Category: News Broadcasting

  • A special series on ‘Bell the Cat’ on CNN-IBN

    A special series on ‘Bell the Cat’ on CNN-IBN

    MUMBAI : The gates to the dream of the flower of Indian youth will open up through the CAT this November 19th. In the endeavor to help more and more of its viewers and readers to clear this first step CNN-IBN and Hindustan Times are offering content that would help tackle the CAT. On Print Hindustan Times through HT Horizons and CNN-IBN through its special programme “Bell the CAT” is providing invaluable advice to the candidates.

     

    Bell the Cat’ is a daily segment that will be aired in ‘Breakfast with India’ at 8:00am on CNN-IBN. In this series the candidate’s specific queries are being answered. The series will culminate with a half-an-hour special on 18th November, 2006 at 9:30 am with a repeat at 6:00 pm the same day. CNN-IBN is bringing the services of old CAT toppers, teachers and heads of various coaching institutes to give the last mile support so much required by the students just before they take on the gruel of the CAT.

     

    Introducing the series, Rajdeep Sardesai, Editor-in-Chief, CNN-IBN and IBN 7 said, “ As CAT is on the anvil, this happens to be a very crucial period for the MBA aspirants. We are confident that our endeavor along with Hindustan Times is worthwhile and fruitful for all “.

     

    “Hindustan Times is very glad to be associated with CNN-IBN for this property as empowering students through information on education is a key focus area for us.” said Anand Bhardawaj, Head of Marketing, HT Media Limited.

     

    “We categorize our programming initiatives by understanding the preferences of our viewers. Our agenda is also to create integrated quality content for the channel. This time we decided to offer something for the viewers that will help them during CAT ” Added Dilip Venkatraman, Director Marketing and Online Projects, CNN-IBN & IBN 7.

  • News channels look at scoring goals

    Soccer mania is in the air! With the Fifa World Cup scheduled to kick off 9 June in Germany, news channels in India, both domestic and international, have lined up extensive plans to capture the soccer fever.

    At the moment, most news channels are running a countdown show and profiling the teams and players in various news segment of the day.

    The scenario was quite different four years back. Then the news space was predominantly ruled by the bi-lingual Star News and the Hindi-language Zee News, besides the two international news channels, BBC World and CNN International.

    But today, the same space has more players and is far more competitive. No surprise, therefore, that all the news channels are gung ho about the football fever.

     
    THE ECONOMICS OF COVERAGE

    Industry observers say that an event of such magnitude can cost a news channel between Rs 5 million to Rs 10 million. If the annual operating expenses of news channels are taken into account, then the expenditure on Fifa World Cup might not look big, though it’s an important part of a news channel’s life.

    For example, NDTV Ltd’s operating expenses round up to approximately RS 1.78 billion annually, while TV18’s touches RS 700 million. TV Today with its three channels — the fourth one started just a few days back — incurred an annual operating cost of about RS 1.07 billion. The operating cost primarily includes expenditure on marketing, personnel, administration and uplinking.

     

    Since all news channels have respective long term tie-ups with global wire agencies like Reuters and APTN, part coverage of events like the World Cup come at a slightly incremental cost.

    “Generally, news channels have a long term agreement with a global news agency and for events like Fifa no extra fee is charged. News channels also inks deal with the sports channel that holds the telecast rights to access various other footage,” Zee News director Laxmi Goel says.

    According to Goel, news channels are also likely to tie-up with ESPN Star Sports as it holds the rights to Fifa World Cup for this region. “At our end, the negotiations are on with ESS and we are also talking to other agencies for acquiring additional footage. Apart from that we will use extensively footage provided by Reuters and APTN,” he added.

    With the soccer fever spreading in India though the country has never qualified for playing in the tournament, ESS is literally on a high. The sports channel is charging $100,000 for 60 seconds footage per match.

    ESS’ euphoria is not shared by all the news channels though they want to provide extensive coverage of Fifa World Cup. The high cost of accessing footage from the rights holder is still an impediment in concluding deals.

    Times Now channels’ parent Times Global Broadcasting vice-president and business head Partho Das Gupta points out that the company is in the process of “closing alliances” with ESS and others.

