Tag: Virat Kohli

  • Virat Kohli spreads new message for Wrogn

    By A Correspondent

     

    Wrogn, the youth fashion brand by Virat Kohli recently launched its new advertising campaign ‘May the best you win’. The brand, founded by Anjana Reddy, Universal Sportsbiz Pvt Ltd has its new campaign speaking about the internal and external fight that an individual experiences on every walk of life.

     

    This new campaign was rolled out nationally across outdoor, print and digital mediums. Said Reddy: “Wrogn brand campaigns have always strived to set a benchmark for fashion advertising in India, and it’s always a fantastic opportunity to push the conversation forward on the brand, being unconventional, provocative and relevant.”

     

    Orko Basu, Creative Head, Fisheye Creative Solutions Pvt. Ltd added: “For this year’s Autumn/Winter campaign, we chose to have not one Virat but two. Wrogn has always challenged the status quo; this time, Wrogn is taking it further by asking us to challenge not just the world around us, but ourselves.”

     

  • Deltin Group of Hotels associates itself with FC Goa for ISL

    By A Correspondent

     

    FC Goa (also known as The Gaurs) competing in the Indian Super League, announced that the Deltin Group of Hotels will be the principal sponsor for all of FC Goa matches in the current season of the Indian Super League.

     

    The team is owned by Goan Football Club Pvt. Ltd. which consists of Jaydev Mody, Venugopal Dhoot and Virat Kohli. It represents Goa, the only state or union territory to declare football as its official sport. The logo represents Goa’s state animal the Gaur while the colours blue and orange symbolizes the Goan coastline and sunrise. The club play their home matches at the Fatorda Stadium in Margao. Brazilian footballer Zico has been the club’s Manager (Head Coach) since its inception while Former Brazilian skipper, World Cup winner and UEFA Champions League winner, Lucio has been the marquee player for the franchise from the second season of the ISL.

     

    The squad comprises a vibrant mix of youth and experience and has one of the biggest contingents of local players with names like Mandar Rao Dessai, Romeo Fernandes and Laxmikant Kattimani representing the club since the first season.

     

  • Test Cricket Woes: Will Kohli Play Saviour?

    picture caption: Source: Twitter/@icc

     

    By Shailesh Kapoor

     

    It’s Test Cricket season again. After what seemed like a never-ending T20 fiesta, we finally have some white uniform cricket. In an unusually-designed tour, India is visiting the West Indies to play four Tests and nothing else. No ODIs, no T20s.

     

    Test cricket has been through its challenges in recent years. There is a loyal base of followers who consider it to be the most challenging and exciting format in the sport. But this loyal base is less than 10 million (1 crore) Indians in size. And the age profile of this segment is not exactly advertiser-friendly, with a large majority of these 10 million being 35+.

     

    It is not very difficult to sell India cricket in any format. ‘India in West Indies playing only Test cricket’ can be the toughest proposition to sell though. There are many reasons.

     

    The timings are unsustainable from a viewership perspective. 7.30pm to 2.30am is arguably worse than New Zealand Test cricket timings of 3.30-10.30am. Sleep deprivation can still be managed, but how does one get the control over the remote in the prime time of mainline GEC content that the family must watch?

     

    West Indies is not the most exciting team to watch in the long format. There are very few stars on the roster, and unlike India-Australia, India-South Africa or India-England, there’s no modern history to this contest.

     

    The telecast experience isn’t going to any better. The stadia are unlikely to be packed, if the first day last night was any indication. And the commentary ranges from functional to plain boring.

     

    In such a scenario, there’s just one thing that would make this Test series worth considering, even for the shrinking loyal base. Virat Kohli. This is Kohli’s first Test match since the T20 World Cup and the IPL, two tournaments where his stature as a modern great was firmly established. As I watch last night’s recording while writing this, I see that Kohli has announced his presence in the series early, scoring 143 not out in two sessions, well on his way to his first double hundred in Tests, probably more.

     

    How emphatically he dominates this series will decide if and how this series is remembered a few years later. Four centuries and it will be the Kohli series that will never be forgotten, especially if India win 4-0 under his leadership. But if the numbers are more modest, the series can fast lose its relevance.

     

    There has been a lot of talk about day-night Test cricket, and BCCI too has been championing the idea, it seems. But the larger problem with the format is that it needs a potential 30 hours of time investment from the viewer, an unreal number in today’s time, when even a 90-minute film can bore us to death.

     

    Test Cricket shall remain niche. The 10 million may go down to 5 million two decades from now. At some stage, Pay Per View (PPV) may be the only practical option to monetise this format in India.

     

    But the next decade is relatively safe. It will be the Kohli decade after all. And if he can grow the loyal base of the format purely on the strength of his charisma, he will be a media industry star too, not just a cricketing one.

