Tag: condoms

  • How Durex got folks in the wrong mood at IIT Mumbai’s Mood Indigo

    How Durex got folks in the wrong mood at IIT Mumbai’s Mood Indigo

    MUMBAI: Humour in advertising  can really strike a funny bone  and have  us doubling over in laughter! It can be a great conversation starter, leader and silence breaker. And a great ad re-caller. However, it all depends on where the humorous advertising is being placed.

    The Indian Institutes of Technology are known to be filled with the super intelligent young folk, actually young adults, but they are also the places where the most amount of things that should not happen, happen. Especially after studying and assignment  time are over.

    Fun, gags, leg pulling, and several other un-mentionable things take place as some of  the mild engineering students in the day turn into evil Hydes late in the evening. Surely, they will know how to take a joke, right?

    Wrong! As the condom brand Durex from the Reckitt Benckiser stable discovered. 

    Durex chose to sponsor the very famous IIT Moodi Indigo festival in Mumbai in a bid to create awareness about safe sex with protection. (During Mood I fest really, where smoking up is pretty common and you find folks cozying up in hidden nooks and crannies, at least it was the case at one time – the professors and the dean would never guess!).

    Mood Indigo Durex

    Durex decided to take the  ‘pun’ning  route to educate the young ‘adult AI, ML, LLM-obsessed students, many of whom are culturing and  nurturing unicorn start up ideas in their heads.

    The Durex standees had tongue in cheek (pun intended again) slogans: “Always up for a good screw,” “Mood U and I. Play with Durex,” “Here the Feelings are always real! We don’t fake around!,””Here because we found the Jee spot. Play with Durex,””Tonight Won’t Come Twice,””I am always a late-comer” and so on.

    Guess the slogans were, and are worth a laugh. 

    Or at least a giggle.  

    Not for some students though.  They rose up as a crowd and voiced their complaints against the so called “vulgar” jokes.

    And guess what?

    While Durex condoms offer protection, no one came forward to protect Durex. The standees had to be prematurely withdrawn and stacked up in a corner hidden from sight.

    The joke really backfired on Durex.

    So did Durex go wrong?

    Some like experienced marketer and brand custodian Arpita  Yadav think so.

    “Everyone, including me loves the quirk that Durex brings on to their social media, even ads. But not sure if I have ever seen it in an outdoor setting, let alone on a college campus. I am all in for educating kids, but don’t think campus authorities could have ever approved this. Imagine the backlash from parents, teachers, and some students. I am actually on the fence about this one: humour might be the best way for spreading awareness, but is it?,” posted Yadav on Linkedin. (Her post on Linkedin has started quite a discussion on whether Durex was right or wrong; the scales seemed to be weighted in favour of wrong place, at the time of writing.)

    So agency executives and brand managers, hope you will learn from this. It’s different strokes for different folks. (once again, pun intended). 

    (A big thank you to Arpita Yadav for the pictures as well. No copyright infringement is intended)

  • Manforce condoms rolls out a new ad ahead of Father’s Day

    Mumbai: Manforce condoms has released a new ad ahead of Fathers’ Day in continuation of its last year’s campaign ‘Better Endings’ on unplanned fatherhood. The ad points to the increased time spent behind closed doors by couples getting caught up in increased moments of intimate indulgence, leading to a sudden rise in the number of quarantine babies!

    The campaign draws inferences from multiple news reports on the existing home-quarantine conditions that caused an unplanned baby boom due to the segregation of couples globally while implicating the lack of protection.

    “Based on our research and the current situation, we continued with our season 2 of the campaign, while keeping the core message intact. This is the best occasion to warn men against the fatherhood situation that they will land in if they do not use protection,” says Grapes Digital COO & strategy head Shradha Agarwal, the agency behind both seasons of the #BetterEndings campaign.

    She added that the theme bears in mind that even during the fresh round of lockdowns for the second COVID- 19 wave, there was a rise in quarantine babies being conceived.

    The campaign hilariously depicts how the enforced segregation indoors can result in inadvertent romantic encounters, leading up to unplanned parenthood, if one is not cautious. The latest film depicts various situations wherein the husband scores brownie points over his wife while helping out in sundry household tasks. At the joint completion of every chore, he impishly teases with a ‘Who’s your daddy?’ query at the wife.

    The film concludes with the same query but, just when the couple’s intimate moment is interrupted by the sound of a crying baby. This makes for the film’s telling final message to viewers on choosing the right way to be called ‘ the daddy’ with #BetterEndings always being a matter of (the right) choice.’

    A strong message on the importance of adopting safe, protected sex is soaked in a fun and light-hearted package to appeal to viewers across the spectrum. Just like the first creative in the campaign, this one too ends with the teaser: “For all those who don’t like the ending, we have a better one. For all those who do? Happy Father’s day!”

    The campaign scores on its entertainment quotient, even as it educates viewers about relevant topics like unplanned pregnancy leading to impending parenthood.

    Commenting on the need behind the campaign, Mankind Pharma DGM Joy Chatterjee said, “Safe intimate relations have always been our core message to our consumers. The situation remains the same as last year similar and hence the thought of the continuation of our #BetterEndings campaign. The concept and thought behind the campaign remain the same. It’s an initiative to reach out to the masses to keep them informed that we all should have our share of fun but be cautious and take necessary protection.”