  • BBC World debuts in the US market

    BBC World debuts in the US market

    MUMBAI: In a bid to target a wider audience, the British Broadcasting Corporation (BBC) has launched BBC World in the US market. Though the news channel started broadcasting at the end of April, it was officially launched on 1 June. The channel can now be seen in New York. The BBC is also looking at striking deals with cable and satellite providers elsewhere in the US soon. 

    The launch coincided with the unveiling of an outdoor advertising campaign in New York to promote the service to viewers.

    In July, BBC World will launch a new breakfast programme presented by George Alagiah. “What we’re not setting out to do is carve a niche that reflects America back to the Americans. What we’re trying to do is reflect the world back to Americans,” Alagiah was quoted as saying in BBC News.

    The show, which will be based in London, will also be carried on the cable channel BBC America.

    BBC World was launched in 1995, and is funded by advertising and subscription. Apart from news bulletins, it also broadcasts the interview programme Hardtalk, motoring show Top Gear and film guide Talking Movies, amongst others.

    Although it can be seen in more than 200 countries, the channel has found it difficult to get a foothold in the US. “The American TV market is the most crowded market in the world. For cable operators to find a space for another news network has been quite difficult,” said the station’s editor Richard Porter.

    Porter also said that the channel’s coverage of global affairs has been their key selling point.

    The launch of BBC World in New York comes just four months after the station signed a distribution deal with Discovery. The channel’s main competitor in the US will be CNN International.

  • B.A.G plans to invest Rs 500 million in radio biz

    B.A.G plans to invest Rs 500 million in radio biz

    MUMBAI: B.A.G Infotainment, a wholly owned subsidiary of B.A.G. Films Ltd, plans to invest over Rs 500 million for its FM radio business spread over 10 towns.

    The investment includes expenses towards infrastructure, equipments and studio facilities. The company will also have to contribute to the common transmission infrastructure. “We have bid successfully at very low costs. This has given us an edge and our outgo towards license fee is just 10 per cent of our project cost,” says B.A.G Intotainment CEO Rajiv Mishra.

    B.A.G is also trying to work out an equity arrangement among a consortium of small and regional radio operators who are in the process of being formed for collectively tapping advertising. “Our feeling is that there should be a common bonding for the consortium that will make it last. This will be best served by an equity arrangement among the partners. We are in talks towards this,” says Mishra.

    The consortium of radio operators for ad sales is in the process of being finalised. B.A.G will lead this combination which will have a national footprint to present before advertisers. Besides pressuring on higher ad rates, the partnership arrangement can help drive down operating costs for these FM broadcasting companies.
    B.A.G expects to rope in 40 radio companies as members of this consortium. The idea is to counter the bigger players like Radio Mirchi, Radio City, Sun TV group and Anil Ambani-controlled Adlabs. “We hope to form the consortium by 15 July. We have already signed up with six companies including Renecka Fincon and Gwalior Farms. We are also in advanced talks with many others,” says Mishra.

    B.A.G has bagged licenses to operate stations in Shimla, Patiala, Karnal, Hissar, Ahmednagar, Jabalpur, Dhule, Jalgaon, Muzzaffarpur and Ranchi. “We expect the second phase of FM stations to be active by December. The marketing efforts should start somewhere in September-October. As for selecting radio companies who would form the consortium, we are careful that in each locality no competing operator is selected. We are selecting geographical blocks,” says Mishra.

  • Panregional players to participate in Discop 2006

    Panregional players to participate in Discop 2006

    MUMBAI: The 2006 edition of Discop to be held from 22 to 24 June expects a good attendance due to the strong recovery of the world television programming markets and the awakening of Central Europe and Eastern Europe to production projects in addition to sales of finished product.

    To be hosted at the Sofitel Atrium Hotel in Budapest, Hungary, there will be 1,300 participants from less than 400 participants four years ago.