     

  • Kohli to promote Premier Futsal in India

    By A Correspondent

     

    Premier Futsal, launched amid much fanfare last week, announced cricket star Virat Kohli as the league’s brand ambassador.

     

    Kohli, the face of Indian Cricket over the last few years, will now lend his name to Futsal, the newer, shorter 5-a-side variant of soccer. His announcement as brand ambassador follows the unveiling of soccer legend Luis Figo as Premier Futsal’s president last week, marking another major coup for the league as it heads into its inaugural season.

     

    Xavier Britto, Chairman, Premier Futsal said, “It is our great pleasure to have India’s current favorite sportsman as the Brand Ambassador for our League. We feel proud to share a common dream of promoting new sports in India with Virat. With him coming on board, we are confident of attracting the youth of India to come see Futsal and take it up as a career eventually. These are really exciting times for us and I am sure this association with Virat will further elevate the standard of Futsal in India.”

     

    Virat Kohli said, “We all grew up playing 5-a-side soccer. The combination of speed & flamboyance is what attracts so many people across the globe to watch & play the sport. Futsal is a fast and exciting sport. Futsallers display a lot of flair, skill and swag on the field, which are all qualities I relate to. I am tremendously excited to be a part of Premier Futsal and motivated to positively contribute to the development of this wonderful new sport in India.”

     

    Premier Futsal, the world’s first multi-national team-based Futsal league, is set to take place in India from July 15th to July 24th with each game split into two halves of 20 minutes each. Over 50 International Futsalers, from four continents and 21 countries are expected to participate. The league, governed by the Futsal Association of India (FAI) with accreditation from international governing body, Asociación Mundial de Futsal (AMF), was launched in Mumbai earlier this week in the presence of the founding team and FAI representative

     

  • 4 reasons why Virat Kohli is a winning endorser for brands

     

    By Bunty Sajdeh

     

    India is a young, passionate and very emotional country. Only a select few exemplify these characteristics. At 27, Virat Kohli is among them. After Sachin Tendulkar, Virat has given not just India but the rest of the world someone to look up to, someone to be inspired by and perhaps even emulate.

     

    Hard work & Commitment

    His untiring hard work, commitment and dedication to his craft are the very things that define Kohli. Attributes that most brands would find very hard to ignore. Virat has become bigger than his sport.

     

    Youth Icon

    Virat Kohli has become a youth icon. He wears his heart on his sleeve and isn’t afraid to call a spade a spade. Much like the youth of our country. Virat takes as much care of himself and his image off the field as he does on it. He is well-read, opinionated and is never afraid to voice his thoughts. All of this makes him an impactful athlete and a larger-than-life personality that brands can capitalise on very easily.

     

    Balances time for business interests

    Virat is also very cognisant and realises that his cricketing career will not last forever, and is therefore very mindful of the brands that he chooses to endorse (or not!) He is a smart businessman, too, and carefully balances his time off the field between endorsements, businesses and his love for sport in general. And after all this, he still manages to make enough time to support several social causes that are close to his heart.

     

    Relevance Rules

    Over time, we have developed brands and businesses that are relevant with Virat’s personality. With him, we have looked at a healthy mix of categories — fashion, licensing and merchandising, and sporting ventures, to name a few. Wrogn is quirky fashion; Chisel is about holistic fitness. Associating with sporting leagues, apart from being lucrative business opportunities, is also to promote a sporting culture in India. We have invested in these properties as they are a natural extension of Kohli’s personality and profession. Staying relevant is the key. The fans relate better with the brands as they are a seamless reflection of Virat himself.

     

    Bunty Sajdeh is CEO, Cornerstone Sport & Entertainment which manages Virat Kohli’s endorsement interests. This article first appeared in dna of brands on April 4, 2016.

     

  • Adidas scripts #FeelLoveUseHate for Virat Kohli

    By A Correspondent

     

    adidas has launched its latest campaign #FeelLoveUseHate featuring Indian cricket superstar Virat Kohli. A fiery persona on the field and a youth icon off it, Kohli has always been a polarising figure. On one hand are his fans who adore his every move, while on the other hand are critics and naysayers who never cease pointing fingers and question him every step of the way. For Virat, the love that he receives helps him soar while the hatred that he inspires challenges and propels him into greatness. This is the core idea that the film has been crafted around. It delves into the duality that is part of Virat’s life.

     

    The #FeelLoveUseHate campaign celebrates Virat’s unabashed flamboyance and passion for the game, not only through its messaging but also in the overall treatment of the film. Each frame is packed with action and passion. The use of special effects makes it even more gripping and cutting-edge. The campaign is being launched on digital media in the midst of the ongoing T20 World Cup. It will be supported across social media by Virat and the adidas cricket handles along with roster of athletes which include Kevin Pietersen, Chris Gayle, Rohit Sharma and Unmukt Chand amongst others.

