Tag: Tide

  • Shah Rukh Khan endorses Tide

    By Our Staff

     

    Tide, the detergent brand from P&G, has chosen to partner with Shah Rukh Khan as a brand ambassador.

     

    Said Mukta Maheshwari, Chief Marketing Officer, P&G India & Category Head, Fabric Care, P&G India spoke on this new partnership: “We’re delighted with the partnership with Shah Rukh Khan and his endorsement of the New and Improved Tide as the Stain Removal King. Tide, the world’s number one detergent brand, is focused on offering laundry solutions that delight consumers every day where it matters most. In this continued endeavor, we’re thrilled that Tide has upgraded to remove deep-seated stains and offer an outstanding clean on the toughest stains. We are delighted to have SRK recommend Tide as the ‘asli/real SRK – Stain Removal King’ to consumers and fans across the country.”

     

     

    https://youtu.be/5k8OdYc-320?si=rTEqM2H6Q_9bdkKj

     

  • Tide launches unveiled laundry music video

    By Our Staff

     

    Tide detergent a unveiled laundry music video ‘Khachak Khuchak Chod do’ with comedian Kiku Sharda, known for his various characters on ‘The Kapil Sharma show’.

     

    Said Sharat Verma, Chief Marketing Officer, P&G India and Vice President and Fabric Care Head for P&G Indian subcontinent. “At Tide, we are known for our fun, quirky and pop culture advertising. Whether it’s the iconic swoosh, the very popular ‘Chauk Gaye,’ the famous Tide rap or our collaboration with iconic characters Tide has always stood for superior whiteness and cleaning while adding a bit of humour to the otherwise mundane chore of laundry. We are always finding new and quirky ways to connect with our consumers. Through this music video, we want to reach out to our digital consumers who are clued in on social media and who will instantly be drawn to the visuals and lyrics of the ‘Khachak Khuchak’ song.”

     

  • Tide launches new campaign

    By Our Staff

     

    Tide, the laundry detergent from P&G, has launched a new campaign #TideforTime with a film. In this campaign, Tide is shining the spotlight on the story of many households, where everyday tasks take up most of the time, leaving little time for anything else. By raising an important question – ‘Are we spending our time on what’s really important?’ Tide aims to contextualise the importance of time for the families of today.

     

    Talking about the campaign, Sharat Verma, Chief Marketing Officer and Vice President, Fabric Care at P&G India said: “During Covid, we have been limited to the confines of our homes. But this physical proximity has not necessarily led to stronger emotional connection. Research shows 9 out of 10* people agree that Covid has made them realize the importance of togetherness. With #TideForTime, our endeavour is to bring to light a pertinent question, rendered even more important in the current context – ‘Are we spending our time on what’s really important?’. We also realize that families spend around 300^ hours every year doing laundry. This is also a reminder that by putting Tide to work and letting it deliver its superior cleaning, we can make some time for our lives and spend it on what we truly value – whether it is spending time with families, pursuing passions, finding some me-time or even exploring the entrepreneurial spirit. Because there’s only one thing more precious than our time, and that’s how we spend it.”

     

    Added Rajdeepak Das, CEO & Chief Creative Officer – South Asia, Leo Burnett: “My late aunt was one of those people who always had time for everyone, and I used to often ask her how she managed to have time. Her standard reply to me was ‘Beta time milta nahi hai, time banana padhta hai’. When we started creating this movement, we realized we spend up to 300 hours on doing laundry. With #TideForTime movement, we want to encourage everyone to make time for all things that are really important by just saving on laundry time. This movement is a true HumanKind insight, a story which goes beyond words and we hope will inspire everyone to make more time for their loved ones.”

     

  • Leo Burnett films new campaign for Tide detergent

    By Our Staff

     

    Tide from P&G has announced its newest campaign #TideforTime with the launch of a new film. The campaign aims to contextualise the importance of time for families.

     

    Talking about the campaign, Sharat Verma, Chief Marketing Officer and Vice President, Fabric Care at P&G India said: “During Covid, we have been limited to the confines of our homes. But this physical proximity has not necessarily led to stronger emotional connection. Research shows 9 out of 10 people agree that Covid has made them realize the importance of togetherness. With #TideForTime, our endeavour is to bring to light a pertinent question, rendered even more important in the current context – ‘Are we spending our time on what’s really important?’. We also realise that families spend around 300 hours every year doing laundry. This is also a reminder that by putting Tide to work and letting it deliver its superior cleaning, we can make some time for our lives and spend it on what we truly value – whether it is spending time with families, pursuing passions, finding some me-time or even exploring the entrepreneurial spirit. Because there’s only one thing more precious than our time, and that’s how we spend it.”

