Tag: Pradeep Guha

  • Remembering my friend, Pradeep Guha

     

     

    By Indrani Sen

     

    Indrani SenPradeep Guha would have been 70 today, had he not passed away last year on August 21 after a short battle with cancer which unfortunately was detected at the last stage. As I was not aware about his disease, the news of his death was a big shocker for me. The MxMIndia editor asked me then if I would like to do a piece on Pradeep and I declined.

     

    I met Pradeep Guha in Mumbai in 1976, when I was a rookie media planner in Ulka Advertising and he, a fresh graduate from St Xavier’s College, Mumbai, was a trainee in media sales with TOI. Pradeep was a few years younger than me, but we hit it off very well from our first meeting. He had been a left-leaning student leader in his college days and I had been actively involved with leftist student politics during my college and university days in Kolkata, yet both of us were disillusioned with the state of left politics in India. In our own ways both of us we were eager to explore the roles media can play in advertising and marketing industry. We had a lot to share and much to discuss. Gradually we became sounding boards for reviewing each other’s ideas.

     

    We discussed about how to use readership research more effectively for media planning and selling; we debated the scope of value additions and innovations in newspapers and speculated about the possibility of rate negotiations when the word was a taboo in the industry. Pradeep had an ability to think laterally ahead of his time and never failed to amaze me with his zest for new and innovative ideas and his energy for planning and executing their implementations. These inborn traits, which I found in him in his mid-twenties, later helped him to excel in his career and become a larger-than-life personality.

     

    I still recall visiting the Colaba office of ‘Centre of Education & Documentation’, Pradeep’s dream project where he had started to build a library, a resource and research centre based on clippings from published news and articles. He firmly believed that reports in print media had the latest information which published books did not have. Before the internet age, Pradeep was able to think out of the box and visualize the importance of having latest information at the fingertips. After Larry Page and Sergey Brin conceived Google in a dorm of the Stanford University and subsequently marketed Google Search in 1998, I recalled about Pradeep’s CED which had the same seed of idea minus the new media technology.

     

    In 1982, Sameer Jain took charge of BCCL and Pradeep Guha became one of his trusted lieutenants. During the eighties and nineties, Pradeep continued with BCCL was responsible for executing the vision of Sameer Jain and transformed the Times media sales department to Times Response, he mentored a formidable salesforce well trained in concepts of media planning, advertising and marketing. Under his guidance the rate cards for BCCL publications morphed to “Mastermind” encouraging advertisers and agencies to buy space in various newer/ smaller editions along with the main editions at reasonable prices ensuring no loss to the marginal editions. The concept of “Invitation Pricing” was also Pradeep’s brain child. He literally gave a new lease of life to the print media industry of India. He was the real architect behind the “Samir Jain Years” (ref Indian Media Business by Vanita Kohli Khanderkar) in print media.

     

    It is difficult to decide if Pradeep’s contribution was greater in space marketing or in brand building. He changed TOI and other BCCL publications to well defined brands supported by multiple branded properties. The Bombay Times Annual Party, Filmfare Awards, Femina Miss India, Femina Look of the Year, the Economic Times Entrepreneurship Awards all were turned from mere events into branding properties by Pradeep which built the brands individually and collectively built the group. He was also credited with conceptualizing the Page 3 Culture through TOI’s metro editions.

     

    Pradeep’s efforts behind lifting up the standard of the Femina Miss India show led to India’s successes at Miss World and Miss Universe. These branding properties built by him in turn accelerated the growth of other industries like beauty, modelling and Bollywood. Driven by his passion for advertising, he was responsible for associating BCCL with Cannes Lions and creating India’s visibility at Cannes Lions Festival. He was its first Country Representative from India and held that position for 10 consecutive years at Cannes. I became an ardent admirer of Pradeep as I watched his exponential growth over three decades in BCCL. I salute his other friends and admirers who took the initiative to name the lane before the Times of India building in Mumbai as “Pradeep Guha Chowk” earlier this year. A fleeting tribute to his monumental leadership.

