Tag: DD

  • Virtual library of cultural assets coming up in DD

    With just five permanent staff members working out of a temporary accommodation, Doordarshan Archives is digitally archiving intellectual property wealth that took roughly Rs 7.5 billion to create, and is steadily moving towards online selling of DVDs and then, video on demand.

    The picture can be bewildering seen from any angle, whether it is the temporary office space, human resources or technology, or the sheer value of the property that is going on the digital archives server, with meta data tags attached to each piece of DD production.

    Kamalini Dutt, director (archives) tells indiantelevision.com that a value could perhaps be put, but then truly speaking it is invaluable.

    An old tape being cleaned of fungus and dust in the DCB machine using hi-tech precision machines

    “I have got, for example, footage of a 35-year-old sarod maestro Amjad Ali Khan in black and white, then I have a 45-year-old Khan playing sarod and now I have a 55 or 60-year-old Amjad Ali Khan… so it is really the life journey of a maestro,” Dutt says.

    Likewise, there are programmes of all the vocal, instrumental, dance, painting, sculpting, theatre maestros, everything (barring those destroyed due to time loss) that DD has gathered since the early 1960s, when DD productions started.

    No wonder that when the DD Archives team made a recent presentation at Golden Prague festival where classical music programme across the world were presented, there was a massive curiosity level from world experts.

    “They all asked about where these things were available and how they could access this,” said Dutt, initially the lone crusader for digital archiving in DD, before she was joined by Director (IPR) Ved Rao.

    Insiders in the archives project – all infected with the virus called ‘save our cultural heritage programmes‘ – say that between the two of them, Rao and Dutt have been responsible for this project that involves state of the art technology.

    These include the latest, digital restorer machine that can restore programmes from any format used in the past to the format presently being used in DD, and record them digitally to be made into printable master copies.

    The process takes an enormous amount of time per programme, starting with creating the meta data tag.

    Old legacy tapes even in such conditions are cured and then digitised for archiving

    This is a form that is filled up first by hand, mentioning everything about a programme, from the title to the gist of it, the producer‘s name, time, format, when it was created, right down to the stack where it is stored.

    Another set of persons are making hard copy of transcripts, some others giving new sub titles, mostly in English which creates more value for a programme by enlarging the audience for it.

    There is a specific room Rao shows around the system, where there are computer stacks, which can be shifted on rails and gives great flexibility to storage space, a room where 18 Celsius temperature and a specific humidity level is maintained at all times.

    Rao, however, often sounds despondent: “Many centres have not sent their legacy tapes,” she laments, and adds that of the oldest programmes, only 170-odd hours could be preserved.

    Rao says Dutt has issued a dictum that whatever is left or the old as well as whatever is being created new, “not an inch of tape can be thrown away”.

    “We have told them, you do not have to store, just send everything to us and we shall store them.”

    The staff strength is also bewildering: just five permanent ones.

    Says Dutt: “We are just five. We are using the services of old, senior and retired DD hands who had been editors and programme executives and they are being outsourced the work for editing and other such work, because they have knowledge of that.

    Experts on arts working at meta data centre for previews of old tapes

    “But for computerised work, we are outsourcing the work to youngsters, who are good at handling computers and more adept at using software.”

    The talk veers back to value, and Dutt says that DD gives roughly RS 250,000 to RS 400,000 to an independent producer for a 30-minute programme, so one can calculate that 250,000 programmes on archiving at the moment could have cost roughly RS 7.5 billion to create, but that is not the real value.

    Dutt explains: “As a programme sits in my library and gets older, it grows in value. For instance, where will we ever get another Bismillah Khan? So, truly speaking, the value of those programmes we have on Khan sahib could be enormous.”

    Many of the programmes have in fact been made into DVDs, and sold at RS 395 per copy, and the hottest selling have been shows by MS Subbulakshmi, Beghum Akhtar, Sufiana Music and Bismillah Khan.

    CD copies come for RS 295 and audio tapes for RS 195 a piece, and these are available at all DD Kendras, as well as other places.

    Ved M Rao, Director, IPR, with Afghan delegates at the compacter section

    Dutt informs that almost all the top music companies, including Music Today, had come seeking collaboration when this RS 30 million a year project or archiving started and when RS 7.5 million out of that was apportioned for creating DVDs and selling them.

    “Surprisingly for some of my colleagues, though not surprising to me, we have made a profit on that,” Dutt says.

    Rao adds that some of the best selling products have had three or four print runs of 3,000 copies each run.

    Dutt says about the collaboration: “We did not want that, we wanted our own exclusive stuff, which could be repurposed for any specific use, and we are thus competing with private channels offering flexi time to viewers.

    Though Dutt, a diminutive powerhouse of an official, did not set a date to it, the next step, she said, would be making available such programmes for DD‘s VoD set up that is likely to come up soon.

    Soon, DD would be creating a website for this archive and the selling of DVDs online would be taken up, Dutt informs, but says that selling other footage would not be possible because of DRM (digital rights management) problems.

