Tag: CM

  • Mann ki Baat gains popularity among NRIs, CMs to emulate idea

    NEW DELHI: Even as the 32nd instalment of ‘Mann Ki Baat’ by Prime Minister Narendra Modi is slated for next Sunday, it is being emulated soon by some Chief Ministers who are commencing similar broadcasts.

    The broadcast on 28 May at 11.00 a.m. over the entire network of All India Radio will be carried by all AIR stations, all AIR FM channels (FM Gold and FM Rainbow), local radio stations, Vividh Bharati Stations, five community radio stations and also Doordarshan’s primkary channels – DD National, DD News, DD Kisan, and DD Bharati.

    The monthly broadcast has become immensely popular in every nook and corner of the country and is also very popularly among listeners in foreign countries who receive Indian TV channels or get it through the mobile app.

    The regional versions of the ‘Mann Ki Baat’ will be originated by the capital AIR stations in non- Hindi speaking zones at 20 hours on the same day. The regional versions shall be relayed by all AIR stations including local radio stations in the respective states.

    Gujarat is expected to set up around 48,000 booths to listen to the broadcast this month.

    The unique aspect of this important broadcast is that it is visually adapted by Doordarshan and other private TV and news channels in India and broadcast simultaneously. Similarly, radio in private sector patches AIR. All DTH operators also carry it.

    It is also live streamed for global audience and is accessible through mobile app, ALL INDIA RADIO LIVE.

    ‘Mann Ki Baat’ — being aired to about 150 countries — has evoked a “huge response” from people of Indian-origin living abroad.

    AIR External Services Division Director Amlanjyoti Mazumdar said the address, telecast live in Hindi, is also broadcast in a translated version in English. Excerpts of the speech are aired in various other languages, including Russian, French, Urdu and Chinese. “We reach out to listeners in 150 countries through our radio broadcast in Hindi and general overseas service (English),” he added.

    Jharkhand Chief Minister Raghubar Das has said he is launching a monthly CM Ki Baat, and has already discussed this with Information and Broadcasting Minister M Venkaiah Naidu.

    The state government is expected to enter into a memorandum of understanding with AIR and Doordarshan in this regard.

  • NBA condemns Telangana CM for threatening media

    NBA condemns Telangana CM for threatening media

    NEW DELHI: The News Broadcasters Association (NBA) has expressed shock at the threats made by the Telangana Chief Minister K Chandrasekhar Rao that he would “bury alive television channels that have dared to insult the Telangana assembly, its MLAs, and Telangana self-respect.” and “won’t hesitate to break their neck and then throw them out.”

     

    NBA stated that such remarks by the Chief Minister are a ‘direct attack on the right to freedom of speech and expression enshrined as a fundamental right under Article 19(1) (a) of the Constitution.’

     

    NBA has appealed to the Chief Minister to desist from making such inflammatory charges against the media and keep the discourse civil and sane.

    NBA also condemned the illegal and arbitrary actions by cable operators in switching off some news channels and urged the government to take cognizance of the same and also take necessary action against such cable operators and individuals.

     

    Blacking out a licensed channel is an anti democratic action that goes against the Constitutional principles of free speech, the NBA said.

     

    Meanwhile, journalists covering functions of the Chief Minister after his remarks covered their mouths with black cloth in a silent protest against the remarks.

  • Marketing lessons a la AAP

    Marketing lessons a la AAP

    MUMBAI: The recent-concluded Delhi elections, took everyone by surprise when Aam Admi Party won 28 seats. We take a look at what one can learn from the new entrant.

    When it was formed less than a year ago on 26 November, 2012, little did the Aam Aadmi Party imagine it would make such a big splash at the polls.   

    Winning 28 out of 70 seats in the Delhi Assembly elections on 8 December, the AAP came a close second to the BJP which won 31 seats, pushing the ruling Congress to an irrelevant third position. What’s more, three-time Congress CM Sheila Dixit suffered defeat at the hands of AAP chief Arvind Kejriwal. Before the elections, the now ex-CM of the national capital, didn’t think before making statements like, “Arvind isn’t even on our radar.” Dixit probably forgot the legend of David Vs Goliath.

    For a fledgling party which emerged as an offshoot of the larger ‘India against Corruption’ movement launched by activist Anna Hazare -where people took to the streets to protest the many ills plaguing the current administration – this is no mean feat.

