Tag: Times Internet

  • Times Internet gets on Coast

    By A Correspondent

     

    Times Internet Limited (TIL) has announced a partnership with Opera Software to preload the group’s websites on Coast by Opera, the web browser for the iPad. TIL websites like Gaana.com, Timescity, Box TV, Speakingtree.in, Zoom and ET will be bookmarked as Speed Dial entries on Coast.

     

    Speaking on the development, Pratik Mazumder, Vice President and Head Marketing, Times Internet, said, “We are excited to enter this strategic partnership. Technology has always been very central to Times Internet’s plans of reaching out to maximum users, and this partnership with Opera will help us achieve that. TIL websites have maintained its number-one position across categories, and they engage with millions of users globally. This tie-up will help in the expansion of the entertainment sector, as this will open avenues of reaching out to new discerning readers.”

     

    “We are glad to offer the popular websites from the Times Internet portfolio to our users,” said Sunil Kamath, Vice President for South Asia, Opera Software. “Coast was custom-made with the iPad in mind and offers users a unique way of viewing the web by letting content take priority, and also makes watching online video a breeze.”

     

    Coast by Opera is available as a free download in Apple’s App Store.

     

  • Times Internet announces senior hires

    By A Correspondent

     

    Times Internet has made some senior level appointments with Pratik Mazumder moving in from Yatra.com to join as Vice President, Marketing. Pawan Agarwal has joined as Business Head -Gaana.com , Swapnil Shrivastav joins as VP, Ad Tech and Miten Sampat as Business Head, Times City.

     

    Mr Mazumder has experience of 19 years, during which he has worked with Bharti Airtel and Yatra.com. Mr Agarwal, on the other hand, brings with him 12+ years entrepreneurial experience as co-founder & COO at Sunstone Business School. Mr Shrivastav, on the other hand, is an Adtech professional and entrepreneur. He was Founder and CEO of two ventures – Seeknet and Vriti. Mr Sampat was last with Neustar VP of Product Strategy.

     

    Satyan Gajwani

    Speaking on the appointments, Satyan Gajwani, CEO, Times Internet, said: “Each of our new joinees has come from an entrepreneurial environment with incredible expertise and exposure in their domains. Miten,Pawan, and Swapnil have strong technical backbones that will allow them to get into the cores of their business units, and Pratik’s creative energy and diverse background will help us approach marketing more uniquely. They have already made great contributions and we are excited for what’s to come.”

     

  • BoxTV brings Shaw Brothers catalogue to India

    By A Correspondent

     

    BoxTV, the online video-on-demand service from Times Internet, has entered into a content deal with Celestial Pictures (CPL), a diversified entertainment company for showcasing more than 100 titles of Shaw Brothers martial arts movies. As a result of this, BoxTV will offer its subscribers access to a wealth of Shaw Brothers martial arts content in a dedicated genre.

     

    All the films will come with English dubbed tracks and supported with English subtitles. Some popular titles include “Blood Brothers”, “Buddha’s Palm”, “Return to the 36th Chamber”, “The Brave Archer”, “Perils of The Sentimental Swordsman”, “The Dragon Missile”, etc. The multiyear agreement also marks CPL’s first digital video-on-demand (VOD) deal in the country.

     

    Officially launched in February 2013, BoxTV currently offers a huge selection of full length movies and television content on its portal. Consumers can access the content by paying a monthly subscription fee of INR199 in India. In addition consumers can browse and watch over 10,000 hours of content free.

     

    “Celestial Pictures is excited to work with video-on-demand platform, BoxTV, to give Indian consumers access to some of the best martial arts content anytime and anywhere they want. The distribution deal also affirms the incredible value of our library titles, and also provides our content with great exposure on a new digital platform,” said Kristen Tong, Head of Legal and Business Affairs of CPL.

     

    “Martial arts content has always been very popular content genre in India. Our association with Celestial Pictures brings to us the Shaw Brothers catalogue, one of the foremost and largest producers of kung-fu/martial arts movies. We are excited to bring a bouquet of the highly regarded martial arts library to our premium user base in India. This is in line with our unique push to get the best of world cinema in a legal and high-quality experience for Internet and mobile users in India,” said Pandurang Nayak, Business Head, BoxTV.

