Category: People

  • Verizon Media names Simon Wheeler as senior director of content

    Verizon Media names Simon Wheeler as senior director of content

    MUMBAI: Verizon Media has elevated Simon Wheeler to senior director of content following significant growth of its Australian media brands. Over the past four years, Wheeler has led the editorial strategy in Australia, managing teams to deliver quality content, diversify audiences and achieve substantial growth.

    Under his new regional remit, he will lead editorial strategy in English-language regions including Australia, India and Southeast Asia. Editorial teams in India and across Southeast Asia will now report into him under the new structure.

    Wheeler said, “This is a really exciting time for Verizon Media as we band together with international teams to deliver quality content for our audiences across the wider APAC region. 2020 presented difficult and unexpected challenges for all but we overcame and adapted to interact with our audiences in new ways. I’m excited to be taking on this new role and working closer with our regional counterparts.”

  • Amazon Prime Video appoints Vishal Shrivastava as sr digital marketing manager

    Amazon Prime Video appoints Vishal Shrivastava as sr digital marketing manager

    NEW DELHI: Vishal Shrivastava has joined Amazon Prime Video as senior digital marketing manager. In his new role, he will be responsible for brand and content marketing for the OTT platform’s originals and movies, while also spearheading the company’s digital growth.

    Shrivastava was previously with Madison Communications, where he served as business director from May 2019 for a period of close to two years.

    Prior to that, he was associate director – digital at Dentsu International and acted as business lead for ITC’s personal care business, Standard Chartered Bank, Total Lubricants and Mattel Toys.

    He has also had stints at Wavemaker, Cheil Worldwide and Omnicom Media.

    With a decade’s experience in digital marketing, Shrivastava has worked with industries across the board like FMCGs, media and entertainment, BFSI, consumer durables, tech and airlines.

    His key focus areas are audience strategy, programmatic, media effectiveness measurement, and full-funnel optimisation.

  • Prachi Mohapatra joins Dr Reddy’s as marketing head – OTC, emerging markets

    Prachi Mohapatra joins Dr Reddy’s as marketing head – OTC, emerging markets

    NEW DELHI: Dr Reddy’s Laboratories has appointed Prachi Mohapatra as marketing head – OTC, emerging markets. She joins from Future Group’s FBB, where she was the CMO for over four years.

    With a keen interest in brand and business building, Mohapatra has had extensive experience working with large conglomerates and start-ups alike. She has helmed marketing departments in sectors like FMCGs, fashion, beauty and personal care; business development, marketing strategy and ROAS is her forte.

    Mohapatra headed brand and communications for beauty brand Oriflame in South Asia for close to five years. She was also associated with brands like Modicare and Mary Kay Cosmetics in the past.

    She describes herself as an avid traveller and an inveterate foodie, whose humble beginnings, small town upbringing, multicultural exposure in various parts of India and the globe has enabled her to make a huge difference to any project and business that she has been involved in.

  • Innovation and pioneering helped Marico grow: Harsh Mariwala

    Innovation and pioneering helped Marico grow: Harsh Mariwala

    MUMBAI: Harsh Mariwala transformed his family's trading business in spices and edible oils into Rs 7,300-crore FMCG giant Marico, led by flagship brands such as Saffola and Parachute which sell in 25 countries. The company recently launched Saffola FITTIFY, a range of healthy soups and shakes. Mariwala's other businesses include Kaya, a chain of skin care clinics.

    The company also scouts for young Indian entrepreneurs and facilitates the start-up ecosystem through the mentoring platform Ascent Foundation.

    Mariwala is someone who walks the talk and lives by example – a catalyst of positive change, said Raj Nayak during a tete-a-tete with the affable Marico founder.

    “We started in phases, earlier the name of the company was Bombay Oil Industries. It's an edible oil business where we were selling coconut oil, refined oils to trade as well as some industries. That business was not doing too well, lots of businesses depend on how well you cover your raw material or how the raw material prices behaved, so it was very erratic in terms of margin and performance,” shared Mariwala.

    So he thought of converting the oils business from unbranded to branded in order to make it more profitable and sustainable, a bold move which paid off. And that’s how it all started. He started travelling to internal markets, appointed distributors, talent managers, advertising agencies in the interiors of Maharashtra and Gujarat. The consumer product is highly de-licensed, which helped Mariwala to gain profit. Apart from licensing, one clear no for him was entering the high-tech business.

    Mariwala mentioned that while his iconic Parachute brand was a success, it was mainly selling in 50 litre tins. Initially, the retailers would buy it and sell it in bottles which were later purchased by consumers. Back then, the market of packed coconut oil was much smaller than what it is today. Later, the idea struck him to create a packaged product which was sold in various parts of Maharashtra. Mariwala’s initial foray was to scale up the existing business across India.