     

    “As the world’s best sports brand, our aim is to encourage all athletes to define their own path, no matter if the world is at their feet or suddenly at their throat. In this film, through Virat, we aim to showcase how great players rise above the adulation and criticism they incite. It encapsulates adidas’ vision of inspiring performers to lead their own game and use love and hate to give it their best,” said Damyant Singh, Senior Marketing Director, adidas India.

     

    Damyant also added, “adidas is committed to cricket and this film cements our association with India’s biggest cricketing icon”.

     

    Talking about the film, Virat Kohli said, “adidas understands sports and athletes like no one else and has a unique perspective on the game. Through this film, they showcase the mental toughness required to be a professional athlete in today’s world and how I personally thrive off the Love & Hate I receive to drive my performance on the field ”.

     

  • Virat Kohli to play anchor role for WROGN

     

     

    Universal Sportsbiz Pvt. Ltd. (USPL), the celebrity fashion lines company founded by Anjana Reddy with equity participation from Sachin Tendulkar is launching the WROGN brand campaign with Virat Kohli as an anchor within a mobile app. The WROGN fashion brand is an expression of Virat Kohli’s distinctive sense of style and enormous youth appeal. This will be the first time that any sports icon has been embedded within a mobile app to engage with youth audiences across India.

     

    USPL is unveiling #WROGNauditions on September 12 and this will see youth across the country answer Virat’s quirky questions on the mobile app. Winners get an all-expenses paid trip to Las Vegas with friends. WROGN is targeting to reach over 5 million youth across India. The app will be available both on Google Play and iOS platforms from September 12th. The #WROGNauditions teaser was launched by Virat on September 3rd and has been trending on Twitter.

     

    Anjana Reddy, co-founder, Universal Sportsbiz commented, “Since WROGN is a break-away youth fashion brand, we wanted to do something very irreverent with Virat. Since mobile is the quickest path to directly engage with the youth, we created a gamification app that features Virat as an ‘Anchor’ who poses tricky questions. We believe that direct youth engagement with a sports icon blended with the latest mobile and digital platforms will accelerate the brand equity of WROGN in an innovative clutter breaking manner”.

     

    “Created by Fish Eye, the gamification strategy behind the innovation was to create a clutter breaking engagement device with the youth of India. WROGN has already built significant traction and this new campaign with Virat as an Anchor will appeal to the sensibilities of the modern youth”, added Anjana.

     

    USPL is in the process of expanding its distribution network for Wrogn across the country. It plans to enhance the network presence from 38 stores to 70 stores for WROGN.

     

  • Sports will soon be as big as Entertainment

     

    By Dyanne Coelho

     

    The state of the sports industry in India is changing, and at a fast pace, says Bunty Sajdeh, the man who manages cricketers Virat Kohli, Rohit Sharma and Shikhar Dhawan. “I’ve been working since 1998. In a span of 10 years, I saw sports grow from nothing. While sports is still no competition to entertainment, it’s definitely growing,” says Sajdeh.

     

    The Indian Premier League is a format that has definitely helped cricket, Sajdeh feels, but even apart from this, there is a lot of growth on the way that is slow and steady, but is happening. Today that growth is visible with the pro kabaddi league, the hockey league and the badminton league. “The US has nine hugely-successful sports leagues, and sport is a much bigger market than entertainment in the US – or anywhere else in the world actually. I think India is the only place where it is the other way around,” Sajdeh added. When he started his own company, Cornerstone Sport and Entertainment, he began by managing both celebrities in Bollywood as well as sportspersons. Gradually, the company made the shift to only sportspersons. “I think there is a lot more scope working with athletes from my experience,” says Sajdeh. “When you represent athletes, there is a certain aspirational aspect to it. That’s there in Bollywood as well, but here there is more of an emotional and patriotic factor.”

     

    Sajdeh feels in the next three to five years, sport will be at par with entertainment, if not supersede it. Brands are investing, leagues are coming up and the sports industry looks promising, says the man who put his faith in Virat Kohli even before he played for India. “We signed Virat before he played for India. We travelled, we evaluated, we went to domestic games, so we could get people like Virat, Rohit, Raina, and Shikhar early on in their careers.”

     

    The sports world and the world of business are also beginning to come together in a whole new way. Sportspersons are looking to invest outside of the field and are planning ahead for retirement as well. “Virat Kohli owns more than 10 percent of FC Goa. He has also invested money in the team, and he is very bullish about it,” says Sajdeh. “He is already looking at simultaneous opportunities off the field that will last beyond his playing career.”