    And neither is the fact that AAP – registered as a political party with the Election Commission (EC) only in March this year – has successfully met the EC’s criteria to become a state party.

    So what did the AAP do right to banish all the scepticism its broom-wielding members met with from seasoned politicians who dismissed the party, at least initially, as ‘chillar’ or worse, a group that made a lot of noise but had no real impact.

    Looking at the AAP’s historic win from a marketing perspective, we at indiantelevision.com believe brands may do well to take a few lessons from the party’s promotional strategy:

    * Strong USP
    Each brand need to have a very strong USP which helps position it in the minds of the target audience. AAP’s USP is that it gives the common man a belief, a hope, that there is going to be a better tomorrow, and that it has been created by the common man who is fed up of the politics of politics, and will hence deliver on its promise.

    *Be consistent
    At the heart of the AAP’s party manifesto is its stand against corruption – which cuts through classes. And it has not deviated from that. It has refused to ally with either the Congress (I) or the BJP, despite there being a possibility of it occupying the seats of power in Delhi.

    Brands need to stick to their core premise and promise and not try to ride fads.
     
    * Marry your brand USP with the brand mnemonics
    The AAP has always had one agenda – the aam aadmi, and it has stayed true to it ever since inception. Party members are common people who have volunteered and are unpaid. They come across as common people; they dress up like common people; they move around like common people. Even though many of them are well educated.
    And during this election campaign there was none of the largesse distribution or ostentation that the general political parties generally resort.

    The choice of name and the symbol in the case of the AAP was also crucial. The name says it all -Aam  Aadmi Party. Then the symbol was the killer: what is the one thing that is still common across all homes in India, even in middle-class and upper class homes and hutments – it is the broom. Using the broom as the mnemonic meant many things: it will be used to sweep clean all the dirt in the political system, while it helped identify the common man with a tool that is used in his/her home every day.

    * Know your customer; make him your network and your ambassador
    The AAP needed to connect with its customer: the electorate of New Delhi. Almost 130,000 volunteers all over the world, some of whom descended on Delhi before the election campaign became both the best focus group and research agency anyone could ask for.

    Some executives even took leave from their high paying jobs in India and overseas, housewives found time from their day to day chores, young college students, technicians, labourers, cable TV operators – everyone pitched to connect with the consumer and pass on what troubled the common Delhi-ite – crucial information to the central headquarters of the AAP. And they then propagated that further themselves to the electorate.

    With millions of products overflowing on shop shelves and online, brands need to know what their customers really want, when they want it and how they want it, and in the process make them your ambassadors and messengers.

    * Choose the correct medium at the correct time
    AAP had little financial resources at its disposal; some say less than Rs 20 crore. That’s probably what’s spent by politicians on a couple of constituencies. Once again volunteers stepped in to build the buzz.

    Twitter, facebook, online, print, and television. AAP went the whole hog on all the mediums. But not to splurge; just to have its message heard. The media were relatively complying: did not the common man also work in media? It hooked the middle class and the upper middle class through social media.

    And what about the man on the street?  Well it used direct selling: volunteers went door to door to the electorate in Delhi, connected with the common man. In trains, in buses, on auto rickshaws, in jhuggis, in bastis – there was the huge poster campaign, and it was the educated folks who went where they normally would not.

    Brands have to be careful about the medium they choose and utilise it to maximise impact. Brands too have to keep themselves in people’s mind through various activations/campaigns especially in today’s market where the sharks are ready to rip apart any competition.

  • Battle for Delhi

    Battle for Delhi

    MUMBAI: This week, on Battle for the States, CNN-IBN delves into the politics of Delhi as various contenders compete for the position of CM. The special show will feature the present CM Sheila Dikshit, who has ruled Delhi unchallenged for the last 15 years. After serving three terms as CM, she is aiming for a record fourth term. Faced with corruption charges, breakdown of law and order and often held responsible for Delhi’s rising prices, CNN-IBN evaluates whether Sheila Dikshit is going to make it this time or not. With the Aam Aadmi Party targeting Sheila’s traditional vote base and Arvind Kejriwal contesting against Sheila in New Delhi, will the current CM prove her mettle? Watch as CNN-IBN’s Pallavi Ghosh assesses her chances on the Campaign Trail with Sheila Dikshit.

    Don’t miss Battle for Delhi: Campaign Trail with Sheila Dikshit on Saturday, Nov 30th @ 8:30 PM and Sunday, Dec 1st @10:30 PM, only on CNN-IBN.