Tag: zivame

  • Leo Burnett creates Zivame campaign

    By Our Staff

     

    Zivame, the intimate wear brand, has launched a campaign for its True Curv range conceived by Leo Burnett.

     

    Said Khatija Lokhandwala, Head of Brand Marketing at Zivame: “At the core of our brand lies the empowering message of Wear Your Confidence irrespective one’s age, size, or body type. Our latest campaign for our True Curv range amplifies our commitment to inclusivity and body positivity and reinforces the belief that every woman, regardless of her shape or size, deserves to feel celebrated and valued every day.”

     

  • Zivame launches new brand campaign

    By Our Staff

     

    Zivame intimate wear announces the launch of its new brand campaign. In #WearYourConfidence film made by Leo Burnett, it encourages women to confidently seize the day. The core insight behind the campaign is that confidence is needed in every aspect of our lives, in our every day. And the right intimate wear designed for your body, empowers you to confidently take on any day.

     

    Lavanya Pachisia COO of Zivame, said: “Our campaign celebrates every Indian women and her diverse everydays, from the mundane to the special, and how with the right intimate wear by her side, she can put her most confident foot forward.”

     

    Sonal Chhajerh, Group Executive Creative Director, Leo Burnett, Mumbai, added: “The right intimate wear can give women the confidence to take on any day. The campaign brings alive how each day brings the need for a different kind of confidence, and there is a Zivame for her every need.”

     

     

  • Zivame launches new brand campaign

    By Our Staff

     

    Zivame, the online lingerie and fashion store, announces the launch of its new brand campaign #DekhoMaineKyaKiya. The film celebrates the freedom and confidence of women and encourages women to embrace their true selves.

     

    Said Amisha Jain, CEO of Zivame: “Our campaign celebrates every Indian women as she goes about life, stealing simple moments to make them her own, fulfilling desires and at times pushing the boundaries. We want her to explore her dreams with confidence, that comes from the right intimate wear.”

     

    Added Puneet Kapoor, Regional Creative Officer, Lowe Lintas Bangalore: “The genesis of the idea ‘Dekho Maine Kya Kiya’ comes from the liberation and confidence that the right intimate-wear allows. Intimate-wear that is uniquely made for different body-types. It celebrates women who push the boundaries with their unique ways as they go about their everyday with aplomb and tenacity.”

     

  • Zivame launches new campaign

    By Our Staff

     

    Zivame has launched a new campaign ‘Kuch New Ho Jaye’ featuring Zivame consumers and its own employees. The campaign focuses on real women proudly showcasing products from Zivame making the brand more relatable to its core consumers.

     

    Said Khatija Lokhandwala, Head Marketing, Zivame: “We wanted to encourage consumers spending a large amount of time at home to explore and experiment with intimate wear and discover something that they love. The use of Zivame consumers in our imagery is aimed to have women look at our products and see them on bodies they can relate to”.

     

  • Zivame makes a powerful statement with #FitForAll

    By A Correspondent

     

    Zivame, India’s leading lingerie brand, announced the launch of its new campaign #FitForAll. The campaign portrays real, relatable Indian women feeling their confident best in lingerie. With an inclusive approach, this campaign aims to create a fresh perspective on women and lingerie in India.

     

    This campaign revolves around the thought that when Indian women come in all sizes, so should lingerie. It has been developed based on consumer insights* that most women find it challenging to get lingerie in sizes other than ‘so-called popular sizes’ in the market.

     

    Sirisha Tadepalli, Marketing Director, Zivame says, “At Zivame, we put consumers at the core of everything we do.Being in the e-commerce business has given access to rich data. This, when combined with our understanding of various body types, has led us to creating the widest range that Indian women truly deserve – from 28A to 46H. To bring this alive, we’ve chosen a cast that’s diverse, in terms of body type and life-stages. This film is our endeavour to ensure that every woman finds her perfect fit, and doesn’t have to ‘fit into’ anything, be it lingerie or life.”

     

    The ad film runs for a duration of 45 seconds and 30 seconds each and will be telecast for a period of 4 weeks on leading English and Hindi general entertainment, movies and lifestyle channels.

     

    Rajesh Ramaswamy, Executive Director, Lowe Lintas adds, “Most lingerie ads feature lingerie models, and as a result, we felt like the category itself lacked a certain authenticity. Because lingerie is such a personal thing, we wanted our communication to be an honest representation of women in India today. We used real women from various walks of life to illustrate just how diverse and awesome they really are. A simple proposition that captured this spirit of#FitForAll”

     

    With its mobile app and Fit Studios, Zivame aims to make its promise of #FitForAll accessible to more and more Indian women, thus redefining women’s relationship with lingerie.

