Tag: AAAI

  • SPN becomes broadcaster of the year at Abby 2018

    SPN becomes broadcaster of the year at Abby 2018

    GOA: After an engaging second day of Goafest 2018, that brought about creative discussions and knowledge sharing amongst stalwarts across consulting, technology, creative arts, marketing, news media and policymakers, the 50th Abby Awards continued.

    As the last rays of the sun kissed the Goan sand on day two, it was time for the presentation of the broadcaster, public relations, still craft, video craft, design and direct Abbys. The awards celebrate the best-in-class creative geniuses and works of stellar significance in creativity. While Sony Pictures Networks led the tally for the Broadcaster Abbys with six metals, it was ZEEL that took home the gold for the night.

    While Design Abbys showed favour to Open Strategy and Design with six metals including one gold, Pi Communications took home four metals where direct specialist Abbys was concerned. While a total of 13 gold were handed out to top honours in public relations amongst other metals, it was Value 360 Communications that ate into the pie with a total of eight metals.

    Still Craft Abbys saw dominance by The Social Street who grabbed four metals including two gold. But the happiest faces for the night clearly belonged to Early Man Film Pvt Ltd, who took home a whopping 16 metals in the video craft specialist category which included five gold, four silvers and seven bronzes!

    With industry-specific conclaves to expert seminars, the Goafest Abbys 2018 presented by The Advertising Club and The AAAI has once again set the benchmark high in celebrating excellence in creativity across media platforms and genres.

     

  • Lodestar UM name media agency on day 1 at ABBY Awards

    Lodestar UM name media agency on day 1 at ABBY Awards

    GOA: Goafest 2018, India’s foremost advertising, media and marketing convention felicitating creative thinking in India, kick-started its annual festival yesterday. This year, the festival is also celebrating 50 years of the prestigious Abby Awards, which have been handed out to creative geniuses over the years for their stellar work that has, today, put India on the global map where advertising, media and marketing is concerned.

    The industry conclave presented by Discovery marked the first session of the day with Baba Ramdev who enthralled the audience by speaking about building inclusive, sustainable, decentralised and just brands. He enlightened them about the philosophy behind the brand Patanjali and stressed upon the need for marketers to build an emotional connect with the consumer. His session was followed by a talk by Pepperfry chief marketing officer and head of new business Kashyap Vadapalli who stressed the importance of building trust amongst consumers.

    As the sun went down on day one, it was time for the presentation of the publisher and media Abbys which recognise the excellence in the use of media such as print, TV, cinema, outdoor, radio, events, digital and social media amongst others. A total of 38 media Abbys and 16 publisher Abbys were awarded. While Lodestar UM led the media Abbys with an impressive 10 awards including four gold medals, the highest number of gold, Jagran Prakashan, scored a total of five metals, thus taking a lead in the publisher Abbys. Other notable winners for the evening included Dentsu Webchutney in the media Abbys category with three silvers and one gold and Times of India that bagged two gold medals in the publisher Abby category.

    This year, twelve creative legends were roped in to form the master jury which had been entrusted with the task of screening all the entries received, across all the categories and verticals and then to identify those worthy of being shortlisted and receiving the award. The 2018 edition of the Abby Awards also saw a number of categories and sub-categories being rationalised, to ensure relevance and effectiveness.

    Advertising Agencies Association of India (AAAI) president Nakul Chopra says, “We started Goafest all those years ago with the aim to bring together people from the world of advertising, media and marketing together to discuss and exchange exciting ideas. But today, this festival has grown into becoming one of the biggest congregations of some of the most brilliant creative minds in the country. It is these young people, who come here in droves to learn from and interact with the legends who paved the creative way for them, who make Goafest a festival worth attending. I am deeply grateful to the fraternity present here for making Goafest what it is today.”

    Discussing the Abby Awards to be handed out at Goafest 2018, The Advertising Club president Vikram Sakhuja adds, “Over the last 50 years, the awards went through a lot of changes. So, we spoke to heads of agencies, to industry leaders and more importantly, to the young creative workforce out there who came up with two key changes to the awards this year. The changes include the rationalisation of categories to stay relevant to today’s young and dynamic creative geniuses and the formation of a master jury made up of industry masters to guarantee effectiveness. And it gives me immense pleasure to see the industry not only embracing these changes with open arms but also supporting us in our endeavour to keep improving the quality of the awards being handed out.”