     

    Kohli is now bigger than a cricketer, he has become a brand in himself, says Sajdeh. Following the Maggi controversy, Twitter was abuzz with talk about whether celebrities endorsing products should be responsible for the products’ quality. At Cornerstone, the team works closely with brands as well. According to Sajdeh, the controversy is unfairly skewed towards celebrities that endorse the product. “Our endorsement contracts with brands are very stringent. We have a very clear clause which indemnifies our celebrities and our athletes a 100 per cent from exactly such instances,” he says. “As a matter of fact after this whole controversy, we went back to our legal team and revisited our contracts to make sure that we were protected from all sides and we didn’t have to change a thing. So our athletes are very well-protected,” he said.

     

    Sajdeh has signed a couple of young cricketers and is constantly on the hunt for new talent across all sports. “We are looking at a portfolio of another eight to 10 athletes who will be the next Virats and the next Rohits and the next Sanias of the world,” he adds. “And it’s for us to then replicate what we’ve done with the existing lot and learn from our mistakes, and do a better job with the next generation of athletes that give us the honour of working with them.” As for Cornerstone, Sajdeh says the company will certainly go on even after his top sportspersons retire.

     

    In our fast-paced lives, even sport has moved to a fast-paced format. In cricket, the 50 overs game has gotten compressed to the 20 overs format, and has been readily accepted and followed with immense passion. Internationally as well, a majority of leagues which are multi-billion dollar properties, like the National Football League, ice-hockey, basketball, baseball,  are all multi-billion dollar events, but the duration of the games are all one-and-a-half to two hour, at best.  That’s all the time people have to dedicate to a sport they love. Sajdeh believes that sport has to keep up with changing times as well, “I think the move from 50 overs to a 20:20 game is easily understandable in our fast-paced lives,” he says. “Today if you ask any cricketer in the Indian team what they would rather play, forget the money and the fame, they would look at Test cricket. But watching a Test match means eight hours a day for five days. And when you have a series of three Test matches, nobody can devote that kind of time.”

     

    Following the huge success of IPL, other leagues like the ISL and the PKL have emerged as well. While many argue that these have sort of stolen the thunder of the IPL, Sajdeh is all praise for them. “I think this is a very good thing. I’m sure all of these will coexist and will move ahead and be profitable in their respective spaces,” he says. “In the next three to five years, I see sport coming up and matching our entertainment industry in terms of market share.”

     

    This story first appeared in dna of brands dated June 15

     

  • Building Trust via Masterbrand 2.0

     

    Eight commercials, Rs 25 crore adspend, and the dropping of megastar Aamir Khan from the next phase a high profile advertising blitz. The Godrej group unveiled its Masterbrand 2.0 consumer connect initiative last week showcasing a slew of innovative products. From a new-age bed equipped with electronic hydraulics, a video door phone allowing continuous surveillance of two entrances of home with a storing capacity of upto 100 photographs, effective mosquito repellant solutions to authentic street food experience at home, these products will be highlighted through a series of eight television commercials that are being aired from November 14 onwards. Aamir Khan, who starred in the first phase of the activity, has moved out though the old protagonists Sam and Meera have stayed on.

     

    Commenting on the Masterbrand 2.0 campaign strategy and the new customer interface system, Shireesh Mukund Joshi, Head-Strategic Marketing said the total spend by Godrej on Masterbrand in Phase 2 is Rs 25 crore, the same as what it was in the first phase. Individual businesses though could use the commercials in addition for pushing their sales.  “Companies aired the TV ads with their budget, reposted Masterbrand digital posts on their channels, and used Aamir, Sam and Meera in their creative last time. This time too is same. Plus they are promoting the FreeG number and channelising their appropriate marketing activity through the FreeG menu,” Joshi told ‘dna of brands’.

     

    Excerpts from an interview with Shireesh Mukund Joshi with Pradyuman Maheshwari:

     

    As you embark on the second phase of MasterBrand, tell us what has been the experience of the first phase?

    I think the campaign has been delightfully successful. People have seen the impact it has had on the business, seeing the impact on the brand. The impact on the brand dimension, revenues, on the pride of the employees, qualitative connect between categories and the Godrej brand. In general, the group feels it’s been a very successful campaign.

     

    You embarked on the build-up for the Godrej brand in 2008. As you look back at the six-year journey, was it really necessary to undertake it? The Godrej brand has always been a household name?

