Tag: creative agency

  • DDB Mudra West wins creative mandate for ICICI Lombard

    DDB Mudra West wins creative mandate for ICICI Lombard

    MUMBAI: DDB Mudra West has won the creative mandate for ICICI Lombard General Insurance, post a rigorous multi-agency pitch. DDB Mudra West’s Mumbai team will lead the account.

     

    ICICI Lombard General Insurance is a joint venture between ICICI Bank, India’s second largest bank with total assets of over $99 billion as of  31 March 2014 and Fairfax Financial Holdings, a Canada based $ 37 billion diversified financial services company engaged in general insurance, reinsurance, insurance claims management and investment management.

     

    DDB Mudra Group executive director & DDB Mudra West president Rajiv Sabnis said, “ICICI Lombard General Insurance has already established a strong leadership through its promise of efficient and speedy claim settlement articulated as “Nibhaye Vaade” in its communication. Our challenge was to give sharper meaning to this promise while also contextualizing General Insurance in a new light. Most of General Insurance (Auto, Travel, Health) bought today is transactional and more or less mandated. We presented our point-of-view on how to make this category more relevant to people’s lives. It is an interesting journey and we are excited that ICICI Lombard chose DDB Mudra to take the brand to the next level.”

     

  • RB appoints McCann World Group for Dettol in India

    RB appoints McCann World Group for Dettol in India

    MUMBAI: RB (formerly called Reckitt Benckiser), a consumer health, hygiene and home company has appointed McCann World Group India as the creative agency for Dettol.

     

    The account is on a project basis. Havas WW will continue to be the Agency of Record on Dettol in India and globally.

     

    Dettol has been consistently voted by Indian consumers as one of the most trusted brands for over a decade. With a legacy of more than 80 years, it has become the trusted champion of health. The development is in line with the ambition of Dettol to further strengthen communication across its portfolio in India.

     

    RB advertises in almost 60 markets around the globe. Dettol, is its iconic brand, which promises to ‘Be 100 per cent sure’, its tagline in the TV ads.

     

    Available as bar soap, liquid hand wash, hand sanitiser and of course, as an antiseptic liquid, Dettol, recently forayed into the dishwasher detergent segment with the launch of its Healthy Kitchen Gel.

  • The future is about reinventing and recasting: Rohit Ohri

    The future is about reinventing and recasting: Rohit Ohri

    Dentsu created waves early this year when the Indian National Congress chose the agency to handle its creative mandate for the 16th Lok Sabha elections. The country’s oldest party might have lost in the elections but the communication was the talking point among industry as well as people.

     

    Rohit Ohri’s nearly twenty-four year journey in advertising communications, began with the Tata Son’s Marg Publications, but he soon moved to JWT, first Kolkata and then Delhi. Under his leadership and strategic direction, JWT Delhi’s top-line doubled, making it the largest branch office of any advertising agency in India, the largest and most profitable JWT office in Asia Pacific and the third largest JWT office in the world.

     

    In August 2011, Ohri, a golfer at heart with a seasoned sense of humour, joined Dentsu India Group as executive chairman. Today, he has additional responsibilities on his shoulders as its CEO in APAC (south).

     

    Indiantelevision.com’s Meghna Sharma caught up with the man to know more on how his term has been with the agency so far and what can be expected from it in the coming months.

     

    Excerpts…

     

    The year started with the great Indian political tamasha. How was the experience especially when the party blamed the agency for the debacle?

     

    The congress party had organised a pitch wherein 16 agencies were pitching, which included JWT and McCann and another six to seven top agencies. We won the business on the basis of our merit. We made over 16 pitches before we actually won the business, so everybody saw the quality of work and what we could deliver before being chosen.

     

    We had absolutely no problems with the congress party at all. None, whatsoever. And this blame game is a media created story. We have got letters from the party’s head of the communication cell that they are very happy with us especially for the quality of work that we delivered and the professionalism with which we worked. Congress party is not blaming us at all, it is an absolute lie.

     

    The first phase of campaign that we had created was really strong and worked really well. The fact is everybody we talked about the campaign, told us that it was strong and strategically correct.

     

    I think the issues are much larger and advertising campaigns are at best support but there has to be an overall positivity behind a candidate or the party. Unfortunately, it was a tough election.