    Advertising Agencies Association of India (AAAI) chairman of Goafest 2018 and vice president Ashish Bhasin mentions, “Goafest is always a great reminder of the amazing amount of creative talent we have in India. Seeing such young people brimming with energy, learning from the best in the industry and congregating together to exchange ideas is what enriches creative thinking. This year, we have upped the ante by bringing in a lot of technological changes and of course by sprucing up our speaker line up by bringing in stalwarts from varied backgrounds – be it advertising, marketing, music, film, yoga and much more.”

    Stay tuned for more updates from Goa.

  • MAM round up of the week

    MAM round up of the week

    MUMBAI: The world of media and advertising never seems to have a dull day with another action-packed week coming to an end. Amid the yo-yoing fortunes of the industry, the newsmakers held their sway. Indian Television Dot Com brings to you a round up of the most important news events over the past seven days: 

    Mindshare South Asia’s organisational restructuring

    Media agency, Mindshare, part of GroupM announced the organisation restructure this week by elevating Amin Lakhani as the new president of client leadership at Mindshare India. In his new role, he will manage core client capabilities across all offices in the country. 

    Additionally, Anita Kotwani has been promoted from her existing role to senior vice president of new business and Premjeet Sodhi will join Mindshare South Asia as senior vice president of Mindshare Fulcrum, South Asia and will lead Team Fulcrum across South Asia. Premjeet’s new role is effective March 2018.

    Madhusudan Gopalan takes over as P&G India MD and CEO

    P&G India elevated Madhusudan Gopalan who as the new managing director and CEO who will take over from 1 April 2018. Madhusudan is currently leading the P&G business in Indonesia and will take over from Al Rajwani, who is set to retire from the company after 37 years of service after the end of the financial year. Until his retirement, Al will help in on-boarding Madhusudan on the India business and enable a smooth transition.

    Gopalan has over 18 years of experience working for the company across business units and diverse geographies like India, US and ASEAN countries.

    Google Pay launches in US, UK

    Globally, in an attempt to become a hit in the vast payment space, Google launched its payment system, Google Pay in US and UK markets where users can pay for public transport in London, Portland and Kiev. 

    In India, Extending its Google Tez option, the Indian payment app will now enable bill payments for electricity, gas, water, DTH as well as postpaid mobile. You just have to link your biller accounts once and directly pay from your bank account. Tez supports Bharat BillPay and doesn’t add any transaction charges.The app is supported in English, Hindi, Bengali, Gujarati, Kannada, Marathi, Tamil, and Telugu languages. 

    The bill paying feature would include major utilities like Reliance Energy, BSES and Dish TV and would cover all states and major metros. The app supports all major and small scale banks in India for payment.

    GroupM, Ogilvy unveil Effectiveness Lab

    Wavemaker, GroupM’s media, content and technology agency partnered with creative powerhouse Ogilvy, to create a first of its kind Effectiveness Lab in India. This unique collaboration, between the two WPP agencies will develop data-validated points of view on creating effective communications across consumer interaction platforms.

    Branded content is the first space the Lab will explore, probing how consumers respond to different content strategies, creative approaches and formats. As marketers increase spends on the creation and deployment of content, it is crucial to bring intelligence to what drives effectiveness in the content space.

    ABBY Awards announces 2018’s jury chairs 

    The week also saw Advertising Club and AAAI’s ABBY Awards announcing the illustrious Jury Chairs for the Media, Broadcaster, Publisher, Branded Content & Entertainment, Specialist and Craft Categories. Chairing the jury for each of these categories are stalwarts and veterans who have played an instrumental role in leading the respective categories towards new echelons of growth. The Media category will be judged by Madison World chairman Sam Balsara, Branded Content and Entertainment category will be judged by BIG FM CEO Tarun Katial. 

    ABBYs 2018 will be a highlight at the leading advertising convention, Goafest, where once again the entire advertising and marketing fraternity is expected to come together in Goa, between 5th April, 2018 and 7th April 201 at The Grand Hyatt, Bambolim, North Goa.

