Tag: Sunil Gautam

  • Integrow Asset retains Pitchfork

    By Our Staff

     

    It’s raining new business announcements at Pitchfork.

     

    Integrow Asset Management, a real estate-focused asset management firm, has appointed Pitchfork Partners as its communication strategy advisor. Pitchfork, the agency set up by industry seniors Sunil Gautam and Jaideep Shergill, will drive the brand outreach for Integrow Asset Management, support its business growth and strengthen the brand narrative.

     

    Said Ramashrya Yadav, Founder and CEO, Integrow Asset Management: “We want to create a premier real estate asset management institution built on trusted partnerships, value creation and sustainability. We want to transform the business of asset management and real estate development through a unique combination of transparency and alpha generation through decisions we make in crucial areas. Integrow aims to be a real estate platform for various forms & formats of real estate eventually benefiting all stakeholders. We aim to drive our brand narrative by leveraging the expertise of Pitchfork Partners, which has a proven track record, understands our message and shares our values.”

     

    Added Shergill: “We look forward to a great partnership. Integrow has a brilliant grasp of the real estate market. With its commitment to sustainable projects, coupled with the power of technology, we believe it has an edge over others in the sector. We are privileged to partner with such an innovative company.”

     

  • Moe’s Art ropes in Sunil Gautam & Jaideep Shergill as advisors

    By A Correspondent

     

    Moe’s Art, an independent communication consultancy firm, has roped in industry biggies Sunil Gautam and Jaideep Shergill as independent advisors. According to information, received the arrangement is purely advisory and there is no acquisition of a stake in the agency.

     

    “The duo will play a key role by providing counsel on the growth and strategic decisions of the organisation,” a communique noted adding: “The association will leverage insights from the veteran duo’s knowledge and expertise across verticals with an aim to generate higher ROI for clients. With an extensive background and expertise in the communication space, the firm is charting the course for the next phase of its growth.”

     

    Sunil Gautam (left) with Jaideep Shergill

    Speaking about the association, the Pitchfork Partners partners Gautam and Shergill, said: “Moe’s Art is a promising young brand in the communication industry and they have executed several innovative campaigns over the last few years. We are excited to associate with Moe’s Art at this stage of their journey and aid in fuelling the next wave of their growth.”

     

    Mayank Sen

    Added Mayank Sen, Co-founder of Moe’s Art: “We believe that Sunil Gautam and Jaideep Shergill bring immense experience and expertise along with an enduring spirit of entrepreneurship to the table. Under their guidance we will expand the consultancy in newer avenues and services. We would also like to draw on their experience in creating innovation strategies and solutions for clients’.”

     

     

  • V Shantakumar joins Pitchfork Partners as senior strategist

    By A Correspondent

     

    Brand and marketing veteran V Shantakumar has joined Pitchfork Partners Strategic Consulting LLP as a senior strategist and board member.

     

    Shantakumar will work closely with co-founders Sunil Gautam and Jaideep Shergill, and the team at Pitchfork Partners, to support its aggressive growth and diversification plans. Shantakumar has been involved with Pitchfork Partners for more than two years as a consulting partner on several assignments; the new role will take his relationship to the next level.

     

    Shantakumar is a veteran of more than four decades in marketing and advertising. He retired as chairman of Saatchi & Saatchi India in 2008, and was an advisor to the worldwide Saatchi & Saatchi Network through to 2010. That year, he founded an independent strategy advisory service called Doing Think focused on helping create sustainable business advantage using a proprietary process called Context Engineering.

     

    Said Gautam and Shergill: “We are excited to have Shanta join us. His credentials are impeccable and Shanta’s ability for creative thinking and strategy are par excellence. With his guidance and support, Pitchfork Partners will take the next leap towards redefining the communications landscape of India.”

     

    Added Shantakumar: “I am thrilled to be an integral member of the Pitchfork team. Although I have been involved over the past two years, the relationship today is more solid and allows me to contribute to my fullest. Sunil and Jaideep are great friends, and I am really excited to work with them to realise the Pitchfork dream.”

     

  • They’re back. Well kinda…

    Sunil Gautam (left) with Jaideep Shergill

     

    By A Correspondent

     

    After exiting MSLGroup in end-2014, PR industry captains Sunil Gautam and Jaideep Shergill launched Pitchfork Partners, a communications advisory with no direct linkages in executing PR or advertising functions. Work was farmed out to various agencies, and Pitchfork also worked with specialised communications specialists from elsewhere in the world.