     

    I would say the year started off pretty well for us. As an agency, and it was on the basis of merit and I am quite proud of it. Most of the bigwigs in politics believe that election campaigns are won on the ground. What a party does at the ground-level with the party workers makes a great primary for a win.

     

    We did not do the Delhi campaign; it was done by JWT and McCann. But see what happened to Sheila Dixit government.

     

    The real thing is what the need of the nation is.

     

    And then came the debate over the new Airtel ad?

     

    I think it is fantastic. The Airtel ad is about connectively and if the ad itself creates conservations then what more do you want?

     

    Everything generates two or more different point of views. So, if the ad shows new dynamics of relationships, it is bound to generate buzz. Change is not accepted easily. Today, we all are creating content that everyone wants to talk about and viralise. So, here it did the same. We had Barkha Dutt doing a show on it and people were logging on to just see the advertisement. So, which client will be unhappy with it?

     

    You will complete three years in the agency, soon, how has the journey been so far? What have been the high and the low points?

     

    I haven’t had any low points. When you look at cultural transformation in an organisation, I think when I look back and then see today’s Dentsu, it is in a much stronger place than when I had joined. I think that is an enormously gratifying feeling.

     

    So, I do feel that agency works very well in terms of where it wants to go in the future. Lot of things in terms of our acquisitions, not just of the company, the talent, and how we build within the Dentsu agencies and how we have integrated well with Taproot and WebChutney matters. And now on a larger level, with the entire Dentsu Aegies Network how we are leveraging the strength across the entire network. We have come a long way and I think we are very happy about that.

     

    It wasn’t very difficult for you to merge the cultural differences between the various Indian and international agencies?

     

    No not at all. If you fundamentally look at a few values of the network, it is about the focus on the quality of creative, integration and on collaborative model of working together. These are things that Dentsu Inc holds very close to its core in Japan.

     

    Example, today everybody talks about integration. It has really turned a new paradigm for advertising and communication agency. Almost 12 years back, Martin Sorrel started the whole thing of unbundling. It created individual interest versus brand interest dominations. In many ways what happened was that fragmentation was created between advertising and marketing and the agency structure was going somewhere else.

     

    That is the reason Dentsu never unbundled itself. It always stayed as an integrated agency firm from day one. The network saw this happening internationally and as the world’s largest advertising agency, could pretty well have gone the same way but decided not to do.

     

    Agencies within the Dentsu Aegis Network collaborate around a particular client saying that if a particular client needs x, then we will work around that particular client. So that the client’s interest is served before anything else. There is certain liquidity in the network and the network is dependent on the basis of client’s needs.

     

    With four creative agencies under the belt, how do you make sure that there isn’t any overlapping?

     

    The fact is that from a philosophy perspective it is one Dentsu; each one of the agency with the exception of Taproot. We have three Dentsu branded agencies and then Taproot which is our acquisition. There is one thinking around all of them. Physically three separate entities have been created so that there is absolutely 100 per cent confidentiality with each and every client.

     

    How has the partnership deal with Aegis Media helped Dentsu in escalating its position?

     

    The partnership with Aegis Media has been perfect for us. Primarily, because Denstu’s core vision, philosophy and point of view on advertising has been about innovation and integration. If you look at that, to deliver integration we need the best in class services across the whole wide number of platforms.

     

    We now have various offerings and all those capacities ready to take to the clients’ saying that ‘with all our entities, we can actually empower your brand.’

     

    In many ways Denstu has completed Aegis and Aegis has completed Dentsu. Now we are a full service integrated brand solution company.

     

    You have said that digital ad campaigns will drive Denstu’s next big initiatives. So, in the future, do you see brands being lead by chief marketing officer or chief technology officer?

     

    For Dentsu, the core of the brand is really about the intersection between creativity and technology. Technology is not just a lap over but technology is something we use as point of view. Technology is needed to reach out to new consumers and empowering them. Dentsu has a rich heritage of harnessing technology for brand communication in a creative and interesting manner.

     

    Going forward, it is a marriage of the two – creativity and technology. It’s not that human beings have become robots. Human beings will be human beings. There will be hearts; emotions and softer side that you need to connect with. It is important for us to say that technology is the enabler. So, how can we make it seamless to form connect with the consumers. It should be able to connect across multiple screens. Seamless connectivity is the idea and technology is letting it happen.

