Tag: Perfect Relations

  • Perfect Relations bags GreenCell Mobility mandate

    By Our Staff

     

    Perfect Relations, the PR agency part of Dentsu, has won the communications mandate for GreenCell Mobility. The consultancy will be responsible for managing the end-to-end PR solutions for GreenCell Mobility in India. GreenCell Mobility is India’s leading e-Mobility company backed by EverSource Capital, the fund manager of Green Growth Equity Fund (GGEF).

     

    Speaking of the association, Ashok Agarwal, Managing Director & Chief Executive Officer, GreenCell Mobility said: “We are committed to redefining the future of shared mobility in our country by providing smart and sustainable mobility solutions for all Indians. We look forward to working with Perfect Relations on our communication objective as we strengthen our presence across key cities in the country.”

     

    Commenting on this new association, Rohan Sukhatankar, Principal Lead at Perfect Relations said:, “We are honoured to be associated with GreenCell, a brand that is endeavoring to revolutionize the shared electric mobility space. Looking at our team’s experience and knowledge in the mobility industry and differentiated storytelling approach, I’m confident that we will be strengthening brand’s affinity and helping the company in achieving its set ambitions.”

     

     

  • Perfect Relations wins communication mandate for Murata Vios

    By Our Staff

     

    Perfect Relations has been awarded the communication mandate for Murata Vios, medical technology company.  It will develop a strategic structure for Murata Vios and manage their communication strategies.

     

    Said Dr Ashutosh Mundkur, VP of Sales & Marketing – India at Murata Vios, Pvt. Ltd: “Perfect Relations comes with significant expertise in the healthcare sector, and we are excited to have them onboard. We are on a growth journey as we continue to scale and increase our footprint in the Indian Healthcare sector. Perfect Relations will help us with creative and impactful storytelling and drive the right communication strategies.”

     

    Talking about the win, Sanjay Choudhry, Senior Director, Perfect Relations added: “With the current pandemic, healthcare technology space is brimming with possibilities. Murata Vios is a pioneer in the wireless remote monitoring space, delivering value for hospitals, clinicians and greatly improving patient outcomes. We are pleased to partner with Murata Vios to drive communication strategies for the brand. With our expertise in healthcare sector and differentiated storytelling, we will help Murata Vios achieve their growth ambitions.”

     

  • Perfect Relations to partner with FloBiz

    By Our Staff

    Perfect Relations has won the communications mandate for FloBiz. It will manage the brand’s strategic PR, media relations, and reputation management across India.

    Said Rahul Raj, Founder & CEO, FloBiz | Building for Growth, Building for Bharat: “Perfect Relations diversified experience across sectors and a deep understanding of the fintech industry makes them an excellent partner to drive our communications. Their approach towards the SMB space aligns with ours in a way that creates entrepreneurial synergies, and we are confident that it will give a remarkable boost to FloBiz’s brand, especially on our rapid growth journey.”

    Added Dilip Cherian, the Co-Founder and Consulting Partner at Perfect Relations, “FloBiz epitomises the brand of new-age start-ups that offer simple solutions to challenges faced by small and medium enterprises across the country. Their work strengthens the core of our economy. We are delighted to partner with this transformational brand that is dynamic and rapidly growing. I am confident that as their partners we will help FloBiz achieve their growth ambitions.”

  • Deepak Mukarji appointed Group Advisor, Oil & Gas at Perfect Relations

    By A Correspondent

     

    Deepak Mukarji has joined Perfect Relations as Group Advisor for the Oil & Gas sector. In his role, he will provide sector expertise to all the Perfect Relations group companies, which include Image Inc, Accord, Imprimis and Buzz.

     

    As a specialist on communications and public affairs, Deepak brings to the company 30 years of experience in creating the space for large global businesses to grow in India in a manner that is sustainable and responsible. For the last 20 years, he has been a member of country leadership teams across various large global organizations by driving strategic positioning of issues and ensuring adherence to the highest standards of corporate governance.