     

  • IPL 6 records 52% growth in online viewership

    By A Correspondent

     

    The IPL’s sixth season is proving to be a smashing hit online. The 20-20 cricket tournament is being streamed live by Times Internet Limited (TIL), the official digital partner of IPL in partnership with YouTube. As per the viewership numbers recorded at 38 matches, which is 50 per cent of the tournament – IPL online across both www.boxtv.com and www.youtube.com/indiatimes combined recorded a 52 per cent growth viewership over 2012 (75.2M vs 49.3M last year.). Furthermore, the combined viewership of users watching highlights and clips saw a whopping 480 per cent growth in watch hours over 2012. That’s a staggering number and no other live event has ever created this kind of reach in India.

     

    In India, Bangalore and Hyderabad lead the viewership with 14 per cent each, with Delhi coming in a close second at 10 per cent. The matches that registered the maximum online views were: RCB vs PW on 23 April and MI vs RCB on April 25.

     

    “Over the last two years, we’ve offered IPL fans across the world a superior experience online and steadily grown a loyal viewer base. For IPL 2013, we’ve worked hard to make the online experience more social and interactive than ever before, and our traffic numbers so far are proof enough that IPL fans are loving it,” said Satyan Gajwani, CEO, Times Internet.

     

    Speaking about the response to IPL season 6, Praveen Sharma, Head of Media Sales, Google India said, “Better streaming experience, increased mobile and tablet device access and growing awareness about the availability of IPL online is fuelling the growth in viewership. In the past, we usually saw rise in the first two weeks of the tournament and then it picked up again during the final week. But this year, the growth has been consistent through the tournament. At this rate we are hopeful of registering strong growth in total viewership by the end of the tournament over last year.”

     

  • Times Internet partners AIR for live IPL commentary

    By A Correspondent

     

    Times Internet Limited (TIL) and AIR will broadcast live commentary of 33 select Pepsi IPL 2013 matches over AIR’s National Channel and FM Gold. Updates for all matches will be broadcast on AIR FM Rainbow Channel.

     

    The running commentary of the matches of Pepsi IPL 2013, including the Playoffs/Final, being played in India, will be broadcast alternately in Hindi and English on National Channel and FM Gold Network. The coverage area of National Channel includes Andhra Pradesh, Bihar, Chhattisgarh, Delhi, Goa, Haryana, Jharkhand, Karnataka, Madhya Pradesh, Manipur, Meghalaya, Orissa, Pondicherry, Tripura, Uttar Pradesh, Uttaranchal and parts of Assam, Maharashtra, Rajasthan and Tamil Nadu. The live commentary of all 33 identified matches will be broadcast over National Channel of AIR which is available all over India.

     

    Satyan Gajwani

    Speaking on the association, Satyan Gajwani, CEO, Times Internet, said, “We’re delighted to renew our association with AIR on Pepsi IPL. By partnering with All India Radio, Pepsi IPL 2013 will tap into a new set of cricket fan audiences across India, particularly beyond the metros.”

     

    “All India Radio, which has always been in the forefront of popularizing sports in India including cricket, is happy to bring live and exciting action from IPL to its listeners”, said LD Mandloi, Director General, All India Radio.

     

  • Times Internet to launch Business Insider India

    By A Correspondent

     

    Times Internet (TIL), the digital arm of the Times of India Group, has entered into a strategic partnership with America’s business news site to launch Business Insider India. The partnership will combine Business Insider’s news with editorial expertise of TIL and deliver global and localized content for the Indian audience.

     

    Times Internet will be Business Insider’s exclusive partner in India for content development, events, monetization, and syndication. The unique alliance will help TIL give Indian users an access to international news covering a wide range of subjects ranging from business trends & strategy, career skills, digital trends, industry reports, white papers, advertising and much more. TIL intends to use The Times Group’s multimedia resources to help develop and evangelize the brand locally.

