Tag: Allied Media

  • “We plan to double staff in a year in pace with client growth”: Vizeum India MD Shripad Kulkarni

    “We plan to double staff in a year in pace with client growth”: Vizeum India MD Shripad Kulkarni

    Shripad Kulkarni is man on a mission. The mission is to transform Vizeum India digitally, not with just an add-on digital arm but from within. Thereafter, establishing the agency as an indispensable AoR partner for clients seeking real measurable value addition from its media management. And the last few account wins including Warner Bro. and TCL show that he is on the right track.

    The agency is believed to handle Rs 200 crore worth of media businesses spread across all its clients, of which the last quarter has been a significant contributor.

    But these numbers are not fruits of labour of just the past few months. Its foundation was laid when Kulkarni had joined Vizeum India as the managing director in 2015 from Percept Allied Media (where he was the CEO), following Dentsu Aegis Network (DAN) Ashish Bhasin’s laying out of his vision for the agency.

    It will be an understatement to say that the soft spoken professional had taken that vision seriously. It’s been a little over a year, and Kulkarni is already confident that the agency will double itself around the end of next financial year.

    In a freewheeling conversation with indiantelevision.com’s Papri Das, Kulkarni delves into his grand plans to realise this target, and more.

    Excerpts:

    What were your personal benchmarks in the last one year of working for Vizeum?

    I have kept a very ‘people first’ approach to my targets within the company since I joined almost a year back. The large team that operates in Delhi is undergoing its digital training  and familiarisation with the tools available within the agency and the group. The last quarter has given us a positive indication that the strategy is working. We have got Warner Bros, we have Panasonic as a client and just recently signed up as the media agency for TCL Corp.

    Given the momentum, I see a significant increase in our client portfolio in the coming few years. We want to double our staff strength in 12 to 18 months to handle this increase in new businesses and our entire budget planning is being worked out to favour this development.

    The one P&L structure that DAN follows is best in terms of getting integrated marcom planning done, and getting various specialists in verticals to work for a brand. The fact that a very high proportion of the revenue of the group comes from digital says a lot about DAN  as a future facing agency.

    Every media agency is ramping up to be the ‘all rounder’ these days. How differently is Vizeum positioned in the market?

    One has to understand that digital is changing your customers, and their linear behaviour in the purchase cycle; the classic AIDA (Attention, Interest, Desire, Action) is no longer working. Now that is a fundamental shift that we must align everyone to, even if one is planning for television. Based on this, we are remodeling Vizeum, to keep our clients up to date.

    At the core of the remodelled Vizeum, with its refreshed approach to traditional media with digital outlook, we believe that media can directly make a difference to business. Media can add value to businesses because of this entire disruption digital is doing across all media, and this significant value addition will be measurable.

    Has this fundamental shift impacted how television planning and buying happens?

    To start with, these days you have to look at video and not television, when doing planning for television, because there is a good chunk of the audience that watches TV on the Internet. There are youngsters who enjoy binge watching or as and when they want to. They are hardly watching television the way we know it. So that is changing the entire paradigm so that even the medium that was classically entirely outbound and spewing messages at its audiences is now changing.

    Another interesting aspect of this paradigm shift is how technology has made TV media more target-oriented. Technology now allows advertisers  to target people who have viewed their ads on television. We have experimented with this technology with a few of our clients where we have embedded certain beacons on their TV ads, and identified which  of the consumers had their smartphones around. Now these consumers could be reached digitally as well, now that we have made sure they had seen the TVC.

    We will soon see that technology and data is going to alter the way the entire marcom industry functions. It will require us agencies and clients as well to understand the complete customer decision journey, and accordingly reach out to them with specific messages at certain stages of the customer purchase journey.

    Do most of your clients come to you keeping a specific media in mind or do they have a specific outcome in mind, regardless of where the spend goes?