    The first need that was felt was that the brand had a hundred years of uncontrolled growth. Divisions were doing things on their own and there was no mastermind shepherding this journey. One stream of thought then was that there needs to be a unified presence for the brand, you can’t represent it in a fragmented fashion. The second thought was that it wasn’t just about how the brand looks but also what people think of the brand. What should you think when you think of Godrej? We spoke to stakeholders inside and outside and arrived at the brand position. After that got done, three other things took off from there. The moment you have a positioning and a set of communication, you need to track it. Tracking, became one stream of work. Next, if it’s a strategic asset, then an asset has value. And the third part was the stream of communication. The team recognized that there were several things that were important and strong about Brand Godrej that needed to be communicated, but they couldn’t all be done at once. After the initial signaling of the change, we took on each one at a time. First was around technology – the aerospace campaign. The second was around lifestyle – the Khelo, Jeeto campaign. The third was around youthfulness and GenNext – the GoJio campaign. Each year was about a new dimension and we did what we could do in 2013 because the seeds had been sowed by other campaigns.

     

    When do you think this journey would have achieved its desired impact?

    We are a respected brand, but it’s not the ranking that’s important to us anymore. It is, but it’s not the stronger driver. The average home will have about four to five Godrej products. We make hundreds. How do we drive a much broader penetration? There is a fair bit of growth still to be achieved.

     

    India has several such large brands as Godrej. Do you think there is a need for an exercise like this for other brands as well?

    I do. In the end every brand is a promise and it plays itself out in business decisions. No brand was created for the purpose of creating a brand. It was created for a product or service. If you think about the conglomerate brands we have in India, they span multiple categories. Ours, Tata, Birla, Reliance, Dabur…. It helps to do it scientifically, measure it, understand the interplay and do more things that reinforce each other and do less of things that are a counter to each other.

     

    You mentioned four or five products in each household and you have a 100 of them in your portfolio. Have you felt the need to get into more youth-appealing products like mobile phones? Would you advise the management to get into such product areas?

    We aren’t looking at product categories we aren’t already in. We’re looking to strengthen and capitalise the categories we’re  already in. We might be a 30-40 per cent market leader. There is tremendous headroom for growth. The focus is on capturing the headroom for growth we have now, which is based on our strengths. If you look at the brand history, you’ll see that every year we have touched upon or entered a category or segment…

     

    How has the brand campaign helped in terms of revenues?

    Exponentially and I think our volumes have increased significantly. We’ve seen at least over 25% year-on-year growth on both topline and bottomline.

     

    Has it helped in terms of attracting topflight talent. Are you hiring from the premium B-schools like the IIMs?

    It has. This year we went to XLRI and IIM Ahmedabad, which we hadn’t gone to for a few years. The growth of the consumer and employer brand allow us entry and access into more and more campuses.

     

    You mentioned the spends on the advertising campaign have been in the region of 25 crore and it has had a positive rub off on the sales of brands. Would you say that the sales have increased beyond spends?

    I think, first of all, all the spend isn’t going into sales. We started with the objective of long-term sales which eventually translates into sales. What we saw was a much stronger short-term impact. There are certain divisions where we’ve seen a dramatic increase in sales in a few months. We’re continuing this campaign, which we’ll see grow with the multiplier effect.

     

    The fact that you’ve got into the second phase obviously indicates the first phase was successful. You have to justify the cost, right?

    Certainly, not just to ourselves because the funding comes from the divisions. They also see it of value given that they still support it in Year 2. Businesses are seeing its impact on their own revenue and sales, directly.

     

    You’ve had Hrithik Roshan, Virat Kohli, Aamir Khan and now you’ve moved way from celebrity endorsers. In fact Godrej has traditionally had people like Imran Khan endorsing the brand.

    Yes, we’ve had historically… mostly in the soap business. Preity Zinta did appliances. No other business has consistently used celebrities thought. Even the Godrej Masterbrand has used a celebrity only for one year. There was a specific reason why we chose Aamir Khan more than anybody else. Now we’ve moved on to the next stage. Traditionally, we don’t use celebrities, leaving soaps aside.

     

    If you have to look at one word where you would have the Godrej name to be described, would it be ‘trust’ or ‘cool’?

    One word is difficult. Everything is multi-dimensional. When we grew up, I had only two shoes – black and PT shoes. Now you have work, party, for sports… everything is fragmented. It’s hard to develop brands in developed categories to work with a single dimension. You have to be more complete than one dimensional. An idea that makes life brighter is just one thought.

     

    The making life brighter would be more cool than trust, isn’t it?

    It’s not at the cost of trust. Products have a much shorter life cycle now. My dad had his first car for 20-odd years before he sold it. I’ve never kept a car for more than five years. It’s not that trust and durability aren’t factors anymore. People have the economic ability to make more choices. We know we’re able to offer services without having to give up on the already good parts. People trust us.