     

    Meanwhile, I had come back to Kolkata for family reasons in mid-eighties. Pradeep was heading the Kolkata office of BCCL at that time, but he returned to Mumbai shortly to take charge of Times Response. Till mid-nineties I had opportunities to meet and catch up with Pradeep during either his visits to Times Kolkata office or my official trips to Mumbai. In 1996, Pradeep helped me to pull off a media coup when he agreed to publish and distribute the Official Handbook of Wills World Cup with TOI’s Mumbai and Delhi editions free of cost against the right of selling ad space in the handbooks. It was a copy book case of a win-win negotiation.

     

    After nearly 30 years, Pradeep left BCCL when he was President of the Times of India Group and a member of the Board of Directors to join as CEO of Zee Entertainment and launched the English daily DNA in 2005.  However, he left Zee after a short stint of 3 years and became an entrepreneur by purchasing 10% stake in 9X Media (where he remained as the MD till his last days) and launching his own consultancy firm. Pradeep had produced two films earlier, Fiza in 2000 and Tehzeeb in 2002; his third production Phir Kabhi was released in 2009 after his exit from the Zee Group.

     

    There were lot of speculation in the industry about his exit from BCCL and many predicted that Pradeep Guha’s best years were over. His critics were blissfully unaware that he continued to support our Ad Industry at large by dawning various hats during his tenure with BCCL as well as after his exit from BCCL. He was the President of the Advertising Club Bombay, President of the Indian Newspaper Society, Chairman of the National Readership Studies Council, Chairman of Ad Asia (Jaipur), Chairman of the Asian Federation of Advertising Associations (AFAA), the Vice President and Area Director of the International Advertising Association (IAA), Asia Pacific region and the first Chairman of the Broadcast Audience Research Council (BARC) which was launched in 2014 and started reporting TV ratings from 2015. Pradeep Guha was the Chairman of the Steering Committee of the successful World Congress of the International Advertising Association held in India for the first time in February 2019 at Kochi. At the time of his death in 2021, he was affiliated to the Board of Directors of Raymond Ltd, Pritish Nandy Communications Ltd and Whistling Woods International.  The Ad Industry had never before seen such a versatile leader who always delivered the desired result and many times exceeded the expectations!

     

    After the nineties, Pradeep and I had gradually drifted apart, meeting only in certain big industry dos where Pradeep used to be super busy with organising the shows. Whenever I could manage to snatch a few minutes with him for a chat, he was always the same old Pradeep with the same twinkle in his eyes and the same warmth in his smile. His wife Papia Guha recently requested me to write a few lines on him for inclusion in the coffee table book on him. However, in the small write up, I could not express all my thoughts, so here is my tribute to my old friend Pradeep Guha, an extraordinary man who walked tall during his life time and left a long tail of unforgettable impressions on many other men and women who were fortunate enough to come in contact with him.

     

  • Book on Pradeep Guha launched

    By Our Staff

     

    ‘Pradeep Guha The Legend I Know,’ a book commemorating the memory of the late media and advertising legend Pradeep Guha, was launched at event held in Mumbai, on June 5. The event also ushered in Guha’s birthday on June 6. He would’ve turned 70 today.

     

    The book carries short first-person accounts by leading lights from media, advertising, entertainment and fashion. It also has some of Guha’s school and college friends sharing little known insights about and events from Guha’s life as a rookie.

     

    Veteran adperson Piyush Pandey and former Miss Universe Lara Dutta presented facets of Guha’s personality and achievements in a light, nostalgic, freewheeling conversation on stage, which was followed by an unveiling of the book by Guha’s wife, Papia, son, Sanket, Jaideep Gandhi, Lara Dutta, Piyush Pandey and Satya Saran to mark the launc of the book.

     

    Guests were presented with a copy of the book and a memory candle specially created for the occasion. The candle was scented with Guha’s favourite fragrance, Fragonard.