     

    Satyan Gajwani, CEO, Times Internet, said, “Business Insider is one of the most successful digital-first news organizations in the world, with a pioneering combination of original reporting, aggregation, and dynamic social engagement tools. Their bold and direct editorial perspective grips readers, and already today attracts a strong loyal following within India. We can’t wait to expose them to a larger audience and increase their relevance and prominence in India.”

     

    Henry Blodget, Founder & Editor-in-Chief of Business Insider, said, “We have many loyal readers in India, so making it the site of the latest international version of Business Insider makes a lot of sense for us. We’re thrilled to be partnering with Times Internet – which has such a storied history, and breadth of editorial resources and acumen – and we look forward to working with them to engage readers in India with a Business Insider that’s more tailored to them.”

     

    Times Local Partners (TLP) is a recent initiative by Times Internet to partner with global digital companies to launch, build and grow in India. Two months ago, TLP announced a partnership with Gawker Media to bring Gizmodo and Lifehacker to India. TLP intends to launch local versions of these sites in April 2013, with a similar hybrid model of local and global content, curated and tailored for the Indian market, which will leverage Times Internet’s position.

     

    After its successful foray with an Australian version earlier this month, the Indian version will further help Business Insider expand its presence in the Asian sub continent. The site already has a wide user base and fetches a good traction in the country.

     

  • Times Internet and HDFC launch Times Card

    By A Correspondent

     

    Times Internet, the digital arm of The Times of India Group, has partnered with HDFC Bank, India’s second largest private sector bank, to launch Times Card, an exclusive, co-branded credit card that provides customers the widest range of discounts and deals on dining, movies and shopping. This credit card has been specifically designed to cater to the lifestyle and entertainment needs of young professionals between the ages of 24 and 38 years, and offers value for money in the movies and dining space.

     

    The Times Card comes with a specially crafted rewards program and year-long discounts. This includes 25 percent off on movie tickets, 20 percent discount on dining, and best-in-segment deals. Users also have the exclusive option to redeem accumulated points against air miles in addition to the usual catalogue based redemption options. Another first in the credit card space is the presence of the QR code on the Times Card plastic. The QR code can be scanned using any Smart phone to reach www.hdfcbank.timescard.com, where customers can view the latest offers and also apply for the Card.

     

    “The association with HDFC Bank helps us create a unique product in the entertainment space that is in line with our goal to consistently deliver unique products and services to our customers. We are sure the co-branded credit card will provide superior customer experience, enabling us to deepen our relationship with our wide customer base,” said Archana Vohra, Vice President and Business Head, Times Internet Limited.

     

    ” We now have a premium product of the highest quality and great customer value for the discerning youth of India and young at heart as they enjoy exclusivity. HDFC Bank’s partnership with Times Internet will further enhance our product offering and provide young Indians with an unrivalled entertainment experience,” said Parag Rao, Senior Executive Vice-president and Business Head, Credit Cards & Merchant Acquiring Services, HDFC Bank.

     

  • Times Internet launches Speaking Tree app for iPad

    By A Correspondent

     

    Times Internet Limited has announced the launch of spiritual networking website www.speakingtree.in as an application for iPads. The application will enable easy access to spiritual conversations and articles 24×7.

     

    The Speaking Tree iPad app hosts a range of spiritual information such as tips on meditation, spiritual blogs, forums and master discourses, as well as conversations between spiritual seekers and masters. Users can also create and share their personal spiritual diary with friends and acquaintances and help spread words of wisdom.

     

    Archana Vohra, Vice President, Times Internet Limited, saiad, “The Speaking Tree iPad application enables one-click access to spiritual conversations. We hope that it will revolutionize the accessibility of spiritual information on the web and help users gain answers to pertinent questions in today’s materialistic world.”

     

  • Gaana.com launches mobile apps

    By A Correspondent

     

    Times Internet (TIL) has announced that it has developed mobile applications for its flagship online music portal, Gaana.com. Simultaneously, Gaana is now available as an application for Android, iOS, Blackberry and J2ME devices, giving music lovers access to millions of songs on their mobile phones. Users can now listen to music wherever they’d like– on their way to work, on a treadmill, while waiting for a train or when peacefully enjoying a great day outside.

