Tag: ZEE Media

  • Das ka Dum with Dr Bhaskar Das: Why is it that none of the big Indian news media conglomerates have produced a product like InShorts or Dailyhunt?

    Bhaskar Das

    It’s going viral. Each Q&A we hear is firing up the Whatsapp and Gmail circuits. People have been laughing, screaming out incorrigible as they read a response… hut there’s no denying that each question-and-answer is profound and funny. Please go to the Das Ka Dum tab on the website’s top navigation bar, to visit the archives of Q&As.

    To those who don’t know who Dr Bhaskar Das is: well, he’s the former big boss of the Times of India group and Zee Media and Dainik Bhaskar and now Republic TV. For those who’ve known him or have heard him, Dr Das belongs to the rare species of advertising sales professionals who has this unique combination of being a deeply spiritual being and also a very persuasive salesperson. His unique turn of phrase can make you chuckle, but almost always sets you pondering. Read on and see how every googly bowled at him is hit back in style. And often far out of the park.

    Das ka Dum features on MxM – Monday through Friday, except on our ‘no edition days’. Presenting Week Two, Day 4:

     

    Q. Why is it that none of the big Indian news media conglomerates have been able to produce a product like InShorts or Dailyhunt?

     

    A. Going by the behavioural trend of India Inc, with the onset of VUCA as the new normal, a meta-realisation has dawned on me viz non-attachment to a successful business model and inability to inculcate a class of losers within a successful business… these are not easy traits to practise live. This axiom is industry- and organisation-neutral. I am sure there are exceptions but they are few and far between. That’s why disruptors are born and even when disruptors mature in their business, they get disrupted. In business and life there are very few holy cows.

  • Das ka Dum with Dr Bhaskar Das: Which is a tougher question to answer – in any context: Why or How? And why?

    Bhaskar Das
    Bhaskar Das

    We hope you are enjoying the Q&As in Das ka Dum by Dr Bhaskar Das… just. The response to this new series of Q&As has been amazing. It of course all boils down to BD’s immense wisdom and popularity. Presenting Day 5 of of Das ka Dum with Dr Bhaskar Das. And do come back tomorrow for another question, and another answer

    The link to yesterday’s column is: https://www.mxmindia.com/2019/09/das-ka-dum-with-dr-bhaskar-das-if-you-could-relive-your-career-is-there-anything-that-you-would-like-to-redo-now-please-dont-give-a-politically-correct-answer/ And the links to the ones before that are in the last Q&A.

    To those who don’t know who Dr Bhaskar Das is: well, he’s the former big boss of the Times of India group and Zee Media and Dainik Bhaskar and now Republic TV. For those who’ve known him or have heard him, Dr Das belongs to the rare species of advertising sales professionals who has this unique combination of being a deeply spiritual being and also a very persuasive salesperson. His unique turn of phrase can make you chuckle, but almost always sets you pondering. At MxMIndia, we enjoy our conversations with him. And for every googly we bowl at him, he hits back like no one has ever before.

    Das ka Dum features on MxM – Monday through Friday, except on our ‘no edition days’. Presenting Day 5:

     

    Q. Which is a tougher question to answer – in any context: Why or How? And why?

     

    A. The quest for categorisation for a deterministic answer is quintessential. The world can’t anymore be ‘either-or’. We have to move from orness to andness. So sequentiality of why, how, what can be done depending on the context but they are fundamentally inter-connected queries for exploring answers to all unexplored areas.

  • Das ka Dum with Dr Bhaskar Das: If you could relive your career, is there anything that you would like to redo? ? Now please don’t give a politically correct answer

    Bhaskar Das

    We hope you are enjoying the Q&As in Das ka Dum by Dr Bhaskar Das… just. There are of course many who say that the column was a no-brainer. Those who’ve had a chat with BD are familiar with his repartees and spiritual responses to down-to-earth issues and problems.

     

    To those who’ve come in late, the link to yesterday’s column is: https://www.mxmindia.com/2019/09/das-ka-dum-with-dr-bhaskar-das-with-so-many-people-losing-jobs-in-the-media-would-you-say-its-a-safe-place-for-people-to-take-up-as-a-career/

    And the link to the ones before that are in the last column.

     

    The questions will be answered by Dr Bhaskar Das, the former big boss of the Times of India group and Zee Media and Dainik Bhaskar and now Republic TV. For those who’ve known him or have heard him, Dr Das belongs to the rare species of advertising sales professionals who has this unique combination of being a deeply spiritual being and a very persuasive salesperson. His unique turn of phrase can make you chuckle, but almost always sets you pondering. At MxMIndia, we enjoy our conversations with him. And for every googly we bowl at him, he hits back like no one has ever before.

     

    Das ka Dum will feature Monday through Friday, except on our ‘no edition days’. Enjoy Day 4.

     

    Q. If you had the opportunity to relive your professional career, is there one thing – or may be two or three – that you would like to redo? Now please don’t give a politically correct answer

            

    A. Why should I relive my professional career when I am so grateful that I could do my best what I was assigned to by God through earthly intermediaries. It may not be the best by material standards or by the expectations of a role model. But I didn’t aspire for them either. When one is in a trance of equanimity,  there is neither anything to seek, nor anything to achieve.

     

    This is not a politically correct answer. I don’t want to indulge in any etymological dissection of the word political but I feel it’s an oxymoron as when one is political , one can’t be correct.