    Another well-known brand, Saffola was neglected for a very long period of time, he revealed. After starting the business, his focus was to identify further opportunities. He added, “I wanted to be in the number one position, to be a market leader, as it helps you to get more margin. We grew by innovating in the coconut oil market, during that time the whole market worked on tin containers, then we converted it to plastic. It was not an easy journey; it was a tough conversion. However, it ensured that our growth rate jumped up multiple times. We applied the same innovation in Bangladesh, and now we are the leading coconut player in the Bangladesh market.”

    Another key innovation was the lice-killing hair product Mediker, a must-have in Indian households with young kids.

    “We acquired Mediker from Proctor & Gamble and introduced it in oil format, the sales just doubled. So, innovation and pioneering helped us to grow,” the business tycoon remarked.

    Relating an interesting anecdote behind how the Revive detergent was launched in the early ‘90s and creating a market for a product where none existed, Mariwala said, “We came up with our product Revive out of a personal necessity. I liked crisp clothes, that is how we made Revive which helps to starch clothes without any hassles.”

    According to him, for any product, there must be a consumer need which is big enough to build a brand. Moreover, to become a market leader, advertising is very important and once a certain mass is created, one can go back to devising effective cost structures and improving margins.

    Everybody still wonders, from where the name Parachute emerged. Mariwala jokingly said that is the question that the nation wants to know. He shared that Bombay Oil Industries was formed in 1947, shortly after the second World War when a lot of Indians got to know about parachutes – and that’s how Mariwala’s uncle thought of creating a brand by this name, which is now a huge success.

    On the subject of world wars, Mariwala opined that there is an ongoing war for talent, and one has to treat hiring like marketing. “When there is a shortage of good talent, you have to market yourself first,” he quipped. “That means you have to identify what is unique about you, you arrive at what we call employee value proposition, which is unique in the job market. In our case, unlike big MNC corporations where decisions are taken in closed headquarters, we empower our employees.”

    Spoken like an entrepreneur who knows how to make a difference.

     

  • Kantar Public hires Gaurav Sabharwal as India CEO

    Kantar Public hires Gaurav Sabharwal as India CEO

    NEW DELHI: Kantar’s public policy arm Kantar Public has welcomed aboard Gaurav Sabharwal as chief executive officer of India and South Asia, based in New Delhi.

    Sabharwal was formerly an executive director / associate partner at consulting firm Ernst & Young where he was involved in business, technology and transaction consulting across various domains within the government and public services division. Prior to that, he was head – central government for Tata Consultancy Services.

    With over 20 years’ experience, Sabharwal is well-versed in digital transformation, analytics, mobile, blockchain and cloud computing, gained through working across a broad range of sectors, including agriculture, urban, housing, transport, health and education.

    Kantar Public global CEO Michelle Harrison said, “Our team in India and South Asia are proven partners with the government in providing the tools for impactful, evidence-based public policy. I am confident that Gaurav’s appointment will enable us to accelerate and expand our provision of innovation and analytics in evidence with expert, advisory services for your clients.”

    “I am excited to take on this role, working to deliver the next steps in India’s powerful and impactful development journey,” remarked Sabharwal. “I look forward to operating in the environment of converging advisory expertise with data capabilities that Kantar Public provides. The organisation is one of the oldest evidence providers in India and I am pleased to lead the expert team in India and South Asia to continue to bring evidence-based public policy services to our clients.”

  • Carat India onboards Ashish Singh as VP – planning

    Carat India onboards Ashish Singh as VP – planning

    NEW DELHI: Carat India, the flagship media agency from the house of Dentsu International, has appointed Ashish Singh as vice president – planning.

    In his new role, Singh will report into Carat India CEO Anita Kotwani, and will lead the agency’s digital mandate for north and east. Singh will focus on developing and leading client relationships for Carat in addition to helping the agency deliver enhanced digital solutions to clients.

    Kotwani said, “He comes in with the mandate to drive the larger north and east offices for Carat India and help drive value for our key global clients like Microsoft, Mastercard, Phillips and local clients like Havells, DS group and others. With his domain expertise across the changing digital eco-system and his love for being a lifelong learner, I am confident that our clients will see the best of data, creative and technology amalgamation under his leadership to help drive their business outcomes.”

    Prior to this, Singh was with Mindshare India where he held the position of partner – digital.

    “With continuous change in the media ecosystem, digital is the battleground for all types of businesses where consumers are accustomed to connectedness. Carat is known for its integrated communication planning backed by some of the cutting-edge analytical tools in the industry. I look forward to this journey where together we focus on growth, expansion and nurture talent," Singh added.

  • Facebook’s Dave Rolfe moves to WPP as global head of production

    Facebook’s Dave Rolfe moves to WPP as global head of production

    NEW DELHI: WPP has appointed Dave Rolfe to the new role of global head of production, WPP and Hogarth.

