Tag: Praful Akali

  • Praful Akali, Ashish Khazanchi Jury Chairs for Abby 2024

    Praful Akali, Managing Director and Founder, Medulla and Ashish Khazanchi, Founder and Chief Creative Officer, Enormous, have joined as Jury Chairs for Health category and Still Print category respectively, at The Abby Awards 2024.

    The Abby Awards powered by One Show will be held on May 29, 30 and 31 as part of Goafest 2024 which is being held in Mumbai this year.

  • Medulla bags a Grand at Clio

    By A Correspondent

     

    Medulla Communications has been recognised at Clio Awards 2017 with its first ever ‘Grand’ – for the integrated campaign ‘Last Laugh’. The campaign also received two bronze for Events/Experiential and PR for Health and Wellness. It was also shortlisted for the best ‘Film’ – Branded Entertainment and Content.

     

    Said Amit Akali, ‎Managing Partner and Creative Head – ‎What’s Your Problem: “I’m excited and glad to receive our first Grand award and most of all to make a difference at the way the topic of ‘Death’ is looked at in India.”

     

    Added Praful Akali, founder-director, Medulla Communications: “Medulla thrives to work on insight based campaigns and is truly being recognised as one of the thought leaders in the healthcare industry globally.”

  • #LaughAtDeathattempts to make Indians accept death

    By A Correspondent

     

    Specialist heathcare agency Medulla and the Indian Association of Palliative Care (IAPC) have come up with what’s possibly yet another Cannes Lions award worthy work. It has launched a new public awareness campaign on palliative or end of life care that will help Indians #LaughAtDeath.

     

    In India, death is a taboo topic, with people uncomfortable discussing it. Leaving terminally ill patients and their families confused, lonely and often depressed. Palliative or end-or-life care focuses on making terminally ill patients comfortable during their last days. It includes counseling for the patient and their family members, which helps them accept death, make the most of their last days and actually enjoy them.

     

    These patients were selected from hundreds of terminally ill patients that IAPC members support daily, and trained by India’s best stand-up comedians – Kunal Kamra, Kashyap, Vinay Sharma, PunitPania, Shriram R and Anand Reghu.

     

    The campaign has broken on Twitter through the first ever comedy show on Twitter and will be amplified on social and digital media through a partnership with The Logical Indian, a platform that leads news and issues that often miss the limelight in the traditional Indian media. Radio Mirchi is also joining hands to bring the #LaughAtDeath campaign to radio.

     

    Said Amit Akali, Chief Creative Officer at Medulla: “This was the most difficult (almost impossible) project of our lives. Made easy and possible by the patients, eager to share their stories and make the most of their last days. They moved us with their courage and floored us with their live performances, some of them taking a stage for the first time in 85 years! They opened their lives to the stand-up comics and rehearsed hard for days.”

     

    Said Mihir Chitre, Creative Group Head: “The most rewarding part of this campaign has been interacting with the terminally ill patients. I think they’ve changed the way I look at life.”

     

    Added Praful Akali, Medulla founder and MD:“This is not just a campaign but an ongoing project and platform for terminally ill patients to share their stories and spread awareness on Palliative care. Love it because it brings alive the power of palliative care in a real way. It is about the strongest demo campaign you’ll ever see.”

     

    Said Dr Mary Ann Muckaden, President of IAPC: “We are looking forward to increase access to palliative care in India with Medulla – right now only 3 per cent of cancer patients get even simple pain relief. Hopefully, this campaign will change that. A big thank you to the patients for sharing their stories, the comedians who trained them, Film-maker Rahul Sengupta for capturing their performances, the venue and media partners who supported us in creating awareness.”

  • Integrating medical, creative and strategy, the Medulla Way

     

    India had a great start at the 2016 Cannes Lions Festival of Creativity, with Mumbai-based Medulla Communications bagging the Healthcare Agency of the Year in the Lions Health category – a first for the country. Praful Akali and Amit, former Grey creative chief , front men of the agency, bagged seven Pharma Lions in all: two Golds, two Silvers, and three Bronzes. Their campaign, ‘Last Words’, for the Indian Association of Palliative Care, hit home. They speak to Anuka Roy about their win, the healthcare advertising scenario in India and what lies ahead.