     

     

    Editor: As we mentioned before, some of the words and phrases our dear BD uses could go over your head. So, purely in reader interest, we will link such words to the dictionary meaning. Now we don’t think etymological is a tough word, but perhaps equanimity might well be for some.

  • Barun Das to take over from Ashok Venkatramani at Zee Media?

    By A Correspondent

    Enter?: Barun Das
    Exit: Ashok Venkatramani

    Senior mediaperson and former Zee News CEO Barun Das is set to take over as CEO/MD of Zee Media Corporation (ZMCL), according to an internal grapevine. This follows the resignation of Ashok Venkatramani as Managing Director as he has “decided to pursue interest outside the Company”, as per filings with the stock exchanges on Tuesday (July 9). An announcement on Das’s appointment is likely to happen today.

    Das, an alumnus of IIT Madras and IIM Calcutta had a successful stint of five-and-a-half years with Zee News, as the company was called earlier, from September 2007 to December 2012. Recently, Das did a short consulting stint with Harvest TV. Venkatramani had joined ZMCL in July 2018 after long stints at ABP News and Hindustan Unilever.

  • Mullen Lintas wins creative mandate of Zee Media

    By A Correspondent

     

    Zee Media Corporation Limited has appointed Mullen Lintas as its creative agency. The win is an outcome of a multi-agency pitch involving industry heavyweights. The agency’s mandate is for Zee News along with other channels including Zee Business, Zee Hindustan, Zee 24 Ghanta, Zee 24 Taas, Zee 24 Kalak and Zee Digital.

     

    Vikas Mehta

    Commenting on the win, Vikas Mehta, CEO, Mullen Lintas, said: “With its tremendous reach and following, Zee Media is a powerhouse that informs India, in its several native languages. This quality mandates the brand to speak from a point of authenticity, which is way ahead of several media houses. We are delighted to be named their partners in shaping this brand, and starting this journey in a milestone year where India goes to vote. We aim to bring the best of our challenger thinking to help Zee Media, build a lasting bond with their audiences.”

     

    Sujeet Mishra

    Added Sujeet Mishra, Marketing Head, Zee Media: “Zee media is the strongest news network in India with multiple channels offering news across the country including vernacular. News viewers have shown great content affinity for Zee. The task at hand is to take the brand story forward and allow zee media brands to lead a new thinking. The most striking elements about Mullen Lintas’ pitch was its ability to get the task articulated very clearly. In a multi-agency pitch process, the strategic and creative illustration of the challenge was very convincing. And we decided to partner with Mullen Lintas.”

     

    Syed Amjad Ali

    Sharing his thoughts about the win, Syed Amjad Ali, President, Mullen Lintas, said: “It was an exciting brief to crack. We breathe news, breaking news, biased news, fake news, divisive news, etc. News talks to us from within, and has become part of our sub-conscious. And each one of us at Mullen are designed like that. We leveraged this collective thinking and put it to use for Zee Media. Quite natural for us to find a meaning for Zee which resonated with them”.

     

    The business will be handled by the Delhi (NCR) offices of Mullen Lintas where a multi-disciplinary team has been devoted to develop the brand footprint.

     

     

  • Dharma. Karma. And all things spiritual with Bhaskar Das

     

    It’s a day before the launch of Republic TV’s bold Hindi news channel. This interview with Dr Bhaskar Das, former Times of India group President, Group CEO of Zee Media, Executive President of the Dainik Bhaskar group and now Group President of Republic though was taken a week earlier. Read on for an engaging chat Dr Das had with Pradyuman Maheshwari. Enjoy.

     

    There are many who are upset that Dr Bhaskar Das is not giving them a chance to blossom in their career. At age 65, you’ve occupied some of the most coveted jobs in the Indian media. Group President of Republic and earlier also Executive President of the Dainik Bhaskar group. Plus you hold a few other senior positions in academics. So what is the secret behind Bhaskar Das’s energy?

    Nothing happens as per one’s plan. We underestimate the role of god and luck. I think it has worked in my favour. And, yes, I have passion for work. I don’t think I am coming in anyone’s way because I complement the core capability of the organisation, any organisation. So, from that point of view, the impressions are misplaced. It is not that people hire an individual. They hire aggregated capabilities. I think I have always tried to upgrade myself, reskill myself and upskill myself. So, when one goes through that journey, and because I love academics, even if demographically I may not be very shining, cognitively and affectively, I have been able to surmount that obstacle.

    Sir, words like cognitive go above my head.

    The objective is not to use jargon to make it incomprehensible… but it is important that you cannot fight demographic obsolescence, corporate obsolescence, sectoral obsolescence. Only thing you can fight is cognitive obsolescence, and affective which is to do with knowledge, skill and emotion. And one needs to understand that if you do not take charge of both of them, one can’t contribute. So, in this part of my journey, my interest is more in terms of serving others, contributing and not for getting up on the stage. I am more a cheerleader for people and make others successful. There is no desire to make myself successful.

    Which existed I guess when you were at Times?

    The fundamental thing is that I cannot change my DNA. That was in my DNA. But, both in terms of designation, salary, everything used to get matched up. Today, I don’t aspire for anything. I just want to, like a traveller, be interested in the journey… quality of roads…

    Is it because you have been there, done that, had the best of everything and now…

    It is not so. You must know that everything has a time, like I can’t aspire now to be a 16- or 30-year-old.

    But you are as colourful as a young adult.

    That’s in the eyes of the people, I think. Colourfulness is in the minds. It need not actually, explicitly, be there. I don’t think I am colourful at all. What is there is that: if you enjoy your existence, nothing matters. So, I love fun and especially when I work, I don’t even feel I am working. I always believe that if you love your work, you don’t have to work at all.

