Category: Media and Advertising

  • dentsu promotes Japan CEO Takeshi Sano to deputy global COO

    dentsu promotes Japan CEO Takeshi Sano to deputy global COO

    MUMBAI: For Takeshi Sano, 3 January was not just another day at dentsu, Japan. When he re-joined office, he had another title – apart from the CEO denstu, Japan one –  added to his name: that of deputy global chief operating officer (COO).  

    It has been a fabulous career graph for Sano-san or Takeshi-san, as he is called.

    Sano-san joined Dentsu Inc., in 1992, building his career within the business produce divisions in which he became managing director in 2017.

    In 2021, Sano-san was appointed executive officer of Dentsu Inc.

    In 2022, he was appointed executive officer in charge of business transformation (BX) services and digital transformation (DX) consulting services and growth officer at Dentsu Japan network, and senior executive officer in charge of business produce divisions at Dentsu Inc.

    And in 2024,  Sano-san was appointed as CEO, dentsu Japan.

    All we at Indiantelevision.com can say to him is Omedeto!

  • Maitri breaks new ground with BGMI ad for World Introvert Day

    Maitri breaks new ground with BGMI ad for World Introvert Day

    MUMBAI: In a world where extroverts dominate the narrative, a whisper of recognition often speaks louder than a shout.

    Maitri, in collaboration with Battlegrounds Mobile India (BGMI), has flipped the script on the traditional ad blitz with a campaign that’s as understated and impactful as its audience: introverts.

    While brands chase the loud fanfare of Valentine’s or Mother’s Day, Maitri chose World Introvert Day to quietly celebrate the unsung heroes who find joy in solitude, thrive in the shadows, and accomplish great things without fanfare. It’s a rare moment of applause for those who prefer none—a subtle yet powerful nod to the ones who rarely seek the spotlight but deserve it anyway.

    The ad, set to launch on World Introvert Day, 2 January 2025, focuses on providing a relatable story for introverts, capturing their quiet essence during the typically overwhelming holiday season. Directed by award-winning feature film director Manu Asokan, the ad stars actor and editor Sangeeth Pratap, whose portrayal resonates with the audience.

    “Games like BGMI provide the perfect balance of social interaction and community for introverts,” explained Maitri head of digital & overseas business, Sumit Raj. “By addressing them directly, we’ve crafted a campaign that engages BGMI’s audience in a light-hearted yet deeply meaningful way.”

    The ad leverages the timing of World Introvert Day, which follows the festive period—an especially challenging time for introverts. By weaving in relatable moments, the campaign positions BGMI as a platform where introverts can connect on their own terms.

    “The collaboration with Manu Asokan and Sangeeth Pratap gave the film a universal appeal,” said Maitri group creative director Francis Thomas. “Fans shared the ad widely, pushing it beyond the gaming community and into broader conversations about introversion and connection.”

    Maitri’s previous campaigns for BGMI in Tamil, Malayalam, and Kannada, such as the viral Malayalam ad with Dhyan Sreenivasan, set the stage for this ambitious project. However, this marks the agency’s first foray into creating a national Hindi-language ad for BGMI, typically handled out of Mumbai.

    “This national ad demonstrates the trust clients have in Maitri’s ability to consistently deliver impactful work,” said Maitri MD, Raju Menon. “As South India’s largest independent agency, we are proud to break new ground with campaigns that celebrate diversity, culture, and human stories.”

    With a 28-year history of award-winning campaigns for major national and international brands, Maitri continues to set benchmarks. The agency recently became the first independent firm to win a Grand Prix at Goafest 2024 and is a three-time winner of the IMA South Indian Agency of the Year award.

  • Rahul Thappa takes over as dentsu Media managing director Singapore

    Rahul Thappa takes over as dentsu Media managing director Singapore

    MUMBAI: He’s shuffled between jobs in the south east Asian region and in India. Between being on the media side and on the broadcast side. 

    Rahul Thappa, however,  is now on the media side as he has taken over as managing director of dentsu Media based in Singapore from 1 January 2025.

    His remit: looking after investment and management for dentsu’s  regional and global accounts out of Singapore and growing the agency’s customer experience capabilities  (CX) with Merkle.”

    Merkle is dentsu’s technology-enabled, data-driven CX  management company.

    Thapa was last the managing director of Vista Equity Partners-backed global centre of excellence Naviga for the past three and a half years based in Gurugram. He took a shot at self-employment by setting up a consulting firm VDO Focus Consulting for a year and half advising start ups to manage their digital campaigns and strategy between January 2020 and July 2021.