     

  • Wavemaker & HUL win big at Emvies 2022

    By Our Staff

     

    Pradeep Guha trophy for Young EMVIE Of The Year
    Pradeep Guha trophy for Young EMVIE Of The Year

    Media agency network Wavemaker pipped sibling Mindshare to be Agency of the Yeat the Emvie Awards held on Friday, March 25. The 22nd edition of the coveted Emvies happened in Mumbai with much fanfare and a full house. Hindustan Unilever was Client of the Year.

     

    The Advertising Club (TAC), this year, received 1054 entries with around 25 agencies participating. There were over 1200 professionals in attendance as 26 Gold and 51 Silver Emvie trophies being presented in addition to 42 Bronze Winners receiving recognition.

     

    Wavemaker Is The Media Agency Of The Year
    Wavemaker Is The Media Agency Of The Year

    Wavemaker with 395 points was ‘Media Agency of the Year’ and it also bagged the coveted the Grand Emvie for Mondelez India for the Cadbury Celebrations – Not Just a Cadbury Ad (Best Response to Covid 19). Mindshare with 375 points stood second and Lodestar with 160 points stood third.

     

    Hindustan Unilever Limited was declared ‘Media Client of the Year’. The Best Implementation Team of the Year award went to Wavemaker for Mondelez India Food Pvt. Ltd for Cadbury Celebrations  – Not Just a Cadbury Ad Google, the Presenting Sponsor, instituted special recognition for work done in the area of Inclusion. The campaign that backed the honour was McDonald’s  – Eatqual – One Bite Closer to Equality by DDB Mudra.   This will be a regular category in the EMVIE entry form from the next year.

     

    Hindustan Unilever Limited Is Best Media Client Of The Year
    Hindustan Unilever Limited Is Best Media Client Of The Year

    The Times of India Group instituted the Pradeep Guha trophy for the category Young Emvie of the Year.  The Pradeep Guha trophy was presented on stage by Partha Sinha, President, actor Dia Mirza, and Papia Guha wife of the Late Pradeep Guha.

     

    Said Aditya Swamy, Chairperson Of Emvie’s Organising Committee: “It is the privilege of the The Ad Club to shine the light on the best work in our industry and it is our endeavour through our award shows to inspire our community to keep raising the bar.”

     

    Added Partha Sinha, President, The Advertising Club: “It’s great to be back on the ground. The energy was infectious and the agency and clients had an excellent time celebrating the spirit of excellence. The winners were not only just best in class in India but they were of global standard. No wonder Emvies is called the Oscar of media awards.” said

     

  • Emvies to be held on March 25

    By Our Staff

     

    The Advertising Club  is set to host the Emvies on March 25. With over 1000 entries this year, the event is scheduled to be held in open air. Mumbai from 6.30pm onwards.

     

    Said Partha Sinha, President, The Advertising Club: “It’s been a long break and we at TAC are eagerly waiting to see some of the great work that has been done in the last year and hope to recognise and reward the best of the best in each category. We have a special recognition – The Young Emvie of the Year, in honour of Pradeep Guha, a stalwart and legend in the world of Media and Entertainment. With Google being our presenting sponsor this year, it’s befitting that we’re looking for innovation at the heart of everything. We are excited and ready to get the ball rolling in earnest, move the inertia of the last two years into a juggernaut of momentum and host perhaps the grandest Emvies to date. All the best to every participant, may the best work win!”

     

    On being the Presenting Sponsor, Sapna Chadha, Vice President, Marketing – India, Southeast Asia and South Asia, Google Asia Pacific, said: “We are delighted to be partnering with The Advertising Club on the most prestigious and highly anticipated media awards. At Google, we incorporate innovation and creative strategy in everything we do and we’re eager to see what the young creative minds of India have produced in the past year. It is our absolute pleasure to be a part of this legacy and hope to see some great work being recognised.”

     

  • Ramesh Narayan inducted into AFAA Hall of Fame 2021

    By Our Staff

     

    Ramesh Narayan
    Ramesh Narayan

    At the inaugural session of the prestigious AdAsia conference being held at Macao, Ramesh Narayan was inducted into the AFAA Hall of Fame, 2021.