    Well of course a client has an outcome in mind to begin with. But the way the industry, and actually media itself, is getting more and more fragmented, advertisers too are seeking specialised use of media — some are looking at digital agencies, some are looking at mainline agencies, some are looking at agencies that are good at search engine optimisation, some are preferring social media only agencies and some are even doing it in house. I think the missing piece is a strategic direction across all media vehicles towards the outcome.

    Sounds like a massive level of unlearning and relearning on the part of the planners and buyers….

    Absolutely. In fact we are currently training every single planner under Vizeum with digital knowledge and skill sets. A planner classically handles mainstream media, and he can plan for digital. But we are aiming to make each one of them experts in digital. Every planner must know digital strategy on a par with an agency squarely into digital marketing. We plan to achieve this within one year, and there will be continuous refresher courses to keep them up to date.

    We have already initiated since a few months ago. It has picked up momentum and we should be able to see some of its results by the next quarter. The ultimate goal is to get all staff, irrespective of the department to be digital savvy. It is a DAN initiative.

    How do you measure a certain campaign’s performance? Is there any yardstick that Vizeum follows?

    Campaign performance must be measurable from day one, and it must be definitive and making a difference to the business. To achieve this, we look at performance in a three by three metric — three minutes, three weeks and three months of the  time spent on a campaign, where each time period gives us specific and significant measure of the campaign’s effectiveness. Certain tools that  we have developed using Facebook data, or Youtube data, or Google data, give us instant feedback on how a campaign is fairing.

    To start with, we can have this performance measure of all digital campaigns running for a few minutes to a day or, as we put it three  minutes to a day.. It will give an instant idea of what is working and what isn’t, which allows creatives to tweak a campaign. For example, if you have six campaigns or creatives running on Youtube, we can now tell which one is performing well, keeping a brand and campaign in mind.

    We make a second assessment after a campaign runs for a week, when we have significant data on it. For certain categories, this time period can extend to a month to be able to gather reliable data.

    The third assessment is made around the three month mark that leaves a planner with a lot of data to play with and analyse keeping quantitative results in mind. This assessment can give us insights on the brand health. In other words, we keep monitoring different measures at different entry points of a campaign within different parameters. We are heading towards an arrangement where we ask for compensations based on such performances.

    Where do you think the media management industry is headed in the next few years and what factors will impact it?

    We are doing a study called India 2020, where we are trying to understand the trends across the world and try and predict the entire media ecosystem of 2020 in India. We believe this disruption is going to stay for a while and lead to digital spends growing by leaps and bounds. As of now we are looking different simulations of different scenarios. We have narrowed down to three such scenarios for the time being based on how quickly high speed data will be available in our country. Whether it is brought about by Reliance Jio or the government, it doesn’t matter, but high speed internet is a deciding factor in the simulations. It will also need to be affordable and services will be free is what I believe. Open wifis will also be a huge thing.

  • “We plan to double staff in a year in pace with client growth”: Vizeum India MD Shripad Kulkarni

    “We plan to double staff in a year in pace with client growth”: Vizeum India MD Shripad Kulkarni

    Shripad Kulkarni is man on a mission. The mission is to transform Vizeum India digitally, not with just an add-on digital arm but from within. Thereafter, establishing the agency as an indispensable AoR partner for clients seeking real measurable value addition from its media management. And the last few account wins including Warner Bro. and TCL show that he is on the right track.

    The agency is believed to handle Rs 200 crore worth of media businesses spread across all its clients, of which the last quarter has been a significant contributor.

    But these numbers are not fruits of labour of just the past few months. Its foundation was laid when Kulkarni had joined Vizeum India as the managing director in 2015 from Percept Allied Media (where he was the CEO), following Dentsu Aegis Network (DAN) Ashish Bhasin’s laying out of his vision for the agency.

    It will be an understatement to say that the soft spoken professional had taken that vision seriously. It’s been a little over a year, and Kulkarni is already confident that the agency will double itself around the end of next financial year.

    In a freewheeling conversation with indiantelevision.com’s Papri Das, Kulkarni delves into his grand plans to realise this target, and more.

