Tag: Rahul Gautam

  • Sleepwell launches new consumer interface

    By A Correspondent

     

    Mattress brand Sleepwell from Sheela Foam Ltd has rolled out a campaign titled Sleepwell@Home.

     

    Said Rahul Gautam, Managing Director, Sheela Foam: “The health of our consumer has always been a priority for the company. In these times, we wanted to ensure our complete support to consumers by enabling access to a hygienic mattress in the most hygienic way. Right from the manufacturing process to the well-being of our staff and customers, we are taking all the precautionary measures to ensure everyone’s safety. We encourage our customers to avail convenience and safety of doorstep services with Sleepwell@Home.”

     

  • Ford’s latest campaign inspires consumers to discover more

    By A Correspondent

     

    Ford India has launched its latest television campaign – Discover the More in You – created by BBDO India.

     

    Said Rahul Gautam, vice president marketing, at Ford India: “Our latest campaign – Discover The More in You – draws from experiences of our customers for whom these situations in their Ford SUV led to self-discovery, making them choose what was right. Not only does it reflect a progressive outlook to societal issues but also a special aspect of human-machine interaction.”

     

     

  • Will Data be the Annadata of the future?

     

    By A Correspondent

     

    We all know that data is the future of the marketing services business. The immediate future at least. And those who want to maximise on things now, even the present.

     

    Marketing services conglomerate WPP organised its first ever ‘Date with Data’ Summit on Tuesday with a galaxy of marketing gods and its own star-studded network.

     

    The idea was to exchange ideas and insights on data-driven marketing and the use of technology across marketing solutions. Keynote speakers and masterclass presenters emphasised the evolving role of data and its profound influence on the industry across all sectors. And thereby of course underscore its expertise with all things data.

    Speaking on the relevance of Audience Planning: A Journey or a Destination, Gauravjeet Singh, Head of Media South Asia, Hindustan Unilever, said, “It is a great experience to attend industry forums like this which really discuss the cutting-edge work that is happening around data. It is important to validate what one believes which helps during discussions with panellists and eventually leads to the right direction.”

     

    Addressing the growing need for marketeers and thought leaders in the industry to efficiently utilise the power of data, CVL Srinivas, Country Manager WPP India, said: “WPP strongly believes in driving collaboration amongst various stakeholders of the industry and this event is our attempt to create a platform for sharing different perspectives on how data is helping reshape marketing and businesses. As responsible users of data, we strive to enable thought-provoking discussions around important themes. We witnessed great participation from our clients, partners and colleagues.”

     

    The Summit opened with masterclasses on Data Visualisation-To Drive Data Adoption and Data Driven Thinking; Building A Data Driven Organisation; Unlocking the True Potential of Mobile Data; Data Privacy and Responsibility and Connecting Data (Data Integration) and Generating Targeted Insights (Data Analysis). These sessions were conducted by experts from Google Cloud, InMobi, Kantar and Data Alliance.

     

    The afternoon saw panel discussions on topics such as Decoding The Consumer: Fundamentals to Future, that addressed advancements in insights, research and analytics; Connected Commerce: Decoding The Last Mile, which highlighted how data and analytics are being leveraged to bridge the gaps in commerce. Audience Planning: A Journey Or A Destination touched upon innovative approaches of using data whilst Data As A Source of Creative Inspiration explored how data can be used to inspire creative content and communication planning.

     

    Speakers and participants from companies such as Vodafone, ITC, Pepperfry, Hindustan Unilever, Ford India, Google, InMobi and Nykaa were amongst those that delivered key presentations and business insights.

     

    And here are pointers from what the various panellists said:

     

    Panel 1: Decoding the Consumer: Fundamentals to Future

     

    Siddharth Banerjee – Executive Vice President of Brand and Marketing, Vodafone

    Data signals help to pick up on consumer behaviour. Data collection can be harnessed in days and weeks rather than months and years. Facebook analytics is used to understand consumer behaviour, it is important for marketeers to harness the information. Future models will have evolve. I would rather use two or three word acronyms over artificial intelligence. Some fundamentals don’t change.

     

    Tushar Vyas- Chief Strategy Officer, GroupM South Asia

    Miniscule part that buys ITC product will be open to understand consumer behaviour

    Machine and data is augmenting the human mind to make the decision.

     

    Shuvadip Banerjee – Vice President of Marketing Services, ITC limited

    Data is being collected, curated mined on a daily basis. Bringing this data together is a challenge. End-to-end perspective gives a richer view. Quantum has increased.