    After Times, you joined the Zee group and you had the longest stint that a professional CEO has had in the Zee group. And then you were with the Dainik Bhaskar Group, and now you are with Republic. There was some overlap between Dainik Bhaskar and Republic, but now you are full-time at Republic. How did you select these jobs, or how did they just happen?

    After Times of India, I have not chosen anything. I have always been chosen.

    Ufff! It’s difficult to pin you down for a straight answer. Do you think the organisations are hiring you just for your contacts… because you can help open doors? Are you being used, and incorrectly so?

    I never felt like that. What is right or wrong is a very post-facto conclusion, and since I am an affected party, there is a conflict of interest in giving you an answer. But from my end, I never felt…

    Conflict of interest with whom?

    Because on the basis of your question, you are mentioning that have they not treated me well?

    Not a question about not treating you well, but…

    Or they have not utilised me well. How can I answer that question? Because the obvious answer would be: yes, I have been used properly. I personally feel that’s not the question. Every organisation knows what is right for them and whatever task they assign me.

    My question was not about them using you effectively. They have used you effectively, but they are employing your skills only because of what you bring to the table. You help open doors…

    That is true for everyone, isn’t it? It is always true for everyone. In any recruitment or any job, there is a huge element of narcissism. And I have never had that problem. I personally feel that every job is an opportunity to learn and also to serve. I am hugely interested in learning and contributing.

    As they say, success is a bastard and failure is an orphan. I have never tried to take credit for anything. I think everything happens because of the collective wisdom, collective effort. And in every organisation, people have different opinions. But I have had consistent opinion of all the organisations that I have worked because I found them to be a huge place for learning.

    According to you, which has been your best place of learning so far? Times of India?

    Times of India has been my school, kindergarten, school, college, university, everything…

    Which part of your education – kindergarten, school, university was the best?

    Kindergarten gives you a solid foundation. If you look at it, at a fundamental level, you learn very few things after kindergarten. But if you are a keen observer, a learner, your learning concept could change. In a sense that, it has become very fluid. It is no longer crystallised. It is not there in the books. The more you work, the more you get immersed in the job, you learn new things. And today, the sources of learning have changed tremendously. I learn today from a kid in twenties, because they are millennials, post-millennials, Generation Z. So you can learn… from books and academics. Another learning happens through observation.

    The criticality is that from the various sources of learning that you get, how do you connect for a cross-category wisdom? I think because of experience now and exposure into various formats of delivery, so one of the examples that I am giving, in various interactions with the advertisers and my colleagues, I always say: I don’t suffer from any format myopia, or language myopia or genre myopia. I am a market. So, whatever it is, I have always sold markets. Markets, both in geographic term and in psychographic term.

    But is it not about the medium?

    It is not about TV, newspaper print. For me it’s the same, seamless thing, that I understand consumer, I understand commerce. That’s it.

    But the fact of the matter is that marketing for television is dramatically different from marketing for print…

    I don’t agree, I don’t agree. It is the execution, it is the detailing that may be different, but at the fundamental level, and I can argue till the cows come home, they are the same. You go to any other industry, our industry is different, print industry is different, every industry is different. Big deal!

    When you joined Zee, there were some naysayers saying that Bhaskar Das is the king of print but will his magic work in television? What you are now telling me is that it is not right to say that sales for print is very different from sales for television

    Yes, I don’t believe so. What you are saying is true, people may have said. But these are typical insecurities of legacy custodian mindset. Ultimately, a consumer is platform-agnostic. Advertising has become platform-agnostic.

    Theodore Levitt spoke about Marketing Myopia, I am seeing a new Theodore Levitt in myopia of silo-ing media

    As you look back, how was your stint at Zee?

    Bhaskar Das: Every stint of mine…

    I am not going to let you go spiritual once again. If you were to give BCCL a 10 on 10, what would you give your score for your stint at Zee?

    To my mind, this is a misplaced question. It is like comparing apples and oranges. Are you different from when you are, say, 16 and now when you are in 50s, for instance. It is such an unfair question. Each one of them have contributed in expanding my vista of knowledge. So how can I compare them?

    You are ducking the question.

    You may be thinking it that way, but I am stating the fact.

    Okay, tell me, satisfaction-wise. Since we know you are a spiritual person,  satisfaction-wise if BCCL was 10 on 10, how was…

    I am telling you how your question is flawed. On the one hand, you are saying I am spiritual and for a spiritual man, satisfaction is not outside, it is inside.

    So how was it on the inside?

    It is seamless, it is consistent, because I am guided by the principle that I am the cause of everything that I experience.

    Moving on, some people said that you could have turned around DNA as a newspaper, the newspaper that you helped kill because when you were at Times you made difficult for it to grow. You were the one person who could have done something with it.

    I tried my best. There are some sectoral peculiarities for which the turning around is bound to take some time and the market leader’s practices can really prohibit a revival strategy. But, under the circumstances, I think I did well.

    Do you think the paper has a future?

    Some of your questions are legacy mindset questions.

    Sir, I am a legacy mindset person, unfortunately…

    Because how do you predict future? They say that the future has been unpredictable

    You are so good at not giving straight answers

    It is not so. At a philosophical level, do you think it has a future? Who has a future? That bikini-clad mountaineer who died. She also thought she has a future. So the future happens on what you are doing in the present. I have a feeling that if the present is handled appropriately, any brand will have a future…

    Interesting point.