     

    Now that you are talking about seamless connectivity, there has been an increase in penetration of smartphones and tablets. But do you think brands know utilising that medium effectively especially in the rural India?

     

    As smartphones penetrate deeper and deeper into the socio-economic gratification, we will see a phenomenal rise of it.

     

    When mobile phones came, they changed the way we connected. Smartphones are the next level of it in the transformation. The power is in our hands it is only multiplying. One can watch videos, work, buy products etc all by a click on the device in my hand.

     

    However, one of the biggest challenge in front of the brands is that how to use that powerful device. Mobile is a great way to pole-vault over the lack of infrastructure. Where roads can’t reach, voice can reach. So, there is a huge opportunity for brands especially e-commerce because a large part of commerce comes from small towns where premium brands don’t have stores. The whole democratisation of luxury has happened so everyone has access to every brand. And this is what technology is doing.

     

    Also, there is a democratisation of creativity. Competitor of a creative agency is not another creative agency but it is the consumer. Today, individuals create content and upload it which sometimes become viral. As a brand/marketer, I will have to create something which people want to share and watch.

     

    One of your favourite digital campaign is…

     

    We saw many wonderfully crafted campaigns at Cannes Lion, this year. One campaign where Sweetie, a 3D CGI created child, from the Philippines working in the online sex industry was the perfect honey trap. It proves that how technology can be used to innovate for the betterment of the society.

     

    Dentsu has made a number of acquisitions in the country. So, will we see a lot more in the near future? Is that the way forward?

     

    India is a very important market for us and hence, we will look at more acquisitions here. We have a long-term strategic plan for the country and globally also. For us, it is all about a constant process of excellence, so we keep looking out for companies and opportunities. We want to build the Dentsu Aegis Network’s vision that is to build a complementary network – a network of complementary services rather than a network of competitive services. So, we want to have a collaborative culture within a network and it is very important to be complementary to each other. Because when two competing brands come together, brands don’t benefit from it but in a complementary set up clients benefit.

     

    Seeing that digital is the way forward, is acquiring digital agencies on priority list or creative?

     

    Currently, we have a very strong digital presence in India. We have iProspect, Isobar, Webchutney, which are complementary in the way they work but each has its own core competence. So when the three come together we have a powerful offering for the clients to leverage.

     

    We always look at bringing services – creative, digital, OOH, activation or any other – that are cutting-edge. That is how we look at organic and inorganic growth.

     

    How has the performance been on the financial and people front?

     

    Last year, for instance, our creative network grew at 65 per cent which made us the fastest growing Dentsu-branded agency anywhere in the world.

     

    It is a fantastic testimony of the fact that we have really come a long way and that Dentsu’s evolution and cultural changes bought in internally and externally have really worked for us. We may want to be anything but what you want to be, has that been bought by clients? That has been a very clear case for us.

     

    Touchwood, in the last three years the senior management lost nobody. Talent has always been my first and foremost agenda. We are a talent business so one has to bring in talent through collaborations, direct hiring or partnership.

     

    What can we expect from Denstu in the coming years?

     

    One of the things which we are really forward to bringing in for our clients is some of the technology platforms we have in Denstu Inc to India. We are already in a very advanced stage of conversation with one of our clients.

     

    We want to fundamentally change the paradigm of engagement with the consumer and when you interphase creativity with technology then you have a whole new paradigm of engaging with consumers at a deeper, meaningful and intimate communication. That’s what I’m excited about.

     

    As we go forward, it is about reinventing and recasting which advertising promised to do but has not really done for a long time.

  • Strike ‘Out of the Box’ to win!

    Strike ‘Out of the Box’ to win!

    MUMBAI: While playing a game of tic tac toe, ever thought you could win a game by just drawing out of the box? If not, then maybe you weren’t creative enough.

    With a single stroke of pen, Out of the Box, a Delhi-based creative agency has proved its point. Tired of the recycled ideas and unoriginal advertising, Saatchi & Saatchi ex-creative Saatchi & Saatchi (then, now L&K Saatchi & Saatchi) Viral Pandya decided to start his own venture.

    The agency formed in 2006, has been planning to revamp its logo for a long time now. It claims that after long, it finally had time to put its creative heads together.  “With so much of work on your table, you rarely get time to think about yourself. Ironical as it may sound, it’s the truth. However, the thought of designing a fresh, new brand identity for Out of the Box was always there at the back of our mind,” says the agency’s co-founder and chief creative officer Pandya.