    Data will help us predict consumer behaviour. Data is supplementing something critical. Never loose contact with your consumers.

     

    Panel 2: Connected Commerce: Decoding the last mile.

     

    Vikas Agnihotri – Country Director, India Sales, Google India.

    Certain weather conditions leads to how the food ordering habits change

    Helped a client on-board payments identified catchments areas where merchants will come on board. Omnichannels is going to stay it is a big part. Eg: Maruti has more than 700 dealers in the country. 9-10 customers watch a video before buying a car. It is a yearly study done by Google. There is a very strong correlation that shows customers are able to see and buy products from the store. The customers are now more informed about the car before they purchase it.

     

    Kashyap Vadapalli – Chief Marketing’s Officer Pepperfry

    Control marketplace, partly how we sell it to our merchants. Data what we use is consumer behaviour. What kind of patterns lead to a completion.

    Buying behaviour is important. Life time value. Then we know category of consumers we have to tap on. Browsing behaviour, gives us an idea of what to do

     

    Sanjay Suri, Chief Technology Officer, Nykaa

    We save all data (click, search) earlier we used to do base level analysis. Ability to look at the cohorts who have come on week by week.

    Use different Market strategy. Breaking the cohort into a granulated level, figuring each segment and personalising it.

     

    Panel 3: Audience Planning: A Journey or a Destination.

     

    Gaurav Jeet Singh – Head of Media South Asia Unilever

    It is all sophisticated marketing. Purchase decision is important.

    Performance marketing is confused with Audience marketing

    Looking at large data structure which don’t talk to each other.

    How does our data marry 2nd party data and how does 2nd party marry 3rd and complement the other.

    You need to go after data that is most recent or refreshed every month. A lot of data set ups are not recent.

     

    Vasuta Agarwal- VP and GM, South Asia InMobi

    Becomes critical with partners and shares. No one solution to fit different markets.

    Define relevant signal and sources

    In the non-economic world you don’t have a single view of their customers which is a problem. Sometimes we take data we take at face value. We don’t know how many times it is refreshed and how recent it is. Another challenge is authentic data. And needing teams to check the data.

     

    Rahul Gautam- VP of Marketing Ford India

    Small share in the Indian context of 5%. People are going against others opinions to buy Ford cars. Taking those signals to target my audience that’s success. It will help all advertisers to be sharp on the money.

     

    Kartik Sharma – CEO South Asia, Wavemaker

    Cohorts of people are being able to identified through audience planning. Initially audience planning was more like demographic planning, now it has become sharper. Look at the consumer take signals and build something of it.

    Recency of data is important. How do you make meaning out of signals is difficult. If you don’t have the resources and people it is task to do.

    Audience planning is a Process

     

    Panel 4: Data As A Source of Creative Inspiration

    Aditya Swamy – Head of Agency Partnership Google

    Looked at data from audience POV. A strong idea laid across the tool, you are sure to win the market. Mass brands can bunch users by their spending techniques and their behaviour. 2015, YouTube had two YouTubers who had million subscribers now in 2018 there 400 solo native Youtubers who have a million subscribers. These people have looked at data analyst and constantly reading comments.

    Looking for tickets while traveling is something MakeMyTrip would tap onto but Samsonite is tapping on those queries.

     

    Kainaz Karmakar – Group Creative Director, Ogilvy

    Campaign creativity for awareness – Savlon Swast campaign.

    Target audience children. By simple data point of washing hands, we have reached 2.3million children. We carried out a project where children in villages were given chalk to write with and once done it was used as handwash under water. This data point has made a difference.

     

    Deepshikha Dharmaraj – Chief Business Growth Officer, Genesis Burson-Marsteller

    It is the biggest challenge to combine data and creativity. Data is pure info unless you can create a story with it. A great campaign is built when it starts with your assumption, thought and then with the data and add a layer of how it work with the audience. Data+ creativity= Magic. It is about storytelling. Influencers are what driving the storytelling technique. Some people don’t want to engage with influencers because of payment. But engaging with them creates a better story telling method. And it also reaches the audience faster.

     

     

  • Ford EcoSport initiates innovation with Google Search

    By A Correspondent

     

    To celebrate the launch of compact SUV Ford EcoSport, Ford India teamed up with Google to launch what it bills as a first-of-its-kind digital campaign in the automobile space in India.

     

    Titled “Fun on Your Side”the digital campaign aimed to bring different aspects of fun to lie that customer can experience with the all-new EcoSport even when they search for it online.