     

    His past appointments have been with companies of the stature of DuPointLucent Technologies, Shell, Essar Energy. Earlier he got exposure in the agency business with IPAN. At Shell, his previous assignment, he was Director Corporate Affairs and Chairman of Pennzoil-Quaker State.

     

  • No Perfect Relations for Publicis. Focus on Sapient for now

     

    By Sandeep Puraname

     

    So is the Paris-based marketing services conglomerate Publicis Groupe gobbling up Perfect Relations? Oui or Non, we asked our source, and were subjected to a loud No. And is it a ‘No’ or a ‘Not yet’, we asked? Short of expletives, we were told “Bilkul Nahin, Kabhi Nahin”.

     

    Now that was something we weren’t willing to put on our headlines yesterday after we read a front-page highlighted reported in premier business daily The Economic Times. We decided to dig further, spoke to our friends at the MSLGroup who said they weren’t authorised to speak and could neither confirm or deny.

     

    Surely there can be no smoke without fire?

     

    Then on some probing over long-distance chatter within India and overseas, we got the inside story. Apparently there have rumours ever since a PR industry website flashed the news. While there may have been discussions with the MSL management, the suitor is clearly not MSL or parent Publicis.  Dentsu, Ominicom and WPP may be looking at buying up the agency, we are told.

     

    But why not MSL? After all Perfect Relations is well-pedigreed, has some interesting clients including Coca-Cola and is well-networked across the country? Because, the Publicis Groupe wants to concentrate on the Sapient buy.

     

    With Sapient, Publicis wants to up its 40 percent revenues from digital to 50 percent and it may be remembered that Sapient has nearly half its staff in India.

     

    It’s likely that all or at least most of the digital activity of the group(e) may be converged to Sapient making it a digital superpower in India and the rest of the world.

     

    While it didn’t need an industry forecast to do it, but with a Forrester research report saying that digital adspends will overtake those on television in two years in the US, most global media service corporations are getting their act together on the digital play. After all it’s no small reason that Publicis paid a 40 percent premium for Sapient at USD 25 a share.  According to reports, Publicis chairman Maurice Levy is reportedly looking at Sapient also being able to counter business going away to consultancies like Accenture.

     

    In India, Sapient has been strong on acquiring talent and turning into a well-rounded creative tech firm.

     

    Given this, it’s likely that some of the existing digital plays of the group – including in those like the MSLGroup – may not get zoned into one robust offering.  This bit is unverified, but that’s the thinking on in sections of the group. But then large networks like Leo Burnett and Publicis Worldwide have made their acquisitions so these issues need to be sorted.

     

    So, bottomline: for the now, MSLGroup is not making any new PR buys. The bosses are content with Hanmer & Partners, 2020 PR and 2020 Social.  There’s enough and more happening more.

     

    But aren’t the MSL bosses in town next week? We thought Olivier Fleurot will make the big announcement. Non, we were told.

     

    Now what if we have egg on our face if all of this is proved wrong, the boss asked this writer.

     

    We’ll know that soon.

     

    PS: Time to compose the resignation letter? Or await that long-awaited raise?

     

  • ‘Indian Consultancy of the Year 2013’ Perfect Relations claims winning entire Star network account when it hasn’t

    By A Correspondent

     

    Valerie Pinto

    As reported earlier, Perfect Relations was awarded ‘Indian Consultancy of The Year 2013’ by the Holmes Report recently. Last week, after the MxMIndia report appeared, the agency issued a press release highlighting the same.

     

    The Perfect Relations press release claims the agency has secured several coveted pitches in the past year including that of the Star Network. While we were unable to verify the claims on all accounts won, we do know that only part of the Star India business is with Perfect Relations and not that of the entire network as the press release would make us believe. MxMIndia confirmed this with the PR head at Star India. Perfect Relations handles PR for only three of the Star India channels.