    Discop is a programming market focused especially on Central and Eastern Europe and it is attended by small- and medium-sized buyers that do not usually go to MIPTV and Mipcom. The highlights are:
    * For the first time, there will be regional production presence, with a good number of local, regional and independent producing companies.
    * Larger buyers will attend, including some from Western Europe.
    * New players are emerging including regional distributors, new pan-regional pay TV channels and also broadcasters, from Czech Republic, Bulgaria and smaller nations.
    * Several ancillary business developers will also attend, covering home video, licensing, mobile telephony and Internet. This did not happen in the past.
    On the sellers side, there will be larger participation, too:
    * Western Europe will be more represented than earlier.
    * Latin America will be participating at full, not only with telenovelas but also offering other types of finished product and formats, cashing on the new bonanza of telenovelas and general “Latin” product in Europe.
    * The countries within the region are starting to market their own product.
    * More participants from the U.S. are expected, since NATPE purchased the show from Reed-Midem.

  • BBC Worldwide global channels appoints Anne Howarth as SVP

    BBC Worldwide global channels appoints Anne Howarth as SVP

    MUMBAI: Anne Howarth is BBC Worldwide global channels senior vice president. She is the first senior management appointment for this division.

    Anne joins Worldwide from the BBC and will be responsible for the strategic direction of BBC Worldwide’s international television channels business, as well as the development and growth of its portfolio of channels, currently 18 wholly owned and joint venture television channels, available in 324 million homes around the world.

    She has already begun working with BBC Worldwide global channels MD Darren Childs, on a new strategy for BBC Worldwide’s TV channels business. The strategy will roll out in 2006 and will gradually develop BBC Worldwide’s portfolio of TV channels in both existing and new markets.

    Childs said, “Anne brings to this role a wealth of expertise. She has played key roles in transforming business into focused, robust operations as well as successfully closing major deals. We are embarking on an unprecedented period of growth around the world and Anne will be instrumental in delivering this growth.”

    Howarth said, “The BBC brand is one of the most respected around the world, and in the UK, its name is synonymous with high-quality, engaging programming. Our new strategy will engender the same feeling with our international audiences, building a strong portfolio of channels that engage and entertain audiences worldwide and it is tremendously exciting to be joining BBC Worldwide TV channels at this time.”

    Prior to this, Howarth had been with the BBC where she most recently played a leading role in the sale of BBC Broadcast now known as Red Bee Ltd, to Macquarie Bank. The sale won Acquisition Monthly’s award for the best mid-market corporate deal of 2005.

  • Globecast will deliver HDTV Fifa World Cup for Sky Italia

    Globecast will deliver HDTV Fifa World Cup for Sky Italia

    MUMBAI: Global content management and delivery firm GlobeCast has been selected by Sky Italia to provide HDTV contribution for the World Cup of Football from the International Broadcasting Centre (IBC) in Munich to Sky’s headquarters outside of Milan, Italy.

    The event kicks off on 9 June in Germany and airs in India on ESPN Star Sports.

    This solution includes both fibre and satellite contribution to ensure a seamless broadcast.

    The contribution service provided by GlobeCast is an end-to-end solution including routing and transmission via fibre, as well as the provision of encoding and decoding equipment in HD.

    GlobeCast will also provide HD satellite coverage as a backup for the event, using capacity on Eutelsat’s Eurobird 3 satellite at 33º East. This satellite coverage will guarantee a high level of reliability and service quality, especially with the inauguration of the latest HD-ready member of GlobeCast’s proprietary fleet of Satellite Newsgathering (SNG) vehicles. This particular truck is the first such all-HD vehicle in the Italian market.

    The service package provided by GlobeCast also includes a 24 hour on-site customer support and technical assistance desk, staffed by GlobeCast’s technical experts.

  • Robert McDowell joins as member to FCC

    Robert McDowell joins as member to FCC

    MUMBAI: Robert McDowell was sworn in by Federal Communications Commission (FCC) chairman C to be a member of America’s media regulatory body.

    McDowell said, “I am honoured and humbled to be joining such a distinguished group of commissioners as well as the fine career public servants at the FCC.

    “There are many challenging issues facing the Commission, and I am eager to begin working on them with my fellow commissioners, with Congress, and with the American people. I am confident that our efforts will help bring the most advanced and efficient communications systems in the world to all American consumers.”

    McDowell brings to the FCC nearly 16 years of private sector experiences in the communications industry. Immediately prior to joining the FCC, McDowell was senior vice president and assistant general counsel for COMPTEL, an association representing competitive facilities-based telecommunications service providers, emerging VoIP providers, integrated communications companies and their supplier partners, where he had responsibilities involving advocacy efforts before Congress, the White House and executive agencies.

