Category: Media and Advertising

  • Neo@Ogilvy Appoints Deepankar Kapoor head of strategy for India

    Neo@Ogilvy Appoints Deepankar Kapoor head of strategy for India

    MUMBAI: Neo@Ogilvy announced Deepankar Kapoor as Vice President and Head of Strategy – India, Neo@Ogilvy. He will be based in Gurgaon.

    Kapoor comes to Neo@Ogilvy with work experience that is richly diverse and spans eight years in digital strategy and planning. Kapoor has worked on multiple aspects of this business – creative, content, media, technology and CRM providing solutions for a roster of blue chip brands. He joins Neo@Ogilvy from Havas Media where he was leading the digital strategy function while working with brands such as Star TV, Sun Pharmaceuticals, LG, Amway, Xolo, Clovia among others.

    Neo@Ogilvy India president & country head Rajesh Bhatia said, “I have always emphasised the need and importance of sophisticated strategy and planning talent – this skill is often compromised by digital agencies. I am fortunate to have worked with some of the best talent in the industry who have reinforced that belief. I am delighted to have Deepankar join us in our journey to help establish our thought leadership and provide digital strategic direction to the brands we partner.”

    Before Havas Media Group, Kapoor has led digital strategy at the Grey Group and DigitasLbi where he drove digital transformation journeys for brands such as Tata Motors, Volkswagen, Quikr, Cadburys, Vespa, ITC, Dell, Johnson & Johnsons portfolio, Indian Army, Network18, Wipro Corporate, etc. A few prominent digital exercises under his belt are the digital brand launches of Tata Bolt & Zest, Tata Safari’s CRM initiative famously known as SOUL and the very recent buzziest campaigns of 2015 called Tardis Day (for Doctor Who fans) for Star FX.

    Academically, he holds an MBA from the University of Calcutta, a degree in Communications Management from Symbiosis International University and a Diploma in Cyber Laws from Government Law College Mumbai.

  • Event Capital repositions as Creator, Curator and Aggregator

    Event Capital repositions as Creator, Curator and Aggregator

    MUMBAI: Event Capital, an event intellectual property specialist company and a Laqshya Media Groupholding, today unveils its new logo which signifies the company’s transformation from an event IP aggregator tofocussed creators and curators of IP events in the live space. The modern typeface is new age and concept driven which reinforces Event Capital’s capability of creating powerful content driven stories. With the completion of 3 years this July, Event Capital has been a pioneer in curating event IPs such as Bike Festival of India, The Edutainment Show, etc.

    This announcement by Event Capital is just one of the first in the series that the company has made after appointing a new CEO, Swaroop Banerjee, only a month ago. A festivals & branded entertainment specialist, Banerjee will be actively involved in expanding the current bouquet of live intellectual properties owned by Event Capital. He will also focus on introducing live and digital content creations and will oversee development of new verticals in lifestyle, music and sports.

    Explaining the change, Swaroop Banerjee commented, “The new logo of Event Capital has a bold outlook in the font with a colour that has a digital millennial filter woven into it. This depicts our ability to curate for youth genres as ably as for other genres. This is our 3rd year in existence and there has been a phenomenal track record so far; we needed a fresh outlook to chart our trajectory higher and therefore the most important thing was to ensure that we come across as a youth consumer focussed organization. Additionally the introduction of a music vertical will change the dynamics for EC and the initiatives under this vertical will form core headline products under the EC hood. Ultimately the bulls-eye for us this year is to become content creators in the live space.”

    Adding to this, Deepak Choudhary, Co-founder & Director, Event Capitalsaid, “It’s has been three exciting business and brand years for Event Capital. Market orientations have changed and the IP industry is now extremely matured. We had started with acquisitions and collaborations with existing IP owners and now we have moved to creating our own IPs. It was only natural that we go through an image makeover as we have gone through a concept makeover.”