    Listen to me: it is an important point. It is all about a business model. It depends how it is being managed for a brand, and because print has this pecking order business where the newcomer takes time for really turning around. So the gestation period can be long. That does not mean that it has no future. Your optimism quotient needs to be high and of course the effort levels.

    Are you unhappy with the way Mumbai Mirror is doing? It was flying high, somehow it has lost the edge?

    I have never driven a car looking at the rear view mirror…

    Gosh, you find everything hunky-dory.  

    One is that. Second is that I don’t have a context.

    Have you never driven a car looking at the rear view mirror? While driving one must look at the rear view mirror, right?

    You see that’s why windscreen is bigger compared to rear view mirror. It looks closer than what they really are. So, rear view, you see that no one comes and knocks you out. That’s your protective shield. But that does not mean that my judgment is dependent on that. Because once I leave a place, I don’t meditate on the past. So if, but… why bother?

    It was an interesting decision for you to join Dainik Bhaskar. Must have been a different experience altogether because you worked a print master who lives in a certain way. In the regional publication space, the owners look at things differently.

    Yes, Dainik Bhaskar has been a very distinctive experience, because it had language. Second it is the #1 in the country, both in terms of readership and circulation terms, but the aggression is something which we have to learn. The aggression and the leadership that the shareholders have is unbelievable.

    No professional has stayed on for too long as CEO at Dainik Bhaskar.

    Because everyone cannot survive the heat of the kitchen. When you are the market challenger, you need to be able to take the war into the…

    Dainik Bhaskar is a leader but is always playing the role of a challenger.

    Yes, which is very good. Because people who become leaders don’t get complacent. They have to maintain the challenger’s role that requires a different level of agility, adaptability and adaptability. And I have a feeling that I don’t have the statistics on what has been the longevity of each CEO and if there is any pattern. But if people treat safety zone to also be a comfort zone, things can work. No one can say in a deterministic manner that it is a bad place to stay because if it happens, why just for the organisation, also for the employees concerned. And the contexts are very different. We know that even Virat Kohli also gets out at zero sometimes that doesn’t mean that he is a bad cricket player. I am not going to blame the pitch also. But it is that day how he plays.

    Who is Virat Kohli here? The owners or…

    The employees. You cannot brand someone who could not take the heat of the kitchen a bad player. What happens that I find everything is T20. Life is about T20. Either you can handle the pressure or get out. It has nothing to do with the format of the game. And today, if you take every organisation job, it is another format of the game. Fundamentally, it is T20.

    Tell me, you also took on the Republic assignment when you were with Bhaskar. So, in a sense, you were two-timing?

    That was with full consent. For me the current journey is about continuously upgrading your skills. And there was no conflict of interest, because the access point is at the generic level. Format-wise one was television and the other was print. I am also in academics, so it has teaching. It is more like portfolio career. Usually, people think it is a conflict of interest, but I think they are being myopic. You need a high level of integrity to do all these jobs. It is more by outcome-based delivery than attendance-based delivery.

    Can you manage to be successful in media with integrity?

    It is all individual judgment. One cannot generalise. Without integrity you cannot survive. Like all generalisations, this one is also wrong. There are always exceptions. It doesn’t mean that if people have not survived with integrity, all others have no integrity. I don’t agree with it.

    You really think integrity is very important?

    Yes, in everything. And it today’s context, it’s all the more. Worldwide, there is a crisis of ethics and integrity going on…

    But despite being such a votary for integrity, when you were with BCCL, Medianet happened. In your own thought process, how did that function because Medianet is all about paid content, paid editorial content, packaging it as editorial, and not really tagging it as advertising. That’s surely not integrity?

    See, one must know that what is your area of operation. Okay? Let me give you a spiritual response. You know Lotus? Lotus?

    BJP?

    No, lotus is a flower which blooms in the muck but the same lotus goes to god’s feet. In the metaphor I used, even if you are in a muck that does not mean that lack integrity. So who is to judge that a business model of mutual value creation is ethically corrupting or not. I am not the person to judge because of the fact that may be the principles have been established. It is transparent so it may not be. I have insufficient data points to say that it is upfront to moral integrity or moral turpitude. But I think that people were not used to it…

    Sir, I will have to put links to the dictionary for people to understand the various words you use.

    Which one?

    Turpitude. I know I am not going to get an answer for my last question.

    Life is not about answers. Life is about searching for questions. If you know the answer, rest assured your question is wrong.

    This is an interview for MxMIndia and not for Sadhguru.com. Please give me some down-to-earth responses

    The point is why this duality. They are all seamlessly integrated.

    Sorry to ask you this question, sitting in the office of Republic – but how did Republic happen?

    I love Republic for a number of things. One is of course the energy. Trying to do something different. People have perceptions, but I think the perceptions have formed on the basis of one’s personal experience, without complete data points. I really took a clinical look at it and I have a feeling there are lot of interesting things that are happening…

    It looks as if you are taking on your previous employer Times Of India. We know that Republic and Times of India have been slugging it out.

    Marketplace is a war place.

    War place?

    When I say war place, because of the fact that there is competition…

    Is Vineet Jain still talking to you?

    Why are you specifying Sameer Jain, Vineet Jain? There is also Aroon Purie…

    Since you were at the top at the Times of India, you know how that organisation works, the various business dynamics, and the love for Arnab Goswami.