     

    A shorter version of a story package on the Godrej Masterbrand 2.0 appeared in dna of brands on November 24

     

  • With deals worth Rs 17 cr a year, Virat Kohli beats Dhoni and Sachin in endorsements

    By Samidha Sharma

     

    India’s hottest young cricketer Virat Kohli is setting the world of brand endorsements alight. The Indian captain-in-the-making, whose exploits on the field, combined with his youth, good looks and never-say-die attitude, makes him a winner off the field too, has inked a Rs 10-crore per annum deal with German sports goods giant Adidas.

     

    The three-year contract, perhaps the most lucrative to be signed by an Indian sports star, will see the swashbuckling right-hand batsman endorsing the brand’s apparel and shoes.

     

    The Delhi lad has also struck a Rs 6.5 crore a year deal with a tyre brand that had master batsmen Sachin Tendulkar and Steve Waugh as its ambassadors, a person familiar with the development revealed.

     

    The two deals will see Kohli topping the likes of Indian skipper Mahendra Singh Dhoni and Tendulkar in terms of annual earnings per brand endorsement.

     

    Kohli, who turns 25 later this year, pocketed around Rs 40 crore from endorsements last year, but that sum may swell up substantially with these two deals in his kit bag. Currently, he lends his face to as many as 13 brands, including  deodorants.

     

    When contacted, an Adidas spokesperson declined to comment on the development. Tendulkar, who is Adidas’ current brand ambassador, is perhaps at the fag end of his illustrious career.

     

    And Kohli fits the bill perfectly as he is being groomed to take over the top job from Dhoni after the 2015 ICC World Cup, an executive from a sports management firm, who did not want to be named, said.

     

    Bunty Sajdeh-led Cornerstone Sport and Entertainment manages the Indian vice-captain’s endorsement contracts. Mr Sajdeh was unavailable for comment.

     

    Kohli’s annual endorsement fee has seen a meteoric rise over the past year, rivalling the likes of Bollywood heartthrob Ranbir Kapoor, the hottest brand ambassador in the film industry. Till last year, the cricket star used to command Rs 3 crore per brand annually, which went up to Rs 6 crore.

     

    The Rs 10-crore a year deal with Adidas propels him to a different league altogether. “For the past few years, Dhoni has been ruling the endorsement space, but Kohli is catching up very fast. While Dhoni connected well with the masses, Kohli has a more urban appeal which a lot of brands want to cash in on,” said Indranil Das Blah, COO of celebrity management firm CAA Kwan.

     

    The price escalation in Kohli’s endorsement contracts has meant that a lot of brands which had signed him early on must shell out much more to renew their deals or simply end their association with him.

     

    “We are willing to pay a premium, depending on what that number is. He has been a great fit for our brand which targets youngsters, and he has grown with us,” said J Suresh, MD and CEO, Arvind Lifestyle and Brands which has had the cricketer on board for three years as Flying Machine’s brand ambassador.

     

    The jeans-wear brand signed Kohli before the World Cup at a moderate price and its contract is up for renewal. With Rs 10 crore becoming the new benchmark, many brands will find it hard to match up to Brand Kohli’s price tag.

     

    Until recently, Kohli and Nike were in a five-year contract inked in 2008. However, things turned sour between the two sides when the US sports goods major went to court claiming Kohli had breached the contract by disagreeing to continue as its brand ambassador till 2014. But the Karnataka high court ruled in favour of the cricketer, allowing him to sign endorsement deals with other sports brands.

     

    Source:The Economic Times

    Copyright © 2013, Bennett, Coleman & Co. Ltd. All Rights Reserved

    Licensed to republish

     

  • Godrej aims for digital connect with consumers

    By Meghna Sharma

     

    As more and more brands enter the already cluttered market today, the challenge for any brand is not only to reinvent itself but also to gain and retain new customers.

     

    Companies are invading the digital space as they see a lot of potential in the medium to tap their audiences. Selling the brand or product is no longer paramount – the aim is to develop and sustain a relationship over a period of time. And as youth are increasingly spending more time on social media, promoting a brand/product/service digitally serves the purpose of attracting and sustaining.

     

    #InViratsHead, #MakesMeAlive, #colouryourfriends and #firsteverfragranceapp are just a few hashtags of the various digital campaigns Godrej has launched lately. The company re-invented itself and has been implementing innovative techniques on various forms of media to drive awareness and establish brand tonality and brand connect with urban TG.

     

    The aer Twitter campaign #colouryourfriends and #firsteverfragranceapp garnered more than 12,500 tweets, reaching out to 6.7 million people and creating more than 47 million impressions in a span of three days.

     

    MxMIndia spoke to Sunil Kataria, Executive VP, Marketing and Sales, Godrej Consumer Products Limited (GCPL) on the insight behind their latest campaigns.

     

    Lately, Godrej has launched a lot of campaigns digitally. What has been the thought process behind them?