     

     

    A quick Q&A with Jaideep Shergill, co-founder, Pitchfork Partners

    One remembers our interview with both of you when you launched, and the clear idea then was that you would not get into an execution mode on routine communications activity. But with the acquisition of Seven and the launch of Archer Freres, you’re now part of the PR brigade. I know you’ll had mentioned that you may acquire or tie-up with specialised service providers, but is this a ‘ghar waapsi’ of sorts?
    As the name suggests, Pitchfork Partners Strategic Consulting is and will be a Strategy firm across Brand & Corp comms and Business issues. Having said this, we have continued to support our clients who are front and centre for us with their execution needs by creating an ecosystem of partners across PR, Internal comms, CSR comms, Digital and Social media, Research, Creative, Design to name a few. This model has served us well and will continue.

    Archer Frères has been set up as part of one of the big areas we wanted to support in our original raison d’être of supporting and mentoring colleagues in the industry. The Seven Comms team has also been a part of out ecosystem since the beginning and we are only taking the relationship to the next level. The business will operate separately and its likely that we may have other partners in our ecosystem move to the same stature as Seven has now with the launch of Archer Frères, so watch this space!

     

    How would you say has the PR industry changed from 2014-end when you’ll exited PR full-time to now?

    We continue to believe that there is a huge untapped opportunity and we must continue to better our lot. In that sense, I am not sure too much has changed.

     

    What’s the aspiration for Archer Freres now that the two ‘maharathis’ are promoting it. Grow it to something like a Hanmer and eventually sell it? Or would you like to be a boutique agency, as it is now.

    Archer Frères will remain a boutique. Sunil and I are big believers in the boutique model and that’s how it will stay.

     

    One still remembers the early days of Hanmer, and the way it grew is by hiring top talent, and one of them included you, Jaideep. Are you looking at doing the same with Archer?

    Archer Frères already has great talent, having said this, we will always continue to groom talent and bring them in when we find them

     

    You’ve mentioned that you are looking at other acquisitions too, not necessarily in PR. Which are these domains going to be, and what’s the timeframe?

    All I will say is that you will need to watch this space. Soon enough!

     

    So what’s with this love for names… first Hanmer & Partners and now Archer Freres?
    All credit to Sunil. He is the one with the names! Its fun though. We have always loved having unusual naming conventions starting with Hanmer & Partners, Pitchfork Partners and now Archer Frères.

     

    While there were many large agencies whom Pitchfork assigned wrok to for its clients, one of the smaller ones was Seven Communications. And now, via a communique on Tuesday, Gautam and Shergill announced the acquisition of Seven Communciations and have rechristened it Archer Frères Communications LLP. It will be a full-service public relations (PR) and communications firm with Seven promoter Priyanka Shetty at the helm. Gautam and Shergill will play a strategic role, mentoring theArcher Frères team andits clients, notes a communqiue.

     

    Archer Frères will now be part of the Pitchfork Partners family, spanning the full-service gamut – from planning to media relations and content across corporate communications and brand PR.The clients currently include BBCWorldwide, Mogae Media, Zeotap, Miracle Foundation, Engage4more and Laqshya Event IP.

     

    Said Gautam and Shergill, in a statement: “We are excited to support the PR and communications ecosystem in India and privileged to mentor such a great team.After setting up Pitchfork Partners, we had been deliberating how to tap opportunities in the marketing services industry bysupporting young entrepreneurs.We hope that Archer Frères is the first of many such ventures we can support, mentor and invest in.”

     

    Meanwhile, when asked whether this could be considered a return of the power duo to PR, Shergill told MxMIndia that Gautam and he were set to announce a slew of other acquisitions, not necessarily in the PR space.

     

    He also clarified that while the Seven acquisition is 100 per cent, Pitchfork will continue to farm out work to other agencies as well, as in the past.

     

  • Sunil Gautam and Jaideep Shergill join Metieta’s Advisory board

    By A Correspondent

     

    Sunil Gautam (right) with Jaideep Shergill

    Metieta Advertising, a boutique branding, creative and media agency, recently announced that the founders of strategic consulting firm, Pitchfork Partners, Sunil Gautam and Jaideep Shergill have joined their Advisory Board. As strategic advisors, the duo will not only audit the agency’s performance from time to time but will also play a vital role in advising on issues related to key business areas, formulating growth strategies and monitoring the implementation of these strategies.

     

    Speaking about the new association, Amit Desai, Founder and Managing Director at Metieta Advertising said, “Sunil and Jaideep have been at the very genesis of our organization since the year 2000 and it is only apt to have them on board to give us a trusted and experienced introspection and at the same time have a truthful advice on the way forward.” He further said that the advisory board has been created to provide renewed vision, growth and strategic directions, and corporate governance to the organization. With these eminent professionals from the communications industry on-board, Metieta looks forward to a new chapter of growth and excellence.