     

  • Lodestar UM Bangalore wins media duties of Zivame

    By A Correspondent

     

    Lodestar UM Bangalore recently added to its vast portfolio of clients by bagging the media duties of Zivame. The media agency, in India has been on a winning spree and has emerged as the dominant players in Bangalore market.

     

    Zivame, a category innovator is probably India’s first and largest online lingerie store for women. Zivame takes on the age old tradition of women buying lingerie at a store and offers them a whole new experience in lingerie buying.

     

    Commenting on the win, Nandini Dias, CEO Lodestar UM said, “Zivame is a prestigious business to have on our roster and we were glad to win that business. I would like to thank the client for having expressed their confidence in Lodestar UM’s differentiated offering in terms of in-depth understanding of e-commerce and the technology sector, with incredible strategy and planning credentials.”

     

    The win adds significant weight to Lodestar UM’s client portfolio, which includes marquee clients such as J&J, Coca-Cola, Mahindra & Mahindra, Samsung, Amul, Tata, Wipro etc.

     

  • Bra ads out in the open

     

    By Mukta Lad

     

    R​emember Asha Parekh crooning ‘O mera sona re, sona re’ to a visibly upset Shammi Kapoor in Teesri Manzil? Or Rekha playing a courtesan in Umrao Jaan? In fact, think of any movie from the 60s to the 80s particularly, with a special glance at the female leads’ costumes.

     

    Ranging from the modest salwar kameez to a sari and the occasional dress, there are aspects of the actresses’ figures that would have lingerie brands in a tizzy, today. With unnaturally conical breasts and largerthan-life behinds, today’s actresses would be laughed right back into their vanity vans if they dared appear on camera like their counterparts of yesteryears.

     

    Although we are nowhere close to buying the $2 million bra that Victoria’s Secret’s Angels unveiled in their recently concluded fashion show, Indian women are now open to experimenting with their lingerie.

     

    The approximately Rs 10000-15000 crore lingerie category in India (about two-thirds of which is unorganised) has seen much upheaval over the last few years. But blame that on the urban Indian woman, who has rapidly evolved, forcing brands to keep pace. She earns more than she ever did, is independent, outgoing, loves to dress up, and most importantly, doesn’t treat lingerie as something to be spoken about in whispers.

     

    Of course she is going to spend Rs 2500 on that mauve lacy bra if she wants to, and we’d like to see you stop her. “A few years ago, the Indian woman wasn’t even comfortable wearing western wear. But she is now fashionable and confidently carries off all kinds of looks with panache. With such evolving fashion needs, she needs lingerie that can support her multi-facetedness,” says Smita Murarka, head – marketing and e-commerce, MAS Brands, the company retailing Amanté.

     

    Rama Bijapurkar, independent market strategy consultant adds, “Indian sexuality has come out of the home closet as various sexual behaviour surveys tell us. Media discussion, too, on this subject is far more open than ever before. Add to this, women are now coming into their own and breaking prescribed taboos on how they are supposed to behave and dress.”

     

    Even the humble saree blouse has transformed, with tailors and designers educating women about fashion and the latest trends forcing w o m e n t o upgrade their lingerie. Obviously, the advertising has evolved by miles, too.

     

    Run a YouTube search for older Indian lingerie brands and watch TVCs for the likes of Sona Lingerie, which tries capturing the important moments of a woman’s life (don’t miss how the model dons the North Indian married women’s chooda the minute the script moves to ‘Intimate Moments’).

     

    Or the VIP Feelings bra ad featuring a classy, saree-clad Kitu Gidwani, and a much younger lad who wants to ask her out to lunch. But while sensuality may have been an attribute staring at a woman from the sidelines of the commercial, lingerie was always portrayed to have a more functional role in a woman’s life. And guess what? Even with all the changes, Indian lingerie brands are still giving in-your-face sexuality a wide berth.

     

    Let’s just say you are unlikely to see campaigns like Calvin Klein’s ‘X Marks the Spot’, Penelope Cruz’s directorial debut for Agent Provocateur’s Autumn Winter campaign, Triumph’s ‘Zero to Sexy’ TV commercial or Marks & Spencers outdoor campaign for the ‘Autograph’ range that was banned in the UK. It is time to ask the difficult question. Does sex really sell?

     

    Enamor’s positioning ‘Fabulous As I Am’ is derived from how women look forward to everything that life has to offer — from jobs, occasions to family time. “We believe women find it demeaning to look at the typical lingerie ads one sees in magazines. We wanted to show them having a good time, being themselves and celebrating their fabulousness while staying in the fashion space,” says Sandra Daniels, VP – marketing, Enamor India.