    With the new logo, the agency wanted to say everything about the agency without speaking a word – its philosophy, its approach, its challenges, its lunatic side, everything. So what one sees as the logo is what defines it as a creative company.

     However, it wasn’t an easy task. With hundreds of drafts on their heads, the agency arrived on something extremely simple – a tic tac toe game with a strike through outside the boxes to say that one will always win with out of the box ideas.

    When asked what the agency is trying to convey to its clients and market, Pandya explains, “Playfulness. Spirit. Radical Approach. All in all, it talks about what we truly are. For clients, it gives an indication of what can be expected of us. As for the market, it tells them how mad we are about what we do. For aspirants, it reminds them of what we expect them to be and deliver.”

    The year has been full of work, full of awards and full of happiness. Graceful to God, Pandya believes that the agency has been able to pull off work that augurs well for the clients. So, far the work has won a fair share of awards this year. Whether it’s One Show Design, New York Festivals, Kyoorius, Luerzer’s Archive or Goafest, the agency has hit a jackpot. “Indeed, it feels good to be consistent. And it also keeps us on our toes to deliver every time.”

    And with two or three exciting accounts in the pipeline, the agency believes that every day there’s a new brief, a new challenge, a new idea and new excitement. But the work that really excites the people at the agency is the curriculum books for Presidium Schools.

    It was the biggest challenge, as well. The agency was supposed to adhere to the guidelines set by NCERT’s National Curriculum Framework (NCF), something that it was completely alien to.

    “Keeping that in mind, our job was to make these books interesting, inspiring, stackable and identifiable. Above all, the biggest mandate was to create the finest curriculum books in the country. It took us one and a half years to design the entire set of books, and there are more than 100 books still in the pipeline,” says Pandya while adding that it would be fair to say that this year was dedicated to education books.

    There’s another piece of work the agency is really excited about. It is a new campaign for Presidium Schools called Leadership via Academics. The first print ad of the campaign was released on Independence Day, and one can see a lot more of them in the coming weeks.

    One work, which made Pandya jump off his seat was ‘Dumb Ways to Die’ for Metro Trains, Melbourne. “So simple, so adorable, so moving, and bang on to the brief, a proof that the more innocent an idea is the more it touches the society,” he says.

    The agency which believes in never giving up, strives for the best and then tries to better it. So, what sets them apart from the others? In one word, passion. “We don’t take any short cuts. We pull all stops when it comes to generating ideas as well as in execution. And most important, we enjoy what we do,” states Pandya matter-of-factly.

    To create its unique identity, even in the age when digital medium has become an integral part of communication, the agency has successfully executed social media and digital campaigns, but it doesn’t set out to do digital campaigns. It wants to crack media-neutral ideas, and factor in digital, if needed.

    In the competitive market where mergers and acquisitions have become a common phenomenon, Pandya thinks it’s both easy and difficult for an independent agency to operate. “There are no network clients and therefore no free lunch,” he laughs and adds, “On the plus side, we enjoy creative freedom and can have clients who appreciate good work.”

    As for the future plans, Pandya jokes and says that as of now, the plan is to print T-shirts for the team with the new logo. “At Out of the Box, we hardly worry about the future. Our primary focus is to keep on creating work that works for the clients and us. What we really worry about is what we are going to drink after a long day at work.”

  • DDB Mudra North appoints Subhashish Dutta as senior CD

    DDB Mudra North appoints Subhashish Dutta as senior CD

    MUMBAI: Subhashish Dutta has joined DDB Mudra North’s formidable creative force as senior creative director (Art). He will be reporting to creative head Sambit Mohanty.

     

    After completing his BFA from College of Art (Delhi), Dutta’s advertising odyssey started out with Capital Advertising. In a career spanning 15 years, he has worked for leading agencies like Bates, Contract, Mudra and McCann before joining DDB Mudra (his second stint here). His diverse experience in various categories spans from Consumer Durables, Telecom, Automobiles and Hair-Care to Social Advertising. Subhashish has been actively involved in the creation and evolution of various brands like Nokia, Wrigley’s, Philips, Volkswagen, ESPN Star Sports, Jaypee Group, LG, Electrolux, Domino’s, Honda, Maruti, Dabur, Emami, NIIT, UNICEF, Videocon, Reebok and more.