     

    Sharing their excitement at joining the advisory board of Metieta, Sunil Gautam and Jaideep Shergill said “We are honored to have been asked by Amit to join the board. Amit and his team have been doing a stellar job in building a solid body of work and credibility for the firm in recent years and we would like to support them to be able to take the firm to the next level. We are both looking forward to being a part of the next phase of the journey which promises to be very exciting indeed”.

     

  • Meet the Pitchfork Partners

    Sunil Gautam (right) with Jaideep Shergill

     

    The announcement last November surprised many as Jaideep Shergill had a successful four-year run as CEO of the MSLGroup. He chose to leave the Pubicis Groupe to join former boss and mentor Sunil Gautam, the chartered accountant-turned-communications professional who founded Clear Advertising and PR and later Hanmer & Partners which eventually morphed into MSL India. SG, as he is known in the PR fraternity, was Chairman Emeritus of the MSLGroup. Effective January 1, Shergill and SG have set up Pitchfork Partners, a specialised consultancy which will handhold corporate and start-ups in their marketing service activities.  In an interview with Pradyuman Maheshwari, the duo share their vision and why firms like Pitchfork will thrive in the ecosystem.

     

    Fifteen years back, you chose Hanmer & Partners as the name of your agency. Now, Pitchfork Partners.  Sunil, what’s with you and your out-of-this-world names. Why Pitchfork?

    Jaideep Shergill (JS): Let me take this one. It’s what the devil uses. It’s his weapon of choice. We were looking for a mischievous, mysterious and magical name. Something that’s out of the ordinary. There are a lot of firms that do communication, creative, PR, digital, but all of them are very tactical and are not really putting their money where their mouth is. After running companies for many years, we’re fairly convinced there’s a vacuum out there. When we were thinking of a name, we wanted to think of something more irreverent. The devil stands for that. Pitchfork is his weapon of choice…

     

    So in what way does the name convey what you’re going to be doing?

    JS: Yes, it’s more than a name. The Trident, Pitchfork, is like the Trishul. In our scheme of things, there are three verticals.

     

    You were having a decent time, Sunil, near-retired, you could’ve invested here and there, played golf. Why get into an all-new activity with all the struggles?

    Sunil Gautam (SG): Yes, I was having a great time, but I want to have a better time. There’s lots to do, a lot of fun. I enjoy working, it’s my passion, it’s great to team up with Jaideep, we know each other for 18-odd years now.

     

    When did you decide to start Pitchfork? Is there an appetite for a business like this?

    SG: We’ve been talking about it for a couple of years but were in no hurry. With markets opening up, we feel the time is right. We hope there is an appetite for business like this. Our initial response has been very encouraging so far.

     

    Will you charge a retainer fee or…

    JS: Retainers and projects. Some long-term programmes where the client will work with us for six months or a year. If it’s a project, we’ll bill them as per our hours. We’ll have billable hours like a McKinsey. We’ll have hourly models.

     

    Will people agree to this? They agree to a McKinsey because they expect them to re-engineer their operations and offer high-end consultancy.

    JS: But we have had hourly systems in MSL historically anyway. We had a large number of clients who pay us a flat retainer fee. But even today, a large no. of clients also pay MSL by the hour. It’s not like that model doesn’t exist. It’s not new, but, yes, it’s not yet at a McKinsey level.

     

    Jaideep, you helmed MSL independently for four years and seemed to be on a high. So why give that all up?

    JS: Three or four reasons. Having been in the mainstream business for a long time, I’ve been through and seen a lot of change. The company we were a part of got acquired, we acquired other companies, I’ve seen the transition from traditional PR to modern communication. I honestly wanted to do something different. There was a wide space there. That’s what Sunil and I were looking at. It’s in three areas. Strategy consulting, because we want to move up the value chain, the second area is aggregation and disintermediary. We won’t work in the traditional PR alone. Given our wide-ranging experience in communications, we’ll be like a business or marketing or brand consultant to a company. That’s the wide space I saw.

     

    When you were with the MSL group, you had the opportunity to steer the company to do some of these things, right?