     

    Amante’s latest campaign, positioning itself on ‘Dare To Be’, urges women to embrace different personalities whether a serious executive by day or an enchantress by night. Online player Zivame.com’s ‘Explore Yourself ‘ ad shows women from various walks of life expressing what they want from their lingerie, steadily breaking stereotypes while at it.

     

    And then there’s the fit: something that most western campaigns seem to take for granted. With women spending so much time on their toes at work, a great fitting, comfortable bra is a primary need. “80 per cent of women wear the wrong bra and do not get fitted by professionals,” Murarka says. Amanté even went as far as releasing a print campaign for fit awareness in 2012 – Break Up With The Wrong Bra.

     

    Kartik Iyer, CEO and co-founder, Happy, the agency behind the campaign, is completely against over-sexualising the category. He argues — why must it always be presented as a sensual, candy box packaging for sex with perfect bodies showing a titillating amount of cleavage?

     

    “We didn’t show any lingerie in the ads at all. The fact that most women wear ill-fitted bras jumped out at us, and we decided to address this important problem first,” he says. “Whether you’re at home or at work or at a party, women need to wear the lingerie and forget about it without being uncomfortable,” adds MC Cariappa, vice president, sales and marketing, Jockey India, ascertaining that comfort and fit are the priorities for all brands.

     

    But mainline advertising only goes so far in solving problems like fit and size education. Enter experiential marketing, an area brands are investing in heavily. Brands like Jockey have five exclusive outlets for the Jockey Women range, while Amanté, too, is all set to launch their own stores next year.

     

    For now, brands have trained staff to guide and fit women shoppers. It is evident that brands take the multi-pronged approach — with brand messaging and core propositions entrusted to mainline advertising and relying heavily on experiential marketing to educate customers. Even brands with no offline presence are working hard to crack this.

     

    Richa Kar, co-founder and CEO at Zivame says that the size and fit factor has never really been a problem. “We have a simple, effective calculator on our website, an all-woman call centre and a direct IVR facility, a fit specialist and a new physical fitting salon with specialists in our office,” she enumerates.

     

    Bijapurkar sums up the traditional advertising versus experiential marketing effectiveness argument best. “It’s never an ‘either or’ situation. One creates awareness of what is available or even the ‘why buy me’, the products walk that talk, while the trials and privacy close purchases and the sales expertise in the shop builds brand trust and cements its relationship with customers.

     

    Amanté and Enamor are bullish. They only see the dynamic market as an opportunity, not a challenge, what with the constantly changing wardrobe a woman has today, the rise of consumerism and the fact that the urban Indian woman is beginning to look forward to dressing better under her clothes.

     

    Maybe sooner, rather than later, owning Victoria’s Secret’s $2 million bra might become a bucket list item, rather than just be a shocking piece of news. Who’s to say, really?

     

    Source:The Economic Times

    Copyright © 2014, Bennett, Coleman & Co. Ltd. All Rights Reserved

    Licensed to republish

     

  • Zivame unveils series of infomercials to promote best practices in lingerie usage

    By A Correspondent

     

    In a bid to educate Indian women on some essential facts about lingerie usage, online lingerie store Zivame.com announced the launch of five new TV infomercials addressing some of the most common lingerie faux pas prevalent in India. The need for an educational approach arose because several of these less than desirable lingerie practices, have health and wellness implications for women. Each infomercial will be of 10 seconds in duration and will be telecasted for a month on leading Hindi and English general entertainment, movies, cookery and music channels.

     

    The insights for the infomercials have been drawn from a survey conducted by Zivame to study lingerie habits of its customers as well as from customer feedback and knowledge it has gathered over the years. The survey brought to fore some shocking facts about women’s understanding of lingerie. Key findings include that that 4 out of 5 Indian women do not know their right size and have been wearing wrong size bras all along. Women are also not aware that the life of a bra is a maximum of six months and often equate expensive lingerie with longevity. According to Zivame’s survey, 53 per cent were still using bras that were more than six months old. The infomercials aim to educate women about such lingerie basics that are important for their health and wellness.

     

    Richa Kar, Founder and CEO, Zivame said, “Our research showed us that a large number of women are shockingly unaware of good lingerie practices – whether it comes to selecting lingerie or using it. As leaders in the category, we believe it is our duty to sensitize all women – whether they buy online or not – about some of the basic do’s and don’ts of lingerie usage, particularly given the health and wellness implications. Television is the best medium for such large-scale reach out and we hope that our campaign will manage to bring about some much needed change in lingerie habits among Indian women. We plan to do more.”