     

    The activity started on November 9 and will be on till November 15. Said Rahul Gautam, Vice President – Marketing, Ford India: “The car that started the compact SUV phenomenon in India is back to win many more hearts and minds. With the Fun with EcoSport campaign, we have worked with Google to ensure that the spirit of fun spreads beyond our dealership floors to everyone searching for it. With the New Ford EcoSport, our engineers have combined style, fun, and technology – all in one package – that we want our consumers to search and experience.”

     

    Commenting on the campaign, Vikas Agnihotri, Director Sales, Google India added: “Research shows 89 per cent of car buyer’s decision making is influenced through digital and majority of their journey starts from Google Search. The digital campaign for the launch of the new Ecosport combines strong intent cues from consumers with the innovative search voting feature to provide a fun-filled and memorable experience.”

     

     

  • Ford urges customers to make safety atop priority

    By A Correspondent

     

    Ford India is back with a campaign where it urges customers to make safety a priority and not a choice. The campaign finds its roots in the research that shows safety in car buying decisions play second fiddle to every other parameter – be it looks or mileage and even convenience features.

     

    The fact that more than two-thirds of close to 22,000 respondents of a survey by Ford India didn’t consider safety as an important consideration while buying a vehicle proves the trend.

     

    “Sixty years ago, Ford was the first automaker to offer factory-installed safety belts, and our legacy of safety innovation endures to this day. Today in India, we are making sure that all our products with six-seven airbags are available at an affordable price. While we make safety accessible, and affordable across segments, with the latest campaign we want customers to prioritize it too for the sake of their loved ones,”

     

    The television commercial titled The Uncomfortable Question features a conversation between a doting father and his curious daughter as they go for a ride in their new Ford EcoSport.

     

    While the father familiarizes the daughter with a long list of Ford EcoSport’s features, the anxious daughter raises a pertinent question — how will he ensure her safety in the rear seat? The confident father, being happy with his choice, assures the daughter with the proven safety credentials of his EcoSport that boasts of six airbags for complete all-around protection. An assured smile replaces the daughter’s confused expression after hearing her father’s reassuring words on how he has prioritized her safety.

     

    The underpinning message in the commercial urges car buyers to make safety a top consideration in their purchase journey and choose a vehicle that priorities complete protection of their loved ones.

     

    “While Government policies and regulations evolve, we are ahead of the curve and are providing safety features not because we have to but because we see it as our responsibility. Your safety is our priority and thus the Ford portfolio in India today comes equipped with advanced safety features such as ABS, EBD, side & curtain airbags as well as industry-first knee airbag, making it up to seven to keep vehicle occupants safe,” said Rahul Gautam, Vice President – Marketing at Ford.

     

    Conveying an important message, the campaign will follow an integrated communication approach and optimally leverage all paid, owned and earned media channels including social, digital, television, print, radio and mobile for the campaigns.

     

    Added Sachin Ambekar, Vice President & Executive Creative Director, Global Team Blue India: “We find that people in India are extremely protective when it comes to the family. They use every mean to protect them. With the help of this campaign, we are pushing consumers to think hard and evaluate the choices they make when it comes to car purchase as well.”

     

  • Ford attempts to break stereotypes with latest TVC

    By A Correspondent

     

    Ford India attempts to break the myth and stereotypes around its cost of service feature in its latest TVC.The genesis of the campaign finds its roots in research that shows how consumers tend to believe others and blindly follow perceptions without knowing the truth.

     

    Taking a unique and fresh creative route to expose the trend, Ford’s latest campaign on the cost of service features well-known on-screen ‘villains’ – Singham fame Prakash Raj, Bad Man Gulshan Grover, and small screen vamp Sudha Chandran. All antagonists in the campaign highlighting how they get stereotyped as bad in real life too due to their evil appearances in cinema/ television.

     

    The narrative seamlessly builds connect with Ford’s continuing efforts in breaking the myth of being high on cost of service with hard hitting facts like the 5th year cost of service for Ford EcoSport being Rs 3,662.

     

    “Ford in India is transforming, and a key part of this success lies in winning the trust of the customer by passing the control back to them. Be it 800+ Sub Assembly Levels of Parts where we have broken big assemblies into sub-component or Longer Service Intervals, we are enabling substantial savings for customers,” said Rahul Gautam, vice president, marketing, Ford India. “With our new campaign, we want to break the myth and establish that Ford cars are surprisingly affordable using an interesting and creative way of storytelling.”

     

    The TVCs created by Global Team Blue (GTB) will target key sports, news and GEC channel along with significant digital and social presence.