  • Spatial Access Solutions founder Meenakshi Madhvani

    Spatial Access Solutions founder Meenakshi Madhvani

    She’s one woman who’s been there, done that! However, hers has been a long journey spanning 25 years wherein she has faced a lot of brickbats for anything that she touched in the industry. Be it shifting gears from the account planning and managing division of Lintas to its media division; joining Zee Telefilms; setting up India’s first media independent – Carat – or for that matter even launching India’s first media audit firm – Spatial Access Solutions… it’s been a tough fight all the way.

    And Meenakshi Madhvani has come out of it all and successfully so. She literally felt her skin getting tougher and tougher with each passing day.

    Her tryst with the advertising and media industry began with a small agency called Ad Plan, where she spent one and a half years. This initial learning in a small agency was instrumental in shaping her as a person. “The small agency introduction to advertising was fantastic because in a small agency you do everything from accounts, copy, visualization, invoices, client interactions etc. It was terrific because at the superficial level, I understood all aspects of the business and that helped me in understanding what I really liked doing and what I didn’t,” says Meenakshi.

    LONG YEARS AT LINTAS

    Then came a rock solid 12 years at Lintas, where Meenakshi joined in the account planning and management division under the able guidance of Alyque Padamsee. Meenakshi joined the agency in 1980 and was with them all the way till 1992. However, she quit the agency for a year to try her hand at ad films with a company called Art Commerical; only to come back.

    It was in this one year that she was involved in the production of yesteryears’ cult comedy serial – Yeh Jo Hai Jindagi, which was being produced by Art Commercial. Her interest in film and television production is what made her break away from Lintas. “I was interested in looking at the production side of things and wanted to see if I like film or television production so I joined Art Commercial for one year. I learnt film and art commercial production and then decided to come back to Lintas,” says she.

    Alyque Padamsee described this as the rubber band effect, wherein people would leave only to come back. “Lintas had told me that I could come back to them anytime and so I went back,” Meenakshi explains.

    At Lintas she worked on a variety of clients including Johnson & Johnson and a variety of brands from the Hindustan Lever Limited (HLL) portfolio. “I had some phenomenal bosses and I think it was in those years that I discovered that a good boss can make or break your career. If you have a good boss who tests, challenges and pushes you; you actually find the strengths and reserves in yourself that you did not know existed. I had two really fantastic bosses – Atul Shrikhande (who is now in the Gulf) and Atul Sharma (who is now the China marketing head for Yum Restaurants),” says she.

    What’s more, apart from the length and breadth of exposure in the advertising industry in those early days, Meenakshi also made some great friends for life. “Deepak Roy, Khursheeda Modi and Amit Bose are all friendships that have built up because of the intensity of that experience. Those were the test years of advertising as we were developing new techniques and experimenting. Also television had just come into the market. The media scene and consumers were changing rapidly. From a protected economy, we were moving to a market economy. The 80s were very exciting times and for me the primary motivation through my working career has been enjoying what I am doing as long as I can feel that I can add value to the business and myself. So for 12 years I did not think of a change as I just enjoyed work thoroughly,” explains Meenakshi.

    At Lintas, she was the head of HLL soaps and detergents for five years and the head of HLL personal products for four years. But then fatigue set in as she had been doing the same thing for more than a decade. That’s when Meenakshi decided to try her hand at media. “After 12 years I was bored of servicing and that’s when I decided to move into Lintas’ media department. The whole media buying experience was really fantastic; because that’s when I realized that the 90s were actually going to be the era of media, and media was going to start becoming the differentiator,” she says.

    Her move into media planning and buying got her a lot of criticisms because in those early days, media was looked at as a backend function. But Meenakshi’s vision of media was totally different. “I saw media as an opportunity to make deals, strike relationships and build on data that was available,” she says

    Her aim was to change the mindset of the agency so that media buying started being looked upon as a function and not just operations. Her claim to fame here was bagging the Coca Cola and ITC accounts. “We pitched for the Coca Cola business because Coke was coming back to India in 92-93. McCann was handling the planning as the business came in with their international alignments. But in India, McCann’s buying was very weak so we pitched and won the business. Then we pitched for ITC, which was looking at aggregating business with one agency. We won that account too,” she recalls.