    The ad is now live across all social media platforms.

  • ‘Sanskari’ India wants condom ads off primetime

    ‘Sanskari’ India wants condom ads off primetime

    MUMBAI: India is a country that takes offence at the slightest suggestion of titillation. The Advertising Standards Council of India (ASCI) has approached the ministry of Information and Broadcasting (MIB ) for withdrawing condom ads that are telecasted during prime time or ‘family viewing time’. The council received several complaints on the kind of content condom brands show in ads, which may not be suitable for kids and teenagers. The ASCI, in its letter to the ministry, has specifically stated that ads that are explicit and vulgar in nature should be aired only between 10 pm to 6 am.

    The most recent instance wherein our sanskari-ness was awakened was when Mankind put up banners across Gujarat that had Sunny Leone advertising condoms with a tagline to ‘Play Navratri but with love’ that did not impress people one bit. Twitter and Facebook were bombarded with hate posts, forcing Manforce to eventually pull down the banner.

    ASCI’s consumer council looks into the content of advertisements and decides whether the ad is a s per its self-regulation code or not. Speaking to Indiantelevision.com, ASCI secretary general Shweta Purandare said, “Given the nature of the category (condoms), some sort of intimacy shown in the ad is inevitable but viewers are upset about them being shows during family viewing time. We replied to a few complaints that were forwarded to us by the MIB , by stating that those ads were not considered objectionable as per ASCI’s code but they (I&B) could consider the timing.”

    Vouching for brands, Vizeum Media Services associate vice president Saumya Agarwal adds, “One cannot penalise the product for the incorrect/unacceptable treatment in their communication. The guidelines must be placed towards how should the creatives be designed, without demeaning any gender in any way, etc., but to put an embargo on their exposure time is not justified.”

    Calling it an extremely myopic and ad hoc approach to solving a much larger issue, Agarwal notes that given the plethora of freely available information across multiple media, this would hardly make any difference. In fact, it is an irony that a country that is promulgating sex education is also fighting to ban condom advertising to the same audience.

    Doordarshan during the 1980s had declared that sanitary pads are ‘unmentionable’ and were not allowed to be advertised before 10 pm. That created a vicious circle for the product since young girls were the primary target. Brand-Building.com brand strategist and founder Ambi MG  Parameswaran is of the opinion that there is nothing wrong with pushing what is known as ‘unmentionable’ products into a more ‘adult’ time slot. “We should remember that condoms are in fact health products, they are for family planning and for prevention of sexually transmitted disease and that needs to be kept in mind when pushing condom ads to midnight slot.”

    On a different note, Harish Bijoor Consults brand strategy expert and founder Harish Bijoor said that laws such as these will help protect the innocence of young audiences that are besotted with television. “If implemented, I do believe that the meaning of explicit should be common to all categories and not condoms alone. If showing skin above the knee is explicit, it should be common to every category for sure. If a skin cream can get away with it, why not condom brands,” he adds.

    Pointing out that brands need to self-regulated before they put out ads, Purandare added, “We are not against advertising of products but the execution is very important. Some ads are quite bold in nature and may not be appropriate for kids and we can’t allow them to show pornography at prime time. Advertisers have to be more conscious about what they put out.”

    One might want to consider the fact that even if the I&B accepts the proposal, kids and teenagers are fairly active on digital as well. They can view the content on digital platforms making it a moot point. Havas India CCO Nima Namchu believes that the content can be delivered to the target audience with a relatively higher degree of accuracy on digital media. But if the idea is to regulate content so that explicit content is not viewed by our children, then this step with ads on television will perhaps be followed by similar requests with digital content as well.

    Doesn’t the nature of the product need ads to be creative with raunchiness and ‘explicit’ communication? Our media experts tend to think otherwise. While Namchu thinks that is not the case, Agarwal adds that categories like alco-bev (Alcohol and Beverages), condoms, feminine hygiene need to be portrayed sensitively without falling into the obvious traps and there must be some sure shot ‘socially responsible’ guidelines in order to prevent marketers crossing the line of objectification of women which is indeed objectionable!

    If and when the move happens, it will impact brand communication and marketing spends for these brands on television as the viewership between 11 pm to 5 pm is negligible. Advertisers would be forced to find alternative routes, use surrogate advertising and move to digital platforms. Harish Bijoor added, “The loss is more for the medium of television rather than for the brand player. The brand player will find other means to advertise. Water will find its own level.”

    Purandare also points out that whether prime time ban would only be applicable for certain products or the entire category would be I&B’s call.

    A head of a big TV network, who did not wished to be named, says it is “hypocritical “ on the part of any government or regulator to say condom ads pollute Indian culture or corrupt young minds, especially when government  itself runs awareness campaigns for HIV/AIDS.

    “At a time when bursting population is becoming a problem for a government and the country, saying young people should not be taught or made aware of sexual activities of humans, especially as it has a big health angle (prevention against AIDS, etc.), any effort to push ads of condoms to unearthly hours past midnight defeats the whole purpose of sex-health education of young people,” the TV exec adds. 

    However, sources in Ministry of Information and Broadcasting (MIB) said no decision has been taken on the issue yet, though, prima face, some content and it’s depiction in such ads are a bit explicit .

    KamaSutra and Durex declined to comment on the issue.