     

    We hope that the information given to the Holmes Report wasn’t with a similar half-truth.

     

    Meanwhile, the communique quotes the agency’s CEO Valerie Pinto saying: “Having helped in the creation and the evolution of India’s communication industry for over 20 years, and being the advisory for more than 2500 clients, Perfect Relations is pleased that its effort in pioneering the role of growing this industry has been recognized.”

     

    Dilip Cherian

    “We are also pleased with the Holmes Report instituting new awards that recognize the need and complexities of the evolving PR industry,” said Dilip Cherian, Founding Partner, Perfect Relations.

     

  • The Anchor: Dilip Cherian on 5 things to keep in mind while building a brand

    By Dilip Cherian

     

    1. Is it unique?

    It helps when your product or service stands out from the clutter. It also makes it distinguishable.

     

    2. How do I want people to remember me by?

    Can I summarise it in no more than three words? Is your brand distinguishable and easy to understand, and easy to connect to? This requires paring it down to its bare essence. What remains is what your brand really is.

     

    3. Who is at the core of my target audience?

    This helps narrowing down on how you want to build the brand. The needs and aspirations of your target audience should define the brand you eventually plan to sell.

     

    4. What do my competitors battle for?

    Identifying the core competence of your competitors helps define the space you wish your brand to occupy.

     

    5. Am I easy to pronounce, remember or Google?

    In today’s digital world, among other factors, brand success also depends on your brand’s ability to seep into the societal subconscious.

     

    Dilip Cherian is Consulting Partner at Perfect Relations

     

  • Nothing can kill brand IPL: Experts

    Indian Premiere League (IPL) was the most-talked about sporting tournament inIndiawhen it started in 2008. From players’ auctions to cheerleaders, the Twenty20 championship caught everyone’s fantasy.

     

    From its inaugural year till today, the tournament has been more than just cricket. It seems that IPL and controversies go hand-in-hand. Slapgate, cheerleaders’ uniforms and Lalit Modi’s case made us wonder if one had seen it all. However, the hand-in-glove relationship the cricket tournament has had with controversies has never stopped. The latest ones – match fixing, SRK-MCA brawl and molestation case – have started everyone talking again, not all of it good. Some even want the IPL to shut down as well.

     

    MxMIndia’s Meghna Sharma spoke to a few media professionals to know if they think brand IPL is losing its value.

     

    Dilip Cherian
    Vikram Sakhuja
    Josy Paul

    Dilip Cherian, image consultant and co-founder Perfect Relations

    It’s true that brand IPL has taken a knocking due to current controversies. However, I don’t think it will harm the brand. The recent events just show that the various rules and regulations need to be stricter and implemented well.

     

    As long as crowds go to the stadiums and viewers switch on their television sets to watch the matches, the show will go on. It also brings other brands into people’s mind. Hence, marketers will continue to invest in the tournament.  So, why will the brand die?

     

    Vikram Sakhuja, CEO – South Asia, GroupM

    With so many channels and shows, the eye-ball distribution is obvious. But the tournament, so far, has got more TRPs than last four years. This only proves that the tournament is doing well. IPL is alive and kicking and will continue to do so.

     

    Josy Paul, Chief Creative Officer and Chairman BBDO India

    IPL is a bhelpuri of entertainment, and not cricket. The more controversies, the merrier it will be for the tournament. Nothing can shake it; controversies and achievements will only increase its sheen. The brand IPL is about entertainment and it is providing the same to its fans.

     

    Kushal Sanghvi, MD, Spiider Digital Hub

    The TRPs of this season is around 3, so it is not doing as well. However, the show is big and helps any brand to position itself well across sections. The marketers get visibility so will continue to get associated with it. No controversy can shake it; it will continue to remain huge.