  • Obit: Ranjan Kapur was a maverick who breathed advertising

    Obit: Ranjan Kapur was a maverick who breathed advertising

    MUMBAI: It was just eight years ago on 8 February 2010 that Mani Ayer, the revered managing director of Ogilvy & Mather, whom Ranjan Kapur succeeded in 1993, passed away. And very close to that date-on 27 January-came the news that Kapur himself had breathed his last.

    To Kapur goes the credit of shaping Ogilvy & Mather into the powerhouse it is today. He had Piyush Pandey on his team. And, mind you, Piyush, who was already gaining a reputation under Ayer, grew under his guidance and freedom into one of the sharpest creative minds in India, dazzling clients with his sheer gift of selling ad concepts and copy for brands. And to check Pandey’s occasional extravagance, Kapur had SN Rane, the finance head who kept an eagle eye on spends.

    Kapur was a feisty corporate chieftain; he had growth ambitions for his agency. He also wanted quality work for his clients. He often called himself a maverick and encouraged entrepreneuralism. He often quipped: “If you can’t say it in the headline, then why bother about the copy.”

    I remember interacting with him a couple of times in the nineties when I was writing for Asian Advertising & Marketing Hong Kong. He was quick to respond to any query I sent out to him about Ogilvy & Mather as he was familiar with the publication’s popularity in the region since he was posted in Singapore prior to being brought to India. He had a sharp, very business oriented mind. He could also throw in his laugh, along with his signature brevity, dressed in double breasted suits as he used to be then.

    And he was only a call away when I reached out to him on launching indiantelevision.com.

    My contributions in terms of analysing and writing on the world of advertising waned. As did my interactions with him. But every time I bumped into him at an Ad Club or AAAI or television industry gathering, he would break into his big grin, with his wife Jimi in proximity, and wish me a polite hello.

    My last conversation with him was when I called on him to be a panellist at our music industry conference Nokia Music Connects in 2010 to talk about the role of music in advertising. I reminded him about our earlier interactions and he agreed to join the panel. And as I interviewed him and another vet Lyn deSouza on stage, he was crystal clear that the ad industry was not paying enough emphasis on the use of sound in advertising. He advised all the players in the music ecosystem to come together and figure out ways to interest brands and agencies to put their money behind music.

    Sadly, I just bumped into him a couple of times after that. And he was always warm.  But my memory is that Kapur was the life of every advertising gathering. He had some anecdote or some experience to share, which would liven up the proceedings. He chose to mentor many a young advertising wannabe, who has today risen up in the ranks in various agencies.

    With Kapur gone, now only Prem Mehta, who was heading Lintas at the time Ranjan came in, is left of the three Punjabi-speaking heavyweights who ruled the ad world in the early nineties. Mike Khanna who led HTA passed away a couple of years ago.

    Speaking to Harvard Business Review (HBR) sometime back, Kapur had shared that as a 23-24 year old, he was bored with being a banker at Citibank despite all the money he made. Hence, he asked to be relieved but was put in charge of advertising for the bank—the first time it was attempting to do so—and dealt with its agency Lintas. He loved it so much, he begged the Lintas guys to get him a job. They said no as they feared losing the Citibank account if they did so. But they helped him get a job with Benson’s (as Ogilvy & Mather was known then). That was more than 52-53 years ago and he stayed with the agency for 37 plus years and the remainder with the WPP group.

    So obsessed was he with advertising, that he confessed he missed out on celebrating his wedding anniversaries on several occasions and even his daughter Tina growing up— something he admitted to regretting in the HBR interview. 

    Over the last few years, he had been occupied with the ISDI WPP School of Communication in order to nurture the next bunch of Mad Men or Math Men (as Martin Sorrel likes to call them) and hopefully plug the huge talent gap that the industry faces.  

    In the beginning for Kapur there was advertising. As it will be for those who graduate from the school and begin their careers in agencies. 

    Indiantelevision.com raises a toast in gratitude to Kapur. RIP Ranjan.

    Kapur’s passing away shocked many in the ad world who posted their grief online:

    Saddened to hear about Ranjan Kapur. An architect of the Advertising industry in India. Cherish the moments spent with him and Jimi

    —  Prasoon Joshi

    Deeply deeply saddened at the passing on of RANJAN KAPUR: a great advertising professional and an even greater human being. The world is much much poorer with his death.