  • Event Capital repositions as Creator, Curator and Aggregator

    Event Capital repositions as Creator, Curator and Aggregator

    MUMBAI: Event Capital, an event intellectual property specialist company and a Laqshya Media Groupholding, today unveils its new logo which signifies the company’s transformation from an event IP aggregator tofocussed creators and curators of IP events in the live space. The modern typeface is new age and concept driven which reinforces Event Capital’s capability of creating powerful content driven stories. With the completion of 3 years this July, Event Capital has been a pioneer in curating event IPs such as Bike Festival of India, The Edutainment Show, etc.

    This announcement by Event Capital is just one of the first in the series that the company has made after appointing a new CEO, Swaroop Banerjee, only a month ago. A festivals & branded entertainment specialist, Banerjee will be actively involved in expanding the current bouquet of live intellectual properties owned by Event Capital. He will also focus on introducing live and digital content creations and will oversee development of new verticals in lifestyle, music and sports.

    Explaining the change, Swaroop Banerjee commented, “The new logo of Event Capital has a bold outlook in the font with a colour that has a digital millennial filter woven into it. This depicts our ability to curate for youth genres as ably as for other genres. This is our 3rd year in existence and there has been a phenomenal track record so far; we needed a fresh outlook to chart our trajectory higher and therefore the most important thing was to ensure that we come across as a youth consumer focussed organization. Additionally the introduction of a music vertical will change the dynamics for EC and the initiatives under this vertical will form core headline products under the EC hood. Ultimately the bulls-eye for us this year is to become content creators in the live space.”

    Adding to this, Deepak Choudhary, Co-founder & Director, Event Capitalsaid, “It’s has been three exciting business and brand years for Event Capital. Market orientations have changed and the IP industry is now extremely matured. We had started with acquisitions and collaborations with existing IP owners and now we have moved to creating our own IPs. It was only natural that we go through an image makeover as we have gone through a concept makeover.”

  • ET Now strengthens brand presence through B2B campaign ‘Dealing Room Heroes’

    ET Now strengthens brand presence through B2B campaign ‘Dealing Room Heroes’

    MUMBAI: After securing a solid positioning as a popular news destination, Times Network, heralded by its flagship channels Times Now and ET Now, is set to strengthen its brand presence amongst clients, advertisers and other businesses through a business-to-business (B2B) approach.

    We saw a fine example of its B2B marketing at Goafest 2016, where, through a quirky campaign targeted at the advertising industry, Times Network emphasised the growth of consumers of English content in India.

    A similar targeted messaging is brought forth in a latest campaign titled ‘Dealing Room Heroes’ that ET Now has initiated.  Starting June 9, ET Now has started visiting the participating well known stock brokerage houses and interacting with their leadership teams to explore what they consider the biggest achievements of the organization in the FY 2015-16, and felicitate key performers from the Dealing Room of each organisation.

    “Now that we have established our leadership position in various markets, we needed to go beyond being leaders in numbers and on air, and focus on making our brand more accessible and relevant to our consumers. As a business news channel we have three forms of consumers — the viewers, the advertisers and media agencies and the stock traders. To reach out to the stock brokers and traders who form an integral part of our consumer base, we have launched this new campaign. It allows us to partner with individual broking firms and celebrate the number crunching and data analysis that goes down in the Dealing Room of a brokerage firm,” revealed Times Network Head of Marketing – Times Now, ET Now, Magicbricks Now & Zoom Shantanu Gangane.

    So far ET Now has partnered with nine brokerage houses including IIFL, Kotak Securities, Motilal Oswal, MK Global, etc., with its first destination for the campaign being Mumbai. Those honoured through this campaign will also find a place on air on ET Now in the form of a two to three minute vignette that will showcase how the person went about dealing. This will run in the channel in high frequency across day parts with special focus on prime time and market hour.  Running for three weeks in each market the campaign may prolong depending on the feedback from each region. When asked, Gangane clarified that the partnerships with the brokerage firms on this campaign weren’t on a commercial level. As per the network, this is a first of a kind initiative by a business channel globally.

    When it came to addressing the viewers through a B2C messaging, in February, ET Now did an engaging activation with its viewers titled ‘Kem Chho Gujarat’ an investor welfare initiative by ET Now.  With this initiative the channel took experts from the financial fraternity and its anchors on ground to address some of the queries in the state in the sector. “It was a complete on ground, on air and online initiative, where consumers got to meet the experts and the anchors face to face,” Gangane shared. 