    But if the two journeys are different? If you look at it from the marketing point of view, we are playing professional games in the marketplace. If I were in Times of India, I would have played Times of India’s game. So, if you are playing the game, you cannot question the rules of the game. I am just following the rules of the game. And it is nothing directed, it is about business.

    Your most trusted lieutenant is heading the rival organisation.

    Not right to call it the rival organisation. It is the market. Any part of the competition worldwide, there are only rivals who are doing. People are leaving McKinsey and joining EY, or for that matter you have worked in Mid-Day and you have gone to DNA. That is your freedom… fundamental right.

    I was a small cog in the wheel. You are the Big Boss

    That’s an illusionary construction. The wheels don’t move with the small cog.

    True. Moving on, you chucked your Dainik Bhaskar job so to say to join Republic…

    I must say here that I did not chuck the job. I…

    You moved on. Or in your words, you steadily transitioned.

    I found that I could not do justice to two jobs, so let me take one job. Because, academics was very important for me. And I thought that I will be able to balance both but after 14 months I realised that I can’t deliver.

    So why Republic and why not Bhaskar.

    This is because I wanted to work with a startup. It is a legacy medium, but the mentality is startup. It is about lot of experimentations that happen as a new organisation, and a very young team. I always look for how I can up skill myself. Dainik Bhaskar is an established company, huge brand pool. Here brand-building has to be done. Pool has to be sustained.

    Brand-building? Why do you need it for Republic? Republic = Arnab Goswami who is a brand…

    One individual cannot make a brand. A brand will ultimately happen…

    You shouldn’t be saying this. Arnab Goswami may also read this interview.

    Even he feels that the corporation is the brand. He is building an institution and has taken me on board to contribute to that institution-building. Anyone can make a big organisation. Dainik Bhaskar is a big company anyway. But your new learning will happen when you dirty your hands for a new institution building. My excitement is that. Otherwise a legacy company or a big company like Times of India or Dainik Bhaskar is much more comfortable. I want to make myself uncomfortable. Because I get scared when it is comfortable. Because learning never happens.

    Point.

    I am still very curious. I am very hungry. And I think that when you asked me some time back about, what is the energy, now I am realising it. It’s the curiosity. And today curiosity of a post-1997-98 born, when I go and learn is a different one. So it is a perfect combination of youth and experience. I wouldn’t say Dhoni-isation, Dhoni is still young. But it’s just “enjoy the game and remain obsolescence-free”.

    Are you in sync with the way Republic is going in terms of news and the postures that Arnab takes… very aggressive, very nationalistic?

    See there are some silos in my mind – my spiritual journey, my job journey, my academic journey, they run their own course. It is not about thesis, antithesis, it is more about synthesising. Ultimately, the market is the best arbiter, why bring in subjective judgment? I go by cold shower of facts that something is working. The biggest problem in the media industry is that some people extrapolate their personal experience to the whole universe. I doubt that the averaging is very important in terms of what is working. And if something is working then why bring individual judgment… if you don’t agree, you go to Ramkrishna Mission.

    That way you can say that pornography works best in the digital…

    It is irrelevant, because of the fact that if the digital characteristic is one-on-one and they are doing it, fine. Now we are talking about the order of ethicality of the society. Let society take care of it. Let the government take care of it. By that logic, if you talk about ethicality, people get excited by 10-year challenge, this, that and whatever. Please understand when you are a consumer, you are just a data point. So, to my mind that level of ethicality is permitted in every business, normal lack of ethicality. I can give you a proof of that that every time I do something on my social media, someone is capturing me, and someone is watching me. I call it the new age capitalistic surveillance.

    So, you are broadly in sync…

    I have a very synthesised mind. I pick up the best and make it a synthesis, as opposed to thinking what is differing with my own way.

    The channel is different…

    When you enter a cluttered market, you have to create a niche for yourself. See, taking a stand, setting an agenda will always be controversial. Republic has taken out a difference from the lexicon of news weaving. If you look at it horizontally, all news gets covered. It is only when you take position in edit page that people feel the whole channel is one way. I think it’s the same way you look at your thali, if you take the decision on the basis of spicy food, so you say that the thali is spicy. Or if its sweet than it’s sweet. I don’t think life has only one shade. It has many shades and I am comfortable with that.

    Guess all is hunky-dory. Hunky-dory in your mind at least. This is a channel that will work but what if as some opinion polls suggest that the BJP may not come back to power. Given that Republic has been very aggressive on the Congress, could the going be tough if an opposition or non-Modi-led government comes to power?

    See, there are newspapers and channels which are also left of centre. They haven’t closed down. Ultimately everyone does business in a certain way to maintain their distinctiveness and I have a feeling what will happen in future which will create stymies. It brands activities, it doesn’t work that way. After Jio has come, have the others shut shop? It has not happened. So, everyone survives in their own way. I think we should cross the bridge when it comes as opposed to, anticipating what will happen.

    Jio is not content. But, tell me, when we go out in the market, what is the kind of chatter you hear? Do people say “Arre, Bhaskarda, what have you done”? You know.

    No. It is a mix of things people say because everyone is relating from their own experience. One good thing is that no one is different.

    Do people sing or hum the song “Ye kya hua, kaise hua”?

    There are people who also say fantastic.. that it’s very good. Also, remember, all of us in some form stay in our echo chambers. You can’t remain really, really absolutely neutral. Your internal beliefs determine your external view of the world. So, the opinion that I get from various people, I’m not being very overtly anxious because in fact when I counter one… they are very perfunctory and quite often based on unrepresentative sample. They don’t have facts.