     

    Kamal Nandi, vice-president (sales and marketing), Godrej & Boyce

    The stats have gone down, so it is becoming less lucrative to invest in the IPL. There is no doubt that it is a strong brand and will be so – controversies or no controversies. However, marketers will be a little cautious in investing in the tournament is the returns are lower than the investment.

     

  • Turkish Airlines looks at India as a booming market

    By A Correspondent

     

    Turkish Airlines has been doing exceptionally well globally and has witnessed remarkable growth, especially in the last year. With Grey as their creative agency inIndiaand Perfect Relations handling their media relations, they are looking atIndiaas a booming market and have various marketing initiatives lined up.

     

    Turkish Airlines has played a vital role in increasing the ratio of the aviation industry ofTurkey. One of their key achievements in 2011 was being awarded ‘Best Airline Europe’, ‘Best Premium Economy Seats’ and ‘Best Airline Southern Europe’ by Skytrax. Their load factor has been as high as 75 per cent in 2011, even on the Indian routes.

     

    They have also acquired brand new aircrafts like B777-300ER equipped with GCS system and A330-300, with the latter being currently operational on the Indian routes. Turkish Airlines flew around 300,000 travellers on the Indian routes in 2011 and are expecting an even higher number in 2012.

     

    The TAAI Convention, being hosted byTurkeythis year, will be one of the biggest B2B initiatives undertaken by Turkish Airlines as they are among the main partners for the event.

     

    Apart from that, Turkish Airlines has engaged in several interesting marketing initiatives inIndiato reach out to its customers and familiarize them with both, Turkish Airlines and its multiple international destinations.

     

    Adnan Aykac, General Manager- Northern & Eastern India, Turkish Airlines, said: “We received great feedback from our previous promotional campaigns and would like to continue with such engagement programs and capitalize on them in the best way possible. This will ensure maximum visibility for Turkish Airlines among its target audience, thereby helping them discover our refined offers and services.”

     

    “Turkish Airlines believes in providing the best offers and facilities to its passengers and maintaining high standards of service. This has always been our prime focus and we believe that the brand and its services speak for itself. We also believe that competitions are healthy as they give you the zeal to further improve and enhance your quality. Hence, our superior and extraordinary services set us apart and help us maintain our top position,” he added.

     

    Also Turkish Airlines have now signed a Free Sale Codeshare Agreement with Air India (AI) after their previous blocked space codeshare agreement. The new agreement will allow both the airlines to market each other’s flights by their own code and flight numbers on a free sale basis.

     

    With effect from March 1, the revised agreement will allow TK passengers a seamless connection to AI-operated flights onHyderabad, Chennai, Ahmedabad, Bangalore, Kolkata and Amritsar routes.

     

    Turkish Airlines witnessed a 15 per cent growth in revenues last year and with the airlines doing so well in the Indian and international markets, sky is the limit for us.

     

  • [PR Channel] We are producing pathetic people for almost every kind of task: Dilip Cherian

    Text and Videos by Shruti Pushkarna

     

    He is one of the first names that crosses anyone’s mind when speaking of public affairs management or image management. Addressed by many as an ‘influencer’, he is known for his roles as an image manager and a policy advisor. Dilip Cherian, Consulting Partner at Perfect Relations started the company in the early nineties and now the firm is South Asia’s largest communications consultancy with 14 offices and 550 professionals on the team. Mr Cherian has also been the editor of the business magazine, Business India and the Observer before he entered the communications business. His work goes well beyond public relations and media. Mr Cherian is the member of the Board of Advertising Standards Council of India and on the Governing Council of the National Institute of Design. He has also been a member of the Censor Board.

     

    In this conversation with MxM India’s Shruti Pushkarna, Mr Cherian confesses to being an ‘image guru’ and shares his views on various subjects like managing public affairs in the PR space, lobbying, policy making, PR in a social/digital world and the biggest challenge he thinks the PR industry is facing today. While many in the communications business have admitted to the challenge of attracting talent into the business in the past, Mr Cherian goes a step further when he says, “I think talent is going to be India’s huge pitfall in the coming years. We are producing pathetic people for almost every kind of task.”