    JS: Yes, we did! 96% of our business was traditional. In the last four years, we moved it more significantly than any PR firm. Today 55% of MSL revenue is traditional and 45% is non-traditional. From 5% to 45% which comes from research and insight, creative, content, digital. It’s happening. Where Sunil and I see the gap is when we come in to the equation, we come in as people who can implement, execute stuff. The clients have decided what they want. We come in at a late stage, sometimes even after the ad agencies are brought in. We come in as the last mile. We want to change perceptions. We want to move up the value chain. We want to offer a service that can work directly with the top management, can be more strategic and can work with a complete backward and forward option. Literally from when the client is looking for a marketing director or a CMO or a Corp Comm Head, we want to come in even at that early stage, help the company through that evolution. That’s what we can’t do within a structured environment. You need to be out there on your own and at the end of the day our value is what he has and what I have. It’s two people bringing their collective wisdom, experience. We will give it a shot, this model hasn’t been tried before.

     

    Were you happy with the way traditional PR agencies have had to change course over the years?

    JS: They can certainly do better. They can do it faster. Speed is of the essence. When we’re together we’re more nimble because there’s just two of us. When you’re in a big institution, everything moves slowly. We want things to move fast.

     

    All going digital?

    JS: Of course! That’s the reality of life. If they don’t, they’ll die.

     

    You mentioned when an organisation is too big, you’re unable to do things. But the whole objective of setting up a new organisation would be to grow that big and do various things.

    SG: The whole idea is very few people who’ll be advising CxOs, the top levels, in terms of strategy. When it comes to implementation, may be we’ll outsource it. When you have to involve yourself at top levels to think strategy, you need to really give a lot of time. This is something you don’t want to delegate, which has been happening across agencies. We’ll be a very lean and mean set-up. At the peak, we may have not more than 10 people. Whoever worked with us will be a partner, will be handpicked, will deal with top level clients in terms of giving them strategic advice. We don’t want it to be large because we don’t want to implement things. We’ll get it done for clients, we’ll oversee it, under our advice and guidance.

     

    Wouldn’t that limit your scope in any way?

    SG: Not really, what we’re here to do is enjoy ourselves. Work closely with fewer clients but give a lot of quality time and thinking for them. Clients are willing to pay top dollar for this.

     

    Sunil, you’ve been part of the PR business since the time of the IPO boom. Unfortunately, clients do not use the services of PR consultants effectively unless there’s a crisis or a new development. They’re not really partners in their progress.

    SG: I don’ think PR agencies have really worked themselves to reach that level. That’s my opinion. I don’t think they’ve worked that hard to reach that level in terms of rubbing shoulders with CxOs to give that kind of advice. There are various reasons for that. But there are clients who are willing, who want, who recognise there is this gap and some of them are already talking to us.

     

    But isn’t all the PR advice they seek is getting the news out (or not out) the next day?

    JS: To begin with, we won’t just advise our clients on PR. That’s most important. We’ll be their communications and marketing advisors. It goes much beyond. It’s giving them a path on their communication needs. Advertising, digital, PR, events… whatever they need.

     

    Both of you known essentially as PR professionals. Do you think you can break that barrier and look at clients – blue chip clients – for their entire marketing services activities?

    JS: Absolutely! There’s no reason, why not? The walls have fallen any way. What’s the difference between the digital work an ad agency or a PR agency does? Everyone is doing everything. Even though we come from a more PR or communications background, there’s enough that we have to be able to guide somebody in the right direction. We’re not the people going to be sitting and writing the copy anyway. So, if a client has a creative requirement, we will find him the best creative talent.

     

    Tell us more about the start-up part of your business?

    JS: Yes, we will look at tech, digital, PR companies who’ve reached a strength of 20 to 30 people and they don’t know how to grow. Creative, digital companies now want to go to the next level. We’ll come in and guide them through the whole growth process, take them to the point where they can either get acquired or sell out or scale up and then we’ll buy into them early as early adoptors or seed fund kind of structuring. We don’t want to be private equity. We want to be mentors.

     

    If any of your MSL clients come in, would you entertain them?

    JS: We’d still want them to work with MSL. But if they are looking for something specific which we are doing, why not? You should also know we’re very transparent with Pubicis about what we’re doing. We also offer a complementary service which is also the reason why our relations with the group is as good as they are.

     

    So will Publicis be your first preference for your clients?

    JS: We’re more than happy to go with anyone. While we’re agnostic, we’ll look at Publicis as the first call. If we find a solution within, why go out? There are certain skillsets it may have not have like market research, for instance.

     

    Sunil, do you see the communications business headed this way with senior professionals like yourself setting up personalised consulting services?

    SG: I’m very confident the world will move that way. Clients today do not get time from senior guys who can think on their behalf.

     

    Do you have any targets on what you want to achieve in your business in the first year?

    JS: Not in terms of a number. As Sunil said, we’re in it to have some fun! The third pillar that we have will require us to give a lot of time for mentorship. We’ll be mentoring young professionals who want to grow. All that doesn’t have a revenue stream. There will be a long gestation period. As an example, if we’re advising a startup PR firm, we won’t actually get anything out of it for the next 5-10 years till it grows. We’re not setting business targets but goals we want to meet as individuals and getting to that self actualization place in life where we’re having fun, we’re working and are able to add some value to the people we work with.