    Does overtly anxious means some amount of anxiety, unhappiness, lack of enthusiasm?

    Not overtly anxious means suppose if five people are saying something negative, then there are five people also saying things that positive. Then, how should you and why should you be anxious about something which is doing so very well. Obviously, you don’t become #1 for 89 weeks. See, the market is the best arbiter. Also, data shows that pre-Republic, if the reach was X, it is gone up by 61 percent. Republic has expanded the news genre, English genre market.

    But the English genre is so small?

    It may be minuscule, but fact remains English in this country is miniscule. Not even a closed fist size.

    My point is it’s about quality versus quantity. It is about its class within a mass… please understand that

    Now you are entering the mass market with Bharat

    Even that mass, if you look at it, is nothing compared to GECs. Everything is relative, right?

    Are you sure that Bharat will be successful with some big folks so well-entrenched?

    I have not developed any skill in astrological predictions…

    Hindi channels also have astrology on them.

    They may have but point is that’s what customers want. But I’m just trying to say that I am talking about myself and I don’t have any astrological ability. The only thing I can tell and talk about is the present. Present an indication in terms of the way channel is getting, content is created, anchors are coming, or distributions are happening. I’m very optimistic not to be politically correct but sounds interesting because I’ve worked in Hindi channels also and I find it there is something interesting that is being constructed. Don’t forget that even in English, Republic has broken the mould. In Hindi also, we are going to break the mould. So, everyone exists, but everyone exist here for a reason and the positioning is all about that. I think Hindi will be able to carve a niche for itself. What will be and who will be standing where, that’s future every week.

    But you have some really big, big as they say ‘diggaj’ (formidable) competitors.

    Yahoo was also a success, once upon a time a success. History is replete, corporate history is replete with examples of big legacy players. You just don’t know how markets behave? See, human needs are primordial. The cessation gets modern and the cessation happens. Most of the cases are tectonic.

    Aaj Tak is still the leader

    I don’t know. Only the future can say that. I’m just trying to say that generic management principle on tectonic shifts, I have not seen visually.

    You used the word tectonic.

    Yes, tectonic.

    Do you see an earthquake happening?

    The tectonic shift that happened is in terms of technology and consumer behaviour and culture and when it happens, consumer preferences change. In our life time starting we have seen the move from radio to television to cable your terrestrial and then of course you have satellite, then you have got mobiles, then you have got OTT. Things are continuously changing and today your first screen is your mobile. If you look at the new generation, post-97 born, you will see they are not even looking at the news. But again, people are putting up at their own experience, their children but actually the news consumption is going up. Markets are getting expanded, the pecking orders are changing.

    Your forecast, I know you said you are not an astrologer. But conviction one can talk about. Where do you think Republic Bharat will be, say, a few months from now?

    See, one is aspiration and then you have the actual reality. Our aspiration is to be a leading competitive player in the market because ultimately business model is about advertising and advertisers prefer top pecking order.  So, Republic like any other channel would like to be…

    Hmmm

    Tell me who will say “I don’t want to be number one”? So, point is if you look at the way news channels is bought, there is a pecking order, there is Basket number 1, Basket number 2 and Basket number 3 and accordingly, the rates are determined and accordingly the preferences are determined by this. I have a feeling Republic would be really competitive at the top end of the spectrum.

    You have still not given me a very firm answer?

    Life is not about determinism. Life is more about a range of possibilities and you play with the possibilities as you gain theory. So anyone who gives a deterministic answer has, I think, superhuman capabilities.

    You’ve gone into a spiritual zone once again

    I’m sure an employer does not want such spiritual achievements. Even in my case it is always response, I got very positive response because of the fact that I don’t do dharma. But when dharma gets sanitised by the doctrine of righteousness, I think anyone would appreciate.

    Dharma cannot be your karma, or can it?

    Our actual pursuance of dharma includes your karma.

    I don’t understand what you are saying

    I have never ever talked about so much of spirituality in an interview.

    I guess our readers will know what you have said and what you have not said. On this spiritual note, at least we can laugh about it. Thank you.

    Believe me, I really continuously sanitise it. It gives one so much peace.

    Hmmm

     

  • Zee Media & Castrol India address health concerns of truck drivers

    By A Correspondent

     

    In the run up to the International Yoga Day today (June 21), Zee Media extended its support to Castrol India Limited on a health and well-being campaign addressing the health concerns of truck drivers.

     

    Castrol Truck aasanas, developed as a result of a health and well-being survey conducted with over 1000 truckers, were launched a day ahead of the International Yoga Day in Baddi, Himachal Pradesh in an event hosted by Zee Media.

     

    Said Kedar Apte, VP – Marketing, Castrol India: “We have been working with truck drivers for several decades now and have built a strong and enduring relationship with them. Through our long association with them, we have gained valuable insights about their lives and working conditions.  One of the key insights is the fact that most truck drivers in India end up neglecting their own health while struggling to make a decent living.

     

    Added Mehraj Dube, Marketing Head of Zee Media: “This is a phenomenal initiative and we all at ZEE Media are very proud of being a part of it. Truck drivers are the backbone of India’s flourishing economy, so if they are healthy, our economy remains healthy.”