     

    Earlier, outgoing Chairman of AFAA, Raymond So said: “the AFAA Hall of Fame sets out to recognize the best of the very best. Ramesh Narayan is a legend who has the ability to look past what’s good enough and focus on making everything better than it has to be”.

     

    He read out a citation that outlined the highlights of an illustrious career studded with almost all the national and global awards in the advertising industry, leadership positions in all the relevant Indian marcom industry associations, the contribution he has made to many social causes, his belief in using communication as a force for good and above all, for his integrity, truthfulness, effective communication skills, and his unique way of winning friends and influencing people.

     

    In his brief acceptance speech, Narayan said: “I’d like to thank AFAA and all my friends across Asia for this huge honor bestowed on me. Around 23 years ago, I was invited by my friend Pradeep Guha (you see I don’t say the late Pradeep Guha, because he lives in our minds and in our hearts) to join the AFAA movement and help make a bid to bring the AdAsia to India. This culminated in the AdAsia 2003 Jaipur. However, for me it was an introduction to industry work, as against only my own Agency work, and that experience is ongoing. I’d like to acknowledge the immense work done by all the architects of AFAA and to accept this honour on behalf of all of them.

     

    “I’d like to talk a little about our industry. I have had the amazing experience to be a part of an industry that keeps the wheels of our economies moving. That ensures more employment across the world. That gives individuals the right to choose. That educates, and entertains and spreads awareness.

     

    “However, I feel all this pales into insignificance before the power of this industry to help rid the world of diseases like polio. To raise money and combat calamities across the world, to help raise our collective voices for the environment and elder care and gender equality. And against domestic violence and animal abuse.

     

    “Can you think of any other industry that can claim to do all these things? Yes, my friends. That is the real power we as an industry wield. And that is what I call communication as a force for good.

     

    “And I urge more of us to think of our industry in this way.. And to make time for work like this. And show that what’s  good, is good for industry.

     

    “And so I stand here today, honoured and humbled.”

     

    Narayan has been President of the Advertising Club, The Advertising Agencies Association of India (AAAI), the India Chapter of the International Advertising Association (IAA), Chairman of the Awards Governing Council of the Abby awards at GoaFest. He has been honoured with the Lifetime Achievement Award by the AAAI, named Global Champion by the IAA, the Lifetime Achievement Award by the Association of Business Communicators of India (ABCI), presented with a Special award by the Public Relations Society of India (PRSI) and inducted into the IAA India Chapter Hall of Fame. He has been president of the Rotary Club of Bombay, and the recipient of several Rotary awards.

     

    Since the AdAsia was being held as a virtual event, a unique hybrid event was held in Mumbai to present the AFAA awards.

     

    Pradeep Guha was posthumously inducted into the AFAA Hall of Fame for 2019 and his wife Papia Guha accepted the award.

     

    Srinivasan Swamy was presented the AFAA Special Merit Award for 2019.

     

  • Srinivasan Swamy elected Chairman AFAA

    By Our Staff

     

    The Asian Federation of Advertising Associations (AFAA), at its General Body Meeting held on Wednesday, elected Srinivasan Swamy as its Chairman for a term of four years. Swamy, who is well known as the Chairman of R K Swamy Hansa group, has held leadership positions in many industry bodies at a national and global level. He has been Chairman and World President of the International Advertising Association (IAA), Chairman Confederation of Asian Advertising Agency Associations (CAAAA), President Advertising Agencies Association of India (AAAI), IAA India Chapter, Chairman Advertising Standards Council of India (ASCI), President All India Management Association (AIMA), to name a few.

     

    Said Swamy: “This is a privilege not just for me but for the Indian marcom community at large. The AFAA not just hosts the prestigious AdAsia conference, but is also connected with AdStars, and runs the widely acclaimed FastTrack program where young professionals are trained and transformed in a three-day program. I look forward to making a meaningful contribution to the communications industry in Asia, as well as seeing how AFAA can work along with other global industry Associations and further the cause of professionalism.”

     

    Adds a communique: “India has seen two distinguished AFAA Chairmen in the past – Gautam Rakshit and Pradeep Guha. Unfortunately both of them passed away recently.”