    However, all was not well in paradise. Differences with the top management of Lintas cast doubts in Meenakshi’s mind and she finally quit in 1994. “I had a boss who I didn’t really like working with. To be honest, I did not want to leave Lintas but my boss was making it less and less fun and I always wanted to enjoy my work. I had the option to stay back and get into strife with my boss or to take it as an opportunity to leave and do something else,” she says.

    At this point in time, she had decided that if she had dedicated the first 10 years of her career to servicing, the next 10 would be in media. “It was a conscious decision because I felt that’s where the future would be in terms of the complexity of the environment. The function needs to actually have people who had analytical skills and yet were able to look at media from the ‘outside in’ rather than ‘inside out.’ So in 1994 I joined Zee Telefilms as vice president of sales and marketing,” she says.

    ZEE HEY DAYS

    Zee TV had just launched and Subhash Chandra asked Meenakshi to come on board. “I decided to take the plunge and it was a great learning experience,” recollects Meenakshi. Zee was a joyride for her and Chandra joined the likes of Shunu Sen and Alyque Padamsee to become one of her mentors.

    What’s more, the rate card system that she introduced back in 1994 is still being followed by the industry today. She joined Zee in September 1994 and in October she decided to bring about a rate hike and sent a circular to agencies and advertisers. “There is much consternation around the rate hike but the beauty of that structure is that it allows you to take a rate hike 365 days a year because all you do is re-classify programmes depending on the kind of ratings. So the rates don’t change but your programme list within that, changes. That rate card structuring has become a standard in the industry. While the absolute costs may not go up but because programmes keep moving up as deliveries improve, your ability to charge more for the programmes is enhanced,” she explains.

    Dwelling on the feeling of having introduced a structure that is still being followed by the industry, Meenakshi says, “It is a great feeling. Sometimes these concepts are lucky accidents and sometimes they are actual brain waves. How the mind works you really never know but at the end of the day if you are able to create an approach or concept that outlasts you, then I think that it’s a true source of satisfaction. So whether it was the rate card structuring at Zee or the whole sales network that was set up; it was truly a good feeling.”

    At Zee, Meenakshi was also instrumental in tapping revenue sources from outside the country. She set up sales offices in Dubai, Singapore, Australia, Tokyo, Bangladesh and Pakistan. “We had revenue coming in from all across the region and the good thing was that we were getting rid of our inventory, creating a lot of interesting marketing opportunities around the channel whether it was sponsored film, corporate films or infomercials,” says Meenakshi.

    Working with Chandra was a great experience for Meenakshi. While her earlier boss – Alyque was an emotional and involved person; Chandra, on the other hand was cold, unemotional and impersonal. “But he is a very driven person because his only measure of people is their output and delivery. The great thing about him is that if you earn his respect, he completely backs off and gives you a free hand in whatever you do,” she says.

    Interestingly, when she joined Zee, she had told Chandra that she would not be able to work well under close supervision. “If you want me to do my best then you need to give me space. If I make a mistake pull me up; if I make serious mistakes then sack me but give me space till then,” is what she told him.

    Confidently she told him that he just needed to tell her what he wanted delivered for the network and she would do it her way. “Don’t tell me how to do it, when to do it, where to get it from. Just give me a number and it will be yours,” were her words.

    Reminisces Meenakshi, “Obviously for the first three months he must have been be very concerned but don’t forget that at that time the stakes were not that high. It’s always easier to trust somebody when the stakes are not that high. When the stakes get really high, the tension and involvement gets more and more.”

    What she learnt from Chandra was how to manage a business and how to look at its legal and financial aspects. “I also learnt to use the power of information and how some bit of information needs to be distributed, while some other needs to be protected,” she says.

    It was fortunate for her that when she joined Zee there was nothing and she was a part of the core team that had to build the company. “Another thing was that we did not know the rules. We were inventing them as we went along. My perspective when it came to creating rules is to always think of the long term. Sometimes short term approaches tend to be detrimental to the long term business interests and I was able to convince Subhashji about the need to look at the long term interests,” she says.

    One challenge she faced at Zee was that now she was on the other side of the fence – from being a buyer of media to being a seller. The first challenge for her was to understand the whole new business of television. “I had to understand the business of the television market at the macro level. At the micro level, one very big issue was the mindset change that one had to go through from being a buyer of advertising to being a seller of advertising services,” says Meenakshi.