    Between July 2013 and September 2019, he made south east Asia his home base – first in Astro in Malaysia as VP data analytics, trading & sales enablement and then at Fox network group in Singapore as SVP ad sale strategy, sales operations.

    A short stab at entrepreneurship preceded that which ended in in six months. As did his assignment with Mindshare in Gurgaon in the leadership team where he stayed for around a year. He hopped on to Mail Today as COO, but could continue there for only nine months between April 2011 and December 2011.

    A mathematics graduate and post graduate diploma holder in marketing communication from Mica and PGPX in general management from IIM-A., Rahul sent six years and six months at Mindshare Malaysia rising to become managing partner.
     

  • Bharat Media recruits Sumaiya Shaikh Vaidya in biz development role

    Bharat Media recruits Sumaiya Shaikh Vaidya in biz development role

    MUMBAI: From being an executive assistant or administrator for almost 10 years in various companies in the beginning of her career, to associate director business development at the Bharat Media & Entertainment group (BMEG), Sumaiya Shaikh Vaidya has progressed extremely well.

    Her first big break outside the EA or admin role came when she was appointed as a deputy manager at India News in charge of revenue generation from the western Indian region – a position she enjoyed for two years. Following this,  she moved to Star TV as a senior sales executive , hopping on to dailyhunt for five months as regional manager, and then back to Disney Star for more than five years, leaving it in December 2024 as assistant manager looking after revenues for Star Suvarna SD, HD & Plus. In between she dabbled in short assignments for companies such as Red Digital Cinema, Aidem Ventures and dailyhunt.

    Her motto all along has been “to seek a higher level of work to expand my experience.”

    BMEG is headed by Andy Charles and is a marketing service company  with expertise in media planning and buying skills, strategic brand building, OOH + experiential,  and creative design solutions. It has offices in Bengaluru, Mumbai, Delhi , Chennai, Kochi, Hyderabad and Kolkata with  new age clients such as Dangal, Linc, KochiKodens, Rapido, Bombay Shaving Co, IDBI Bank, among a long list of others.

     

  • Dr Mukul Jain joins LG-affiliated agency HS AD as digital head

    Dr Mukul Jain joins LG-affiliated agency HS AD as digital head

    MUMBAI: The Dr in Dr Mukul Jain’s name is because he has completed his Ph.D in information technology working for his thesis between 2011-2018, showing his degree of patience in getting it. The degree is in the past now for Dr Mukul has  joined Seoul-headquartered HS AD, an LG Electronics affiliated global ad agency as its digital head of strategy & operations. He will be based in Noida.

    Dr Mukul’s last posting was in AGL Hakuhodo where he rose from group head in March 2021 to account director in April 2022 and to director – account management & marketing strategy in April 2024. Whilst at AGL Hakuhodo he managed accounts like Startup India, Indian Airforce, Alliance Air, and others.

    Prior to that he spent a year as a client servicing director at Crayons Advertising (Jan -Dec 2020), almost five years at Internet Moguls as head of digital marketing and a good seven years and some months as a research associate at the Jaypee Institute of Information Technology from where he also completed his Phd.

    He has had brief stints with the Asian Business School as an assistant professor (Apr 2013-Jun 2014); GL Bajaj Institute of Management & Research as an assistant professor (Jun 2012-March 2013); as a business analyst at Google (Jan 2011-Jun 2011).

    Dr Mukul has other educational credits to his name: an MBA in business management, marketing  and related support services and a B. Tech in electrical, electronics and communications engineering.

    He considers himself a dynamic marketing strategist, a digital transformation leader and a growth architect.  He also is a start up investor.

    “With over 14 years of experience, I’ve partnered with leading global brands, driving growth and enhancing visibility through strategic marketing initiatives, says Dr Mukul. “ My expertise spans digital marketing, brand strategy, public procurement, and project management, with a proven track record of delivering measurable results for clients like the Indian Air Force, Thai Airways, Startup India, Bira, Alliance Air, ITDC, Ministry of Shipping, MP Tourism, Leela Hotels.”

     

  • Deepa Jatkar to head WPP’s OpenDoor – the special  servicing unit for Amazon

    Deepa Jatkar to head WPP’s OpenDoor – the special servicing unit for Amazon

    MUMBAI: When you win a premium  media planning and buying account such as Amazon, you put  your best foot behind it don’t you? 

    That’s what ad agency WPP’s has done by setting up OpenDoor,  WPP’s dedicated global client practice for Amazon, providing custom-built teams around a client’s specific needs and challenges and easy access to the right capabilities. 