     

    AFAA is represented in India by the Advertising Council of India (ACI) whose members are The Advertising Club, the Advertising Agencies Association of India, the India Chapter of International Advertising Association, Indian Broadcasting and Digital Association and the Indian Society of Advertisers.

     

  • The Phenomenon called Pradeep Guha

    Pradeep Guha

     

    By Vishakha Singh

     

    Vishakha SinghEtsy, said the Facebook representative and a few heads turned towards me. It was mid-morning on a sunny October day in San Francisco, nearly a decade ago. The International Advertising Association India delegation of 20 people were seated in a small room at the Facebook headquarters with a bright orange wall on the backside. As a part of the delegation, I was attending a session by Facebook’s Paul Adams on building communities. It was 2012, when the words ‘digital communities’ appeared like precious jewels in our conversations, in small quantities. Building communities as a business model was new for the world and Facebook was showing the path, in action and in presentations. The speaker was then head of Facebook planning and had just released a book titled ‘Grouped’ on communities which we later received as a gift.

     

    Led by Pradeep Guha, IAA had organised a digital tour for the CEOs to the US to visit and learn from the big tech companies. The 2012 digital tour was the second initiative from IAA and I had onboarded the delegation to visit Microsoft, YouTube, Facebook, Google and Twitter.

     

    That October morning, at the Facebook headquarters, in the middle of a talk by Facebook, I had earned a special spot in Pradeep Guha’s thoughts. Before the start of the tour, in Pradeep Guha’s Mumbai office, sitting across his large wooden table, I had requested him to include a visit to the Etsy office too. A listed company, Etsy is dedicated to building small, homegrown businesses and has been building communities since its inception. Those days, Etsy was not widely popular. PG was not familiar with Etsy but he took interest in my conversation on Etsy.  So as the Facebook speaker talked about Etsy as the leading example in building communities, Pradeep Guha, sitting at the centre of the table, leaned forward and gestured a thumbs up to me. And heads on the table turned in my direction on this rare appreciation coming from him. I was suddenly noticed. Etsy had marked a respectable spot for me in his mind.

     

     

    In this article, I want to bring your attention to the phenomenon called Pradeep Guha. To the unknown, you can read about Pradeep Guha in the tribute written here and a lot over the internet.

     

    The Curious:

    Techcrunch Disrupt is an annual event held in San Francisco for the tech startup world. It not only showcases new ideas but also the making of ideas, successes and failures. I had described the event to PG and had recommended him to attend it. One fine morning in 2019, I received a message from him on how excited he was to attend it. Curiosity fuels learning and he stayed at the top of knowledge by attending not just Techcrunch but also Singularity University and some other courses. A sharp thinker feeds his mind with new knowledge. He makes efforts to attend courses to learn and unlearn, no matter his age or designation. This is what Pradeep Guha maintained. It was not just an Etsy moment at Facebook, PG made efforts to learn the new from across fields and continents. He displayed curiosity with a proficiency that lacked any arrogance, the arrogance that becomes a second nature for being successful for a long time.

     

    The secret of making a phenomenon is to live a life with a growth mindset, to stay curious and to hone the knowledge.

     

    The Contrast:

    What is the opposite of grand? Insignificant. To balance the two opposites effortlessly is a magical trait and that is what came easy to the phenomenon called PG. He always came up with grand visions but stayed true to the most insignificant details in execution of that vision. There was never any room for error in execution of the grandest of the vision. This reflected in all aspects of his work whether it was related to media selling by designing Mastermind or in creation of landmark events or even in maintaining his relationships with the world.He effortlessly balanced the contrast of big and trivial detail. It was neither compromised nor showcased. The balancing of the contrast was a given, it came like yin and yang, always together.

