Tag: Anita Nayyar

  • Anita Nayyar to return to Havas Media as CEO, quits BCCL

    Anita Nayyar to return to Havas Media as CEO, quits BCCL

    MUMBAI: Former Havas Media CEO for India and South Asia Anita Nayyar is returning to her old agency, after a short stint of four
    months at Bennett, Coleman and Company (BCCL) as director customer strategy.

    Nayyar will take up her old position at Havas Media from 14 August. Her last day at BCCL is 9 August.

    Confirming her movement to Indiantelevision.com, Nayyar said, “I was missing the base of media agency where I have worked for 28 years. My journey with BCCL was very exciting and I learnt a lot here.”

    “I think when you are on the media side you don’t understand the concerns of the other side well. After being on this side of the table, I have understood how a publishing house or a media house, a conglomerate operates. In terms of expectations from an agency’s side, now it is well-grounded,” she added.

    Havas Media Asia Pacific CEO Vishnu Mohan said, “We are delighted that Anita has decided to return to the agency. While I met many potential candidates over the last months, when the choice did open up I had no doubt in my mind that she would be the right person to helm the India and South Asia operations. Her network knowledge, prior track record, industry experience and seniority – made it all relatively easy for me to decide who to place my trust in.”

    Nayyar had joined Havas Media in 2007 as the CEO of MPG India. Later on, she was promoted to CEO of Havas Media for India and South Asia. Prior to joining Havas Media, she had also worked with Starcom and Mudra Communications.

  • Size matters in changing adland

    MUMBAI: In the acquisition storm swirling across the advertising world, there are two strong currents that are pushing from below to force change in adland: the digital might of Google, Microsoft and their likes and the emerging high-growth markets including India.

    The compulsion to do buyout deals and outsize competitive agencies is coming from an evil that is economic crisis. Global media agencies are looking for safe harbours away from the slowing advertising markets of the United States and Europe.

    Prolonged recession since 2008 is providing the ideal climate for these deals to fertilise. The smaller players have become more open to sell as they seek escape from financial stress and acquisition prices become more affordable.

    “We will see more mergers and acquisitions take place. In a downswing, the values become lucrative and the benefits of consolidation become more apparent,” says Publicis South Asia CEO Nakul Chopra.

    The BBHs of the world were born in a different era and in a different period of history. Now is the time to build scale, volume, value and efficiencies through size. The scramble is on to consolidate advertising spends among the top five agencies, much like the way the other industries behave.

    “How long can the ad industry stay fragmented? It is the era of consolidation at the top,” says former Havas Media CEO and now
    BCCL director customer strategy Anita Nayyar.

    There is no other way to survive the onslaught of the digital players in a convergent media world. Agencies need to invest in digital expertise, technology and geographies. For tapping say Google, agencies with size will have a distinct advantage.

    And who knows where the ambitions of these digital giants will end? Sitting on huge cash piles, Google, Facebook, Apple or Microsoft may find business sense in owning media and entertainment companies as the world moves rapidly towards convergent economies.

    And what if they suddenly develop the appetite to gobble up extended areas like the agency business?

    That may be too much of an extended logic. It is definitely not the reason behind the current urge of agency owners to grow into bigger giants. Consolidation to tap deeper into clients in a digital era is the one big pull. And in a mightier ad world, growth can come through buyouts that provide complementary strengths.

    Japan’s Dentsu, overwhelmingly dependent on its revenues from the home market, has taken one such giant leap by agreeing to buy London-based Aegis Group for a whopping $4.9 billion. This will enable it to fly with greater stamina in Europe, a market it had earlier tried to dig into but failed. The Aegis buyout will place the Tokyo-based agency in the top position in the Asia-Pacific region while it becomes the second largest in western Europe, the fastest growing in North America and a global leader in digital markets.

    The Japanese agency couldn‘t have waited longer to spread far and wide. WPP has done a spate of acquisitions across the world, the most recent being independent digital agency AKQA. Publicis Groupe, on the other hand, gobbled up London-based Bartle Bogle Hegarty (BBH) for $848.5 million. The French agency also bought Rosetta, a digital marketing company, last year.