    Rolfe, who was most recently head of production for global business marketing at Facebook, will be based in Hogarth Worldwide, WPP’s creative production arm. He joins in March, reporting to WPP’s incoming global chief creative officer Rob Reilly and Hogarth CEO Richard Glasson.

    In this newly created role, Rolfe will be responsible for executing a strategy that elevates the role of production in delivering creative excellence across WPP. He is tasked with attracting and nurturing the best production talent from across the industry and building a best-in-class production community that offers integrated and innovative solutions for clients. Given Hogarth’s long-standing partnership with Ogilvy, Dave will also oversee production at the agency.

    Prior to Facebook, Rolfe was global EVP, director of integrated production at BBDO for eight years. He played a key role in BBDO’s creative success, garnering numerous prizes for work ranging from social and innovation to Super Bowl, as well as high-profile cause-related work.

    He has consistently earned creative and innovation recognition working with clients such as AT&T, Burger King, GE, Mars, Bacardi, Microsoft, Anheuser-Bush, Domino’s, VW, MINI, as well as Sandy Hook Promise and American Legacy Foundation’s Truth.

    WPP CEO Mark Read said, “Dave is simply the best in the industry, and his appointment underlines our commitment to outstanding creativity on behalf of our clients. He will be a great partner to Rob and the Hogarth team, and a great champion of excellence and innovation in creative production throughout WPP.”

    Rolfe added, “Over the past five years I’ve focused much of my efforts on how the consolidated production model can best perform, as it both innovates for clients at the highest level and aligns with agencies – respecting and bolstering their production offering. As much as I’ve spent time cultivating projects small and large, the scaled model enables effective partnership and great work at all levels. I couldn’t be more excited to work with the talented team at Hogarth and to help deliver WPP’s creative ambitions for its agencies and clients.”

  • Adaptability & speed key factors to get through tough times: SBI General’s Shefali Khalsa

    Adaptability & speed key factors to get through tough times: SBI General’s Shefali Khalsa

    MUMBAI: That India’s banking and finance sector has witnessed explosive growth and expansion ever since the era of economic reforms was launched nearly three decades ago is not news. That this growth also fuelled new windows of employment opportunity for women in the BFSI sector is however not so well known. Stats show that roughly half of the annual intake of trainee bankers in institutions like SBI comprise women, with more and more women rising to top positions in the banking industry shattering the infamous glass ceiling. The Banking and financial services industry is clearly stealing the march from its contemporary sectors, not only when it comes to aggressive hiring of women employees but also for nurturing and mentoring talented women – another factor crucial for an individual’s progress.

    In the run up to International Women’s Day on 8 March 2021, we caught up with SBI General Insurance’s head – brand and marketing Shefali Khalsa for a freewheeling discussion on the challenges and opportunities in the BFSI industry for women, and how the women workforce is changing the face of the industry. Having spent close to 14 years in the industry, of which nine years were with HDFC Ergo before taking on the mantle for brand, corporate communication and online sales at SBI General, she would know. While India ranks a dismal 112th on the gender parity index, Shefali Khalsa shares her views on whether the banking and finance sector has evolved on gender and pay parity for its women workforce. She also shines a light on how SBI General tackled the trials and tribulations that the pandemic wrought on the industry. 

    Edited excerpts:

    On challenges and opportunities in the BFSI industry for women today.

    I believe the BFSI industry is a wonderful service oriented industry, with equal, merit-based and immense opportunities for women. Of my total 17 years of work, I have spent 12 in the BFSI industry- of this, nine years were in my last organisation at HDFC Ergo. In these nine years I have come across several women in leadership roles, both in the boardrooms as well as in management positions. I myself got the opportunity to head the department, after joining as a team member.

    On gender discrimination and pay parity for women in leadership roles.

    Personally, I have not seen or experienced any sort of discriminatory attitude or bias against women leaders. In fact in banking especially, in recent times we have had so many women as CEOs in leading banks, driving the business and spearheading its brand. I would go so far as to say that the women workforce is changing the face of the BFSI industry. Talking about SBI General, we have about 18 per cent of women representation in the leadership role. If we compare that with the worldwide women workforce stats, the average comes out to be 27 per cent while in Asia it's 13 percent.  

    When it comes to pay parity issues, I am aware that India ranks 112th on the global gender parity index – that would be based on data across different industries. However, as far as BFSI is concerned, in my ten-years-plus experience I have yet to come across any disparity in pay, solely because of gender. Yes, it differs from role to role, but definitely not based on gender.

    On how SBI General dealt with the pandemic.

    The first quarter of the last financial year was such that everyone was caught unawares – nobody was prepared for such a situation. Insurance being a service industry and more so, we being in health insurance largely, it was all the more imperative for us to keep our customers informed and give them the confidence that we are there for them.