     

    The Compassionate:

    Pradeep Guha, the media stalwart passed away on August 21, 2021. On August 9, I had a message exchange where he wrote to me saying, “All good, thank you.” The news of his passing filled me with all shades of emotions, primarily being upset. He had hidden the suffering, at the same time, he had responded. When tributes poured in, all of it had the same tone of how he made people feel very special. Losing him became a personal loss on a mass level. Another contrast. His ability to connect, support, bind with people is an ability less possessed by leaders. I was a nobody in his aura of things, but from time to time, I received a message, sometimes a gentle scolding for staying quiet for months. His ability to keep people in his thoughts, to make them feel important and needed is a lesson in generosity. It was a construct maintained over the years. Not just colleagues and friends, he maintained a magical vibe with celebrities too. Renowned personalities treated him like their closest pal, yet he asked for a picture to keep the podium well-defined for both.

     

    Pradeep Guha, the phenomenon, lit the path with his way of life, with childlike curiosity, manlike balancing of contrast and nature like compassion for people. All we need to do is to keep the lights on.

     

    Vishakha Singh is a senior mediaperson and entrepreneur based in Mumbai. She has authored an online course titled SHIFT _ Simple Habits and Ideas for Forward Thinking that that encourages one to think in an alert, creative style in the fast changing business environment. She writes a weekly column at HabitsforThinking.in, the homebase for SHIFT. She also writes a column on Moneycontrol titled ‘Soch to Success’. This article has also appeared on HabitsforThinking.in

     

  • Das ka Dum with Dr Bhaskar Das | The prayer meeting for Pradeep Guha is scheduled for this evening. In what way do you think can the industry celebrate his work?

    There are few better people in medialand better than Dr Bhaskar Das who worked so very closely with the late Pradeep Guha. So we asked him this question for the September 1 edition of Das ka Dum.

     If you wish to access the archives, please go to the Das Ka Dum tab on the website’s top navigation bar.

     

    Q. The prayer meeting for Pradeep Guha is scheduled for this evening. In what way do you think can the industry celebrate his work?

     

    A. Mr Pradeep Guha straddled many areas during his professional life — be it creativity, content, design and monetisation. All these skills were integrated with his leadership style, cultural curation in the organisation, intense strategic focus and leveraging colleagues’ energy. All the above qualities are relevant today for navigating enterprise in any business space. When these behavioural traits are practised as a dominant culture in enterprise management, Mr Guha’s legacy would be celebrated in practice.

  • Media icon Pradeep Guha passes away

     

    By Our Staff

     

    Pradeep Guha, one of the seniormost professionals in Indian media, passed away earlier today. Guha was critically ill and was put on ventilator on Friday morning. He was in intensive care at the Kokilaben Ambani Hospital in North West Mumbai, after he was diagnosed with advanced liver cancer a few weeks back.

     

    Guha is one of the few professionals to have straddled both print and electronic media platforms with much success. He headed the Times of India group (where he spent nearly three decades) and the Zee Entertainment Network from 2005 to 2008. And since 2010, he took charge of the 9XM bouquet of music channels and turned them around.

     

    He was also Area Director and Vice President, Asia Pacific of the International Advertising Association. A few years back he was the first inductee into the prestigious Hall of Fame set up by the India Chapter of the IAA. He was also  Chairman of the Asian Federation of Advertising Associations (AFAA).

     

    He is credited with organising the AdAsia 2003, Jaipur, the benchmark for such events even today. He has been the President of the Indian Newspaper Society (INS) and the India Chapter IAA. He  also had a success career in Bollywood having produced highly acclaimed films like Fiza.

     

    Guha was a man of many parts. While he started as a hardnosed adsales professional with The Times of India, he moved up the ladder to head the publishing division of the group. He transformed the Miss India and Filmfare awards and along the way the magazines to very high profile and successful awards in the business. Both of them existed long before Guha took over the reins, but he made them slick and counted for and aspirational. The Bombay Times party that he organised was the most sought after by Mumbai affluentials.

     

     

     

     

  • Dr Bhaskar Das: Every Strategy has an Expiry Date

     

    By A Correspondent

     

     In early 2005, when it was clear to the big bosses at the Old Lady of Boribunder that Hindustan Times and DNA were set to launch in Mumbai, there was much concern about the future of the Empire. While HT may still be this North India superpower, the paper had turned stylish and had some great writers and people at the helm.