    “In this consolidation wave, Dentsu needed to balance their footprint. There was an inherent strategic need,” says Chopra.

    Consolidation among the bigger agencies is nowhere near completion. Havas and the Interpublic Group could become the new targets for acquisition as the pecking order of the top five agencies remain unchanged even after combining Dentsu and Aegis. WPP leads the pack, followed by Omnicom, Publicis, IPG and Dentsu.

    The acquisition fever has also spread to the Indian shores. The largest takeover activity was made last year when Omnicom snapped up majority stake in Anil Ambani‘s Reliance-owned Mudra Group. The most recent acquisitions this year have been the total buyout of digital agency Indigo Consulting by Publicis’ Leo Burnett and 51 per cent of Hungama Digital by WPP’s JWT.

    “In this digital era, there is a need to offer a wider level of specialised services. We acquired Indigo Consulting, one of the largest digital agencies in India,” says Leo Burnett chairman and CEO for Indian subcontinent Arvind Sharma.

    The acquisitions across geographies are not going to end. The cross-border deals are, in fact, going to multiply. “The big change sweeping across the world is the power of the digital medium. In this cyclic wave, inorganic expansion is becoming an important route. Agencies want to leapfrog their understanding in the digital arena as consumer behaviour is changing fast. Since digital means global platforms, we are seeing more cross-border deals like Dentsu intending to acquire Aegis,” says ZenithOptimedia CEO Satyajit Sen.

    Sharma believes that mergers and acquisitions will last for at least a decade. “The dominance of television is waning and ad spends are moving away to digital. The market is getting more segmented and ad models are becoming complex. Also, TV, tablets and smart phones are merging into each other. Media companies are acquiring specialities as digital is becoming a powerful communication tool. Technology is driving interest and consumer time. These require new perspectives and new skillsets,” he explains.

    India with a 1.2 billion demographic has become a very important growth market for the global agencies. Commenting on S&P’s remark about India being the first fallen angel, WPP Group CEO Martin Sorrell told CNBC TV18‘s Anuradha Sengupta in an interview that “If India is a fallen angel, I would like to be a fallen angel.”

    The angels are inhabiting Brazil, Russia, India and China. While US is seeing very slow growth and Europe is caught in a debt crisis, the BRIC countries are growing strongly though of late they are tending to reverse their crazy pace.

    Sharma believes acquisitions will keep happening in India. If 4G turns out to be a success and the projection of 200 million subscribers over the next five years actually happens, it would throw open a lot of opportunities and challenges for agencies.

    “We will see digital and special units and talent being gobbled up. New creative shops will keep coming up and it normally takes seven years of growth for such smaller outfits to be a target for acquisition,” he says.

    Agrees Sen, “Acquisitions will be on the rise. Network agencies will have an advantage.”

    Will that signal the end of the mushrooming of independent agencies in India? Madison Media Group CEO Gautam Kiyawat does not think so. “Creative shops can be successful without the scale attached to it. I don’t see their death in India. They will continue to exist in numbers,” he says.

    The advertising landscape will possibly witness two trends. While mid-sized agencies will be buyout targets, the smaller creative outfits will find space to exist.

    Nayyar feels India will not follow the global trend where the top league will be occupied by five agencies who will dominate the market. Being diverse in nature, India will be a 10-15 player market. Agencies with sizeable volumes like Madison already exist. Like China, India is a volume market,” she avers.

    Percept Limited joint managing director Shailendra Singh agrees that India will have more players with strong volume business. “India is a totally different market. “We are a totally different market. Percept will not sell. Our media business, in fact, has been made the company of the year in the Group. We are client heavy and our growth is steady,” he asserts.

    The consolidation wave is looked at as a healthy development by some industry experts. “The trend to break free and set up smaller units has fragmented the market too much and clients have gained from this. The industry needs to work with better rates,” says Nayyar.

    Sharma holds a contrarian view. According to him, consolidation is not deep or penetrative enough to push up rates. “Consolidation has not been so dramatic that it will have an impact on agency compensations in the short run. It may slow down the drop in agency compensations but not necessarily push them up,” he says.

