Category: People

  • Neeraj (Bunty) Bahl appointed ITW Blitz CEO

    Neeraj (Bunty) Bahl appointed ITW Blitz CEO

    NEW DELHI: Neeraj Bahl has been appointed as the chief executive officer of ITW Blitz, the talent management arm of ITW Playworx Media and Entertainment, a part of ITW Consulting, an integrated marketing agency.

    Bahl, popularly known as Bunty, brings in close to 20 years of experience in the field of celebrity management and film and digital content creation. Bunty will be based in Mumbai and will report to the executive board of ITW Playworx.

    Bahl said: “The Indian market is largely influenced by entertainment and sports. The film and music industry is going through an explosive growth phase which we want to capitalise on.”

    ITW Playworx CEO Sidharth Ghosh said, “Our vision is to create an integrated approach for brands, where it is not only about creating the right concept, but also about ensuring quality execution across mediums.”

    “Content consumption pattern is evolving — on newer platforms like OTT. ITW Blitz will also create customised content across mediums. With the wealth of knowledge and experience Bunty brings in, his contribution will have a positive impact on the overall business,” Ghosh added.

  • Dentsu Impact elevates Ramaswamy, to make ‘Maruti’ a vibrant brand

    Dentsu Impact elevates Ramaswamy, to make ‘Maruti’ a vibrant brand

    MUMBAI: Dentsu Impact recently restructured its creative department and promoted Anupama Ramaswamy as the national creative director. Ramaswamy has been with Dentsu Impact for over a year now, after joining as the executive creative director.

    The recent restructuring happened owing to the consolidation of creative, digital and media duties for all Maruti Suzuki brands (except Nexa brands) with Dentsu Aegis Network. Post this development, the network created an integrated creative team which will deliver solutions for the brand. Ramaswamy would be leading this team both, on offline as well as digital creative front.

    Some of the agencies that Ramaswamy has worked with, besides Dentsu Impact, include Cheil, JWT, Lowe Lintas, Rediffusion, Havas and FCB. She has worked across a gamut of brands such as Samsung, Nokia, Airtel, Woodland, Whirlpool, LG, Maruti, Lays and Boost.

    There are a number of awards in her kitty; both international and local, like Cannes Gold, Clio Gold, AdFest Golds, Spikes, Effies, New York Festival and a number of Abby’s. She was a part of the One Show Jury in 2012 and is a regular face on the Goafest jury panel over the last few years.

    Ramaswamy said, “Maruti Suzuki is undergoing a transformation and not many in the industry can boast of being a part of such a change. My mandate is to make the ‘most popular automobile’ brand equally young and vibrant.”

    Dentsu Impact chief creative officer Soumitra Karnik said, “Anupama (Ramaswamy) has played a stellar role in the creative performance of Dentsu Impact. Keeping pace with where Maruti Suzuki aims to be in the coming times is both exciting as well as challenging. It requires complex understanding of the automobile industry and the world in which it is going to operate in.”

  • Martin Sorrell on how WPP is combating ad world slowdown

    Martin Sorrell on how WPP is combating ad world slowdown

    MUMBAI: It’s been sometime that we have got to listen to advertising heavyweight and guru Martin Sorrell’s unique insights. For those who have missed him, he’s still at his vintage best. The WPP CEO shared his worldview on what’s impacting the advertising business and how the industry is combating with the slowdown in a fireside chat with Goldman Sachs analyst Lisa Yan at the 26th Goldman Sachs Communacopia Conference held last week.

    Sorrell pointed out that the advertising industry has been generally  going through a slow growth-pace for a while now, though it has seen some upward movements for a short period. The reasons: low-economic growth, low-inflation, very little pricing power, and focus on cost, amongst clients. “That’s been tolerable, certainly up until, I would say the end of 2016,” expressed Sorrell. “What we started to see, a little bit of softness…certainly in Q4 of last year.”

    What caused this slowdown? Sorrell gave at least three hypotheses that could have contributed, and could continue to do so, and industry will have to have adequate responses to them.

    The first being consulting firms who have been looking at generating cost savings for bottomline-focused corporations, and the first expense they have been scratching out is advertising.  

    “I think you can build the case, so that consultants, it’s not just an Accenture or Deloitte or BCG or McKinsey or Bain, go into client and say you’re spending too much money generally, your costs are too high, we’ll see if we can do something about it, and that fans out from there,” said Sorrell.