    In a similar fashion Magicbricks Now had also initiated the ‘Urban Debate’ where real estate issues of a given area were taken up and addressed through an on ground event that was telecast. 

    Since both Urban Debate and Kem Chho Gujrat were consumer initiatives, the channel used a lot of tools to promote audience participation and registration for event, be it in the form of digital promotions, print ads or promos that run within the network where it can target the relevant audience. The strategy differs a bit when it comes to Dealing Room Heroes, for which the channel focusses on print ads, magazines that are popular within the brokerage industry, for example Dalal Street Journal, and optimise the marketing on the channel itself.

    Gangane acknowledged the need to think differently when conceptualizing a campaign targeted towards masses and specifically towards businesses or brands. The medium of communication is very important when planning campaign in B2B versus B2C, Gangane said, “When going B2B you cannot carpet bomb, like you intend a marketing blitzkrieg. B2B relies a lot on you optimizing reach and frequency. In B2B communication one needs to be direct, contextual to the target brand or business. That’s where the media mix becomes important. As far as the communication is concerned, it needs to be more relatable rather than eye catching and attention seeking.”

    Given the different planning of media mixes for each approach, the budgeting changes as well. One might think that a high decibel mass campaign was more expensive, but Gangage revealed that getting the right audience could be an expensive affair as well. “If you are going for quality and sharp focus, you may sometimes end up paying more.”

    While Gangage did not divulge the network’s split of marketing budgets in B2B and B2C campaigns, he explained the mindset behind the allotments. “It is very specific to the objective, honestly. For example for a brand building campaign for the entire Times Network, the budget allotted for B2B would be 80 per cent approximately. But if we are launching a show on a particular channel, spend will be more on the B2C side.”

    Speaking from a network standpoint, Gangane highlighted that none of the brands were dormant when it came to visibility amongst consumers, be it Times Now, Zoom or Movies Now and Romedy Now. “Each of the brands are buzzing in their own way. Having said that, Times Network as a whole did initiate a larger brand communication earlier this year, which will see some more work on audience metrics in the upcoming months,” Gangane added in parting.
     

  • ET Now strengthens brand presence through B2B campaign ‘Dealing Room Heroes’

    ET Now strengthens brand presence through B2B campaign ‘Dealing Room Heroes’

    MUMBAI: After securing a solid positioning as a popular news destination, Times Network, heralded by its flagship channels Times Now and ET Now, is set to strengthen its brand presence amongst clients, advertisers and other businesses through a business-to-business (B2B) approach.

    We saw a fine example of its B2B marketing at Goafest 2016, where, through a quirky campaign targeted at the advertising industry, Times Network emphasised the growth of consumers of English content in India.

    A similar targeted messaging is brought forth in a latest campaign titled ‘Dealing Room Heroes’ that ET Now has initiated.  Starting June 9, ET Now has started visiting the participating well known stock brokerage houses and interacting with their leadership teams to explore what they consider the biggest achievements of the organization in the FY 2015-16, and felicitate key performers from the Dealing Room of each organisation.

    “Now that we have established our leadership position in various markets, we needed to go beyond being leaders in numbers and on air, and focus on making our brand more accessible and relevant to our consumers. As a business news channel we have three forms of consumers — the viewers, the advertisers and media agencies and the stock traders. To reach out to the stock brokers and traders who form an integral part of our consumer base, we have launched this new campaign. It allows us to partner with individual broking firms and celebrate the number crunching and data analysis that goes down in the Dealing Room of a brokerage firm,” revealed Times Network Head of Marketing – Times Now, ET Now, Magicbricks Now & Zoom Shantanu Gangane.

    So far ET Now has partnered with nine brokerage houses including IIFL, Kotak Securities, Motilal Oswal, MK Global, etc., with its first destination for the campaign being Mumbai. Those honoured through this campaign will also find a place on air on ET Now in the form of a two to three minute vignette that will showcase how the person went about dealing. This will run in the channel in high frequency across day parts with special focus on prime time and market hour.  Running for three weeks in each market the campaign may prolong depending on the feedback from each region. When asked, Gangane clarified that the partnerships with the brokerage firms on this campaign weren’t on a commercial level. As per the network, this is a first of a kind initiative by a business channel globally.