    The predominant platform for customer outreach was social media. Our core messaging was ‘we are with you in these difficult times’. A parallel campaign was about SBI General remaining uninterrupted titled ‘Being you, Uninterrupted’ – which literally translated into the company is uninterrupted in our day-to-day functioning. Offices may be shut but that did not mean the work has ceased. All of it shifted overnight onto digital platforms. In fact, the lockdown phase turned out to be quite productive for us work wise, with employees across all regions being well-connected, synergised – you didn’t feel the distance.

    On customer outreach and marketing perspective in 2020.

    We were getting lots of queries from customers, especially to check whether Covid2019 will be covered under the health insurance or not. So to align the expectations with the service offered, we doubled our communications on all spheres– the customer communication, employee communication, channel partner communication et al.  

    We were also working at double speed from the marketing perspective, exploiting all possible digital platforms. All the campaigns were re-aligned to digital domains. We did quite a lot of ideation into campaigns, a lot of home-made videos were also floated, especially using our employees. Which becomes a win-win for both the employee- who gets recognition and feels motivated- and for the brand, as well. For, it increases the virality of the campaign, as the video would be further shared on at least five to six of the staff’s private networks/ groups. So those kinds of ideations, usage of influencers had increased a lot, and that should continue into the coming financial year too.

    On SBI General’s marketing strategy for 2021.

    Largely our campaign would be on social media and other digital platforms driving digital business like Google Ad Words and so on- that will remain the core focus. But looking ahead with businesses slowly opening up, in 2021’s third and fourth quarters we might turn to traditional media as well. Q1 is usually a lull period with businesses closing the financial year and strategising for the coming year. So while on the digital front campaign planning and execution continues, the ad spend we are looking at, for the upcoming year across all media will definitely be higher than the year gone by. 

    On #ChooseToChallenge lessons learned. 

    I would say adaptability and speed are crucial lessons I have picked up along the way. Every woman has to #ChooseToChallenge the status quo, whether working out of home or not. Every day is a challenge. On the work front, of course we face many unprecedented situations where one has to think on our feet and deliver. This is especially true on the marketing front to manage the timelines of channel expectations. So I choose to challenge myself by being adaptive and quick to respond to challenges. Which was the clear cut motto even during this pandemic lockdown from the marketing perspective, when so many brands had to curb their regular spend on traditional media and had to adapt to the digital medium. This could only be accomplished if one acted with speed and was adaptive to changes around us.

  • Fittr brings on Kapil Mehta as head of marketing

    Fittr brings on Kapil Mehta as head of marketing

    NEW DELHI: Online health and fitness brand Fittr has strengthened its core leadership team with the appointment of Kapil Mehta as the head of marketing. In his new role, Mehta will be responsible for formulating the overall marketing strategy, alongside building and developing brand Fittr.

    A seasoned marketing professional with over 13 years of experience, Mehta was previously heading marketing at BookMyShow for the last seven years. Prior to that, he has also served marketing roles within the gaming and financial services industries.

    Fittr founder & CEO Jitendra Chouksey said, “I am delighted to welcome Kapil on board and lead Fittr’s marketing efforts. We believe he will add a lot of value to our long-term vision and strategy and help us cement our leadership position as a community-first fitness platform. We are poised to continue our excellent growth trajectory and build on our existing competitive strengths within the fitness industry.”

    “Fittr’s philosophy of democratising fitness through a community-first approach, and making it accessible to everyone, was what got all my attention. I am really excited to be a part of the brand’s journey, especially as we enter the new phase of growth,” said Mehta.

    An MBA in marketing from Symbiosis Institute of Management Studies, Mehta will be based in Mumbai and will report to Chouksey.

  • Publicis Groupe’s Sweety Advani joins Wondrlab as CFO

    Publicis Groupe’s Sweety Advani joins Wondrlab as CFO

    NEW DELHI: Platform-first martech start-up Wondrlab has appointed Sweety Advani as its chief financial officer (CFO). She will be based in Mumbai, and will report to Wondrlab founder & CEO Saurabh Varma. Advani joins from Publicis Groupe, where she was the finance director for South Asia.

    “Wondrlab’s exponential growth needed a finance head that can keep up with our momentum. Advani is a proven results-oriented leader with tremendous financial expertise. Her vision and ambition for Wondrlab matches ours, making her the perfect fit for the role,” said Varma.

    Advani has almost two decades of industry experience with stints across key organisations in India. Before taking on her role at Publicis Groupe, she was the finance director for another of the Groupe’s agencies – Leo Burnett India. She has also spent considerable time in companies such as WPP, Essar, Reliance and Pfizer, to name a few.

    “2020 was a great year for Wondrlab and 2021 looks even better; I don’t think this opportunity could have come at a better time for me. I look forward to supporting Wondrlab’s momentum with financial strategy and learnings,” Advani added.