  • Anita Nayyar quits Havas Media to join BCCL

    Anita Nayyar quits Havas Media to join BCCL

    MUMBAI: Havas Media CEO Anita Nayyar has put in her papers after a stint of five years with the company.

    She will be serving her notice period till the end of the month.

    Nayyar is expected to join Bennett, Coleman and Company (BCCL) as director customer strategy.

    Havas Media Asia Pacific CEO Vishnu Mohan said, “Yes, Anita has quit. The agency is in process of identifying the right person for the role.”

    “After five years, Anita leaves behind an organization seven times stronger with several specialist brands that today are over 40 per cent of group‘s portfolio and a strong talent force that are leaders in their own right. We thank her for her stewardship and wish her every success in this new stint on the other side after 28 years in the agency business. We are at present in the process of identifying a suitable leader for this role and should make an announcement to that effect shortly,” Mohan added.

    Meanwhile, MPG India has promoted managing partner Mohit Joshi to the post of managing director.

    Based in Mumbai, he will be reporting to Mohan.

    Nayyar had joined Havas Media in 2007 as the CEO of MPG India. Later on, she was promoted to CEO of Havas Media-South Asia. Prior to joining Havas Media, she had also worked with Starcom and Mudra Communications.

  • Sleepwell appoints MPG as its media AoR

    Sleepwell appoints MPG as its media AoR

    MUMBAI: Havas Media’s flagship brand, MPG India, has been appointed as the media AOR for Sleepwell.

    The account size is in the range of Rs 200 million and will be handled by MPG’s Delhi office.

    The incumbent agency on the account is GroupM’s Motivator.

    Sleepwell head of marketing Manoj Sharma said, “We are happy to partner with MPG. We found their approach very thorough and insightful. Their strategic thinking is driven by MPG proprietary tools which provide a holistic communication perspective. Most importantly, their extremely passionate and enthusiastic team made us choose them as our media partners”

    MPG South Asia CEO Anita Nayyar said, “It is a great privilege to be working with Sleepwell. One of the key factors that helped us win this business was our strategic approach to communication using our proprietary tools. It is a great win for MPG to kick-start the second quarter”.

    Sleepwell is the flagship brand of Sheela Group and is a ISO 9001 certified brand.

  • Havas Media prepares for aggressive growth in 2012

    Havas Media prepares for aggressive growth in 2012

    MUMBAI: In a tough economic slowdown year, Havas Media had to ride through a quieter phase of growth as it parted with the Maxx Mobiles account, one of its top five clients, but retained the MTS business. And its prize catch was winning the entire media business of Parle Products, the account size of which is pegged at Rs 700 million.


     
    “2011 has been a tough but an on-track year. Maxx Mobiles is the only business we gave up due to the poor health of the handset category and, hence, payment issues. But we managed to retain the MTS business despite fierce competition. And we closed the year by gaining the complete Parle AOR,”said Havas Media India & South Asia CEO Anita Nayyar.


    Growth in 2011 was muted by the fact that there were lesser number of pitches called for. Havas participated in around ten bids and won about six.


    “The industry did not see too many pitches for new accounts in 2011. Hence conversions have been a bit slow but our new business targets are on track. We expect the scenario to change in 2012 and will aggressively go for new business,”said Nayyar.


    Havas formed alliances to ensure growth is smoother. Its media agency MPG partnered with Rediffusion‘s media brand TME to offer planning and buying services to clients of Rediffusion Y & R and its subsidiary Everest Brand Solutions.


    “We are already on the path of initiatives, one of the most recent being an alliance with TME, the media arm of Rediffusion , wherein media for Rediff and Everest clients is being handled by MPG. This has allowed us to have prestigious clients like Parle, Heinz, Tata Motors, Paras, TVS Tyres etc under the MPG-TME brand. We are looking forward to more such initiatives across our offerings,”said Nayyar.