    When it came to addressing the viewers through a B2C messaging, in February, ET Now did an engaging activation with its viewers titled ‘Kem Chho Gujarat’ an investor welfare initiative by ET Now.  With this initiative the channel took experts from the financial fraternity and its anchors on ground to address some of the queries in the state in the sector. “It was a complete on ground, on air and online initiative, where consumers got to meet the experts and the anchors face to face,” Gangane shared. 

    In a similar fashion Magicbricks Now had also initiated the ‘Urban Debate’ where real estate issues of a given area were taken up and addressed through an on ground event that was telecast. 

    Since both Urban Debate and Kem Chho Gujrat were consumer initiatives, the channel used a lot of tools to promote audience participation and registration for event, be it in the form of digital promotions, print ads or promos that run within the network where it can target the relevant audience. The strategy differs a bit when it comes to Dealing Room Heroes, for which the channel focusses on print ads, magazines that are popular within the brokerage industry, for example Dalal Street Journal, and optimise the marketing on the channel itself.

    Gangane acknowledged the need to think differently when conceptualizing a campaign targeted towards masses and specifically towards businesses or brands. The medium of communication is very important when planning campaign in B2B versus B2C, Gangane said, “When going B2B you cannot carpet bomb, like you intend a marketing blitzkrieg. B2B relies a lot on you optimizing reach and frequency. In B2B communication one needs to be direct, contextual to the target brand or business. That’s where the media mix becomes important. As far as the communication is concerned, it needs to be more relatable rather than eye catching and attention seeking.”

    Given the different planning of media mixes for each approach, the budgeting changes as well. One might think that a high decibel mass campaign was more expensive, but Gangage revealed that getting the right audience could be an expensive affair as well. “If you are going for quality and sharp focus, you may sometimes end up paying more.”

    While Gangage did not divulge the network’s split of marketing budgets in B2B and B2C campaigns, he explained the mindset behind the allotments. “It is very specific to the objective, honestly. For example for a brand building campaign for the entire Times Network, the budget allotted for B2B would be 80 per cent approximately. But if we are launching a show on a particular channel, spend will be more on the B2C side.”

    Speaking from a network standpoint, Gangane highlighted that none of the brands were dormant when it came to visibility amongst consumers, be it Times Now, Zoom or Movies Now and Romedy Now. “Each of the brands are buzzing in their own way. Having said that, Times Network as a whole did initiate a larger brand communication earlier this year, which will see some more work on audience metrics in the upcoming months,” Gangane added in parting.
     

  • 3M India appoints Debarati Sen as MD; Amit Laroya elevated to 3M Korea MD

    3M India appoints Debarati Sen as MD; Amit Laroya elevated to 3M Korea MD

    MUMBAI: 3M India, the Indian subsidiary of US multinational conglomerate 3M Co., has announced the appointment of Debarati Sen as managing director of 3M India Limited and 3M Lanka Pvt. Ltd. The appointment came into with effect from 1 June 2016. Sen has taken the responsibility from Amit Laroya, who led the company for the past three years and is now moving to 3M Korea.

    In her new role, she will focus on innovation, aligning the organization closely to customer needs in the Indian marketplace. She will also look after 3M India’s local capabilities in the form of industry leading customer innovation centers, multiple manufacturing plans and top notch talent across functions positions it well for growth.

    On the occasion of her appointment, Sen, said, “Having been part of 3M for more than two decades, I am committed to building further the strong position that 3M has built over the years in India. The focus will be stronger than ever to provide innovative solutions to the Indian customer and help drive value through local technology and manufacturing. The endeavour is to work closely with the government to help realize ‘Make in India’ project a success.”

    3M India is a publicly traded company on the Bombay Stock Exchange and National stock exchange and claims to have an annual sales of Rs.2,103 cr in financial year 2015-16).