     

  • Zivame.com to host its first Hackathon

    By A Correspondent

     

    In a bid to attract the attention of top notch engineering talent in the country, Zivame.com is conducting its first ever Hackathon on November 14th at its office premises in Bangalore. The all night Hackathon will start at 10am on November 14 and will go on till noon on November 15, when the results will be declared. The applicants can click here to register online for participation. Candidates can either participate individually or as a two-member team.

     

    Shyam Krishnamurthy, CTO, Zivame said, “While Zivame is a lingerie company, what sets us apart is our tech expertise. The entire consumer experience is driven by tech – from the website to the delivery to feedback.  Our technology makes the organization future ready, data driven & poised for scale. Therefore, we are always looking for exceptional engineering talent to be a part of our team. A hackathon helps replicate real life coding problems that we want to test our applicants on, in a fun and engaging, yet professional atmosphere.”

     

    Zivame is looking for both front end and back end developers to be a part of the hackathon. For front end, a team should have PHP, JavaScript, CSS3, HTML5, MySQL, Postgres, Mongo DB, HBase, Cassandra, Linux Operating System, Git, SVN and Magento as part of their stack. For back end, a team should have Python/Java, Scala, API Integration, MySQL/Postgres, MongoDB, Redis, Linux Operating System, Git, and SVNas part of their stack.

     

    The challenge for the hackathon will be announced on the spot. Emphasis of the hackathon will be on a candidate’s coding practices – reusable and maintainable code. Once a candidate applies, the Zivame team will send them relevant material to help them to start preparing for the event. The participants will be Zivame’s guests and will be offered lunch and dinner on November 14. Since the event will require candidates to work the entire night, they are requested to bring their own linen while basic sleeping facilities will be provided by the company.

     

  • Zivame unveils first television campaign

    By A Correspondent

     

    Leading online lingerie store Zivame has launched its first television campaign bringing to light how Indian women from all walks of life are now exploring themselves through lingerie. In a first for a lingerie player, the campaign does not show any lingerie while communicating the message that Zivame has a huge collection available for women to explore. The month-long TV campaign will appear on leading Hindi and English general entertainment, movies and music channels. The company will also be targeting HD channels for the campaign.

     

    Conceptualized by Fisheye Creative Solutions, the ad campaign features Indian women from different age groups, professions and walks of life sharing what they have found at Zivame. From a middle-aged lady policeman who found a ‘Pink Thong’, to a pregnant bride who found a ‘nursing bra’, to a grandmother who found a ‘Tummy Tucker’, the bold ad campaign aims to break many taboos prevalent in the Indian society, while communicating how Zivame has a huge variety of products available to suit each person’s individual needs.

     

    Richa Kar, Founder and CEO, Zivame said, “We are very excited to launch our first television campaign. Lingerie as a category is underserved through offline retail with limited availability of sizes, types and designs. With our campaign we want to highlight how women from across the country are increasingly coming to Zivame and exploring the huge collection that we have on offer, including products they may have never heard of before!”

     

    Dave Banerjee, CEO & Strategy Head, Fisheye Creative Solutions added, “Lingerie as a category has always been showcased either in a utilitarian setting or in an obviously sensuous manner. This campaign negates that aging stereotype by showing women comfortably and confidently exploring various lingerie. Something they’ve never been able to do before!”

     

  • The Anchor: 5 ways e-shopping portals can differentiate from hordes of others

    By Richa Kar

     

    #1 Marketing

    How does a portal market itself and build the brand over a longer period of time? Why should a customer keep coming back and shop with you instead of going to a competitor website? Marketing will drive the association of brand with consumers.

     

    #2 Technology

    This plays a big role in enhancing user experience on site. As a portal increases the categories that it retails, it becomes that much more difficult and time-consuming for a customer to find what they need. An e-tailer needs to leverage technology to make product discovery much easier and faster by way of tagging, search, filter etc.

     

    #3 Re-looking at content strategy

    In an industry where you have multiple players selling the same categories, brands, styles etc., the only way an e-tailer can differentiate themselves is content. Content can be on site, product lead, off site, social media. This also involves looking at merchandising very differently.

     

    #4 Execution

    Execution plays a very important role. Customers buy from online portals without having a real-time experience of the products and repost faith in the portal to deliver high-quality products, on time and in great condition. We at zivame ensure that we execute the order well and live up to the customers’ expectations.

     

    #5 Value Proposition

    Our value proposition is making the customer feel comfortable buying lingerie. Buying lingerie offline can sometimes be awkward. We also ensure that our packaging is done in really neat-looking boxes with no provocative pictures on them. Sticking to the core value proposition is of utmost importance.

     

    Richa Kar is CEO of Zivame.com