    The agency also revamped its Mumbai office while Kolkata presence was established. Averred Nayyar, “We have revamped and strengthened our Mumbai office, which is gaining new clients and is ready to fight the market. The new clients that have come in after the revamp include History, Guffic, CNBC Awaz, Parle, Heinz, Taj, Tata Motors etc. We also have presence in the Kolkata market.”


    Havas Media has grown more than five times in the last five years. “Our growth is largely a function of two key factors – new business wins (like Hyundai, MTS, Kohler, Carlsberg, Bank of Baroda) and launch of diversified divisions like Havas Digital (Media Contacts, Mobext,Escelis), Outdoor- MPG Active, Havas Sports and Entertainment and BTL- MPG Solutions,”she stated, while refusing to disclose the financials.


    Charting out the road for 2012, Nayyar said, “Growth will be through the organic route and getting new clients is the oxygen for this. The focus is entirely on providing the best services to our existing clients and pitching for new business. Our integrated offering provides clients to choose all or choose from complete communication services.”


    “Digital is certainly the focus area with more and more clients realising and appreciating the role of the medium in their business.Endeavour is towards strengthening this offer in media, search, social media and performance marketing through specialised services including conversion rate optimisation, attribution modelling and quality score management to provide a complete digital offering to clients,”said Nayyar.


    Havas Media recently acquired a majority stake in Snapworx Mobile Inc, the mobile marketing arm of Philippines-based Snapworx Inc. Will it follow a similar route to grow its digital business in India?


    Nayyar said the digital wing of the media agency is the one to look out for in the coming year, without clearly stating whether it would adopt the inorganic route. “Digital is certainly the focus area with more and more clients realising and appreciating the role of the medium in their business. Endeavour is towards strengthening this offer in media, search, social media and performance marketing through specialised services including Conversion Rate Optimisation, Attribution Modelling and Quality Score Management,”she concluded.

  • TME enters in strategic alliance with MPG

    TME enters in strategic alliance with MPG

    MUMBAI: TME, the media planning and buying arm of Rediffusion – Y & R and Everest Brand Solutions, and Havas Media’s flagship brand MPG have entered into a strategic alliance to provide value added media planning and buying services to clients of Rediffusion – Y & R and Everest Brand Solutions.


    Rediffusion – Y & R president D Rajappa said, “This alliance is a collaborative effort to grow the business and also add enhanced value to existing and prospective clients of RYR”


    TME and MPG will leverage their individual strengths to provide greater value to clients and collaborate to tap opportunities for growth in the market, the two companies said.
     
    The alliance will also enable TME’s clients to benefit from Havas Media‘s network knowledge resources, the integrated buying clout, MPG‘s proprietary decision support systems and their touch point platform “Connect” bringing together a more effective and optimised investment plan.


    Everest Brand Solutions president Dhunji Wadia added, “This is one of the deepest integrations to date, marking yet another milestone in the group’s plan for a consolidated media investment management operation. The focus is to bring competitive advantage to our clients and our companies.”
     
    Havas Media, South Asia CEO Anita Nayyar added, “This strategic alliance is a synergistic relationship between MPG and TME wherein both brands will co-exist and continue to provide benefits to each other working towards a common goal of delighting clients.”


    Meanwhile, TME will continue to be built as a media independent brand under MPG‘s stewardship.

  • History appoints MPG as its agency on record

    History appoints MPG as its agency on record

    MUMBAI: The A + E Networks and TV 18 JV has taken MPG onboard for media duties for the soon-to-be-launched History channel in India. History will focus on factual entertainment. The agency will work on the media strategy for the launch of History channel and sustenance thereof in India.

    MPG was appointed for the account, following pitches made by four agencies.

    A+E Networks TV18 JV president Ajay Chacko said, “The subject history has always been associated with the past in India, but with the all new HISTORY channel, we hope to hange people‘s perception of history. The channel today is contemporary, it‘s also about action & adventure. It is about people making history every day. We found the MPG approach to be thorough and insightful. Their strategic thinking, drive and passion give us the confidence to believe that MPG India will truly help us make HISTORY in India and we are looking forward to making this genre as popular in India as it is around the world.”