    Sen joined 3M in 1996 and has been a part of the organization for over two decades now. She has worked across various verticals and held key positions including CMO and global business director at 3M. Currently, she is the acting director of corporate sales operation at 3M’s corporate headquarters in St. Paul, USA.

    3M former MD Laroya added, “I am glad to handover this position to someone who has a proven track record both in India and the US. 3M India will benefit from her experience and leadership.”

  • 3M India appoints Debarati Sen as MD; Amit Laroya elevated to 3M Korea MD

    3M India appoints Debarati Sen as MD; Amit Laroya elevated to 3M Korea MD

    MUMBAI: 3M India, the Indian subsidiary of US multinational conglomerate 3M Co., has announced the appointment of Debarati Sen as managing director of 3M India Limited and 3M Lanka Pvt. Ltd. The appointment came into with effect from 1 June 2016. Sen has taken the responsibility from Amit Laroya, who led the company for the past three years and is now moving to 3M Korea.

    In her new role, she will focus on innovation, aligning the organization closely to customer needs in the Indian marketplace. She will also look after 3M India’s local capabilities in the form of industry leading customer innovation centers, multiple manufacturing plans and top notch talent across functions positions it well for growth.

    On the occasion of her appointment, Sen, said, “Having been part of 3M for more than two decades, I am committed to building further the strong position that 3M has built over the years in India. The focus will be stronger than ever to provide innovative solutions to the Indian customer and help drive value through local technology and manufacturing. The endeavour is to work closely with the government to help realize ‘Make in India’ project a success.”

    3M India is a publicly traded company on the Bombay Stock Exchange and National stock exchange and claims to have an annual sales of Rs.2,103 cr in financial year 2015-16).

    Sen joined 3M in 1996 and has been a part of the organization for over two decades now. She has worked across various verticals and held key positions including CMO and global business director at 3M. Currently, she is the acting director of corporate sales operation at 3M’s corporate headquarters in St. Paul, USA.

    3M former MD Laroya added, “I am glad to handover this position to someone who has a proven track record both in India and the US. 3M India will benefit from her experience and leadership.”

  • Digital transformation of OOH in India

    Digital transformation of OOH in India

    MUMBAI: Digital billboards, synchronized messaging across hoardings, real time trading, interactive digital displays, mobile convergence, geo-tagged tracking of impressions and measurement — digital is rapidly evolving how out-of-home advertising is perceived.

    A good look around and you will be amazed to see to what extent we are surrounded by advertisements–  on moving buses, at  public places like railways, bus stops, airports, malls and theatres and of course the billboards and hoardings beside every major building and driveway. Out of Home or ‘OOH’ is a ‘traditional’ as well as one of the oldest formats of advertising.

    Though the medium has only ever evolved gradually with time in the last few decades, currently it is at the cusp of a major overhaul that is riding the digital wave.

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    OOH: The late entrant to digital

    Unlike other advertising mediums, OOH was the latest to feel the impact of the digital disruption here, be it in terms of innovation or revenue loss in ad spends. Where serious concerns were being raised on how digital’s advent will split the ad revenue pie of the market, and cannibalize other media, OOH to the most part was oblivious.

    Sharing his perspective on this transition, Kinetic India CEO South Asia and Middle East Suresh Balakrishnan informs indiantelevision, “The advent of digital in our country in all its form, whether it’s digital, or display or social, mobile has eaten away the budgets of most media.  Having said that, it has happened to India at a good time, for as a market India is growing. We are probably one of the only few markets that are growing at an average of 15 to 18 per cent. Therefore we have made space for digital.”

    “As far as OOH is concerned there has been some revenue loss to digital, but I don’t think it has been significant. I don’t remember a time when OOH was growing at 20 to 30 per cent year on year. It has always lingered around 10 to 13 percent year on year, which again is moderately good growth for OOH,” he adds.

    But that doesn’t mean that ‘change’ isn’t chasing OOH.  

    “OOH can’t sit on its haunches and think that digital will not affect it. Unless, OOH marries digital and adapts what digital has to offer to enhance its services and experience for the consumer, we won’t be able to fight the battle in the long run,” Balakrishnan explains.  