     

    Added Rajdeepak Das, CEO & Chief Creative Officer – South Asia, Leo Burnett: “My late aunt was one of those people who always had time for everyone, and I used to often ask her how she managed to have time. Her standard reply to me was ‘Beta time milta nahi hai, time banana padhta hai’. When we started creating this movement, we realized we spend up to 300 hours on doing laundry. With #TideForTime movement, we want to encourage everyone to make time for all things that are really important by just saving on laundry time. This movement is a true HumanKind insight, a story which goes beyond words and we hope will inspire everyone to make more time for their loved ones.

     

     

  • Rohit Surfactants to launch mid-premium laundry brand Uni Wash to challenge HUL & P&G brands

    By Sagar Malviya

     

    Maker of India’s largest-selling detergent brand Ghari, Kanpur-based Rohit Surfactants plans to launch a mid-premium laundry brand to take on Hindustan Unilever’s Rin and Procter & Gamble’s Tide.

     

    “We want to tap into mid-priced category which has good potential as well as offer higher margins,” Rahul Gyanchandani, director at Rohit Surfactants, said. Ghari competes in the highly competitive mass-priced segment, where companies are under margin pressure due to high raw material costs. “In addition, apart from brands such as Rin and Tide, there is a vacuum in the segment which we want to fill,” said Gyanchandani.

     

    The new brand, Uni Wash, will be launched in the next 2-3 months and be priced similar to Rin and Tide, the company said. Rin’s 1-kg pack costs Rs50, while Tide Naturals’ 870-gram pack is sold at 30. Spokesperson of HUL and P&G said as a company policy they do not comment on competitors.

     

    Rohit Surfactants’ Ghari beat HUL’s Wheel late last year to become the top brand in the 13,000-crore laundry industry. The firm’s entry into the mid-premium segment is expected to make the infamous Rin-Tide fight even murkier. HUL, early this year, priced Rin lower than P&G’s Tide and released an advertisement asking consumers to choose the better brand-the latest in a series of aggressive commercials from either brand targeting the other. Some blatant ads even attracted legal recourse from the other side.

     

    According to an industry insider, Tide’s share has doubled in the last two years to over 13.7 per cent in 2011 while Rin’s share has grown from 4 per cent in 2009 to around 6 per cent.

     

    TOUGH MARKET

    Analysts feel that Rohit Surfactants’ entry could further dent margins in laundry, one of the largest segments that contribute to more than a quarter of the revenues for both HUL and P&G.

     

    “The category has limited pricing power already and a new brand entering will surely affect the exiting brands in the long term,” Gautam Duggad, an analyst at brokerage Prabhudas Lilladhar, said. Mr Duggad, however, added that it would not be easy for Rohit Surfactants to build a brand from scratch.

     

    “Launching a completely new brand altogether would be a challenge in this cut-throat market as it will take a long time for a brand to start from scratch,” he said. Rohit Surfactants has been building its distribution network to reach most of the country and believes it now has the wherewithal to compete with established brands.

     

     

    “We already have a solid platform now, which we can leverage for the new brand to push it,” Mr Gyanchandani said.

     

    Rohit Surfactants entered 10 new states in the last three years to expand its reach to 19 states through more than 3,500 dealers. It has 21 manufacturing units, 15 of which were added since 2006. The company now plans to expand its distribution and build manufacturing plants in markets such as Bihar, Raipur and Karnataka.

     

    Launched in 1987 by brothers Muralidhar and Bimal Kumar Gyanchandani, Rohit Surfactants had sales of over Rs2,500 crore in the year ending March 2012.

     

    But there is increasing pressure on the margins of detergent makers due to increasing prices of key raw materials such as LAB, or linear alkyl benzene,  that has increased 19 per cent, and soda ash that climbed 4 per cent in the last three months.

     

    HUL, the Indian unit of Anglo-Dutch Unilever, has indicated that it is facing the heat of inflation in categories such as soaps and detergents, and has tried to moderate its advertising spends to protect margins.

     

    At the same time, P&G is looking to expand production capacity in India so that it can make products cheaper locally.

     

    Source: The Economic Times
    Copyright © 2012, Bennett, Coleman & Co. Ltd. All Rights Reserved