    —  Suhel Sheth

    They say nothing grows under a mighty banyan tree. Ranjan was the rare exception. Many a giant oak flourished in the sunlight of his shadow. My heart breaks for Jimi and Tina. It breaks for all of us who were blessed to have him in our lives.

    —  Bobby Pawar

    A very very sad day for Indian advertising. RIP Ranjan Kapur. I am lucky to have worked with him – he was one of the biggest influences on many of us at that time. They don’t make them like him anymore. The biggest chapter of Indian advertising just got concluded.

    —  Partha Sinha 

    I met Ranjan Kapur as an Ogilvy intern a couple of times. He was always kind. Sad to hear of his passing.

    So sad to hear about the passing of Ranjan Kapur. He was so generous to me with his time and wisdom in setting up the @WPP_Govt in India and @KantarPublic. A lovely man.

    —  Gaurav Jain

    My finest boss ever ! RIP Ranjan Kapur

    Saddened to hear that #Ranjan Kapur is no more. Can’t believe it. The end of an era of statesmanship and grace in advertising. RIP.

    Goodbye #RanjanKapur .. Will never forget your spirit, warmth and constant sense of wonder .. the world will miss you ..

    —  Pratop Bose

  • Nakul Chopra is new BARC chairman

    Nakul Chopra is new BARC chairman

    MUMBAI: Nakul Chopra, currently president of Advertising Agencies Association of India (AAAI) and senior advisor of Publicis Communications, has been elected as the next chairman of BARC India. Chopra succeeds Viacom18 group CEO Sudhanshu Vats, who has completed his one-year tenure as chairman.

    Chopra will be the third chairman of BARC India. He joined the BARC India Board in September 2016 and since then has been an integral part of the various decisions taken by the Board.

    “BARC India has been very busy in the past one year, as it further consolidated its TV measurement business. 2017 has also been the year when groundwork was done for key future projects, and in the year ahead I am looking forward to oversee their implementation. Top on that list is the rollout of EKAM – our digital measurement products. Expansion of TV sample using Return Path Data will be the other big piece to watch out for. We are all thankful to Sudhanshu for his leadership over the past year and I very much look forward to working closely with Partho and his excellent team over the coming year,” said Nakul Chopra on being elected as BARC India Chairman.

    Under chairmanship of Vats, BARC India expanded its sample panel homes from 20,000 to 30,000. Under his tenure, BARC India also announced its partnership with multi-system operator DEN Networks for return path data and announced the digital measurement partner.

    “BARC is a bold, paradigm-changing initiative that has already started to redefine our industry. Since inception, BARC has tackled several challenges while several remain. Going forward, I would urge all stakeholders to continue to take cognizance of the pace of change in our sector and the urgent need for us to adapt. A few years out, the next generation of industry leaders needs to look back and admire our shared legacy. This means creating a future-ready, sustainable organization with each of us making some concessions for the greater good. I wish Nakul the very best as he takes on the reins of a hard-working, industry-critical operation in a fast-changing operating landscape,” said Vats.

    Vats has been on the board of BARC India since its inception and will continue in his capacity as a board member.

    Said BARC India CEO Partho Dasgupta, “I am thankful to Sudhanshu for his guidance and support to the team. Our focus now is to establish ourselves as an insights company. Nakul in his new role as BARC India chairman will be a great driving force in launching our digital-measurement products, expanding sample homes via RPD, and launching a suite of new products.”

  • BARC India to TRAI and MIB: Tweak legislation to make data tamper-proof

    BARC India to TRAI and MIB: Tweak legislation to make data tamper-proof

    NEW DELHI: India’s audience measurement company BARC India has urged broadcast regulator TRAI and Ministry of Information and Broadcasting (MIB) to bring in legislations making TV viewership data tamper-proof and stipulate stringent penalties for offenders.

    “Provisions need to be added in relevant regulations to not only dis-incentivize `viewership malpractices’ but also allow for punitive action against those indulging in such activities,” Broadcast Audience Research Council of India (BARC India) has said.

    In addition, it has also suggested the government and regulator to explore whether digital set-top-boxes and smart TV sets could be mandated by law to be made return path data (RPD)-enabled, moves that could enhance data robustness.

    BARC India is of the opinion that guidelines for uplinking and downlinking of TV channels, issued by MIB, could be “suitably amended to recognize and codify” efforts by TV channels to infiltrate or tamper with data collection processes.