    Excerpts:

    What were your personal benchmarks in the last one year of working for Vizeum?

    I have kept a very ‘people first’ approach to my targets within the company since I joined almost a year back. The large team that operates in Delhi is undergoing its digital training  and familiarisation with the tools available within the agency and the group. The last quarter has given us a positive indication that the strategy is working. We have got Warner Bros, we have Panasonic as a client and just recently signed up as the media agency for TCL Corp.

    Given the momentum, I see a significant increase in our client portfolio in the coming few years. We want to double our staff strength in 12 to 18 months to handle this increase in new businesses and our entire budget planning is being worked out to favour this development.

    The one P&L structure that DAN follows is best in terms of getting integrated marcom planning done, and getting various specialists in verticals to work for a brand. The fact that a very high proportion of the revenue of the group comes from digital says a lot about DAN  as a future facing agency.

    Every media agency is ramping up to be the ‘all rounder’ these days. How differently is Vizeum positioned in the market?

    One has to understand that digital is changing your customers, and their linear behaviour in the purchase cycle; the classic AIDA (Attention, Interest, Desire, Action) is no longer working. Now that is a fundamental shift that we must align everyone to, even if one is planning for television. Based on this, we are remodeling Vizeum, to keep our clients up to date.

    At the core of the remodelled Vizeum, with its refreshed approach to traditional media with digital outlook, we believe that media can directly make a difference to business. Media can add value to businesses because of this entire disruption digital is doing across all media, and this significant value addition will be measurable.

    Has this fundamental shift impacted how television planning and buying happens?

    To start with, these days you have to look at video and not television, when doing planning for television, because there is a good chunk of the audience that watches TV on the Internet. There are youngsters who enjoy binge watching or as and when they want to. They are hardly watching television the way we know it. So that is changing the entire paradigm so that even the medium that was classically entirely outbound and spewing messages at its audiences is now changing.

    Another interesting aspect of this paradigm shift is how technology has made TV media more target-oriented. Technology now allows advertisers  to target people who have viewed their ads on television. We have experimented with this technology with a few of our clients where we have embedded certain beacons on their TV ads, and identified which  of the consumers had their smartphones around. Now these consumers could be reached digitally as well, now that we have made sure they had seen the TVC.

    We will soon see that technology and data is going to alter the way the entire marcom industry functions. It will require us agencies and clients as well to understand the complete customer decision journey, and accordingly reach out to them with specific messages at certain stages of the customer purchase journey.

    Do most of your clients come to you keeping a specific media in mind or do they have a specific outcome in mind, regardless of where the spend goes?

    Well of course a client has an outcome in mind to begin with. But the way the industry, and actually media itself, is getting more and more fragmented, advertisers too are seeking specialised use of media — some are looking at digital agencies, some are looking at mainline agencies, some are looking at agencies that are good at search engine optimisation, some are preferring social media only agencies and some are even doing it in house. I think the missing piece is a strategic direction across all media vehicles towards the outcome.

    Sounds like a massive level of unlearning and relearning on the part of the planners and buyers….

    Absolutely. In fact we are currently training every single planner under Vizeum with digital knowledge and skill sets. A planner classically handles mainstream media, and he can plan for digital. But we are aiming to make each one of them experts in digital. Every planner must know digital strategy on a par with an agency squarely into digital marketing. We plan to achieve this within one year, and there will be continuous refresher courses to keep them up to date.

    We have already initiated since a few months ago. It has picked up momentum and we should be able to see some of its results by the next quarter. The ultimate goal is to get all staff, irrespective of the department to be digital savvy. It is a DAN initiative.

    How do you measure a certain campaign’s performance? Is there any yardstick that Vizeum follows?

    Campaign performance must be measurable from day one, and it must be definitive and making a difference to the business. To achieve this, we look at performance in a three by three metric — three minutes, three weeks and three months of the  time spent on a campaign, where each time period gives us specific and significant measure of the campaign’s effectiveness. Certain tools that  we have developed using Facebook data, or Youtube data, or Google data, give us instant feedback on how a campaign is fairing.