     

    Would you at any point think of getting an investor on board? Maybe after 4-5 years?

    SG: It’s too early to say. This is just our first month.

     

    A shorter version of this appeared in dna of brands dated January 12

     

  • Road to CL2013: The way to win at Cannes is by not aiming for a metal

    The Cannes metal wins for India has been disappointing. There could be various reasons for it and the metal tally definitely doesn’t point that the work coming out of India is of inferior category. However, it does point that there is something more required from India n agencies to gain attention of the international jury. Who better that people on the Cannes jury this year to show us some light on where the agencies could improve and what really went behind the judging. We spoke to a few on the jury this year to understand where India went wrong and what can be done to reclaim some of the lost ground this year.

     

    Rahul Jauhari, National Creative Director, Everest Brand Solutions

    Rahul Jauhari

    I don’t think you can aim at Cannes by doing something that can win at Cannes . Most winning entries at Cannes are brilliant solutions to one business issue or another. “Let’s do something like that one” ­ is not going to get you anywhere. The point is to solve the business issue facing your brand with a wonderful idea and execution. If it is that wonderful, it will win.

     

    And yes, the glorious part is in doing it in a way that is relevant to the India n audience. The jury are not fools. They can see through scams, in most cases. They ask relevant questions and give a lot of importance to the logic of the communication. They reward ingenuity, but not at the cost of authenticity.Brazilwins a lot of awards at Cannes . But their work is unmistakably Brazilian. The same goes for other countries. So, the language of your entry is not a minus point, as long as you send in a good explanation.

     

    The jury at Cannes is now well represented by different countries. And that shows in the selection of work. “Let’s do something that integrates social media” is not the answer either. More Facebook likes is not equal to higher chances at a Cannes metal. If the idea is loved, people will spread it on social media. A print ad can lead to online furore or fan-following. The same goes for a TV ad or a radio spot. The consumer builds in social media integration without asking you. So there.

     

    Simply put, the way to win at Cannes is not by aiming for a metal at Cannes . Aim for a brilliant solution or idea. Execute it brilliantly. Even the simplest of ideas can win. There is that little bit about the packaging, though. When a jury member has to sift through a thousand plus entries, he or she will not suffer a poorly packaged entry. Keep it simple, keep it to the point. Sure make it enjoyable. But remember, the jury wants to know how you did it, why you did it and what it achieved. Inform them, but don’t bore them to death. And don’t try to con them. Most are highly experienced and can tell a fake from a real. Instantly.

     

    Sunil Gautam, Founder, HanmerMSL

    This is the fourth year for Cannes PR Lions which saw 1,130 entries from 61 countries, the highest number of entries received by Cannes Lions in this category ever. 134 entries were short listed. India had 19 entries, 1 was short-listed.

     

    The composition of jury was very good and it represented the cross-section from the world over. There was a lot of interaction and discussion before finalising the winners. According to me, it was very professional judging and the experience was awesome.

     

    India had 19 entries in this category, and many of them came up for lively discussion. Of these, one entry was short listed. Unfortunately, this entry didn’t get any metal. But the overall effort by the India n agencies was excellent. All the campaigns that were reviewed were very imaginative, with good strategy, execution and measurable impact and results.

     

    My advice to the India n public relations industry is to focus on innovative strategies, immaculate execution and measurable results in such a way that the campaigns that they implement for a client are a huge success. And not to plan campaigns from the short sighted of just winning awards. Good campaigns are appreciated everywhere and they may end up with the awards. The client comes first and they will get awarded if they deserve.

     

    Vikram S Gaikwad, Partner & Executive Creative Director, Creativeland Asia

    Vikram S Gaikwad

    I think there are three simple yet significant aspects to any entry. The idea, its execution and the category in which it is entered. A brilliant idea can miss out simply because it is not entered in the right category.

    With the number of entries running in thousands even in each category, each panel has a unique criteria while judging entries. So, the chances are that a great entry submitted in a wrong category might fail to even get a shortlist.

    Also, we should look at the new categories introduced at Cannes every year.I was disappointed to see little or no work in categories like Mobile, PR and Brand Entertainment & Content categories. With the size of the Indian
    market, number of brands, consumption etc, we are very much capable of capitalising on various opportunities and entering more quality work in the future.

    This year the number of metals that India won has gone significantly low. This definitely is disappointing. So, I am hoping we will make up for it
    next year.