    “A limited number of unscrupulous elements exist in the sector (a carryover from the past) who seek to infiltrate security of BARC India’s sample (panel homes), and unfairly influence their viewership habits. Their goal (and business) is to skew final viewership data in favour of some channels, using unfair means that BARC India defines as `viewership malpractice’,” the measurement body, a joint venture amongst IBF, AAAI and AISA, has said, highlighting it was grappling with legacy issues.

    Over the last 12 months several instances have come to light where TV channels were found to be allegedly attempting to tamper and influence audience data and indulging in other malpractices to boost viewership or TV ratings points, as it’s popularly described in India. In some cases, BARC India undertook counter-measures resulting in alleged offenders taking legal recourse. In some other instances, the regulator had to issue warnings in an effort to do damage control.

    “In terms of specifics, MIB’s channel licensing norms can stipulate that any broadcaster found to be indulging in unfair means to influence its viewership through acts of viewership malpractice can face… actions,” BARC India has suggested in its submission to TRAI’s consultation paper on `Ease of Doing Business in Broadcasting Sector’, adding a “fair system that evaluates complaints and adjudicates on them may also be included” in the regulations.

    Amongst the moves that the government and sector regulator could take, as suggested by BARC India, include measures like errant company facing viewership data blackout for a limited period, telecast ban for a limited period and revoking of license depending on the seriousness of the offense. “A regulatory framework that helps prevent distortions and fraudulent activities in the eco-system would be highly desirable, and valuable to all sections of the industry,” it has said in its submission.

    Why is BARC India pushing for legislative protection?  Pointing out that “incorrect, false and misleading audience ratings can lead to incorrect content decisions”, the measurement organization said, “There are no sections in IPC with reference to which BARC India can file police complaint and this emboldens those involved in such (fraudulent) activities.”

    In addition to seeking legal protection for data generation process, BARC India has also highlighted to TRAI the technological steps that can be taken — and is being explored by it.

    Use of return path data to complement the present TV currency is one such option. RPD involves capturing TV viewing data of homes with addressable set-top-boxes (DTH and digital cable) by enabling “return path” flow of data. “Once enabled, this would allow capture of TV viewership data from several lakh homes, as opposed to the 50,000 sample mandated at present. Additionally, this larger sample would allow more accurate capture of viewership of niche audiences and genres/channels with small viewing base (such as regional language channels and genres like infotainment, etc.),” BARC India has said.

    However, there’s a slight hitch. In the absence of technical standards presently, a large number of STBs in India is not enabled for RPD owing to inadequacies in hardware and software systems.

    BARC India, which is presently in discussions with some DTH and digital cable service providers for return path data collation, has submitted that mandating manufacture and sale of RPD-enabled STBs in India would go a long way in further improving TV viewership measurement system in the country.

    In this context, the organization has also urged TRAI to examine whether RPD-enabled smart TV sets could be mandated in India considering their rising sales as such a move could further add to the robustness in data collection.

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  • AAAI honours senior media planner Roda Mehta

    MUMBAI: The Advertising Agencies Association of India (AAAI) has announced that the recipient of this year’s AAAI Lifetime Achievement Award is Roda Mehta. AAAI Award is the highest honour given to an individual in India for his/her outstanding contribution to the Advertising Industry. The AAAI Lifetime Achievement Award will be presented to Roda Mehta on 14 July 2017 in Mumbai.

    Mehta played a legendary and pioneering role in establishing scientific media planning and buying in India. While doing so, she built a whole generation of media professionals for the advertising industry.

    She joined Hindustan Thompson Associates in 1971 and became the first MBA and first woman in the Media function of an advertising agency in India. She moved to Ogilvy Benson & Mather in 1975, and rose from Media Group Head to Media Controller for Bombay Office in 1976 to representing Media for the first time on the Managing Committee of Bombay Office in 1978 to being sent to London for three months to introduce Account Planning and Research in the Indian operation in 1980 to the Board as Director – Media & Research in 1982. She transferred, as President – South in 1992, became Director -International Client Service in 1994, and Managing Consultant – the Media Network in 1996. Along the way, she pioneered Outdoor planning and buying and set up a Rural Media network to service client requirements.

