Tag: ad sales deal

  • DirecTV, Twentieth Television expand ad sales deal

    MUMBAI: US pay TV platform DirecTV and Twentieth Television, DirecTV’s ad sales partner, announced the expansion of their current ad sales agreement.

     

     
    This will include DirecTV’s Spanish and English language programming platform DirecTV Para Todos from next year. Under the arrangement, Twentieth Television will be responsible for overseeing all general market and direct response ad sales for select channels available on DirecTV Para Todos.

    DirecTV’s Para Todos provides access to more than 55 Spanish-language and 220 English-language channels, all in digital quality, featuring a variety of sports, news, entertainment and family programming. Currently, DirecTV Para Todos is available in more than 850,000 homes throughout the US.

     
     
    DirecTV Entertainment executive VP d Eric Shanks says, “The customer base for the DirecTV Para Todos Spanish-language platform has more than tripled in the past 18 months. Our current partnership with
    Twentieth Television has been extremely successful and we look forward to Twentieth helping us to reach this growing and increasingly more affluent demographic.”

     
     
    Twentieth Television executive VP advertising Bob Cesa said, “It has been a pleasure to work with and to represent DirecTV to the advertising community. We are proud that our success has resulted in growing the relationship to include DirecTV Para Todos. The Latino community is the fastest growing market in the country with immense buying power. We are now uniquely positioned to empower advertisers with a direct link to this highly attractive demographic.”

  • NDTV Media, MSN India poised to ink ad sales deal

    MUMBAI: Trust him to pull it off and marketing whiz Raj Nayak has done it once again. This time, he’s shaking hands with MSN India for an undisclosed multi-million dollar deal to sell space on the portal.

     

     
    According to information available with Indiantelevision.com, NDTV Media, which is spearheaded by Nayak as its chief executive, is poised to ink an agreement with MSN India (part of Bill Gates’ widespread infotech empire) to sell and market advertising space for the latter.

    Considered to be one of the biggest deals in the Indian advertising and marketing industry, the NDTV Media-MSN India pact, according to industry sources, could range anywhere between $ 1 million to $ 3.5 million.

     
     
    NDTV Media, a working joint venture between Nayak and the Prannoy Roy-promoted NDTV Ltd, would end up getting 15-20 per cent commission from selling space for MSN India. The present industry norm is that the ad concessionaires get 15 per cent as fee.

    The mandate for space selling of MSN India, reportedly, was being handled by another television company along with another outfit till now.
    Pursued by Indiantelevision.com on the MSN-NDTV deal, which has set the local industry abuzz with excitement, Nayak today refused to commit himself to any details saying, “It’s too premature to comment on the issue.”

    However, industry sources insist that the agreement is on course and it’s only a matter of time before it is made public soon. Two other big agencies were also in the fray, amongst others.

     
    Marketing and ad sales company NDTV Media was set up after Nayak left Star India in 2003 and later joined forces with Roy who was then in the process of establishing his news channels, NDTV 24X7 and NDTV India.
    At present, NDTV Media looks after the ad sales and marketing activities of the existing NDTV channels, apart from other similar activities that Roy’s company undertake in India and abroad.

    In a rare interview to Indiantelevision.com in January 2004, when asked about the agenda of NDTV Media, Nayak had said, “Once that is done (establishment of NDTV channels), one of our priorities is to then look at what are the other things we want to do. Doing similar kinds of work – sales, marketing, research, programme syndication, events for other channels, which are not in competition with NDTV.”

    MSN India seems to an extension of the aforementioned belief.