    Godrej as a brand believes in building a connect with the consumers at every step across platforms. Companies across sectors are leveraging social media to connect with consumers to get instant feedback. For companies it has not only been to sell a brand/product to the consumers but to develop and sustain a relationship over a period of time. The youth are increasingly being spending more time on social media and a lot of their conversations on this medium influence their shopper decisions. Promoting a brand/product/service digitally serves the purpose of attracting and sustaining interest among their consumers and it could be done in innovate and engaging ways. The Godrej campaigns for Cinthol and aer have been the most trending on Twitter lately.

     

    How do you see the digital platform help the brand to rebrand itself in the market?

    With the growth of internet and rising popularity of social media among younger audience it is imperative for brands to create a very significant presence in the digital space. Also, the increasing use of smart phones has significantly reduced consumer consumption of traditional mediums of TV and paper. The digital medium is an exciting platform for brands as they communicate with the consumer directly and the consumer can share his experience with the brand. Apart from that, key influencers/celebrities who are a part of a campaign also help to reach out to a larger pool of audience since the fan following of these influencers get acquainted with the brand through the campaign. For example, fans of Virat got acquainted with the Cinthol brand through the #InViratsHead campaign.

     

    How much is the budget for the digital platform?

    The budget is 2 percent of total ATL budget for digital media.

     

    Apart from digital, what is the marketing mix of the brand?

    Godrej aer is promoted through a 360-degree marketing media. The media vehicles used are TV, Print, Radio & Digital media. Brand has been doing innovations in all the media vehicles planned. Olfactory marketing experience generating initiatives are planned at important touch points like car accessory stores, modern trade stores, petrol pumps and lifestyle-oriented touch points like a gym etc.

     

    With competitors too exploring the digital platform, how can one deal with it to stay ahead in the clutter?

    With the growing popularity of social media and increasing use of digital medium by consumers it is imperative for brands to have an active presence on the digital platform. Consumer conversation on social media influence shoppers’ preferences and hence brands needs to be a part of these conversations to gain new potential customers and sustaining the existing ones. The key challenge for any digital campaign is to identify the right target audience and to creatively engage with them which has been the key focus area for the campaigns by Godrej #InViratsHeadwas trending for three days and # firsteverfragranceapp was trending for two days, which is a clear indication of huge consumer response that the campaign received.

     

    And lastly, where do you see the digital platform in the next five years?

    Increasing internet penetration and demand for smart phones will only increase the engagement of consumers on social media. We could probably see new social media apps being developed to cater to custom made requirements. Consumer would also find new platforms of communications similar to Facebook, Twitter etc which would further accentuate the brand engagement with consumers. Digital will definitely be the pivotal focus of most marketing campaigns and will be the new battlefield for brands to fight for consumer attention.

     

  • Master marketer AK is Godrej’s new mascot

     

    By Johnson Napier

     

    If you thought actor Hrithik Roshan was the only superstar or that current favourite Virat Kohli was the sportsperson of choice to drive growth for the products that they endorse under the Godrej portfolio, you may be mistaken. While their immense contribution in driving sales and popularity cannot be doubted, Godrej has turned to master-marketer Aamir Khan to clinch the deal for them.

     

    ‘A perfect opportunity to get width and scale for brand Godrej’
     

    The next few days will be aspirational for Shireesh Mukund Joshi, Head – Strategic Marketing, Godrej Group, as his organisation engages in an eight-part brand promotion exercise in the Indian marketplace. With Aamir Khan as its celeb-of-choice, the integrated campaign of ‘Ideas that makes life brighter‘ will focus on enhancing brand Godrej’s emotive appeal by showcasing the breadth of fresh ideas from within the group to its consumers.

     

    Excerpts from an interview with Mr Joshi on the occasion of the launch…

     

    In challenging times such as these, brands would usually go in for an all-out promotional exercise if they are engaging in repositioning or if they want to give falling numbers a fillip. What made you opt for an overall brand-Godrej promotional exercise at this juncture?

    It’s been some time since we last came out with a communication around all of our brands. If you observe, during this period we’ve achieved and done quite a lot in terms of new product launches, promotional campaigns etc. Also if you see each of the brands talk to a specific set of audiences but no one has managed to see all of them in a single piece of communication. This will be a perfect opportunity for us to get width and scale for brand Godrej. Since we have managed to accumulate a lot of products under our portfolio to showcase to the consumers, we felt the time was right to come up with a communication campaign of this scale.

     

    The emphasis for most brands in recent times has been around marketing and reaching out to the youth in a big way. How is the story same or different for brand Godrej?

    Where Godrej is concerned, it is a youth-also brand rather than just youth-only. We have products that are built for homes and diverse set of audiences. The products of today have to be designed keeping the various needs of the overall audiences in mind whether it is the youth or other audience categories. As the needs of consumers keep evolving so do our products that need to undergo a shift in terms of adjusting to the needs of the audiences.