    WPP has chosen WaveMaker’s chief growth officer Deepa Jatkar to head OpenDoor in India. 

    A hardcore media and tech person, Deepa has had well-rounded 20 years of agency experience. She began her career working at McCann (May 2000-May 2002, media planner); Mindshare (June 2002 to Sep 20024, media planning manager); Omnicom group (Dec 2004 to Nov 2006, media planning manager -Associate director); MediaCom (Apr 2008 -June 2016 -Biz grp head, biz dir, sr biz dir, gen manager); Meta (Jul2016-Aug 2022, manager global biz group -agency vertical) and Wavemaker (Apr 2023-Jan 2025, chief growth officer. She’s got great academic credentials as well – a BA in psychology, a PGDM, and a masters in communication studies.

    Deepa will be putting a crack team in place to service Amazon. No surprises there, Amazon’s guesstimated to bill  around $20 billion globally; WPP is  handling  APAC and EMEA; Omnicom,  the Americas.

    “Here’s to building winning teams and driving meaningful impact.,” said Deepa on linkedin. “With over 20 years of experience leading business strategy, my career has been driven by a focus on delivering meaningful, scalable, and sustainable impact through winning media strategies. Looking forward to continue the streak at OpenDoor.”

  • Srinivasan Swamy  & family increase promoters stake in RK Swamy

    Srinivasan Swamy & family increase promoters stake in RK Swamy

    MUMBAI: Things should be cooling off as the New Year approaches with folks winding down their assignments, getting ready to take some time off, right?

    But that was not the case with the promoters of  India’s only BSE and NSE-listed marketing services provider  R K Swamy.

    The promoters were busy consolidating their holding in the agency.  Through an off market transaction, they bought 3.56 per cent holding that US investment fund  Evanston Pioneer Fund LP   had invested in the group in 2018-19.  

    Srinivasan K Swamy and Narasimhan K Swamy concluded the transaction on 27 December 2024 at the market price of Rs 249.64 per share.  

    With this buy out, the promoter and promoter group hold 69.6 per cet of the equity paid up capital of the company. Following this, Evanston Pioneer Fund withdrew the nomination of  Pattabhi Kothandapani Raman  from the company’’s board in accordance with the shareholders agreement.

    The company informed the stock exchange about the buyout on 30 December 2024 and about the change in the board on 31 December. 

  • Private equity firm Kedaara Capital announces two elevations

    Private equity firm Kedaara Capital announces two elevations

    MUMBAI: 14 year old private equity firm founded by  Manish Kejriwal, Sunish Sharma and Nishant Sharma, Kedaara Capital, announced two promotions just as 2024 was ending.

    First, Anant Gupta.  A  managing director at the firm, he has been elevated to the position of partner. Anant has been with Kedaara Capital for the past 12 years and was a board member or observer of many of the companies it had invested in.

    Among them: LensKart.com, Dairy Day, Vishal Megamart, Purplle.com, Vedant Fashions, Manjushree Technopack, Owndays Co.

    The firm said that he has been instrumental in driving investments, value creation and fostering long-term growth and successful exits.

    Next the PE firm announced the advancement of managing director Rishiraj Khajanchi  as partner &  chief operating officer.  Rishiraj has been with Kedaara for a decade plus and the firm said that “he has been a cornerstone of Kedaara’s fund operations, investor relations and has actively supported the investment team in complex situations.”

  • In memoriam: the passing of a lesser-known advertising legend, Walter Saldanha

    In memoriam: the passing of a lesser-known advertising legend, Walter Saldanha

    MUMBAI: Walter Saldanha passed away silently almost unknown to many in the advertising and marketing world over the weekend. For those who don’t know of him, he is the reason the creative shop Leo Burnett – which is part of the Publicis group today – is around in India.

    Actually, Leo Burnett was called Chaitra Leo Burnett for a long time and Chaitra Advertising for even longer even before that.

    Walter Saldanha and Brendan Pereira co-founded Chaitra Advertising in 1972, in the midst of “one of the worst recessions in advertising history.” Walter was this mild mannered, extremely slender, bespectacled man who looked more like a suited accountant than an advertising professional. He actually began his career as a typist in 1947 a little shy of 16. 

    Four years later somehow or the other he landed up at advertising agency J Walter Thompson and worked there in various roles before joining Aiyars  – an advertising agency –  where he and creative wizard Brendan formed a bond.  They worked together on many accounts, Brendan the creative type and Walter the client management guy who had to clean up after his colleague had an argument which turned wild with the client losing his top. 