     

    Dilip Cherian Interview Part 1
    [youtube width=”400″ height=”200″]http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=4Z4b_10_GWk[/youtube]

    Q: You are often referred to as the ‘image guru of India’. And a lot of people address you as an ‘influencer who opens the right doors for his clients’. How do you react to that?

    A: The image guru part I confess to, the opening doors part… I don’t do that. What I do however is, as an image guru, I try and help my clients to focus on what are the issues they should be communicating about. I also help them understand what are the implications of what they are doing and whom they are communicating to. So what I am good at is, pointing in a direction and also very often enhancing their skills in being able to project themselves correctly. This kind of situation requires knowledge of who they are communicating to, so it’s not that I open a door, it’s just that I tell them when they walk through the door, what should they say and how would that impact their image.

     

    Q: So you do confess to being an ‘image guru’?

    A: It’s both the kind of appellation which works in a positive sense for the company because I only work through Perfect Relations and through the five group companies that we have. I think that the designation, as it were, helped me focus on what my real work is. My real work is more in the nature of someone who provides coaching to my own people, or to the people we work with, to enhance their skill sets in being able to better manage their image. So the ‘guru’ part is about the teaching part and that really is about helping others enhance whatever skills they may have, or to reduce sometimes, and this is equally important in my view, to reduce the aberrations which prevent them from having the image which they desire.

     

    Q: You have done an extensive amount of work in public affairs management. Tell us a bit about your experience of work in this area of PR. Also, how critical do you think is public affairs management to the communications business?

    A: Public affairs management is a relatively new science as far as India is concerned, and that’s because of the fact that public affairs used to be, the way it was practiced, largely a dirty word because it had nuances of ‘off-the-balance sheet’ activity. Where we have come in and over the last ten years what Perfect Relations has done is that in the public affairs space, we have created space for a new kind of activity. And that is, helping to communicate with policy makers to influence the direction of policy; policy when it’s wrong or policy when it is being created or policy as it’s being created. In the public affairs area, the relationship with the client is that of the guru kind but also of a confidential advisor, telling them what are the aspects of decision-making they need to focus on rather than the people. Because what’s happened over the past is that too much enthusiasm has been expended on people. It’s not about people, policy making is about a process, and that’s the first skill set we have managed to bring into this area of public affairs. The second thing that we do in public affairs is we help global companies understand that decision-making in India is not uniquely different from anywhere else. So Perfect Relations is the only company which has had experience and skills set in working at a panchayat level, at a district level, at a state level and at the central level. The decision-making vectors and the parameters in each of these spaces is different. Global companies don’t necessarily have somebody who can lead them through this; this is not about market entry strategy, this is about understanding the policy landscape of the country.

     

    Dilip Cherian Interview Part 2

    [youtube width=”400″ height=”200″]http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=LDi643AWsD4[/youtube]

    Q: How critical is the function of crisis management in PR?

    A: Over the last 25 years of existence if there were one function for which we’ve been called in at the highest level, whether it’s in the public sector when for example there was a fire on an oil rig, or whether it’s in the case of a global company when there was a firing in faraway Goa, or whether it’s in the case of an Indian company whose licence got cancelled, Perfect Relations has always been the first port of call for somebody who is in really deep trouble. So crisis management is something that happens as a plug-on rather than as part of a process. Largely we have come in when the agency that was currently handling a client was seen as not geared to have the bandwidth, the experience, the specialized people and the local teams available on the ground; and that’s the reason why we get called in. Over the last 25 years of doing this in India we also realized some years ago that crisis preparedness as a module needs to be put into companies. So for some of the clients who have the budgets to be able to do this because this is expensive, today we have teams that go in and train top management in the five life-saving skills, life-saving in terms of corporate life of a company, that are needed to ensure that crisis preparedness is at a higher level than it ever was before.

