given?

    VSS: We are not working with numerical targets at the moment.

     

    One last questions: couldn’t you have done all this with the name change? Launching 82.5 means fresh stationery, branding, registration etc etc?

     

    SC: So, I just think it’s a new positioning. Yes, we could have. If you are asking, technically speaking, we could have re-invented Soho Square as something. But we felt that going forward, we want to have a distinctive position and we wanted a distinctive name to go with that.

     

    VSS: I think it is not a rebranding exercise that we have gone through. It’s a re-positioning exercise that we have gone through.

     

    All the very best!

     

     

  • Zoomcar goes big with ATL campaign

    By A Correspondent

     

    Zoomcar has rolled out its new ad campaign that has been conceptualised and created by Ogilvy India highlighting Zoomcar’s car subscription model ZAP.

     

    Speaking on the campaign, Varun Jha, Sr. Vice President & Head-Marketing at Zoomcar said: “This is our first ever big bang ATL campaign since we launched in 2013. Therefore, the focus as was to work with the best in class creative and media partners in order to produce world class content. We roped in Ogilvy as our creative partner and prepared the entire campaign in under three weeks. The same rigour was shown by Motivator (GroupM) while deploying media. With the shift towards long-term rentals and not buying cars anymore, it’s an apt time to launch ZAP Subscribe. That being said, building a new category is long drawn process and needs constant hammering across consumer touch points. Zoomcar is committed to the Indian market when it comes to mobility solutions and wants to dominate the hockey stick growth curve that will happen in car subscription services over next few years.”

     

    Commenting on making the film, Amitabh Agnihotri, Group Creative Director at Ogilvy said: “Car subscription is a fairly new concept to most Indians. It needed to be conveyed through a simple creative idea. Proposal with a twist is such an idea. And the idea and the script allowed us to make it in an epic style. Like a scene out of a film. All these things put together make it a memorable film that you want to watch again and again.”

     

    The integrated campaign has been conceptualized by Amitabh Agnihotri, the Group Creative Director at Ogilvy India. He also penned the lyrics for the brand anthem which is on air on across radio stations in 15 cities. The TV ad been directed by Abhinav Pratiman of Early Man Films.

     

     

  • Bournvita Biscuits for progressive parenting

    By A Correspondent

     

    Bournvita Biscuits, through its latest campaign, seeks to foster progressive parenting. Their latest campaign ‘No More Excuses’ stems from real life insights when children resort to creative excuses to avoid eating anything that could be healthy.

     

    Said Sudhanshu Nagpal, Head – Biscuits Category, Mondelez India: “Since its launch in 2016, Bournvita Biscuits has provided an effective choice of delicious snacking enriched with the wholesome goodness of Bournvita, the drink Indian consumers have trusted for decades. The latest campaign on Bournvita Biscuits appeals to all progressive mothers, who believe in collaborative parenting. Since mornings are always hustled, leaving barely any time for kids to consume the right foods, Bournvita Biscuits will help moms provide the right start to their day giving them “no more excuse” to skip the morning snack.”

     

    Added Harshad Rajadhyaksha & Kainaz Karmakar, Chief Creative Officers, Ogilvy India: “The campaign plays on the insight that kids are most innovative when they want to get out of something. One of the things all kids want to escape is a boring breakfast. The film is simple, relevant, charming and brings this insight to life.”

     

     

  • KFC pushes its Super Saver range via latest ad campaign

    By A Correspondent

     

    KFC India has launched the all-new Super Saver range starting at Rs 99. The brand has rolled out its latest TVC by Ogilvy India.

     

    Commenting on the TVC, Moksh Chopra, Chief Marketing Officer, KFC India said: “We recently launched our new ‘Super Saver’ range offering both value and variety to consumers, starting at an unbelievable price point of INR 99/- Though it sounds too good to be real – Super Saver is exactly what you see! Nothing but finger lickin’ good meal at an affordable price.”

     

    Commented Krishna Mani, Senior Creative Director, Ogilvy India: “A range of your KFC favourites at a price point starting INR 99 was actually too good to be true, even as brief to us. Therefore, the task was to find a creative way to deliver the incredible but true pricing to audiences. What better way than to get Colonel Sanders to create some magic at KFC Land.”

     

     

  • Milton seeks to make life easier for officegoers via latest offering

    By A Correspondent

     

    Milton has released a new TVC for its new offering – Microwow Tiffin. Conceptualised by Ogilvy India, the TVC communicates the brand proposition of providing officegoers with intelligent tiffin solutions to make lunchtime enjoyable without hampering their daily work commitments.

     

    Said Ajay Vaghani – Managing Director, Hamilton Housewares Pvt. Ltd: “The campaign highlights the underlying culture of lunch-breaks and the dilemma of every office-goer in India today. The high-standard high-pressure workplace makes one settle for cold food and rushed lunches. Small joys of having hot home-made food get compromised. Our product solves a real problem of finding the right balance between lunch breaks and work. The communication focuses on the solution by highlighting the core benefit of our tiffin while taking the viewer on a journey that is both engaging and entertaining.”

     

    Added Anurag Agnihotri – Executive Creative Director, Ogilvy India: “Milton’s microwaveable steel tiffin – Microwow solves a real problem. One can’t choose a hot lunch over  work. This innovation lets you have a piping hot lunch at any hour. The film brings this eternal conflict alive, where the boss represents work and the wife, lunch. Now one can keep both happy.’’

     

    Said Kunal Jeswani, CEO, Ogilvy India: “In today’s high-pressure work environment, small pleasures, like having a warm meal, often get sacrificed. A meal is best enjoyed when it is had warm, if not piping hot! The new Milton microwavable lunch box commercial is a simple product demo film that makes it easy to work when you need to and eat a hot meal whenever you have the time to.”

     

     

  • Ajay Gahlaut moves on from Ogilvy

    By A Correspondent

     

    It’s been doing the rounds for weeks. But now it’s official. Ogilvy India has announced the departure of Ajay Gahlaut, Deputy Chief Creative Officer, Ogilvy India, CCO – Ogilvy North. Gahlaut leaves Ogilvy to pursue his own interests.

     

    Gahlaut joined Ogilvy for the second time, in November 2007. His first stint with Ogilvy was in 2001 and until 2005. In the last decade, he has worked to help build brands such as Pernod Ricard, BMW, KFC, Tacobel, Dabur, Perfetti, Mother Dairy, Pizza Hut,  Sprite, Best Foods, HT Mint, Philips, to name a few.

     

    Said Sonal Dabral, Group Chief Creative Officer & Vice Chairman, Ogilvy India: “Ajay did some excellent work in his decade long innings in Ogilvy Delhi. I’d like to thank him for building a great team and wish him all the best for all his future endeavours.”

    Added Piyush Pandey, Executive Chairman & Chief Creative Officer, Ogilvy South Asia: “Ajay is looking for life beyond advertising and for that reason, I cannot stop him just like I couldn’t stop Abhijit. If Abhijit was going to another agency, I wouldn’t have let him go. Everyone has a dream and unfortunately, I can’t fulfil that dream. He has done a stellar job and I am very proud of him. He worked very closely with me and I will miss him. He is a very dear friend.”

     

    So why did Gahlaut go? And what’s he doing next? And who’s going to helm the all-important Delhi/North India operations of Ogilvy next. We don’t have answers to these, though there are murmurs on why Gahlaut was keen on moving out. Since these are murmurs, perhaps they should stay that way. If we know for sure, we’ll come back with a report.