     

    Dutta said, “It feels great to be part of DDB heritage where you get to work with such a young team with full of energy and enthusiasm. And I’m looking forward doing some fantastic work too.”

     

    Mohanty said, “Subhashish is a fantastic guy both in terms of talent and spirit. With him in place, our senior creative leadership is complete. His cheerful presence will undoubtedly make a positive difference to our work and workplace.”

  • M&C Saatchi and Delhi-based February join forces

    M&C Saatchi and Delhi-based February join forces

    MUMBAI: M&C Saatchi Worldwide is strengthening its presence in India through a tie- up with Delhi-based independent creative agency, February. The tie-up sees the launch of a new Indian agency christened M&C Saatchi February with immediate effect.

     

    Offering  advertising, design, digital, social, mobile, events and activation, M&C Saatchi February’s founding portfolio of blue-chip  clients  will  include  Nando’s,  Typhoo,  Avis,  Blossom  Kochhar  Aroma  Magic,  DLF  retail, Ananda in the Himalayas, SBI Cards and Panasonic Mobility.

     

    M&C Saatchi Worldwide CEO Moray MacLennan said, “India is a fundamental part of our global strategy, and we’re delighted to join forces with a brilliant team to help us create a global hub in this critical market.”

     

    The deal follows a strategic review of the agency’s Indian operations and will see M&C Saatchi’s new Indian  agency  –  M&C  Saatchi  February  –  headquartered  in  February’s  offices  in  Delhi’s  Shahpur Jat.

     

    February’s  founders  Gopal  Krishnan  and  Nirmal  Pulickal  will take over  the leadership  of  the combined operation. They will be supported by M&C Saatchi Delhi CEO Anjali Nayar, who has been appointed as the president of the new venture.

     

    MacLennan  added, “In Gopal, Nirmal and the team at February, we have found our perfect partners. They’ve built an agency producing world-class work for both local and international clients.  They share our obsession with ‘Brutal Simplicity of Thought’, and our laser-like focus on building business results for our clients.”

     

    Initially, the  partners  of  February  will  have  a  majority  stake  in  the  venture,  with  M&C  Saatchi Worldwide taking over the majority stake over an agreed timescale.

     

    Krishnan said,  “We’re  delighted  to be  joining  forces  with  M&C Saatchi  as we embark  on the next phase  of February’s  exciting  journey.  We’ve been doing some great work for some wonderful clients over the last couple of years, and this new partnership will help us play on an even bigger stage going forward.”

     

    Pulickal added, “When we launched February two years ago we had a simple goal – to create great work that works for our clients’ business.  It’s great to find a partner in M&C Saatchi who shares our vision entirely. We’re very excited about the future of M&C Saatchi February.”

  • Bajaj Electricals gets Leo Burnett on-board as creative agency

    Bajaj Electricals gets Leo Burnett on-board as creative agency

    BENGALURU: Consumer durables and lighting major Bajaj Electricals has entrusted its creative duties to Leo Burnett, a senior executive from the company informed.

    Bajaj executive director – consumer products P S Tandon said Touchstone was the incumbent agency.

    The company is already running a teaser outdoor billboard and movable boards on vans campaign to increase the curiosity factor over the past few days in Bengaluru.

    It has also launched a campaign for its new range of mixer grinders which went live on outdoor and the print media. Once the products are launched across South India followed by a pan-India presence, the company plans to use television for mass media communications.

    “South India is a priority market for Bajaj Mixer Grinders,” said Bajaj VP & Head for Sales & Marketing (Kitchen Appliances) Pradeep Patil. “The range will be priced between Rs. 3000 and Rs .4000 and comes with a two year guarantee for the product and five year warranty for the motor,” he said further.

    The new range has been launched in Bangalore initially, to be followed by the rest of the country later, says Tandon.

    “We spend about Rs 750 million annual towards B2C. Besides, we spend another Rs 100 million or so towards B2B,” Tandon said.

    “This is the festival season and our campaigns are on air at present on women oriented programs in the afternoon on national and regional channels, besides which we have been promoting our products through association with movies too.”

    With Rs 31 billion in annual revenues the company is targeting a 20 to 30 percent growth this year.

    “Our media plans for the new range of mixer-grinders in being worked upon and once the pan India launch is complete, we will be on air for these new products on the national and regional channels,” he added.