    To start with, we can have this performance measure of all digital campaigns running for a few minutes to a day or, as we put it three  minutes to a day.. It will give an instant idea of what is working and what isn’t, which allows creatives to tweak a campaign. For example, if you have six campaigns or creatives running on Youtube, we can now tell which one is performing well, keeping a brand and campaign in mind.

    We make a second assessment after a campaign runs for a week, when we have significant data on it. For certain categories, this time period can extend to a month to be able to gather reliable data.

    The third assessment is made around the three month mark that leaves a planner with a lot of data to play with and analyse keeping quantitative results in mind. This assessment can give us insights on the brand health. In other words, we keep monitoring different measures at different entry points of a campaign within different parameters. We are heading towards an arrangement where we ask for compensations based on such performances.

    Where do you think the media management industry is headed in the next few years and what factors will impact it?

    We are doing a study called India 2020, where we are trying to understand the trends across the world and try and predict the entire media ecosystem of 2020 in India. We believe this disruption is going to stay for a while and lead to digital spends growing by leaps and bounds. As of now we are looking different simulations of different scenarios. We have narrowed down to three such scenarios for the time being based on how quickly high speed data will be available in our country. Whether it is brought about by Reliance Jio or the government, it doesn’t matter, but high speed internet is a deciding factor in the simulations. It will also need to be affordable and services will be free is what I believe. Open wifis will also be a huge thing.

  • Percept integrates media companies into single entity ‘Percept Media’

    Percept integrates media companies into single entity ‘Percept Media’

    MUMBAI: Percept has restructured and integrated its media businesses into a single entity ‘Percept Media’ with effect from 6 July 2015. The restructure will enable Percept to bring greater focus and offer better synergies and efficiencies between the various media arms, thereby presenting a wider array of services and solutions to stakeholders.

     

    Currently, Percept Group encompasses Allied Media – the media planning, evaluation and buying unit along with the digital media services arm and Percept Out of Home – the communications specialist providing solutions in the outdoor and rural media arena. The revised structure will see the two media service companies integrate into a single vertical under the nomenclature ‘Percept Media’, to become a single platform offering innovative and collaborative 360-degree media solutions to stakeholders.

     

    Percept COO Ajay Upadhyay will serve as chief mentor to guide the integration process of the media vertical, while Percept One COO Sanjay Shukla will be responsible for directly supervising the entire integration and restructuring process as a part of the Percept One portfolio.

     

    Following the exit of Allied Media erstwhile CEO Shripad Kulkarni, earlier this month, P M Balakrishna has been elevated to the position. He will also hold the position of Percept Media executive vice president.

     

    Rajneesh Bahl has been promoted to the post of Percept Media executive VP and will also continue to serve in the capacity of Percept Out of Home CEO, overseeing the entire OOH operations for the company. Milind Dewulkar will take charge as CFO of the newly created Percept Media vertical.

     

    The restructuring in the Media business is in keeping with the evolving and dynamic changes in the M&E industry and will enable Percept to offer greater efficiencies in the way it operates and functions. The new structure would also offer Percept’s clients greater synergy in the range of solutions and service offerings in the media domain thereby translating into greater value add and a heightened level of customer service and value for all stakeholders.

     

    The Percept Media leadership team will soon be drawing out a comprehensive plan encompassing the branding, structure, services, revenue and business development strategy for FY’16.

  • Allied Media’s new biz wins are worth Rs 1.5 bn

    MUMBAI: Percept’s media buying and planning division Allied Media said in a statement today that it has won businesses worth Rs 1.5 billion over last two months.

    The new clients of the agency include DB Realty, Sahara Q Shop, Baskin-Robbins India, Just Dial, Italy Tourism, and DSK Hyosung.

    The company said that the marketing spends of these brands is a good Rs 1.5 billion. Allied Media will offer these clients a 360 degree media service, which would encompass strategic planning, media buying and implementation.