    The second hypothesis is that increasingly agencies and brands have been diverting spends towards Google and Facebook. “Google and Facebook have become significant  destinations… we are the most significant customer with  the two – on behalf of our clients,” he said. “If Google was $5 billion, Murdoch $2.25 billion and Facebook $1.7 billion last year, this year the figures are Google $5.5 billion-$6billion, Facebook $2.5 billion, and Murdoch $2.25 billion.”

    Sorrel labeled the two digital giants as frenemies, though he acknowledged that they have become friendlier than last year, especially Google.

    The third hypothesis – which he called the most plausible reason for the impact this year – “is that in an era of cheap capital, a zero cost — or close to zero-cost capital, there are pools of capital which fund zero-based budgeting approaches or private equity activist approaches that are putting tremendous pressure on particularly packaged goods companies,” said Sorrell. “Their approach has get rid of R&D spending, get reduced marketing spending and its running across sectors…Beyond tech and pharma, top-line growth is very hard to come by. And, I think that’s the central issue. So, as long as there’s cheap capital, as long as there is this very significant pressure of a zero-based budgeting and an activist later, you’re going to see pressure.”

    Sorrell does not expect the era of cheap capital to go away quickly thanks to Hurricane Harvey and the tragedies in Houston and Florida. “The results of this is indices rise, the fed probably is going to keep interest rates down lower longer,” he expressed.

    WPP has been responding to these challenges, he pointed out, through what it calls horizontality – basically integrating the  company in a much more aggressive, seamless, efficient manner.

    The second response has been zooming in on the high growth markets of Asia, Latin America, Africa, Middle East and central and eastern Europe. “That continues. That’s a third of our business; it continues to be a high level of focus,” he said.

    WPP, has got a razor sharp eye on digital which is 40 per cent of its business. “It is very much in the target range that we identified three, four, five years ago. It doesn’t stop at 40 per cent, 41 per cent, which it was in the first half of the year; it has to go beyond that, so probably to the extent where ultimately everything is permeated in one way or another by digital. But that’s some way off, but getting closer,” highlighted Sorrell.

    “Making data, the centre or a significant part of the centre of what we do is critically important, particularly when you have disintermediation in retail from the likes of Amazon or Alibaba or Tencent or JD.com or others where the battlefield will ultimately be about who controls the data,” he added.   He, however, mentioned that the growth of data has not been as good as the industry would like to see it but that doesn’t diminish its importance in relation to horizontality.

    Sorrell expressed his worry that what’s happening in the packaging goods industry could have worrying implications as a whole for the ad business.

    “My hypothesis would be that cheap money is chasing packaged goods and driving up the valuations. And those last three quarters, if you look at revenue growth at 2.4 per cent, it’s mainly price, very little volume. And those of you know how packaged goods companies function know that the moment the volumes stutter and stagnate or even fall, which is the case with a number of packaged goods companies, the trouble starts. If you have fewer consumers, fewer customers,  that’s when the trouble starts. So, I come back to this, and it’s fundamental obviously, it’s our lifeblood, I come back to this thing that investing in innovation and brand is key, and that’s the heart of it,” the WPP chief elaborated.

    WPP has lost out on a lot of business (AT&T and VW) in recent times, and Sorrell stated that competition will always stay but it’s a question of price. “I’ve never heard any of our people say to me it was because we didn’t do a good job, they’ve always said it’s because somebody else discounted and we lost the business on the basis of price. Sometimes, that maybe the case but I think mainly it’s due to the qualitative side of the offer. But, I think we’ve got our act together much better on integration,” he added.

    Google is the biggest destination for WPP’s media spend for their clients. “It is by definition currently the most powerful media channel that you can find, search being the primary product. Boycotting that, not accessing it, I think is a mistake. Working with Google to improve the way that they manage the process is the way to go,” he said.

    Sorrell also mentioned that WPP will be changing its regional management approach encouraging more integration on shared client work across agencies. “Well, with the growth of technology, with the rise of the BRICs — Brazil, Russia, India and China should not be regional reports, they should be direct to the center. Even if that upsets regional managers,” he quipped.

    He said that he saw Amazon becoming a very serious threat to Google on search with 55 per cent of product searches in the US  emanating from it. “Amazon now has a voice activated device. Every one of the Fearsome Five has a voice activated device. What that means for brands is very serious.”

     

  • Madison CEO Vikram Sakhuja is Advertising Club’s new president

    Madison CEO Vikram Sakhuja is Advertising Club’s new president

    MUMBAI: The Advertising Club has unanimously elected the industry veteran Vikram Sakhuja (Group CEO – media and OOH, Madison Communications) as the president. 