    Also the fact was that now she was dealing with the same people who, only six months ago, were her competitors. “In the Indian context the buyer is always in a stronger position than the seller so I had to start going to agencies, meet people, seek appointments, talk to them about the channel, educate them on what the channel could do for them and why they needed to invest in us, etc. I may have been a buyer six months ago but now I was a seller and therefore I needed to start thinking like a seller and look for opportunities,” she says.

    One thing that could have been in her favour was that she knew the people on the other side and hence it might not have been that difficult to get them on board. But Meenakshi disagrees, saying, “A lot of people I was going to see as a representative of Zee were actually my competitors earlier. For them, it was a nice and happy situation to be in because somebody who was a competitor and was fighting for the same business; now was asking you for an appointment in order to make a sales pitch to you. It’s a perfect opportunity to humiliate somebody if you want to and I had more than my fair share of people who wanted to put me in my place.”

    At that time, Zee had a separate subsidiary company that looked after sales and marketing with Meenakshi at the helm. Credit goes to her for increasing the company’s revenues from Rs 500 – 600 million to Rs 3.5 billion. “One year down the line, things became easier for me because by then I had been able to convince people that Zee had to be an integral part of their media plan. But for that first year it was very difficult,” she recalls.

    After three years with the company, trouble was brewing yet again in Meenakshi’s professional life. Chandra had roped in Vijay Jindal as the CEO and managing director of Zee Telefilms and Meenakshi couldn’t see eye to eye with him.

    When Jindal was roped in, Meenakshi was managing director of Zee’s marketing company. “Jindal’s focus was completely driven by finance. His primary objective was to enhance shareholders’ value. But while looking at enhancing shareholders’ value, he was not as committed to enhancing customer value. Apart from this, I also went and told Subhashji that I wouldn’t be able to work with Jindal because there was a big difference between his and my philosophy and approach to the broadcasting business,” Meenakshi says.

    CARAT CHALLENGE

    Around the same time that this was happening, she got an offer to set up and head Carat, which was looking at entering the Indian market. Chandra tried to convince her not to leave. In fact, Chandra, who had just bought over the East India Trading Company, also offered Meenakshi the chance to take on that project and see what she could do with it. But Meenakshi was adamant. The challenge she saw in Carat was that she wanted to experience what it was to be a “small fish in a big pond”.

    “The thing with Zee was that I was heading a large business but working in a fairly limited market. Yes, I had sales offices across the globe but I wasn’t pitting myself against the best in the business. It’s great being a big fish in a small pond but I wanted to know what it would be like being a small fish in a big pond,” she says.

    Setting up Carat in 1997 was no cakewalk. Once again the advertising industry was all out against her because industry veterans thought that the Indian market was not yet ready for a media independent. Meenakshi remembers Madison Communications chairman and managing director Sam Balsara and present Starcom Mediavest Group Asia CEO D Sriram (who at that time was with Madison) going on record to say that they would give Carat six months.

    “Every conceivable criticism that can be thought of against a media independent was said. Obviously I was very concerned because if the stalwarts of the industry were saying that it won’t work then was I making a mistake? But ultimately you have to give it your best shot and that’s what I decided to do,” says Meenakshi.

    What came in handy while setting up Carat was Meenakshi’s experience at Zee. “I was able to use the financial and legal exposure that I got at Zee to set up Carat. What I had going for me was the fact that I was setting it up for an entity that was known globally and there was some amount of equity about the parent company. There was the financial strength and support of the parent company and they were willing to invest in the market,” she says.

    While her goodwill in the industry and team she built at Carat were things that worked in favour of the agency, there were a lot of things going against it.

    “One of the problems in setting up Carat was the stern resistance from the advertising agencies. The Advertising Agencies Association of India (AAAI) got together and tried to get the Indian Society of Advertisers (ISA) to actually stay away from media independents,” recalls Meenakshi.

    Another thing that can be counted as a personal achievement for her but worked against her was that at 38, she was the youngest country head of Carat globally anywhere across the network. Hence, within the group too, there was scepticism if she would be able to deliver.