    Invited on several committees and associations by the industry, including the Expert Committee on TV Marketing for Doordarshan & AIR, she was Founder Member of the Market Research Society of India (MRSI) and Founder Member and Chairperson – Technical Committee of the Media Research Users Council (MRUC). She chaired MRUC from 1994-96. Ms Mehta was also on the Board of several other committees including Advisory Board – Ministry of Information & Broadcasting (Govt of India), AAAI’s Media Disputes Committee, Economic Times Advisory Panel, etc. An avidly sought after speaker at industry conferences/seminars, she served as faculty on training programs run by Ogilvy & Mather India and Asia Pacific.

    Roda Mehta bagged several prestigious awards including the David Ogilvy Award for Asia Pacific & Agency of the Year Award (Public Service) 1992 for the National Literacy Mission campaign.

    Currently she is associated with several non-profit organisations as a Trustee of the Lila Poonawalla Foundation, which provides scholarships and mentoring to economically challenged girls from Maharashtra for post-graduate, graduate/diploma and secondary school education; Board Member & Treasurer of Nagrik Chetna Manch, a citizen’s watchdog organization on public expenditure. She administers a very active Citizens’ Whatsapp Group for civic affairs of PMC Ward 21 and is a practitioner of Kriya Yoga.

    Making the announcement, AAAI president Nakul Chopra stated, “Roda Mehta is a pioneer in more ways than one. This Award is well-deserved recognition for the stellar leadership she provided our industry and our eco-system for over two decades, during which time she also nurtured a whole generation of professional talent.”

    AAAI Lifetime Achievement Award Committee – Selection former chairman Ashish Bhasin said “Roda Mehta has single-handedly played a vital role in getting due respectability for the Media function in Advertising.” Members of the Selection Committee for this Award included Sam Balsara, Srinivasan K Swamy, Ambi Parameswaran and Nakul Chopra.

  • BARC India to halt analogue measurement from July, up overall data collection

    NEW DELHI: India’s audience measurement company Broadcast Audience Research Council of India (BARC India) will stop reporting on analogue TV homes’ data from 1 July 2017 with the exception of one State and will add homes with new boxes to augment data collection.

    “We will also stop reporting all analogue homes across the country with the exception of Tamil Nadu from 1July 2017,” BARC India CEO Partho Dasgupta told indiantelevision.com, adding that hopefully the South Indian state too would soon come within the ambit of normal measurement process.

    The move to stop collecting and make available analogue home audience data seems to be aimed at nudging distribution platforms to stop analogue signals and a big hint to TV channels that in a digitized India it was best to go the digital way.

    Dasgupta, who was interacting with indiantelevision.com in an exclusive interview on the occasion of BARC India’s second anniversary, while dwelling on temporary hiccups, said, “With the current digitization mandate for Tamil Nadu, hopefully, analoguereporting will also stop soon there too. All this may lead to some interim flux, but in the long term will improve robustness of our viewership data.”

    The Tamil Nadu-Government run Arasu Cable TV Corporation (TACTV) was granted provisional digital license by the Ministry of Information and Broadcasting (MIB) in April 2017 to operate as a multi-system operator in the state. The late clearance was based on a rider that the MSO switches off analogue signals in the entire state within three months.

    As part of a wide-ranging interview, Dasgupta informed that BARC India’s annual exercise, which is also part of a government mandate, will also see new meter homes (called BAR-o-meters) added this calendar year.

    “This year we will see our (pan-India measurement) panel expanding from 20,000 to 30,000 reporting homes,” Dasgupta said, adding, “Combined with the newly added homes, we will also be seeding some new homes as part of our regular churn policy.”

    The government while giving clearance to BARC India, a joint venture amongst IBF, AAAI and the Indian Society of Advertisers, had made it clear that the number of homes used for data collection should reach 50,000 within a five-year period. BARC India’s predecessor was TAM India, a joint venture between global companies Nielsen and WPP-owned Kantar Media.

    Confirming an earlier indiantelevision.com new story on BARC exploring avenues to collaborate with Indian DTH platforms for return path data (RPD) to augment data collection, Dasgupta said, “We are trying to innovate (with) panel expansion by tying up directly with key DTH and digital cable operators to enable return path (audience) data.”       