    Walter rose to become MD of the agency which was owned by Aiyar and had some of the more prestigious accounts at that time. The owner had promised to give them equity but when it came to delivering on the promise he procrastinated every time, despite all the good work they put in. This was getting too much for both Walter and Brendan.  And they showed it. One day, Walter returned from one of his domestic client meetings only to find his office taken over by Aiyar and he was informed the board had decided to eject him as managing director. 

    This broke the soft spoken but tough-as-nails Walter who burst into tears in front of Brendan (he was offered the role to run the agency replacing Walter, which Brendan of course refused. In fact, it made him furious.)

    A lot of drama happened after that, but, to cut a long story short, the duo took along some of the gee-whiz advertising professionals of that time working at Aiyars who were livid at the treatment meted out to Walter. 
    Sheila Sista, Jean Durante, Prakash Deshpande, Shantaran, Julien Almeida, Eddie Myers, Arvind Gosavi, among others were taken on as shareholders of Chaitra. The agency was born out of this bond the two shared between themselves and 12 other team members, with no clients and out of Brendan’s flat in Colaba. 

    Amongst Chaitra’s first clients was this pan chewing businessman in white kurta pyjamas who wanted to promote his brand of polyester fabric. When both Walter  and Brendan met him at his office in Dhobi Talao (Mumbai) he kept on wiping his mouth with the towel as he chewed his pan. His brand was Vimal and he was going to launch his first retail showroom at Roxy cinema in Mumbai. Amongst the first questions Dhirubhai Amabni asked the two was  “So, what business do you have, who are your clients,?” Both Brendan and Walter told him they  had no clients. “Ha, so I’m going to be your first client. Very good. You take my business.” 
    He wanted invitation cards, bags, name boards, leaflets to be designed and a press  announcement to be made. He also gave Walter and Brendan a free hand to come up with something unusual. 

    Billings in year one for Chaitra were in double digit lakh. But the agency was unstoppable and it grew fast with many clients coming on board because of its outstanding creative. Brendan and he parted ways from Chaitra in 1983 when he returned after three months of  being away from the agency. Walter and the management informed him that they wanted to manage creative with Brendan offering creative guidance. The reason: clients were pretty miffed with Brendan refusal to cooperate with them on creative changes and adjustments, and the list was long. This was something that was unacceptable to Brendan.  For him that was it, and he left.
     

     

    Chaitra’s reputation had spread far and wide and it attracted Leo Burnett to become its affiliate in 1987 as most foreign agencies were beginning to expand internationally in order to be able to offer their international clients services in India. Leo Burnett entered India in 1992, when it invested in Chaitra which became Chaitra Leo Burnett. After around eight years, the Chaitra name was dropped and Leo Burnett India was born when Walter, as he liked to be called, gave majority to it. He retired but continued as chairman emeritus. Under his watch Chaitra had grown to be one of the top agencies of the country. 

    Walter went beyond advertising. After his retirement, he started the  Asian Institute of Communication and Research, a small business school he built in the hills of Matheran, in 2001 after retiring from Chaitra. The school has given birth to many advertising and marketing professionals who are in leading positions in leading companies today. 

    Walter was honorary treasurer of the Society for Eradication of Leprosy – something he was very passionate about – the care of those infected and eradicating it totally. He was also a trustee of the Sangeet Abhinay Academy, an organisation devoted to the development of musical talent and the Shanti Avedna Sadan (a home for terminally ill cancer patients). And yes, he  fought for the rights of  slum dwellers and he was the former Chairman of Slum Rehabilitation Society. 

    He remained extremely low key throughout his career seeking very little attention, instead focusing on bringing out great advertising for his clients and serving society in whatever manner he could. Brendan was the better known of the two, as he ran creative and was in the limelight, while at Chaitra and after that.

    I remember spending some time in Chaitra’s Kemps Corner office with Walter in the early nineties. He preferred to let Arvind Sharma – who later led the agency phenomenally well – to do most of the talking. He preferred to exchange stories about his social work, even when I spoke to him in later years – about his institute, his leprosy work and the problems slum dwellers face. Students of the institute he set up remembered him fondly when they learned of his passing  on Linkedin on how he helped shape their careers with his encouraging words and guidance. 

    11 years or so after setting up Chaitra, Walter and Brendan took their own paths. 

    Death, however, did not set them too apart. 

    Brendan passed on in July 2024, Walter on 28 December 2024., if I have got the date right. 

    May they both rest in peace! 

    (Some of the information in this piece was gleaned from Brendan’s book Changing  Faces. Any errors of information omission or inference are unintended. Picture of Walter lighting the lamp, courtesy  Vaishali  Nikalje on linkedin)