     

    Gaana’s mobile applications have been built to provide a full-service music experience, creating more depth than any offering available today. Some of its features include:

    – Access to over 1 million songs, including Bollywood, Hollywood, Tamil, Telegu, and regional music

    – Social listening: see what your friends are listening to

    – My zone: an ability to see your history, your favorite songs, playlists, albums and artists across your computer or mobile phone (automatically synced in real-time across all devices)

    – Radio mode: make your own radio station automatically, based on any song you play, using our proprietary recommendation algorithm

    – Easy interactions: one-click abilities to favorite a song or share a playlist, via Facebook, Twitter, or email.

    – The best curated playlists from radio channels like Radio Mirchi and others, to help you find new music you’ll love

    – The service is completely free to the end user

     

    According to Comscore (Nov 2012) Gaana has been the leading music service on web, with nearly 3 million visitors per month, who spend nearly 2.5x more time per visit than visitors of other music sites in India.

     

    Satyan Gajwani, CEO, Times Internet, said “We are so proud of the Gaana experience on mobile. Indian consumers love their music, and we’ve built a product that matches their expectations for excellence across every screen that matters to them. Gaana on mobile is feature-rich and intuitive to use, and we intend to use this as a base to build even more functionality and offerings for our users, across all platforms.”

     

    The app is available for download free of cost from gaana.com, or on the iTunes App Store, Google Play Store, Blackberry App World, Nokia Ovi Store, or Samsung App Store.

     

  • Times Internet partners Gawker media to drive Gizmodo, Lifehacker

    By A Correspondent

     

    Times Internet (TIL) has entered into a strategic partnership with American independent online media company Gawker Media (Gawker). Via this partnership, Times Internet will manage and drive local Indian destinations for Gizmodo.com and Lifehacker.com, Gawker Media’s leading technology sites.

     

    As part of the collaboration, Times Internet will have exclusive rights to the brand; monetization, content, syndication and sub-licensing of Gizmodo.com and Lifehacker.com within India. The unique partnership will help TIL grow an already-strong vibrant digital community of Indian consumers passionate about consumer electronics and technology. TIL intends to use the Times Group’s multimedia resources to help develop and evangelize the brand locally.

     

    Gizmodo.com, a site focused on gadgets and tech culture, is Gawker’s most popular site, registering nine million unique visitors and 100 million page views every month. About one-third of its traffic is international. Lifehacker.com is an eight-year-old weblog with thousands of posts related to technology, personal productivity, software, tips, and technology lifestyle. The two sites already have a wide user base and are getting good traction in the country.

     

    Discussing the partnership with Gawker, Satyan Gajwani, CEO, Times Internet said, “Gizmodo and Lifehacker have been two of my favourite sites for a long time, so it’s exciting to be their partner in India. They have fantastic, relevant content for a younger generation that’s increasingly interested in technology. We are partnering with one of the world’s strongest digital media companies, and we can’t wait to increase their prominence in India.”

     

    Gaby Darbyshire, COO of Gawker, said, “With an international presence in eight countries outside the USA, India has long been a natural next step for our global expansion, and TIL is a natural fit for Gizmodo and Lifehacker. We are very excited to be partnering with them to bring our technology content to India and look forward to seeing the brands develop for this new audience.”

     

  • Online video entertainment service Box TV launched

    By Ananya Saha

     

    After a lot of buzz around its premium online video content service, Times Internet Limited has finally unveiled BoxTV.com in India, the US and UK. BoxTV’s content includes blockbuster movies, TV shows, short films and much more that can be accessed via web browser, smartphones, tablets or any other internet-enabled device.

     

    The website, which can initially be accessed only by invitation, will work on the ‘freemium’ model. Content will be available on an ad-supported free-to-user basis and the rest of the content will be available on a monthly subscription basis. The subscription in India is Rs 199 per month, in US $4.99 per month and in the UK, £4.99 per month. With 12 content partners currently, the content currently is available in English, Hindi, Telugu, Tamil, and Kannada. Box TV plans to add more regional content and more content partners. The site boasts of having accrued more than 50,000 invite requests following its invite-only alpha preview in August this year.