     

    You are a young agency, having been set up in 2008, but your works have been winning awards over the years. But being ‘Healthcare Agency of the Year’ is a big deal. Your sentiments as you look back on your eight-year journey…

    Praful Akali (PA): We feel proud to have won ‘Agency of the Year’ for India. We are happy to have made India proud.

     

    A B-Pharm degree followed by a PGDM from an IIM is a winning formula to lead a healthcare agency. Plus a brother who is among the top creative professionals in the country. So what would you attribute your success to?

    PA: Our success is based on our philosophy of integrating medical, creative and strategy, which is why all our communication — whether for clients or awards — has been appreciated. The rest has been about focusing on the advertising basics. If you look at any healthcare advertising agency, either in India or even abroad, they understand healthcare but not necessarily advertising. So the planning pieces of advertising, the basic creative and strategic processes, are not followed. An advertising agency does not necessarily get healthcare and very few have a healthcare arm. We felt that we needed an agency which got both advertising and healthcare. When Amit joined us, we used him as Chief Creative Officer to bring a basic creative strategy and philosophy on board, and also hire great creative people.

     

    Amit Akali (AA): When I left Grey two years ago, I felt that the level of strategy and creativity in a niche industry, was not the same as in mainline agencies. In the healthcare agency that already existed six years ago, called Medulla, while the strategy (coming from Praful’s background of IIM) was world-class, and their medical team was among the best in the world, where creativity was concerned Medulla had benchmarked itself against the Indian healthcare industry. We were clear that with the medical expertise already there, the creativity had to be benchmarked to the best in the world, and so we benchmarked it against Cannes. Last year was the first time we entered at Cannes, and became the No. 3 agency in the world. That is when we decide that we owe it to ourselves to now become No. 1.

     

    What are the challenges of being a healthcare agency as against a regular creative shop?

    PA: The communication you have in healthcare can genuinely impact the lives of people. But the regulatory barriers, in terms of more complex messaging, also have to be medically robust. The complexity of medical advertising means that my creative has more pegs to hang things on. And the other things – like medically robust communication, saying the right thing and being ethically correct — is the same for all kinds of advertising. Agencies from Mexico, South Korea and Indonesia have been telling us that they are glad that an Indian agency won because the work has been truly inspiring for them.

     

    AA: Healthcare has its regulations and restrictions. All your life you work on briefs for cold drinks, chips and chocolates and suddenly, over here healthcare is a completely new sector and the briefs are very specific. For me, coming from mainline, the propositions were really fresh. In healthcare, you also have a medical team that is part of the creative process. They come up with the knowledge of the product and they really give you very sharp briefs to reap off.

     

    Tell us about your client, the Indian Association of Palliative Care, for whose campaign (‘Last Words’) you bagged two Golds and a Silver.

    PA: ‘Last Words’ is not a simple campaign. It is a huge project for the Indian Association of Palliative Care (IAPC), and gave us a lot of emotional connect with everyone, including the jury. The campaign has been a personal journey for us. Our mother was suffering from cancer and wanted to die at home, and not in the hospital. At the last stage, she was in such bad shape that we had to move her to a hospital, and she died in the ICU. We were not sure if we had done the right thing since we had not heard of palliative care. Later, when IAPC was looking for a campaign, we were inspired by our own journey. Palliative care reduces pain in the last stage and provides counseling to both the patient and the family to prepare them. You always expect that your last words will be heard by your family, but when we realised that the last words are actually heard by nurses, we did this campaign with nurses, and chose the strongest last words to become a part of the AV and online film.

     

    Healthcare advertising is not really big in India. Do you think winning ‘Agency of the Year’ will change that?