     

    Why didn’t you stick with current favourite Virat Kohli or the dependable Hrithik Roshan to espouse the larger cause for brand Godrej? Why rope in a new celebrity?

    Both Virat Kohli and Hrithik Roshan have been used for pushing further the cause of Cinthol in the Indian marketplace. Where Aamir Khan is concerned, he will be seen endorsing brand Godrej in its entirety. So wherever there is a connect with brand Godrej we’ve set up a communication that will feature Aamir Khan as the ambassador. It is not about a particular product but is rather about endorsing common set of values across our entire product portfolio. Aamir, we thought, was the perfect fit to drive our objective in the current brand communication context.

     

    You’ve stuck with JWT to drive the creative thought process for this large exercise too…

    The entire communication has been handled effectively by JWT and we are happy with the way the range of commercials have been drafted for presentation in the coming few days.

     

    Were you looking at IPL as the platform to share the core brand objective exclusively with? Will you be pledging maximum revenues on IPL 6?

    I cannot reveal what the estimated spend is for the IPL this year but it will suffice to say that it is well balanced.

     

    What is the spike you’re expecting in volume sales or the bottomline revenue for the group from this activity?

    This is not a product or specific campaign launch. It’s a campaign that celebrates brand Godrej in India. Over a period of time as more people become aware of more products from Godrej then we will rise in consideration set. It’s a much more longer term infusion of values of the brand rather than concentrating in immediate spike in sales or revenue. We will be able to gauge the impact on sales and revenue only later.

     

    And it’s not just a division or two – the ace actor has been roped in by Godrej to endorse the overall group in India. The move follows the company’s strategy over the last five years, where the group has built on its promise towards a brighter living by creating a slew of innovative ideas. Continuing with its next phase of journey, the new integrated campaign - Ideas that make life brighter – will be focused on enhancing the brand’s emotive appeal by showcasing the breadth of fresh ideas from within the group to its consumers.

     

    While company spokespersons preferred to withhold information on the cost of getting Aamir to endorse for the group, the overall cost for the eight-part television promotional activity is being pegged in upwards of Rs 50 crore. Creative hotshop JWT has been the force behind the new commercials featuring Aamir Khan.

     

    The categories to be featured as part of the promotional activities include Appliances, Interiors, GCPL, GPL & Security Solutions.

     

    Tanya Dubash, Executive Director and Chief Brand Officer, Godrej Group, explained the AK rationale: “Over the last five years we have walked on the exciting journey of managing the Godrej brand as an invaluable strategic asset. This journey has been marked by the creation of a more contemporary entity that has created an even stronger connect with the 500 million Indians who use a Godrej product or service every day.”

     

    The new integrated campaign, ‘Ideas that make life brighter’, aims to communicate the ethos of brand Godrej to the consumers, she added. “It is our belief that this campaign will harness the strength of the masterbrand through leveraging the diverse innovations across the group and presenting them in a very engaging manner.”

     

    While such activities are a result of some repositioning exercise that brands use to boost falling sales numbers, for Godrej it is about showcasing all its products under the Godrej umbrella to enable it to attain width and scale. Shireesh Mukund Joshi, Head – Strategic Marketing, Godrej Group said, “It’s been some time since we last came out with a communication around all of our brands. If you observe, during the recent past we’ve achieved and done quite a lot in terms of new product launches, promotional campaigns etc. Also, each of the brands talk to a specific set of audiences but no one has managed to see all of them in a single piece of communication. This will be a perfect opportunity for us to get width and scale for brand Godrej.”

     

    Since the group has a lot of products under its portfolio to showcase to consumers, the time was right to come up with a communication campaign of this scale, Mr Joshi said. On the decision to get Aamir Khan over the other bunch of superstars including current ambassadors Hrithik Roshan or Virat Kohli, he said, “It is not about a particular product but is rather about endorsing a common set of values across our entire product portfolio. Aamir, we thought, was the perfect fit to drive our objective in the current brand communication context.”

     

    On the impact that such an activity will have on the overall revenue growth for the group, Mr Joshi said, “We have to realise that this is a campaign that celebrates brand Godrej in India. Over a period of time as more people become aware of more products from Godrej then we will rise in consideration set. It’s a longer-term infusion of values of the brand rather than focusing on immediate spike in sales or revenue. We will be able to gauge the impact on sales and revenue only later.”

     

    Given the timing of its launch, it is obvious that the group will look at the IPL as the platform to go big with their promotional activities. Without getting into specifics, Joshi said that it would suffice to state that the spend for the IPL has been “well-balanced”.

     

    For now, it is time for the action to move to the small screen as consumers will take a call on whether Aamir Khan does justice to the brand.