     

    Satyan Gajwani

    Making an impact with a paid model can be a tough strategy. Satyan Gajwani, CEO of Times Internet Ltd agreed, and said, “This is the first-of-its-kind model that we are trying in India. We are positioning ourselves as premium. We will not be offering user-generated content like YouTube. And we are sure that people who want to see the content we offer, will be ready to pay.”

     

    Mr Gajwani added, “In the US and the UK, it is easier to be a pay-model. It will definitely be difficult in India. In the first year, we will obviously be getting more subscriptions from outside India. However, we are hopeful that this ratio will change in the next 2-3 years.”

     

    Pandurang Nayak, GM-Digital Video Initiatives, Times Audience Network/Box TV, said, “With the premium content, we are targeting SEC A in urban markets in India. And we will be adding more premium content as we go along.” For India, thanks to the broadband issues, Box TV has an in-built auto-bandwidth optimizer for working well on low or inconsistent bandwidths.

     

    The premium video destination, though has no advertiser on-board yet, will be selling the space at price 3-4 times higher than the current internet sites in India, according to Mr Gajwani. Before opening the site for advertisers, Box TV is aiming at having a sizeable number of registered users. The marketing and promotional activities will also begin 2-3 months down the line. “We are aiming at finding early adopters, and make our service better on the feedback. Then, we will aim at viral growth. We will start marketing as the business model makes its case to spend,” said Mr Gajwani.

     

     

  • Where the economics stand for 4 key stakeholders post IPL’s fifth season

    By Ravi Teja Sharma

     

    Beyond the brawls and the bustups, there was cricket. And business, which became steadier and better. As millions continued to watch the cricket, IPL 5 strengthened the league’s business credentials.

     

    Franchises

    Their costs are mostly fixed and they are squeezing more out of each revenue stream. In the humdrum of IPL3, the operative word was ‘valuation’. The then-IPL chief Lalit Modi proudly announced two new franchises, Kochi at $333 million and Pune at $370 million.

     

    In other words, Pune’s owner, the Sahara group, was paying 3.3 times the priciest original franchise (Mumbai, $112 million), setting a new benchmark for valuing a team.

     

    More insanity followed: Modi was dismissed by a tweet, Kochi imploded, and Sahara had second thoughts about its $370 million investment. Sanity returned in season five. “Initially, it was more about valuations, not viability,” said Venky Mysore, CEO of the Kolkata team. More than any other season, IPL 5 has been about viability.

     

    Not of the surviving kind, but of the thriving kind. “For the first time, most of the franchises will be financially better off,” said IPL commissioner Rajeev Shukla.

     

    “Many have become profitable after IPL 5.” Like Kolkata. “We reduced our combined losses by about 50 per cent in IPL 4,” said Mr Mysore. “This year was equally good or better than last year…we should wipe out the remaining losses.” Chennai and Delhi say they have been profitable since season three, and that this year was better.

     

    The economics for a franchise are simple. Every franchise incurs two kinds of costs, and both are essentially of a fixed nature: the licence fee and player costs.

     

    For a metro franchise, the licence fee is around Rs35 crore a year, while the player cost is Rs55 crore. Add sundry expenses, and a franchise is looking at total costs of Rs100-120 crore. On the revenue side, there are essentially three revenue streams.

     

    The biggest revenue contributor is the ‘central pool’. All the money the BCCI raises by selling broadcasting rights and sponsorship goes into a common pool. The BCCI keeps part of this and distributes the rest among teams.

     

    With the BCCI negotiating hard with the broadcaster and sponsors, each franchise’s share of the central pool has steadily increased-from Rs29 crore in season one to Rs40 crore in season four.

     

    “The central payout will increase to Rs 50-60 crore this year,” said Mr Shukla. The franchises have no control over the central pool. They do have control over the other two main revenue streams: ticket sales and sponsorships, from where the good franchises raised, on an average, Rs30 crore and Rs30-40 crore, respectively.

     

    In both these areas, IPL-V saw the franchises, with one eye on growth and another on the bottom line, pushing new levers. Teams say they increased ticket prices and reduced the number of passes, and consequently made more.