     

     

  • Ashok Venkatramani to take charge of Zee Media from July 1

    By A Correspondent

     

    Ashok Venkatramani

    Former ABP News Network CEO and Hindustan Unilever top honcho Ashok Venkatramani has been appointed Managing Director of Zee Media Corporation Limited. The Board of Directors of ZMCL met on Thursday and formally announced the appointment to the stock exchanges, and the world. Meanwhile, there are reports of an expansion at ZMCL, and Executive Director Group COO Rajiv Singh will reportedly be given an expanded role and newer

     

    Venkatramani, who quit ABP News in November 2016, will take charge on July 1, 2018. The contract is for a period of three years. Venkatramani, who is currently in the United States, is looking forward to his new role, a reply from him to us and other friends indicated.

     

    An engineering graduate from Mumbai and a postgraduate from the Indian Institute of Management Ahmedabad, Venkatramani worked with Hindustan Unilever for nearly two decades after which he joined ABP News, then called Star News, and the company, a joint venture of the ABP Group and Star India, was called Media Content and Communications

     

    (MCCS). At HUL, the post he last held was Vice President and Business Head of the all-important skincare division. At ABP, he helped streamline processes and successfully transitioned the Star brand to ABP. Venkatramani has also done an advanced management programme at the Harvard

     

    Known for his people skills, Venkatramani is known to be no-nonsense when it comes to deliverables and processes. This is what Punit Misra, currently CEO of the Broadcast Business at Zee Entertainment wrote on Venkatramani, his boss at HUL, on LinkedIn in April 2009: “Having worked with Ashok in two different stints, I rank him tops on his ability to build and nurture individuals and to create great performing teams. There are many things special about Ashok as a leader – always accessible and friendly, operating from the principle that people must be given support and space to contribute thier best, supporting people when chips are down, never hierarchical, willing to take risks and let people take risks, feet strongly on the ground but egging people on to go for the moon – and so many other things… It has been an absolute pleasure reporting in to a friend like Ashok – ‘coz he doesn’t treat you as if he is the boss!”

     

    Former colleagues at ABP News are bullish about Venkatramani turning around ZMCL. “If ANN is a profitable company today, it’s thanks to the systems and processes Ashok set up. He may scream and shout a bit, but he gives you the kind of freedom that few bosses do. He doesn’t micro-manage at all and would judge you via periodic reviews. He also focuses considerably on training of his team and ensuring that they are adequate empowered.” Another ex-colleague said: “He’s not one who will sack people. So if there’s something that needs cleaning up, he will do it. And that’s what Subhash Chandra and the Zee management always look for.”

     

     

  • Wion spreads its wings to the Middle East

    By A Correspondent

     

    Zee Media’s English news channel World Is One News (Wion) has been launched on Etisalat in the United Arab Emirates and Qatar. Viewers in those countries can also watch the channel on Du and Ooredoo. Wion’sMiddle East debut comes on the heels of its launch in seven African countries: Nigeria, Kenya, Zambia, Zimbabwe, Ghana, Botswana and Rwanda. From February to April, Wionwill be spreading its outreach to other South Asian countries like Bangladesh, Sri Lanka and Myanmar, notes a communique.

     

    Said Zee Chairman Subhash Chandra on the launch: “After a successful start in India, Wionis gearing up to bring world-class journalism to the people of UAE and Qatar who have long been waiting for a global network from India.”

     

     

  • Prez, PM celebrate Essel Group’s 90 years with Subhash Chandra & family

    By A Correspondent

     

    Essel Group, the leading entertainment-led business group, is celebrating 90 years of existence and to celebrate the occasion, Chairman Dr Subhash Chandra announced the launch of the DSC Foundation by contributing Rs 5000 crore from his family wealth, the ‘Sarthi’ initiative and its English global news network, WION – World Is One News, in the presence of President Pranab Mukherjee and Prime Minister Narendra Modi in New Delhi on Sunday. The Group also honoured the winners of the first edition of the Zee Media Family Business Legacy Awards – Dabur India Ltd., Wagh Bakri Tea Group and Wockhardt Ltd.

     

    Said Dr Chandra: “This journey of 90 years has been filled with remarkable successes as well as challenges and obstacles. It has been a journey of creating history, venturing into unknown territories, only to emerge as leaders, capitalising on our pioneering vision and sheer entrepreneurial spirit. As we look to the future, I am confident that we will carry forward the legacy of the Group with complete passion, dedication and above all, the spirit of #YoungAt90! On this occasion, we are launching our new initiatives – Sarthi, DSC Foundation and WION, that will empower the lives of the people. Sarthi will provide a platform to help people with their problems by connecting them to the right persons and then taking it to the logical conclusion. With WION, we want to provide a medium which will give people news from around the world and how it affects India. This initiative is not for profit, but a medium for society and the nation to benefit. Through the DSC Foundation, we will be building capacity in the society to take on problems and tackle them. We are pledging Rs. 5000 crore out of our profits towards this Foundation.”

     

    Meanwhile, the Essel Group also announced the winners of the first-edition of Zee Media Family Business Legacy Awards which aim to honour and recognise India’s oldest family-run businesses which have expanded their empires over successive generations. To select the winners, entries from business groups which spanned a tleast four generations and had a turnover of over Rs 1000 crore, were invited and then verified by Ernst & Young, the internal process partner, using rigorous criteria to arrive at the final winners.

     

    The winners of the first-edition of the Zee Media Family Business Legacy Awards are Dabur India Ltd., Wagh Bakri Tea Group and Wockhardt Ltd.

     

  • Reliance ADAG exits television, 49% of radio. Sells to Zee

     

    By A Correspondent

     

    The Zee group has acquired the Reliance Broadcast Network Limited’s entertainment channels (plus four other licences it owns) along with 49 per cent stake in 92.7 Big FM. The transactions will help reduce exposure in non-core businesses and work towards further reducing debt under Reliance Capital, said Sam Ghosh, Executive Director and Group CEO, Reliance Capital.