     

    Q: What are your views on lobbying? Do you think past controversy has tainted the image of PR as an industry?

    A: Lobbying is a dirty word in terms of the kind of nuances and practices that a large number of players have indulged in. Is this a result of the way our democracy functions? I don’t quite know. But is it possible to function differently? The answer is, absolutely yes. It takes more patience, it takes much deeper skills and it takes a lot more of focused attention of top management. The problem with ‘bad lobbying’ as I call it, is because sometimes CEOs or owners want to outsource it, saying, we are not doing this. Let somebody else take care of the dirty work. And then it becomes a dirty job. So where we are concerned, what we advise our clients and owners of companies who work with us is, that this is something that you need to integrate yourself into because when the mud starts getting splattered it’s bound to hit you; so rather than outsource it, be part of the process and ensure that you take liability and responsibility for what goes into it. We find that kind of lobbying does not have a bad name, whether it’s a government department, whether it’s a minister, whether it’s a panchayat, everybody is willing to talk to the person who is actually the ownership person in terms of what he or she is planning to do on the ground. Very often they get heard and very often the problems get sorted out. So lobbying of the kind that we call ‘ethical lobbying’ is something we are quite happy to say that we do, and we’ve had no problem dealing with multiple organizations using these techniques.

     

    Q: How do you think PR can be more than just mere press relations?

    A: I think PR is already more than press relations. What is happening is that, like any industry, you follow the 80-20 rule – 80 percent of agencies in the business do what is easiest to do, which is, merely handing some pretty pathetic material to journalists who are absolutely uninformed. There’s a market there and so 80 percent of the companies like to do it. The 80-20 rule when flipped on its head, today we get 80 percent of our revenue not from our press relations work but from the advisory work where we talk to the brand managers and we talk to marketing directors, we talk to the people looking after the digital space. For example, digital – it’s a huge new way for corporations and companies to reach out to customers, it’s a one-to-one designed sort of communication. It’s difficult, it requires the same set of skills which PR people thought they used to have, which is communication. But it’s a whole new technology landscape and it’s a whole new idiom. So what we do now is to try and ensure that 80 percent of our revenue comes from the activities which are no longer those that 80 percent of the players in the industry try and do.

     

    Q: How do you think social media has impacted PR and its functioning?

    A: I think it’s important to distinguish two things. Social media is changing the way humans communicate with each other, that’s one. But digital media goes far beyond that. It’s also about ensuring that your reputation is intact in the vast new internet space. So the way we look at digital PR is probably along the same lines that we look at press relations. It’s not about putting one-to-one communications in a mass market, it’s about actually changing the platform from which you communicate so that you don’t need to say too much and you already are in a sense transmitting those values to everybody who reaches out to you. So you need to communicate less but you need to have much higher quality. So it’s strategic, it requires a vast volume of monitoring which our teams now have tech tools to help them do, and it’s about training – because like in the case of lobbying, in the digital PR space, we recognize it is the voice of the CEO, it is the voice of the brand, it is the voice of the marketing specialist that needs to be communicating directly to the customers who reach out to them.

     

    Q: Tell us a bit about your role as a policy advisor?

    A: I took a decision about ten years ago, which is about 15 years after running the company full time, that you need to put a certain part of your skills back into society. So whether it is working with the Censor Board, which is taking calls on which films could cause communal disharmony or relate in sexually inappropriate kind of behaviour being encouraged, I spend a certain part of my time in ensuring that I am available with my skills to organizations that in a sense implement policy. At the other end of the spectrum is the Advertising Standards Council, which helps corporations to figure out in a pure industry-based platform what is appropriate behaviour for advertising agencies and what is not. I am a great votary of self-regulation for some of these industries. If you want to prevent strangleholds of government, you’ve got to have powerful industry bodies that do self-regulation. So at the ASCI, my contribution is to ensure that as a PR person, I am able to look at advertising from a slightly different standpoint and provide guidance to the other advertising people about the way it would be looked at in government, by the media etc. So in the contribution to the debate, to the framing and the implementation of public policy, I hope that in the last ten years that I have spent, I am putting this contribution back in terms of the life skills I have built up.