     

    The bigger worry was DNA, short for Daily News & Analysis. It was being set up in a jv of the Dainik Bhaskar group and Zee. Bhaskar had essayed huge success in Gujarat with Divya Bhaskar and the Zee TV group chairman Subhash Chandra is a tough fighter and was keen on extending his domination to print. Plus there was Pradeep Guha, the former Times of India bossman who knew it all. And had a point to prove. When Guha moved to Zee, there was much talk of his trust lieutenant and second-in-command Dr Bhaskar Das also moving with him. But his bosses – Samir and Vineet Jain – held him back.

     

    Das suggested the flanking strategy to the Jains, and get the newbies battle it out with Mirror first. The gambit worked, and Mirror in Mumbai was a profitable venture in three-odd years. The circulation was large thanks to the fact it went free with The Times of India. The going was good, business-wise and editorially, though it had achieved its purpose.

     

    The Agarwals sold their stake in DNA to Chandra at Zee, and the paper finally folded up a year-odd back. HT could weather the onslaught, but it was a never a close #2 in Mumbai amongst broadsheets. Mid-Day, which was once #2 in Mumbai, suffered through the fight among the big ones.

     

    Post the announcement of The Times of India group on Saturday to close Mumbai Mirror as a daily, we asked Dr Bhaskar Das (BD) a few questions as part of the Das ka Dum series. We couldn’t help not asking him many questions on the development as part of the questions for the week. He was after all the boss of the project. We then thought it would be good to carry the entire Q&A together, and add a couple of more questions.

     

    Even if state this ourselves, we think it makes for a great interview, and he’s been reasonably candid. There’s a wee bit written between the lines, but then that’s BD for you. Enjoy.

     

    If the Print Media were to look at itself in the Mirror, what would it see? A self that’s Deflated, Defeated and Dead?

     

    None of them, according to me. Naysayers or doomsday predictors might agree with your observation. I am not oblivious to the emotional aspect of the reflection in the mirror. But in business, as in life, recalibration of the forward journey is a constant imperative. Learnings happen when one cleans up the mirror first before cleaning one’s face only. A deep introspection followed by a resilient approach would engender a realisation that death is the beginning of life and life is the beginning of death. Accordingly, new roadmap would emerge.

     

    Your sentiments on the closure of Mumbai Mirror, the daily, since you headed the team and started it all. In fact I am told you thought of the idea…

     

    What sentiments? � The company started a project. I was an incidental steward. When one is (in this case me) lovingly detached, launch or closure is part of a continuum, as in life. The pragmatism of business and its strategy compels an organisation to take a decision which might have to be revoked in future when the landscape changes. For business process continuity and for conservation of finite resources, an organisation has to choose an alternative from amongst multiple choices in an altered landscape.  After all, any  strategy is ultimately  a cascade of choices. Hence emotion has no legitimate space in such a decision-making. An engrossed passion helps a rational decision get wings. For the concerned daily, the dominant sentiment at that relevant time was perhaps like that. Hence an individual sentiment doesn’t matter.

     

    Does the closure of the Mumbai Mirror as a daily augur sad times for the newspaper industry. After all this is an offering from the #1 newspaper group in the country/ continent/ world, and operates in Mumbai, one of the most important advertising markets on land?

     

    As if this is the first time a publication has been shut. Every strategy has an expiry date. The publication had served a strategic purpose perhaps at that relevant time. Changing times need new strategy to navigate the operating environment. So I can presume the group has enough in its arsenal to leverage in the most important advertising market of India. From the outside it might look as a dystopian development. But it can be a precursor to a ‘manthan’ too. Who knows? As an incorrigible optimist , I think so.

     

    Our heart goes out to the employees engaged by newspapers, esp those who aren’t shared resources. With jobs not easily available what would you recommend to people who are set to be displaced?

     

    I can empathise with this question. I really have no answer to this. Sometimes silence is important to respect emotions. I can only pray for their well-being. The employees created a fantastic brand. They will do well anywhere. I am convinced.