    With this, the capitalised billing of Allied Media has scaled up to Rs 12 billion. Allied media has set up a new special business cell and a core strategy cell supported by Data Centre. This initiative has resulted in Allied Media bagging these key clients, the agency said.

    Geared to meet the emerging market scenario, the strategy cell promises to offer its clients consulting, modeling and easy-to-use customisable software solutions for communication planning, ROI modeling, targeting and segmentation. The newly introduces business cell and strategy cell that aims to give the clients a competitive advantage in the media and communications domain.

    Allied Media CEO Shripad Kulkarni said, “On Buying and Implementation, for some time now, we are already the best in class. Our USP is our unique approach to marcom solutions for our clients. Marcom Solutions have got to be customised and dynamic. And, our approach fuses marketplace dynamics, consumer research, statistical analytics and practical common sense analytics in good measure. As we hone it better, it will deliver even better results.”

  • Advertisers want deals to reflect digitisation gaps

    MUMBAI: Advertisers are pressing for structuring of advertising deals with television broadcasters to reflect the likelihood of a section of homes going without cable TV connections in the four metros as the shift to digital delivery of television channels happens from 1 November.

    The advertising industry expects about 15-20 per cent of television households to remain disconnected for some period from 1 November. Also, advertisers’ communications in the run up to the deadline for digitisation will not reach to the fullest extent as broadcasters have begun to switch off analogue channels genre wise from 10 October and would end the process of complete withdrawal of analogue TV channels in the four metros on 22 October with the most watched Hindi general entertainment channels (GECs).

    Allied Media COO PM Balakrishnan says, “There is lot of thinking happening at the backend. I don’t think advertisers are panicking.
    Even the deals are getting structured considering all these things.”

    The CEO of a large media buying and planning agency, who did not want to be quoted, said, “Advertisers may do well to analyse the realities of digitisation based on data available and fine-tune their media plans for the festive season.”

    The Information and Broadcasting Ministry on Wednesday said an average of 77 per cent of cable TV homes in Mumbai, Delhi, Chennai and Kolkata have switched to digital with the installation of set-top boxes (STBs), led by Mumbai with 99 per cent digitisation. According to the ministry, Chennai is the laggard with 59 per cent cable TV homes converted to digital.

    Advertising, particularly by consumer durable companies and automobile makers, peaks during Diwali festival when the consuming class spends the most.
    Havas Media India and South Asia CEO Anita Nayyar says, “The timing is very bad. The advertisers and media agencies are not going to be happy considering the environment currently. This was the period when we were looking at some traction at least. This has been a year of reduced ad spends and basically a slowdown year. Now there is uncertainty about the reach of the channels in the metros. The deals will have to be re-packaged.”

    Advertising community is also doubtful about the government’s claim of 77 per cent average digitisation in the four metros. Cable operators in Chennai and Kolkata are asking for extension of the digitisation deadline as they fear a significant percentage of homes would be without cable TV connection after 31 October.

    Lodestar UM COO Anamika Mehta says, “The economy has been sluggish, so all marketers were looking at the festive period to drive sales. TV obviously takes the big chunk of advertising. Now on TV many marketers will play safe.”
    Adding to this, OMD COO Haresh Shriyan says, “Whatever genre broadcasters will pull out, there are companies which are advertising on it. It will have serious implications on them in all the four metros. All this will certainly reflect on the ratings and reach, if executed. The advertisers now will have two options. One is that if the reach comes down and if the ratings and connectivity is impacted, advertisers will seek to have compensation from the broadcasters. They have paid when everything was normal but today it isn’t. Also, if this is the scenario, if the reach is impacted, if people don’t get to see their ads, the advertisers and agencies need to recommend a boost of plan for these markets.” 

    There is also a faction of media planners that feels the advertisers need not panic. If the current figures are to be believed, then the percentage of media darkness will be small compared to the earlier estimates. Madison Media CEO Basab Datta Chowdhury says, “Given the current level of penetration, it is only 20 per cent of homes that will be without cable TV connections. 100 per cent penetration won’t happen, we all know.”