     

    Q: How was the transition from a senior journalist to that of a PR practioneer, especially since, at the time when you moved to communications, PR was not taken very seriously?

    A: Whether it was working with an editorial position at Business India, or whether it was running a newspaper for the Ambanis called The Observer, or whether it was setting up a journal for parliamentarians, all the journalism that I used to do actually impinged on some of the areas which I today work on. So in Business India it was the element of business strategy, in the Observer it was the ability to understand how the government at the bureaucratic level functioned, and at the paper we were launching for parliamentarians, it was looking at policy-making inside the rotunda. So I thought with the skills I had, over a period of time, I was beginning to repeat myself and I felt that rather than repeat myself ad infinitum, I need to move to the other side, flip it over and become an advisor to corporations. So it was in a sense a random decision which was sprung up on by circumstances but also it was something I had prepared myself for. Was it for this, the answer is no; but was it for something else, the answer is yes. It just happened that this was the something else.

     

    Q: It is believed by some that PR professionals influence journalists and content is published in lieu of money. Do you think it’s a correct allegation?

    A: My read on paid content is that for a variety of reasons and not a small element to do with social media, I think it was an idea which came and it is an idea that’s not going to last because the piercing of that kind of pretended journalism veil is over. So today when there is paid content, it gets pilloried in a manner that social media alone can do. On the other hand, there is at a social level the whole issue of right to information. So between the right to information and social media, I think the days of conventional paid media is reaching its end already very fast.

     

    Q: What are the challenges that face the PR industry today? Do you think attracting talent to PR is one of them?

    A: I think talent is going to be India’s huge pitfall in the coming years. We are producing pathetic people for almost every kind of task. Also with this new urbanization that’s happened over the years, people have created a new generation of people with expectations that simply cannot be fulfilled in the workplace. So people are hopping around hoping that they can find someone who will recognize their talent. That’s not going to happen. The world over, today Spain has somewhere like 40 percent of the youth unemployed, the UK has 30 percent youth unemployed, I think unemployment is a result of not preparing a new generation for what a work field actually is. It’s not about jobs, it’s about talent and it’s about recognizing that talent needs to do it every day to become talent, it’s not talent because they think they have it. I think the PR industry has a huge talent problem. What are we doing to address our problem of talent as an industry? Eighteen years ago we set up an institute to work on training PR professionals. It didn’t work. But we have started one again because I think the time was too early then. I think now, seeing the demand there is for PR, the time has come, the industry is recognizing, also students are recognizing they don’t have the skills. So we are now beginning again the process of creating talent. And the first batch should be out in a few months.

     

    Q: Where do you think is the PR industry headed in the next five years?

    A: I think the industry is headed to greater growth without a doubt because industry will grow at at least twice the pace at which industrial growth happens, so that’s almost a given. The direction to go in the future is going to be specialization and specialization at all levels, press relations, strategic advice, digital advice. Another big change that’s going to happen is that you are going to probably have to bring back people from retirement to find jobs because I think you are not going to get the talent you are going to need for many of the things that the PR industry will need to do. So I see the age profile in the industry actually going up instead of going down as is the case with most service industries.

     

    Q: Who do you think does the best PR for himself or herself in the country today?

    A: I think the people who do PR for themselves perhaps do it unwittingly because they have natural skills at it. So I would say that if one looks at individuals who are doing a great job at portraying who they are, the one who is kind of a runaway success is Abdul Kalam. He has done a fabulous job as a President and he’s actually found an afterlife. In terms of stars, Amitabh is a shining example of PR and he is also one of those who have managed the transition to social media quite cleverly.