    Without disclosing a time-frame for such data-boosting tie-ups with DTH ops, Dasgupta explained, “Our tie-up with DTH operators and MSOs for RPD is an attempt (to bring about more robustness). This will not only increase the number of sample panel homes, but will also make infiltration efforts ineffective. We will innovate more on the meter technology front.”

    Stay tuned for the full interview of Dasgupta, which will be on air soon.

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  • BARC India formally sets up independent council to probe viewership malpractices complaints

    MUMBAI: BARC India has set up an independent disciplinary council to further strengthen transparency and credibility of its measurement system.

    The six-member BARC India Disciplinary Council (BDC) will investigate and address complaints related to viewership malpractices and tampering of BARC India’s measurement system.

    The BDC will be headed by Punjab & Haryana High Court’s former chief justice Mukul Mudgal and has former Mumbai police commissioner and DGP Maharashtra D Shivanandan and independent technical expert Paritosh Joshi as its members. Viacom18 group general counsel and company secretary Sujeet Jain, GroupM South Asia CEO CVL Srinivas and GCPL AVP corporate legal Pankaj Phadnis are the other members, representing the three stakeholder bodies – IBF, AAAI and ISA.

    BARC India has already set up a vigilance team to probe viewership malpractices complaints, as well as investigate abnormal viewership data recorded from BARC India panel households. The new council will independently examine vigilance team reports, and where culpability is clearly established, it will be empowered to order punitive action appropriate to level of offence. The action could range from written warning and a fine for first level offence, to suspension of viewership data for three months, leading up to termination of BARC India’s contract with the subscriber.

    Alongside setting up of the high-level BDC, BARC India has re-drafted terms of the contract it signs with its subscribers. This has been done to address limitations in the current End User License Agreements (EULA) and strengthen legal provisions that will allow the BDC to act against viewership malpractices. The updated EULA will soon be circulated to all BARC India subscribers, and they would be required to sign them.

    “The BDC is a step forward in our commitment to ensuring transparency, and eradicating this long existing malpractice of panel tampering. We hope to build further credibility in our processes and systems under guidance of Justice Mudgal. The independent council will also benefit from the advice of a seasoned law enforcement expert like Shivanandan, and the continued support of industry stakeholders,” said BARC India CEO Partho Dasgupta.

  • NITI Aayog, Nestlé India, Tata Global & Parle Agro execs pocket Excellence Awards

    MUMBAI: The Advertising Club (TAC) and the Advertising Agencies Association of India (AAAI) jointly announced the first ever champions of excellence who would be felicitated at the Goafest on 7 April 2017.

    The awards were conceived and curated by the AAAI and TAC for acknowledging and saluting visionary advertisers who have taken the leap of faith and invested resources, ensuring that “Great ideas transform into Great advertising”.

    The jury consisting of senior members of the awards governing council of the Abby’s at Goafest were unanimous in selecting NITI Aayog CEO Amitabh Kant, Nestlé India Ltd South Asia Region Sr. VP & Head of Communications and E- Commerce Chandrasekhar Radhakrishna, Tata Global Beverages chairman Harish Bhat and Parle Agro JMD and CMO Nadia Chauhan, GCMMF Ltd (Amul) managing director R.S.Sodhi as the first ever recipients of this new and prestigious industry award for their role in inspiring great advertising.

    AAAI presdient Nakul Chopra said “For the first time we are honoring advertisers at the Goafest. This award is very special as it acknowledges the pivotal role played by these men and women we call “clients” but who have acquired a much larger status in the overall brand scenario. These are the select few individuals who have helped build and nurture brands, supporting their Agency partners every step of the way.

    The Advertising Club president Raj Nayak added “As an industry we need to salute these Brand Custodians who stake the reputation and money of their Brands on the creativity of their advertising agencies. They literally take that leap of faith every day. Having them at Goafest would be very inspirational for the audience.

    Goafest chairman Ashish Bhasin said, “We always celebrated advertising agencies, digital companies, production houses and media companies at the Goafest. Now with top advertisers being honoured, the festival is more complete.”

    Awards’ Governing Council chairman Ramesh Narayan said, “This award really places the advertiser at the center of the communication effort, and rightfully so. The response for nominations from advertising agencies was quite good and I am confident this would go on to become one of the highlights of the Goafest in the years ahead. What is advertising without the advertiser?”