    The important point to consider here is what part of the estimated 20 per cent media dark homes constitutes the TG. The advertisers’ ire on the pull out of analogue signals will depend on how much of their TG is being excluded from the reach.

    According to Madison’s Chowdhury, there isn’t much to worry in that case. “Right now, we are talking about 20 per cent of the homes (in media darkness). Also, if we extrapolate IRS figures onto the current penetration of digitisation, then it is essentially the Sec D and E homes. Nearly 95 per cent of the communication is targeted at the Sec A B and C viewers,” she says.

    TAM’s ratings

    If the industry banked on TAM ratings for planning and estimates earlier, the data becomes all the more important now in view of the genre-wise switching off of analogue signals. Nayyar says, “What TAM does post 1 November will be known only after the meeting next week. But till 31 October, TAM should continue giving ratings. This will serve two purposes — we will know the reality of digitisation figures in the metros. Secondly, we will know how much media darkness is prevalent in the metros.”

    Representatives from Advertising Agencies Association of India (AAAI), Indian Society of Advertisers (ISA) and Indian Broadcasting Foundation (IBF) would be meeting TAM Media Research on 15 October to discuss issues arising out of digitisation and the likelihood of some homes remaining without cable TV connections.

  • No turnaround in ad spends despite bullish market sentiment

    MUMBAI: The business sentiment may have turned positive following a slew of FDI policies but advertisement spends are not going to change dramatically.

    The festival season has already begun but the advertisement spends are not as anticipated. The slowdown in ad spends since the beginning of this year will see no recovery yet, experts said.

    “This festive season is pretty in its run and the mood is not very great. The advertising spends are not up to the kind of
    expectations, there is still a slowdown,” said Allied Media COO P M Balakrishnan.

    He said as far as the reforms by the government are concerned, “it’s the steroid put in the economy to create the right sentiment.”

    Officials at other media agencies too said that though the business climate is better than earlier months of this year, it’s not better than the same period of last year.

    Echoes OMD India COO Harish Shriyan, “Festive season is always better. Most of the advertisers in any case are spending money and they will continue to do so but the level and kind of money they used to spend earlier is not the same this time. Though it is better than the previous few months I don’t think there is any kind of major reaction because of the policies and all. I doubt that advertising spend will increase in these (the remaining) months (of the year).”

    Balakrishnan feels the advertising spends on television will continue to be moderate this year. “Slowdown is going on. It’s not that people are withdrawing but also they aren’t going over-board and gung-ho this season.”

    According to GroupM’s revised forecast, the advertising expenditure on television is estimated to grow at 5.6 per cent to gross Rs 148.12 billion in calendar year 2012 against earlier estimate of a 12 per cent growth.

    Havas Media CEO India and South Asia Anita Nayyar agreed that the growth in spends this season will be in the same range of five
    to six per cent.

    She noted that the festival season has now started to look up and it’s high time as Diwali is just a little more than a month away. “Earlier the season preparation would start almost two to two-and-a-half months in advance. It’s always nice for the advertising industry to grow and I hope that advertisers will now start seeing advertising budgets as investments rather than expenditures now that the sentiment is improving.”

    SMG CEO Malli CR, however, feels that ad spends on television are ok. “It is not that the things are terribly down, there are quite few sectors where things are ok, and they may not be growing at an exponential rate. Sectors like telecom and consumer goods are advertising and FMCG is anyway continuing to advertise so it’s not that the economy has come to a standstill.”

    “Some sectors like BFSI, automobile are probably not spending as much as they would have. FMCGs put together account for about more than 55 per cent TV advertising. Everybody is hoping that Diwali should lead to something better. People are spending on digital and other mediums, so it’s not a bleak scenario,” Malli added.

  • Allied Media appoints Shilpa Dhanu as head M3 project & strategy team

    MUMBAI: Allied Media Network, the media planning, buying and evaluation arm of Percept, has appointed Shilpa Dhanu as Head – M3 Project & Strategy Team.