     

    There are sentiments that BCCL should have absorbed the losses and grow the brand. Your thoughts.

     

    Theoretically, everything is possible. But how do I simulate a probabilistic answer without having any access to the compulsions that led to this decision? The only point that I can make is that the print sector itself is under dual threat  of format obsolescence and Covid-led tepid business headwind, and hence, even a supposedly deep-pocketed organisation  may not have the luxury of  taking  decisions that are unrelated to the basic tenets of commercial viability.

     

    As an academic in marketing, would you say that the existence or longevity of a product or service that’s set up essentially to combat competition is always in suspect?

     

    Not necessarily. INS Vikrant was also useful once upon a time. Then it got replaced by a more state-of-the-art aircraft carrier. Besides, strategic imperatives change. A market-facing organisation has to continuously readjust its gear depending on the terrain change and organisational priorities. Hence any deterministic prediction on this matter is as reliable as any decision that is predicated dominantly on convenient sampling.

     

    Do your responses really reflect your true emotions? Or are you just being politically correct?

     

    Political and correctness are oxymoronish terms, to my mind. I am neither political nor  claiming to be correct in my answers. May be my answers are not fitting into an expected paradigm of response. Then you should first decide if you want a rational answer or an emotional one. I am sure you would prefer the former.

  • Jaideep Gandhi joins STACA Board

    By A Correspondent

     

    The Standing Committee on Advertising (STACA), at a meeting of their Board of Trustees inducted senior adperson Jaideep Gandhi, Founder of Another Idea, onto their Board of Trustees. STACA is the apex body whose operations arm is the Advertising Council of India (ACI).

     

    Jaideep Gandhi

    Said Pradeep Guha, Chairman of STACA: “Jaideep Gandhi has been a veteran advertising person associated with prestigious industry Associations such as the Advertising Agencies Association of India (AAAI) and the India Chapter of the International Advertising Association (IAA) for many years. His understanding of industry matters will be an asset to STACA and ACI, under whose aegis the AdAsia has been held in India. ACI also sponsors six young professionals every year to the prestigious FastTrack program in Malaysia.”

     

    STACA was set up in 1981 as a Public Charitable Trust. Its main object is to impart education in advertising, marketing and allied subjects. Besides, the Trust organises various activities to promote growth & development of advertising and marketing and to promote better understanding amongst all the constituents in the field of advertising.

     

     

  • AFAA & IAA host Fasttrack, a Leadership Development Programme

    By A Campaign

     

    The Asian Federation of Advertising Associations (AFAA) and the International Advertising Association (IAA) concluded the seventh edition of Fasttrack, a three-day leadership programme for young professionals in Kuala Lumpur from September 11 to 13 2019. The participants were from Malaysia, India, China, Taiwan , Nepal, Sri Lanka, Bangladesh and Indonesia.

     

    Said Pradeep Guha of the Advertising Council of India (ACI): “I am delighted that Fasttrack has come so far. The feedback from all our nominees from India has been superb. I am also happy to note that they are advancing steadily in their professional lives and contributing gainfully to our industry. The ACI, which has as its members the IAA (India Chapter), AAAI, Advertising Club and IBF has been sponsoring six delegates for an all-expenses-paid experience in the programme for the last several years. We believe it is our investment in our industry and the returns are showing now. We conduct a national search for these six delegates and this year the entire search and short-listing was handled by media veteran Paritosh Joshi. We are happy to continue backing Fasttrack and wish it spreads from Malaysia, where it is being run now, to India as well”.

     

    Added Bharat Avalani, Chief Knowledge Officer of the AFAA and the pioneer of the programme: “We are incredibly heartened by the breakthroughs. We continually receive positive feedback from the human resources department of the participants, and we are pleased to witness their ability to engage in higher-level conversations and take greater responsibility in their work. The advertising and marketing  industry is challenged like never before; trust and credibility is diminishing, therefore this is a critical time for us to raise leaders with the right attitudes to seek solutions,”.