    And if that was not all, another problem was that Carat did not have accreditation and hence the agency could not get commissions or credit. “I had to find a creative way to work around that issue and I did manage to get accreditation. The amazing thing is that even today, Carat is the only media independent that has got accreditation,” says Meenakshi with pride.

    Barring these initial hitches, Carat’s first big break came in December 1997 when the agency signed on Bacardi as its first major client. After that Cadbury and many other clients followed.

    “One of my biggest achievements at Carat was that I was able to conclusively prove to the industry that there was an opportunity for media independents. Two years after I launched Carat, every agency in the country launched their media divisions starting off with Sam. Then came Mindshare, Starcom and Lodestar,” says she.

    So what brought about the change in people’s mindset? Meenakshi explains, “It’s very simple. If it’s working, let’s jump in. If it’s not, then we can stay on the sidelines and pontificate. Nobody wanted to make the first move. Let’s wait and watch was their mantra. They wanted someone else to be the guinea pig and if it worked then they would marshal their resources and line up. I am sorry for being so brutal but that’s the reality and the kind of impediments that the creative advertising agencies put in were phenomenal.”

    Another boost that Carat got was with Bharti signing on as a client. “Bharti asked us to set up offices across the length and breadth of the country. Bharti marketing head Hemant Sachdev gave me the business on one condition that I set up offices in seven cities within 90 days. At the end of 80 days, I went back to him and said it was done. So suddenly from being a two office (Mumbai and Delhi) network, we became a very large network across the country,” she says.

    After that Meenakshi launched Carat Pakistan and also took over supervising the Thailand and Malaysia offices of the agency.

    FINAL CALLING – SPATIAL ACCESS

    Her stint with Carat lasted six years. In 2003, after some introspection, Meenakshi realized that till now she had built business for others, whether it was setting up the marketing and sales division at Zee or setting up Carat from scratch. Now it was time for her to do something of her own.

    Again it was disagreements with her boss that made Meenakshi quit. “I had reached a state in my life where I had decided that I am not going to compromise on issues that are very important to me. I have been fortunate that I can take a stance. I had disagreements with my boss again… the wonderful history with Peter Paska… and decided to take a stance and quit,” she says.

    In retrospect, she thinks it might have been an emotional decision and maybe she should have stayed back, fought and resolved her disagreements with him. But at the same time, she doesn’t have any regrets because she feels it was the right thing to do.

    With that, India’s first media audit firm – Spatial Access Solutions – emerged. Yet again the industry turned foe. “I had seen what was going on in the media planning and buying industry and incidentally this is something that the industry holds against me. A lot of people felt that I used to be an insider and was exposed to everything that was going on. ‘How could I turn around and become an auditor?’ was what was thrown at me,” says Meenakshi.

    “The industry felt that it was much better to have a financial auditor because they don’t know their ass from their elbow. You can hide a lot of things under the carpet when there is incompetence because of lack of knowledge, not because of lack of ability,” she adds.

    For Meenakshi, it was a logical progression to set up Spatial Access Solutions. “All industries go through phases and I knew that the industry in India was following a path. I, too, was a part of that change… whether it was from servicing into media to broadcasting to media independents. Media audits was the next logical progression for me,” she says.

    Meenakshi feels that the media scenario has now changed as more and more clients are now consolidating their media with one agency rather than dividing it between different agencies. In the earlier scenario, a series of natural checks and balances came into place because there was more than one agency involved.

    As a media auditor, there are 3 things I tell agencies:

    Do the right thing for your client – Ensure that you are actually providing him with an outstanding media service and buying.

    Charge the right fees – Don’t be pushovers where it comes to your fees. Every single agency says that others are willing to undercut commissions but the fact of the matter is if you believe in what you are doing and you know what you are doing is good why should you compromise on your fees?

    Don’t make money at the cost of the client – The fact is that today very often recommendations are made on media plans, not on the strength on whether or not the media is good for the client but on the strength of how much extra commissions the agency is getting from the media.

    “Now with all the media being aggregated and consolidated with one media agency those natural checks and balances no longer exist. The size of the business has increased and also the number of people required to service a business. Therefore the trauma of a review or moving to another agency was becoming more and more large and clients were getting stuck in that rut. The beautiful thing with a media auditor is that it acts like a marriage counsellor, who explains what the problem is with the marriage and tells the client to get their agency to give them better service, work and cement the marriage and not to walk away from it,” she explains.