    And that battle is more than about mere survival. It is the way forward for the medium to be more relevant to the consumers, more useful to the clients and more creatively enriching for the agencies.

    Digital, the perfect partner

    To say that digital will aid OOH is an understatement.

    Digital innovation in OOH has enabled the medium to achieve what it was earlier unable to attempt.

    While the idea of a dynamic digital billboard in itself is attractive and engaging for consumers, agencies are now able to explore technology that helps target and track consumers in a better manner and even give a push to point of sale campaigns in malls and other retail outlets.

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    “There are a lot of innovations that are happening in this area. For example, now digital technology allows users and consumers to scan bar codes from hoardings which directly lead to any product website through their devices,” points out Havas Media Group, India and South Asia CEO Anita Nayyar.

    “Whether it is in the way of ‘blipping’ the product from the hoardings, or digitally connecting an LED screen with some data source, there are various innovations that go hand in hand with billboards that are digitally enabled,” she adds.

    Balakrishnan on the other hand takes delight from the classier messaging that is made possible with digital. He cites an example of a campaign that Kinetic had earlier done for Mondelez’s popular chocolate brand Cadbury Bubbly.

    The crowd at Palladium Mumbai witnessed the experiential and innovative activation where in a digital screen was placed at all these places with a new motion sensor technology that transformed the normal Cadbury Silk chocolate into Cadbury Silk Bubbly with each and every movement around the screen. At metro stations in Mumbai, the screen was placed in such a way that the chocolate bubbled up with the movement of the train.

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    The number game: Measurability

    OOH as a medium had long struggled to measure the reach of campaigns. Therefore, very less accountability was placed on the medium and most of the money spent on the medium goes into brand building.

    “With the lack of a streamlined synchronised measurement system, there has been constant pressure from client to prove the effectiveness of the campaign,” Balakrishnan reveals.  But, to many creatives in OOH, digital is a great way to achieve that sense of measurability.

    Nayyar, having seen the Indian advertising scenario evolve, admits that while one medium (digital) is accountable, the other is almost immeasurable.

    “Apart from a couple of researches done, it is very hard to measure this medium. Thus, by clubbing the two medium, outdoor as a medium can gain huge credibility and measurability from digital,” asserts Nayyar.

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    Kinetic has, in fact, launched a tool called SAS or Social Amplification Score worldwide that can add some numbers to even an OOH campaign. The tool has so far been released globally by the Kinetic team and is expected to hit India in the next three months.  

    “The moment an OOH campaign is released, the tool tracks the buzz it creates by using 37 or more keywords like OOH, malls, bus shelter, etc. Basically wherever it is seen and spoken about, to tool automatically puts a score to that. It gathers the information by using geo-tagging technology that most social media platforms have enabled. With this tool therefore, we can put certain reachable numbers to an OOH campaign,” Balakrishnan informs about the effectiveness of the tool.

    Milestone Brandcom founder MD and a pioneer in the OOH business Nabendu Bhattacharyya however sheds a different light on the matter.

    “It is true that all mediums have their own struggle with measurements. Amongst all of them, OOH is the least measurable and most unorganised, Bhattacharyya opines.

    Pointing out that individual agencies have their own measurement systems that help provide clients with numbers, the veteran OOH man says, “If digital billboards become more mainstream, it will help us approach clients on a better ground as digital can incorporate those numbers.”

    Digital OOH: International VS Local

    In spite of some very obvious perks of the digital transformation, India has a lot of catching up to do when it comes to innovating OOH using technology.  Travel to any western country and one can easily spot the vast gap in the digital revolution of OOH.

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    “If you look at the western markets, OOH is far more advanced and digitised than in our country. It’s also a question of infrastructure as installing these billboards needs a certain aesthetic upgradation as well. Broadband and connectivity also become an issue and do not allow the proposition to be completely seamless and workable,” Nayyar explains.

    Balakrishnan concurs with Nayyar and says, “The more mature markets have gone and beautifully adapted digital with OOH. In fact, I would say the west has shown us that one of the mediums that integrate with digital is OOH.”

    However, Bhattacharyya feels that aesthetically India isn’t far behind western markets in exploiting digital options.