    A+E Networks TV18 JV GM marketing Sangeetha Aiyer, said, “We have extensive and ambitious plans for the launch of History in India. Being familiar with the agency‘s work, we completely trust MPG to deliver as per our expectations.”

    MPG South Asia CEO Anita Nayyar said, “History‘s launch in India is a landmark development in itself and we are pleased to have won the marketing teams confidence. The team at MPG that worked on the pitch is personally passionate about History‘s content and this passion is what helped us clinch the business.”

    MPG executive director of for West India Kunal Jamuar said, “History channel has a loyal following in most countries it is present in and we feel fortunate to have been tasked to build a buzz around a channel of such distinction. We have put together some interesting plans, which will be rolled out in the next few months. Our aim is to skyrocket the channel into the minds of Indian audiences.”

    History will position itself as having content which is gripping and racy.

  • MPG appointed as media AOR for Vaswani Group

    MPG appointed as media AOR for Vaswani Group

    MUMBAI: MPG India, a flagship brand of Havas Media, has been appointed the media AOR of real estate company Vaswani Group.

    The account, worth upwards of Rs 100 million, will be handled by MPG Bangalore. The agency won the account in a competitive pitch process.

    MPG has been tasked with developing a media planning and buying strategy towards building an exclusive brand – The Vaswani Reserve.

    Vaswani Group GM of marketing Joseph Angelo said: “We felt the MPG approach was thorough and insightful. Their strategic thinking, drive and passion instilled in us the confidence to believe that this will be a successful partnership.”

    Commenting on the win, MPG South Asia CEO Anita Nayyar said: “It is a great privilege to be working with a very professional set of clients from Vaswani Group. The real estate space is booming in our country and the company has already created a niche for itself in commercial and residential property development arena. Partnering them in their journey is exciting and we are looking to play an important role in their next phase of growth. “

    “One of the factors that helped us win this business was our strategic approach to communication mix using our proprietary tools. We made very targeted recommendations especially for consumer activation program.”

    The Bangalore based Vaswani Group is a well-established property development company with strong presence and South India. The group has been in operation for the last 16 years and has developed eight million square feet of built area.

  • MPG ropes in Kunal Jamuar as head of West India

    MPG ropes in Kunal Jamuar as head of West India

    MUMBAI: Havas Media‘s media service group, MPG India, has roped in Kunal Jamuar as head of West India and executive director for Mumbai office.

    Jamuar will be responsible for the growth of MPG Mumbai, the hub for agency‘s integrated services offerings including digital and sports and entertainment.

    Besides new business growth, Jamuar will also work with different units within the agency such as Media Contacts and Havas Sports & Entertainment.

    Havas Media & MPG South Asia CEO Anita Nayyar said, “Kunal came across as a very mature media professional with a fire in his belly to make it big and go for the big kill. It is this hunger to make things happen which impressed us.”

    Prior to this Jamuar had spent four years at Lintas Media Group, overseeing the media activities of brands including Idea Cellular, UTI MF, Bajaj Auto and ITC.

    Jamuar said, “One of the key reasons for joining MPG is that I find them to be a ‘Future Ready‘ agency, with a healthy focus on New Media, New tools and New Thinking. I look forward to supporting MPG‘s objective of achieving its rightful place in the Indian media space.”

    In his nearly 15 years of experience in media planning, buying, strategy and account management, Jamuar has worked with agencies such as Madison Media, Media Direction, Lintas Media Group and Mudra Communications.

     

  • Havas to launch Arena and Mobext in India

    Havas to launch Arena and Mobext in India

    MUMBAI: Havas Media is in the process of expanding its operations in India. The company‘s 2011 agenda includes the launch of specialised media agency Arena, and the mobile marketing agency Mobext. 

    Havas Media India and South Asia CEO Anita Nayyar confirmed the news to Indiantelevision.com.

    Arena, that is already operational in Spain, the UK, Latin America and Southern Europe, is known for its specialties that includes offering tailor-made services to its key clients.

    Recently Havas Media‘s flagship media service brand MPG had formed a buying alliance with the Percept India group.