    When queried as to how it felt to work with the same people who at one point in time criticised her for setting up Spatial Access? She says, “These are all creatures of convenience not conviction. Two and half years ago when I set up Spatial Access, there were allegations made about my integrity and credibility. The fact is that those same people today are happy to queue up when I am helping a client put his business up for a pitch. Today they are willing to treat me with respect, maybe behind my back they still say nasty things about me but I don’t care.”

    Many people in the industry feel that she is biased towards some agencies but Meenakshi is undeterred. She clarifies, “People in the industry think I have an agenda. I am saying this categorically and for the record that I do not have an agenda. I do not have any friends or enemies among the media agencies. I am completely transparent and fair regardless of who the agency is.”

    So after two-and-a-half years, are there still some who are not open to media audits? “Well, most of them have seen the benefits of it. Sam Balsara has gone on record to say that he’s not willing to be audited and of course prior to that he went on record to say that he was supportive of audits and the industry needed audits. Group M has been silent as far as the record is concerned, but has actively gone around telling their clients that they cannot share rates and can’t have an auditor. They are very supportive of financial auditors like Ernst & Young because they do a process and a financial audit. Out of these two, one has taken a stance and I respect him for that. He at least had the courage to speak out. But the other has not taken a stance in public but is doing everything to make sure that they roadblock their clients from going ahead with audits,” quips Meenakshi.

    Three issues on my agenda right now:

    Grow the business in terms of the size of clients and the reach of services. One of the new services we have just added on is media performance monitor. So every month we can monitor our clients’ media performance and give him a comparative analysis, which goes to him in the form of a report.

    The second thing is expansion. We are happy with what we have been able to do in the Indian market. Now we are looking at expansion outside the country. We’re in the process of signing on clients in Greece and Singapore.

    The third thing is that I have bought a small plot of land in Kamshet, which is 11 kilometers away from Khandala and Lonavala. My objective is to build my house there, plant some trees and have my own little farm.

    However, the rest of the industry has been pragmatic about media audits and have realized that they are much better having an auditor who does not have an agenda, understands this space and can add value to it.

    Today, Spatial Access has 44 clients across six cities. The firm also has three tie-ups with European companies. If these firms have clients who need an audit in India, Spatial Access provides them with the expertise.

    “We have expanded our service basket because we started out only with media expenditure, thanks to the myopic perspective of the media agencies. But because clients were migrating a lot of their marketing budgets into non media areas, we decided to look at the entire marketing investments. Now we have media as well as non media marketing investments. We look at production audits, print production, whether it’s creative fees, printing, processing etc. We also look at film production and the amount that an advertiser should be paying for a film because film production costs are going through the roof and advertisers need to understand the nuances of that costing exercise. We do PR audits, direct mailer audits, ground event evaluation as well as a reality check on the marketing expenditure,” she elaborates.

    At the end of the day, Meenakshi has no regrets. “I have made some fantastic friends and I have made some enemies also, but those are enemies worthy of respect,” she says.

  • ABC puts viewers through ‘The Con Test’

    ABC puts viewers through ‘The Con Test’

    MUMBAI: The UK game show The Con Test is coming to the US in a production deal between FremantleMedia North America and ABC.
    The Con Test is a game show where one person could walk away with over one million dollars without ever having to answer a single question right.

    The Con Test is a game for those who have the wit, nerves and guile to bluff their way to an exorbitant amount of cash. Dont understand the questions? Fake it. Dont know the answers? Lie. All that matters is that the opponent thinks you do.
    Each episode wil be in a question-and-answer format, with the contestants unaware of how they are faring against their opponents. This allows those who are trailing to advantageously bluff their way to victory.

    ABC says that the show is a unique and fresh game show concept and sees this series as a fun outlet for viewers who want to sit back, be entertained and scream at the TV set as if the contestants can hear them.

    FremantleMedia North America CEO Cecile Frot-Coutaz says, “We’ve seen tremendous success with a variety of game shows that have come over from the UK to America. We believe that The Con Test has all the elements of a hit and are extremely enthusiastic about introducing it to the US audience.”