     

    Radio:

    The Board of Directors of Zee Media Corporation Limited has approved acquisition of 49% stake in 92.7 BIG FM, the radio broadcasting business of Reliance Broadcast Network Limited.

     

    Reliance Broadcast Network Limited runs the largest network of FM radio channels in India – 45 operational licenses (issued under Phase II and migrated to Phase III) and 14 new licenses (issued under Phase III). The FM channels are being broadcast under the brand “92.7 BIG FM”, reaching to 45 cities, 1200 towns and over 200 million people. It reaches out to around 43 million listeners per week and engages with a large number of national and local advertisers.

     

    Reliance Broadcast Network Limited shall be transferring the 45 operational and 14 new licences into two SPVs respectively along with the assets and liabilities. ZMCL shall acquire 49% stake in each of these two SPVs. ZMCL and Reliance Broadcast Network Limited shall also have a call/put option to acquire/sell the balance 51% after the lock-in provisions on the permission holder of these licenses expire. As per MIB regulations, at least 51% shareholding needs to be held by the permission holder for a minimum period of three years from the date the channels were operationalised. The lock-in period for the 45 operational licenses shall expire on March 31, 2018, whilst the lock-in period for the 14 licences shall expire after the expiry of three years from the day all 14 licences shall have become operational, which is expected to be around March 2020.

     

    Said Rajiv Singh, COO, ZMCL: “We are pleased to announce this acquisition which shall not only be complementary to our current business but accelerate its growth too. We are currently running successfully a bouquet of 11 news and current affair channels and with the addition of 59 radio licenses, we will be reaching out to a much increased audience base and will keep them engaged on different media platforms. This acquisition shall bring about the desired business diversity and will help in achieving the sound financial objectives at an accelerated pace. We are confident that this investment will enhance value for all stakeholders and looking forward towards this exciting journey to take the company to the next level.”

     

    Said Sam Ghosh, ED and Group CEO, Reliance Capital in a statement: “We are happy to bring in Zee Media as our partner in the Radio business. This transaction is part of our strategy to reduce exposure in non-core businesses and work towards further reducing debt under Reliance Capital”.

     

    The proposed transaction remains subject to regulatory approvals including Ministry of Information & Broadcasting. The transaction is expected to close in the first half of CY2017.

     

    Television:

    Meanwhile, the Board of Directors of Zee Entertainment Enterprises Limited (“ZEEL”) has also approved the acquisition of the general entertainment broadcasting business undertaking of Reliance Big Broadcasting Private Limited, Big Magic Limited and Azalia Broadcast Private Limited, all part of Anil Ambani-led Reliance Group entities through a scheme of demerger and execution of definitive agreements in relation to such proposed acquisition..  The TV Broadcasting business of Reliance Group Entities currently comprises two operational general entertainment channels (“BIG Magic” and “BIG Ganga”) and 4 other TV licenses.

     

    BIG Magic is a Comedy channel catering to Hindi Speaking Markets. BIG Ganga is a leading Bhojpuri entertainment channel catering to audiences in Bihar, Jharkhand and Purvanchal. The channels are available on all major MSOs and DTH operators.

     

    The General Entertainment TV Broadcasting business undertaking along with its assets, liabilities, licenses, trademarks etc. shall get demerged from “BIG Magic Ltd”, “Reliance Big Broadcasting Private Ltd” and “Azalia Broadcast Private Ltd” into ZEEL through a court-approved scheme.

     

    Said Punit Goenka, MD & CEO, ZEEL: “We are pleased to announce this acquisition which further adds to our expanding universe of general entertainment channels. Big Magic gives us access to comedy genre enhancing our customer offerings. Big Ganga, a leading Bhojpuri channel syncs with our strategy of expanding into the regional markets which offers attractive growth potential. I am confident that these two channels will make the Zee Network channels more enriching for the audience and for the Company.”

     

    Said Sam Ghosh, ED and Group CEO, Reliance Capital: “We are happy to divest 100 per cent of our general entertainment TV business to Zee Entertainment. This transaction is part of our strategy to reduce exposure in non-core businesses and work towards further reducing debt under Reliance Capital.”

     

    The proposed transaction remains subject to approval of the shareholders and requisite regulatory approvals including stock exchanges, Ministry of Information & Broadcasting and the Bombay Hight Court. The transaction is expected to close in the second half of CY2017.

     

  • Former Zee Media CEO R K Arora launches Hindi news channel JK 24X7 News

    By A Correspondent

     

    R K Arora

    Former Zee Media CEO and Executive Director RK Arora has jointly launched a new national Hindi news channel – JK 24X7 News – under the banner of JK Media Network with Subash Chowdhary and Tapinder Kumar alias Bhanu. The network also runs a channel in regional space ‘Gulistan News’ which caters to viewers of Jammu & Kashmir and.

     

    Inspired with the thought, ‘Aao Badlen Hum’, spurring change and emboldening the voice of the changing India, is the brand positioning for JK 24X7 News. To achieve this, JK 24X7 News has a mix of programmes that will help it make a positive impact in the lives of its viewers, notes a communiqué.

     

    The network has plans for expansion of their bouquet of channels in different genres in near future.

     

    A Chartered Accountant by profession, Arora has over 25 years of experience. Prior to Zee Media, he has worked with News Nation, India News, News 24 and India TV.