    In her new role, Shilpa Dhanu will be responsible for the Centralised Data Analytics Cell. Based in Mumbai, she will be reporting to Allied Media CEO Shripad Kulkarni and with a core team of senior and junior analysts will take care of research & analytical needs for clients across India.

    Shilpa‘s mandate is to assist and steer the strategy team of the company to newer heights. She also will be responsible in creating newer avenues and strategising various offerings of the company for the clients.

    Allied Media last year had launched Centralised Data Analytical Cell, a specialised vertical that leverages various strategic initiatives across all media companies of the Percept Group for the clients. It will conduct research and collating data on key sectors and industries on a round the clock basis.

    This data will help in giving a tailor made report to the client and will help in effectively measuring all their communication campaigns including ATL, BTL, Social Media, Word of Mouth and other vehicles optimally.

    The tools will help as a guide for advertisers of different sectors to effectively bifurcate their communication spends in various vehicles as per consumer behaviour & media efficacy.

    Allied Media CEO Shripad Kulkarni commented, “We are extremely pleased to welcome Shilpa in our team. She has a grass root level experience in understanding consumer trends and purchasing behaviour and will add tremendous value in steering our Data Analytics vertical. I am confident that she will drive our unrelenting focus on building and adding constant value for our discerning clients.”

    Shilpa Dhanu has more than a decade‘s experience and has worked as senior manager-Consumer Insights – Star India. She also has had a successful stint in UTV, Carat Media Services Ogilvy & Mather, MTV India, Zenith Optimedia, Initiative Media, and CSRIdentity.com where she has been instrumental in handling Research & Strategy for them.

    Allied Media GM Strategy Shilpa Dhanu added, “I am really excited to join Allied Media and work on multinational brands and be an active part in their communication strategy. Allied Media has been in a forefront in charting out effective media mix for all their clients. This opportunity comes at an interesting juncture in my career.”

  • Allied Media gets Santanu Bhattacharjee to head Panasonic biz

    Allied Media gets Santanu Bhattacharjee to head Panasonic biz

    MUMBAI: Allied Media, the media planning, buying and evaluation arm of Percept, has appointed Santanu Bhattacharjee as the business head for team Panasonic.

    Based in New Delhi, Bhattacharjee will be responsible for spearheading the entire business vertical of Panasonic account.

    Backed with a team of professionals specialising in consumer electronics, he will be strategising and servicing for all the categories of Panasonic and its physical distribution channel partners nationally. He will also be advising the client on media penetration in different geographical markets.

    Bhattacharjee will be reporting to Allied Media AVP Surbhi Murthy.

    Murthy said, “In today‘s age clients‘ needs have been changing on a daily basis. Each category has its own speciality and every major client has specific needs based on their various product life cycles. By getting Shantanu on board, we are consolidating our resources to form a customised team to meet the needs of Panasonic as a client.”

    Bhattacharjee has experience spread over a decade. Prior to joining Allied Media, he was director – The Exchange at MindShare. He has also worked with Percept and IMG.

  • Aamby Valley continues with Kaleido Communications as creative partner

    Aamby Valley continues with Kaleido Communications as creative partner

    MUMBAI: Sahara group-promoted Aamby Valley City has retained Navi Mumbai-based Kaleido Communications to do its creative duties. The agency got associated with the developer of a hill city in the Sahayadri ranges a year back when it first won the creative mandate.

    Recently Aamby Valley City had called for a re-evaluation of the pitch, which involved agencies like Lowe and Contract, apart from Kaleido.

    Media grapevine estimates the account size to be around Rs 100 million. Sources close to the development confirmed the news to indiantelevision.com. The media mandate of the brand is handled by Percept‘s Allied Media.

    According to a source close to the development, the main focus of the forthcoming campaign will be on re-launching Aamby Valley City in its new avatar and promoting the group‘s other real estate properties as well.