     

    “Gate collections in season five would have doubled compared to earlier years,” said Rakesh Singh, joint president, India Cements, the South-based cement company that owns the team, without giving specific numbers.

     

    Amrit Mathur, CEO of the Delhi team, too declined to share numbers, but described ticket sales as “phenomenal”. “We limited passes only to our contractual agreements,” he said. What teams did more was to reach out to the paying fan.

     

    Kolkata, for example, had 10 cars going around the city and doubling up as ticket counters. The team also did corporate sales to fill up the 80,000-seater Eden Gardens.

     

    For next year, it is looking to convert some of those seats into hospitality boxes, whose revenue potential is 20 per cent more. Teams earned more from sponsors too by selling advertising on 10 designated spots on a player’s uniform.

     

    “We expect it (sponsorship revenues) to be 50-75 per cent higher than year one,” said Mr Mathur. Chennai’s strategy was to cut back on sponsors. “We wanted to clear the clutter and charge more instead,” said Mr Singh of the Chennai team, whose sponsors include Aircel, Gulf, LifeOK, Amrapali and Usha.

     

    Some other nascent revenue streams are gaining ground, like merchandising. “About 10-12 per cent of our revenues this year came from licensing and merchandising,” said Colonel Arvinder Singh, COO of the Punjab team. And the Delhi Daredevils is looking to lend its name to sports bars, the first of which has come up at the Delhi airport.

     

    For teams owned by corporates, in addition to a tangible payback, there’s also an intangible one for the main business. For example, all the branding on the Bangalore players is from the liquor and airline brands owned by team owner Vijay Mallya.

     

    “That has been our main priority,” said Russell Adams, vice president-commercial operations for the Bangalore team. Similarly, India Cements has used IPL to drive into markets other than the South.

     

    Besides the visibility from player jerseys, it has been wooing cement traders in cities in Gujarat, Madhya Pradesh and Rajasthan with a package of an IPL match in Chennai and a pilgrimage to Tirupati.

     

    “This was a masterstroke for us: to enter a market dominated by biggies like Ultratech,” said Mr Singh. It all contributed towards viability-of the long-term kind. And valuations, today, stand forgotten.

     

    Broadcaster

    Viewership addition tapered, but it’s still a critical mass watching. There’s pressure on two of the numbers that matter for SET Max. According to TAM, which tracks TV viewership, the number of people who tuned into IPL grew just 0.4 per cent this year, against 12.9-19.8 per cent in the previous ones. And they watched less.

     

    If they saw 4.5 per cent of all the minutes they could have in the first three years, they saw 3.5 per cent in 2012, the same as in 2011. Or, a TVR (television viewership rating) of 3.5 per cent. That said, even a TVR of 3.5 per cent is top draw, more so if it comes with a reach of 162.9 million.

     

    “No programme will give the pan-India reach that IPL does for two months,” said Nandini Dias, COO of media-buying house Lodestar Universal. It is why, she added, SET Max commands a 60-70 per cent premium in pricing over another programme with an identical TVR.

     

    This year, SET Max charged Rs5 lakh per 10 seconds, the same as in 2011 and 150 per cent more than in 2008. “Ratings fell, but we did not drop our price,” said Rohit Gupta, president of Multi Screen Media, which runs SET Max. Mr Gupta declined to disclose revenues, though he admits it is “lower than 2011”.

     

    A senior official from the channel, not wanting to be named, said revenues from IPL-IV crossed Rs1,000 crore, against Rs800 crore in IPL 3and Rs260 crore in IPL 1. SET Max’s original deal, struck in 2008, was for $1.02 billion (about Rs 4,000 crore) for 10 years.

     

    This was revised in 2009 to $1.64 billion (Rs 6,560 crore) for nine years. When the number of matches increased from 60 to 74, in 2010, this number increased further, said Mr Gupta, on a “pro-rata basis”. Back-of-the-envelope calculations show the current deal would be for about Rs 8,000 crore and that SET Max needs an average of Rs 1,050 crore a year over the remaining five years to break even.