    PA: I think it is already happening. When we were there, we met everyone from the Indian advertising fraternity, and they were all proud of the win. A lot of them may not have heard of Medulla because healthcare advertising was not necessarily on their radar, but they were proud. Realising the potential of healthcare advertising is already happening. Between last year and this year, I think the number of entries from India in the Cannes Lion Healthcare category has increased five-fold while entries from across the world have gone up by 40 per cent. People are realising that healthcare advertising can genuinely change lives and is an opportunity for people to do more impactful communication.

     

    AA: At Cannes, we presented JWT’s Blood Bank project and the Blue Dot project by McCann. Clearly, the focus this year was on healthcare, not just from Medulla but India. Healthcare is a very important sector in a developing country like India. Twenty years back, Ogilvy worked for the Pulse Polio campaign and helped eradicate polio. In a country like India, healthcare and healthcare communication have importance, but specialised healthcare agencies are not doing as much creative work as the mainline agencies. That is something Medulla set out to change two years ago, and that has clearly happened.

     

    A Grand Prix still eludes you. Are you aiming for that next year?

    PA: The ‘Last Words’ campaign, we were later told, was considered for a Grand Prix. For us the big aim was clearly to become Agency of the Year. I do not think that a Grand Prix is necessarily the peg, but there are pegs of winning even more awards the next year, and making people realise that it was not a flash in the pan, but that Indian advertising is very mature when it comes to healthcare. We want to do some of the best international advertising work in pharma and healthcare, and if tomorrow we do that and people laud the work done by an Indian agency, that would mean more for us than a Grand Prix.

     

    This interview first appeared in dna of brands on June 27

     

  • Amit Akali launches full-service digital agency. So, What’s Your Problem!

    By A Correspondent

     

    There’s hope for public relations practitioners. ‘Cause the creative and assorted ad agency folk can’t write a copy-pasteable press release. They are after all creative, think with both ends of their brains, and think out-of-the-box.

     

    So we meet Amit Akali at the Kyoorius after-party last Saturday and he said he’s gonna make the big announcement on Wednesday. Which he did, and wetransferred us the entire docket. Pictures, logo, a note… all that you need.

     

    Except that the press release wasn’t a typical release. It had everything in it, but we had to put all it in the right place.

     

    But, then, that’s our problem. The boss pays us for figuring the method in the madness.

     

    Okay, so here goes. Amit Akali, we know him. He doesn’t belong to the ruling party in Punjab. He doesn’t even belong to the cricket team that the pre(i)tty dimpled star co-owns.

     

    Akali, Managing Partner and Creative Head of WYP, has over 18 years of experience in advertising, including as National Creative Head of Grey India (with Malvika Mehra) and member of the Grey Global Creative Council. Other than which he’s worked in various agencies: Enterprise Nexus, O&M (Creative Head, Ogilvy Bangalore). Praful Akali, Managing Partner and Strategy Head, is an IIM Lucknow, marketing graduate, and has worked with leading consumer healthcare multinationals (Pfizer, Ranbaxy, Boots Piramal) for seven years before setting up his own healthcare communications agency, Medulla Communications, almost seven years ago.

     

    The other co-founders are Huzefa Roowala (Hozi) who will be Director – Content & Creative and Hammad Khan, Director – Servicing and Technology. Then there’s Ajay Takalkar, Director – Art & Design, and Hensila Kava, Social Media Lead – founder member of social media agency FYA.

     

    ‘What’s Your Problem’ is part of an agency network, which includes partner agency, Medulla. It starts off in over 3000 square feet of office space at Santacruz, in Suburban Mumbai, and a 60-member team with industry leading in-house capabilities in strategy, social media, SEO, SEM, digital media planning, analytics, YouTube marketing, web-development, art and design, UI/ UX, copy and content, video production, animation, etc.

     

    There are some clients on board already. Some work for Flipkart along with Chapter Five and other clients, being Nilgai Foods, Brinc and Indigo Music,

     

    Now was this a creatively written news report? Akalijis, do we get a job?