    “In the last few years we have seen some major infrastructural changes in India like the airports have been modernised, fantastic looking metro rails have come up in different places, the malls that are coming up are engineered to look aesthetically good. Therefore these places have immense potential to support a digitally charged OOH campaign. Within the controlled environment, the look and feel of the architectures and the interior designs are at par with what we see internationally,” Bhattacharyya says.

    Challenges: what’s holding OOH back?

    Though each industry player has its own take where Indian OOH stands from a global perspective, most agree that the primary reason that holds them back to optimise the medium’s digital potential is the slow bureaucracy of the country.

    According to the industry, less than 10 per cent of the overall OOH inventory is digital. The reason for that is two-fold: firstly agencies have a hard time securing permissions to go digital in full throttle.

    “The government is slow and the municipal authorities take time to give us those permissions and update themselves,” Balakrishnan explains while highlighting the bureaucratic hurdles.

    The initial cost of setting up digital installations for a campaign is pretty high, and hence media owners who invest in it, think ten times before putting up money.  

    “The setup costs are high when it comes to digital, so naturally the clients also look to quickly amortise it within a year or two. That pushes up the cost of the entire campaign and sometimes clients back out in the end. Balakrishnan puts it bluntly, adding high immeasurability also puts a question mark on big budgets being sanctioned.

    Bhattacharrya goes a step further explaining that ‘real problems’ start beyond the controlled environment spaces.

    “As per government laws, for the most part, digital displays are not allowed in this country. Except for one or two places like Bangalore and Kolkata, it is hard to find legitimate space for putting up an LED display. But those too are in a slideshow format and not really as big as you see in other countries,” Bhattacharrya adds.

    Industry experts point out that if Mumbai and Delhi are taken as example, one has more than ten authorities to deal with before one can even think of a draft design of a campaign. “MMRDA, Mumbai Municipal Corporation, the railway authorities, PWDs –the complications are endless, and way more compared to other countries,” Bhattacharya complains.

    Even if permissions to innovate in the controlled environment space become more lenient budget becomes a hindering factor.

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    “Out of overall spends in the industry, the budget allotted for controlled environment advertising is close to 20 percent only while the bulk of the budget goes to the uncontrolled environment.  And that 20 percent is further split into the different mediums with digital being one. It’s a small percentage that goes into digital,” Balakrishnan shares.

    International advertisers have another advantage over their Indian counterparts, though.

    Elaborating on what Balakrishnan opined, Bhattacharya says, “In other countries the tenders are done for a 10 to 15 year contract, whereas in India it is two to three years at the maximum. From a business perspective, this dissuades media owners from actively investing in the business, as it lacks the guarantee of a prolonged period. Add to that the fact that the initial investment to digitise the OOH infrastructure is high. Thus a short term contract is disadvantageous for a media owner.”

    Nayyar, however, feels if the technology works and gets the clients the desired results, advertisers are willing to pay and go that extra mile for  really effective storytelling.

    Indian OOH’s digital ‘jugaad’

    (Jugaad (alternatively Juggaar) is a colloquial Hindi-Urdu word that can mean an innovative fix or a simple work-around, used for solutions that bend rules, or a resource that can be used as such, or a person who can solve a complicated issue).

    Creatives here are trying to work around their limitations and adopt digital tools and services in their own way.

    From putting up digital billboards for a short period of three days to digitally enable a normal billboard, the ‘jugaads’ are many.

    Balakrishnan highlights the Indian mindset.

    “For example, creatives can use a CEE app that can be embedded into anything and works on an image recognition technology. If embedded in a brand’s app, every single static piece of communication would become interactive sans the use of barcodes, QR code. Just let your phone that has the CEE enabled app of a particular brand register its visual or logo, and it will take you to a large billboard or a small screen for that matter.”

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    As always, when presented with adversity, the Indian ‘jugaad’ mindset easily kicks in and it seems to be working wonders for the industry so far.

    But that may not sustain it for too long if the country wants to compete and be at par with other mature markets and make the most of the double digit ad spend growth it’s currently experiencing with dollops of digital help from the government, of course.