     

    “IPL has become a brand that is big enough to sustain for many more years,” said Piyush Pandey, executive chairman of Ogilvy & Mather India. Added Ms Dias: “If IPL remains in the top five programmes through the coming year, it could still command its 60-70 per cent premium.”

     

    The other broadcaster, Times Internet, which owns the rights for international broadcast, Internet, mobile and valueadded services, and radio, expects to break even this year. According to CEO Rishi Khiani, Times Internet is paying Rs 67 crore a year to BCCI.

     

    It reached 26 million viewers this year-an increase of 55 per cent over 2011. “If you sell it right, there is an opportunity,” said Mr Khiani.

     

    Sponsors

    They got their bang, in different ways. For more, they will likely have to pay higher. IPL’s main sponsors only have good things to say about their pricey tie up. The established talk about reaching a wider audience.

     

    “We were well-known in the north, but now have spread awareness in other parts as well,” said Rajeev Talwar, group ED at DLF, which paid Rs 40 crore a year for the title sponsorship. The fledgling talk about IPL as the main piece of their brand strategy.

     

    Karbonn Mobiles started in 2009 and tied up with IPL in 2010. Sashin Devsare, ED, said IPL put Karbonn “in the consideration set of a mobile buyer.” Likewise, Volkswagen, which came to India in 2007.

     

    “We needed to raise brand awareness,” said Lutz Kothe, head of marketing and PR, Volkswagen Passenger Cars. “All these sponsors would have got five times worth exposure for every rupee spent,” said Hiren Pandit, managing partner with media-buying agency Group M.

     

    “But over a period of time, that exposure becomes a blind spot if there is no other engagement.” For example, Vodafone used ad campaigns to push specific business ideas: ‘happy to help’ in 2008, the Zoozoos in 2009 and 2010, 3G in 2011, and Internet services this year.

     

    In contrast, DLF was content being the title sponsor and having an on-ground presence. All sponsorship deals are due for renewal.

     

    “Most were done on an anticipated performance of the league,” said Basabdutta Chowdhury, CEO of Platinum Media, a unit of Madison World. “Now that it has a proven record, BCCI would be looking at higher value.” The season of BCCI hardball is beginning.

     

    Promoter

    BCCI’s golden goose is IPL and it is making it work overtime. Just how important the IPL is to the entity that runs cricket in India can be gauged from one statistic. In 2010-11, the IPL accounted for 48 per cent of the revenues of the Board of Control for Cricket in India (BCCI).

     

    Add revenues from the Champions League Twenty20, which owes its existence to the IPL, the figure shoots up to 60 per cent. IPL is BCCI’s golden goose, and the board is making it lay as many eggs as it can.

     

    This means birthing new revenues streams by adding more dates to a packed cricketing calendar or earning more from existing streams by negotiating hard with those who want a piece of the IPL. Both have yielded smart financial payoffs for the BCCI.

     

    Thus, in 2009, was born the Champions League, which essentially gives the BCCI and the top four IPL finishers a revenue kicker. The same year, BCCI renegotiated the TV deal with Set MAX and squeezed out 78 per cent more.

     

    In 2011, it added two teams to the IPL (one has since folded) at a valuation that was about thrice the maximum from the initial lot in 2008. Overall, the number of matches increased, which translated to higher TV and sponsorship revenues.

     

    The BCCI earned more. So did the franchisees, as the BCCI shares some part of its broadcast and sponsorship revenues with them. BCCI’s ‘surplus’-the equivalent of a corporate net profit-has increased from Rs 11.6 crore in 2008 to Rs 118.8 crore in 2010.

     

    Numbers for the last two years are not available, though the BCCI had forecast a surplus of Rs 209.9 crore for season four.

     

    “BCCI revenues have gone up,” is all that Rajeev Shukla, commissioner of IPL and vice-president of BCCI, is willing to disclose. Revenues could increase further as all sponsorship deals are due for renewal now. And even as it says it will address scheduling concerns, the BCCI has allowed all franchisees to play three T20 matches with teams from tier-II cricketing nations like Canada, the US, Netherlands and Ireland.

     

    “This will spread awareness about IPL and improve the league’s reach next season,” said Mr Shukla. And also improve the BCCI’s financial health.

     

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