    Taking on the baton from Raj Nayak, who has lead the club towards new highs across two consecutive terms, Sakhuja will now lead the mandate of representing the country’s leading industry representative forum. 

    The outgoing president said: “Leading an apex industry body like the advertising club towards new echelons of growth has been an enriching experience. The Indian advertising industry has witnessed tremendous growth and has been at the forefront of curating some iconic behavioral change campaigns. I would want to thank the  club’s managing committee which helped bring alive  the  vision of  showcasing the Indian advertising industry as a global game changer.”

    Speaking about the appointment, he added, “Vikram brings with him tremendous understanding of the industry and global media trends.”

    Sakhuja said: “My endeavor is to work towards building further scale to the great work done by Raj, by adding onto and developing our existing marquee leadership forums into formidable and relevant global platforms.”

    The appointment was followed by the announcement of this year’s managing committee.

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  • Tata Sons appoints Pradipta Bagchi as the new group CCO

    Tata Sons appoints Pradipta Bagchi as the new group CCO

    MUMBAI: Tata Sons has announced the appointment of Pradipta Bagchi as the group chief communications officer with the effect from 12, September 2017.

    Bagchi will report to Tata Sons executive chairman N. Chandrasekaran.

    A professional with over 25 years of experience in business, media and communications, Bagchi has been the head of corporate communications for TCS since 2005.

    Chandrasekaran said, “As the group chief communications officer, he will play a key role in driving seamless communication experience across the Tata group as well as create engagement with stakeholders.”

    Bagchi was an editor and reporter with Indian media houses like The Times of India, The Economic Times and Business Standard prior to joining TCS. He is a graduate of the University of Sussex.

    Tata Trusts head corporate communications and public relations Debasis Ray, will continue to support the Tata Group communications team on an ongoing basis.

  • Publicis’ Moorthy joins iCubesWire as head-RDX sales and trading desk

    Publicis’ Moorthy joins iCubesWire as head-RDX sales and trading desk

    MUMBAI: iCubesWire, a digital marketing solution and concept provider, has announced the appointment of Sabareesh Moorthy as the head – RDX sales and trading desk at its Mumbai office.

    Moorthy will work towards expanding and strengthening the business while being closely associated with the CEO Sahil Chopra and the COO Aditya Singh.

    Chopra says, “Sabareesh (Moorthy) brings his vast experience in various facets of digital media like programmatic, client servicing, media strategy, account management, advertising operations and technology and business development.”

    Moorthy brings with him an industry experience of more than 12 years. Prior to joining iCubesWire, he was associated with Publicis Media as the associate director and group head of advertising operations.

    Moorthy has also worked with Cartrade.com as the assistant general manager – media sales, Madhouse as the group head – operations, Automotive Exchange as the advertising operations manager and other organisations such as Yahoo India, Tribal DDB India, and Mindshare, among other.

    Moorthy will head the agency account sales in the western region and start a new initiative in the trading desk for programmatic advertising.

  • dentsu X India ropes in Roopam Garg as chief client officer

    dentsu X India ropes in Roopam Garg as chief client officer

    MUMBAI: dentsu X India, an integrated media specialist, part of Dentsu Aegis Network, has roped in Roopam Garg as the chief client officer (CCO).

    Garg brings with him a rich experience of 22 years across multiple markets; India, MENA, China, Vietnam, London. His diverse set of exposure spans across FMCG majors, (P&G, Coke, Reckitt Benckiser) Two Wheeler (HMSI), Cars (Tata Motors) and Durable (Samsung)

    Given his multi-market, cross category experience, Garg is adept at global best practices. He has tweaked global tools into the Indian market and has also developed strategic media approaches between consumers, brands and their market performance which was then rolled out and adopted in other global markets.

    Garg’s ability to bring multi-functional teams together to see the unified goal is summed up with his motto, “Brand Wins, We Win”.

    Divya Karani, CEO, dentsu X India said, “Roopam brings immense value to the company with his extensive experience and holistic world-view on best practices. We want to increasingly bring on board senior talent who can carry forward the learnings of seamless integrated Consumer and Brand interaction to bear on our clients’ business.”

    Garg said, “In my experience across markets, I have come to realize that it’s critical to keep it simple, actionable and measurable for the client. Media is growing in complexity and the agency of the future needs to harness deep learning to innovate relentlessly.”

    Garg will report to Karani, will be based out of Delhi.

  • Publicis strengthens strategy team in Delhi

    Publicis strengthens strategy team in Delhi

    MUMBAI: Publicis India has announced the appointment of Nisha Ganneri and Gursimran Singh as associate vice-president, strategy and vice-president – strategy. Both the appointees will report to Sudeep Gohil – chief strategy officer & managing partner.

    Nisha joins in from Ogilvy, Gurgaon, where she was the planning director; while Gursimran’s last stint was at MullenLowe Lintas as the AVP. Nisha and Gursimran both possess over 11 years of rich experience and have been successful in driving growth and thought leadership for iconic global and local brands.

    Singh said “I am honoured to be a part of Publicis Worldwide, an organisation which follows ‘Power of One’ philosophy, keeping their communication integrated yet dynamic.”

    Ganneri said: “It’s a pleasure to be a part of an esteemed organisation like Publicis India and getting to work for some really exciting clients. Publics has an impeccable repute in the industry because of its zest for exceeding expectations. Delivering the best has been my motto and I look forward to working with the teams through the ‘Power of One’ philosophy.”

    Publicis India managing director Srija Chatterjee said, “Appointing some of the best talent of the industry at leadership positions is a vital step that takes us forward in the direction to providing our clients with exceptional experiences.”

    Publicis India executive director Ravpreet Ganesh said, “Ganneri and Singh have an amazing experience in the industry and their contributions are commendable.”

  • Happy mcgarrybowen appoints Mani as ECD & Madhavdas as SVP

    Happy mcgarrybowen appoints Mani as ECD & Madhavdas as SVP

    MUMBAI: Happy mcgarrybowen, the creative agency from Dentsu Aegis Network, has added creative and account management muscle in the team with the appointment of Rajesh Mani and Kunal Madhavdas as the agency’s first ever ECD and Sr. VP respectively.

    Armed with over 18 years of rich experience across agencies like BBH, Ogilvy, Leo Burnett and Commonwealth, Rajesh arrives at Happy to take up the Executive Creative Director role.

    Kartik Iyer, CEO, Happy mcgarrybowen, said, “Creative leadership is not just about the talent but more about having the maturity to nurture ideas. In Rajesh we found the natural energy to further that culture.”

    Having worked on many landmark campaigns, such as Vodafone’s Blackberry Boys, The Zoozoos, Lenovo’s Sumo film, many noted pieces on Marico, Chevrolet, Bajaj, Titan and more, Rajesh will head a few of Happy mcgarrybowen’s prime accounts – Ola, Suzuki and Jabong.

    Mani said, “The decision to join here felt like a natural progression. The mandate was simple and clear; to keep the creative flag flying high and that’s what I aim to do.”

    Meanwhile Kunal Madhavdas landed at Happy mcgarrybowen after stints at Lowe Lintas, JWT and McCann Erickson in a career that is 14 years in the making. Having overseen multiple blockbuster campaigns for Flipkart, TVS, Myntra, Fastrack, Britannia, Tata Tea, bagging multiple Effies and a couple of AME’s in the process, Kunal joins as Senior Vice President, working closely with Kartik Iyer and Samarjit Choudhry, COO, Happy mcgarrybowen.

    Madhavdas commented, “The intent and the capability to crack and execute integrated campaigns that work effectively across mediums is something most brands look for in their advertising partners today. Happy mcgarrybowen has consistently done that. I can sense happier times ahead, so keep watching!”

    The new hires mark a distinct upsurge in direction and ambition from Happy mcgarrybowen on its tenth anniversary and serves as another example of how the agency is investing heavily in the finest talent in India to deliver the best for its clients.

    Samarjit Choudhry, COO, Happy mcgarrybowen, said, “With Kunal and now Rajesh, we have people who come from the same mindset.”

  • CK Birla hires GM India’s Bhattacharya as communication head

    CK Birla hires GM India’s Bhattacharya as communication head

    MUMBAI: The CK Birla Group has appointed Swati Bhattacharya as the group brand and communication head.

    Bhattacharya is responsible for the group’s communication and brand strategy and will help shape the company’s narrative as it moves towards the next chapter in its story of value creation.

    Bhattacharya comes to CK Birla from General Motors India, where she had served as the vice-president of corporate communications. She was earlier vice president – corporate relations, public affairs and branding with Ingersoll Rand and head of corporate relations at Agilent Technologies prior to that.

    Bhattacharya said, “The group’s enriched legacy and strong commercial footprint has delivered outstanding growth and value for its stakeholders. I look forward to building upon that legacy and reputation.”