    Typically of a pubcaster mindset, DD is not just raking in moolah for itself, but offering the benefits of the sales to the creators as well, including the artists, and Rao as Director IPR, is working out the value of programmes and the creators‘ shares with them.

    The idea is to have a virtual library with meta data tags on each programme, which then can be used commercially, instead of storing programmes that are used once in three or four years.

    “See, all these were made with public money, so why should we just keep it and not make it available to them at an affordable price and let them enjoy a higher level of aesthetic experience,” Dutt says.

    However, though there is a large market, Dutt admits that it is this issue of higher level of aesthetic experience that keep the market contained within some elite sections who have the taste, exposure and desire to experience that aesthetic, but that elite happens to be global and expanding, as the eyes on India expands exponentially.

  • Kainthola takes over as executive director in LS TV

    Kainthola takes over as executive director in LS TV

    NEW DELHI: Indian Information Service officer Bhupendra Kainthola has taken over as the new executive director (programmes) of Lok Sabha Television, filling the vacancy created in January after the termination of services of Sudhir Tandon, without ascribing reason.

    Kainthola has been posted to LS TV on deputation for three years. He is an IIS officer of the 1989 batch.

    His last posting was as the deputy general manager (media) for the National Highways Authority of India (NHAI) for the past two years, but he has earlier worked for several years in Doordarshan News in the Mumbai and Delhi kendras. He also functioned in the Press Information Bureau for one year.

    The post of the ED (P) has been held as an additional charge first by the executive producer Vartika Nanda-Sahai, and then by the executive director (marketing), Sunit Tandon, who is in the channel on deputation from the National Films Development Corporation.

    Sudhir Tandon had retired as deputy director general in August 2005 from the charge of Director of the Delhi Kendra of Doordarshan before joining LS TV. He had received a termination order in late December ending his three-year contract (in just over a year), without assigning any reasons.

    The LS TV was first conceived by the Lok Sabha Speaker Somnath Chatterjee and offered to Doordarshan.

    However, the public broadcaster had demanded financial support for a minimum of 250 employees. Bhaskar Ghose – a former Director General of Doordarshan and also Secretary in the Information and Broadcasting Ministry – was then given the task of running the channel with a strength of less than 80 people.

    He was appointed with the designation of media adivsor to the speaker and chief executive of the channel. LS TV was formally launched as a 24×7 channel from July 24, 2006 when the Monsoon session commenced. 

    Commencing with the Budget session, the channel is now in charge of transmitting the signals to the Doordarshan tower from where these are uplinked. Earlier, this work was being handled by DD staff.

    Furthermore, two more studios are coming up to augment the facilities, but sources in the channel told indiatelevision.com that there was no corresponding increase in staff strength which was now just over 100.

    The channel still does not have any funds of its own and has to depend on the Audio Visual Unit of the Lok Sabha Secretariat for its expenses and infrastructure.

  • DD to telecast Opening Tie, Semi-finals and final, and Indian matches

    DD to telecast Opening Tie, Semi-finals and final, and Indian matches

    NEW DELHI: Doordarshan will telecast live all the nine matches in which India is slated to play in the ICC World Cup beginning in March 13, apart from telecast of the Opening match and the semi-finals and final on April 28.

    Doordarshan will also telecast a curtain raiser before and after each match, titled Fourth Umpire.

    The Opening tie on March 13 between host West Indies and Pakistan will be telecast from Jamaica in a deferred telecast of one hour. The first match featuring India against Bangladesh will be telecast from Trinidad and Tobago on March 17.

    Other matches featuring India are against Bermuda on March 19, Sri Lanka on March 23, Australia on March 31,

    New Zealand on April two, South Africa on April 7, England on April 11, arch rivals Pakistan on April 15 and hosts 19.

    The detailed schedule prepared by Doordarshan is:

    Day/Date
    Teams
    Timings
    Tuesday 13/03/2007    West Indies V/s Pakistan
    at Jamaica
    (starts one hour late)
    06.30 P.M.- 08.00 P.M. Fourth Umpire 
    08.00P.M. – 11.30 P.M. – 1st Session 
    11.30 P.M. – 12.00 P.M. – Fourth Umpire 
    12.00 P.M. – 03.30 A.M. – (13/14-03/07)
    Saturday – 17/03/2007    India V/s Bangladesh
    at Trinidad & Tobago
    05.30 P.M.- 07.00 P.M. – Fourth Umpire 
    07.00P.M. – 10.30 P.M. – 1st Session 
    10.30 P.M. – 11.00 P.M. – Fourth Umpire 
    11.00 P.M. – 02.30 A.M. – (17/18-03/07)
    Monday
    19/03/2007
    India V/s Bermuda
    at Trinidad & Tobago
    05.30 P.M.- 07.00 P.M. Fourth Umpire 
    07.00P.M. – 10.30 P.M. – 1st Session 
    10.30 P.M. – 11.00 P.M. – Fourth Umpire 
    11.00 P.M. – 02.30 A.M. – (19/20-03/07)
    Friday 23/03/2007    India V/s Sri Lanka
    at Trinidad & Tobago
    05.30 P.M.- 07.00 P.M. Fourth Umpire 
    07.00P.M. – 10.30 P.M. – 1st Session 
    10.30 P.M. – 11.00 P.M. – Fourth Umpire 
    11.00 P.M. – 02.30 A.M. – (23/24-03/07)
    Saturday 24/03/2007    Australia V/s South Africa
    at St. Kitts & Nevis
    05.30 P.M.- 07.00 P.M. Fourth Umpire 
    07.00P.M. – 10.30 P.M. – 1st Session 
    10.30 P.M. – 11.00 P.M. – Fourth Umpire 
    11.00 P.M. – 02.30 A.M. – (24/25-03/07)
    Saturday 31/03/2007    India V/s Australia
    at Antigua & Barbuda
    05.30 P.M.- 07.00 P.M. Fourth Umpire 
    07.00P.M. – 10.30 P.M. – 1st Session 
    10.30 P.M. – 11.00 P.M. – Fourth Umpire 
    11.00 P.M. – 02.30 A.M. – (31/03/07- 01/04/07)
    Monday 02/04/2007    India V/s New Zealand
    at Antigua & Barbuda
    05.30 P.M.- 07.00 P.M. Fourth Umpire 
    07.00P.M. – 10.30 P.M. – 1st Session 
    10.30 P.M. – 11.00 P.M. – Fourth Umpire 
    11.00 P.M. – 02.30 A.M. – (2/3-04/07 )
    Saturday 07/04/2007    India V/s South Africa
    at Guyana
    05.30 P.M.- 07.00 P.M. Fourth Umpire 
    07.00P.M. – 10.30 P.M. – 1st Session 
    10.30 P.M. – 11.00 P.M. – Fourth Umpire 
    11.00 P.M. – 02.30 A.M. – (7/8-04/07 )
    Sunday 08/04/2007    Australia V/s England at Antigua & Barbuda    05.30 P.M.- 07.00 P.M. Fourth Umpire 
    07.00P.M. – 10.30 P.M. – 1st Session 
    10.30 P.M. – 11.00 P.M. – Fourth Umpire 
    11.00 P.M. – 02.30 A.M. – (8/9-04/07 )
    Wednesday 11/04/2007    India V/s England at Barbados    05.30 P.M.- 07.00 P.M. Fourth Umpire 
    07.00P.M. – 10.30 P.M. – 1st Session 
    10.30 P.M. – 11.00 P.M. – Fourth Umpire 
    11.00 P.M. – 02.30 A.M. – (11/12-04/07 )
    Friday 13/04/2007    Australia V/s Pakistan at Barbados    05.30 P.M.- 07.00 P.M. Fourth Umpire 
    07.00P.M. – 10.30 P.M. – 1st Session 
    10.30 P.M. – 11.00 P.M. – Fourth Umpire 
    11.00 P.M. – 02.30 A.M. – (13/14-04/07)
    Sunday 15/04/2007    India V/s Pakistan 
    at Barbados
    05.30 P.M.- 07.00 P.M. Fourth Umpire
    07.00P.M. – 10.30 P.M. – 1st Session
    10.30 P.M. – 11.00 P.M. – Fourth Umpire
    11.00 P.M. – 02.30 A.M. – (15/16-04/07 )
    Thursday 19/04/2007    India V/s West Indies
    at Barbados
    05.30 P.M.- 07.00 P.M. Fourth Umpire
    07.00P.M. – 10.30 P.M. – 1st Session
    10.30 P.M. – 11.00 P.M. – Fourth Umpire
    11.00 P.M. – 02.30 A.M. – (19/20-04/07 )
    Tuesday 24/04/2007    1st Semi Final – 2 X 3
    at Jamaica
    (starts one hour late)
    06.30 P.M.- 08.00 P.M. Fourth Umpire 
    08.00P.M. – 11.30 P.M. – 1st Session 
    11.30 P.M. – 12.00 P.M. – Fourth Umpire 
    12.00 P.M. – 03.30 A.M. – (24/25-04/07)
    Wednesday 25/04/2007    2nd Semi Final – 1X4 at Saint Lucia    05.30 P.M.- 07.00 P.M. Fourth Umpire
    07.00P.M. – 10.30 P.M. – 1st Session
    10.30 P.M. – 11.00 P.M. – Fourth Umpire
    11.00 P.M. – 02.30 A.M. – (25/26-04/07 )
    Saturday 28/04/2007    Final
    at Barbados
    05.30 P.M.- 07.00 P.M. Fourth Umpire
    07.00P.M. – 10.30 P.M. – 1st Session
    10.30 P.M. – 11.00 P.M. – Fourth Umpire
    11.00 P.M. – 02.30 A.M. – (28/29-04/07 )

  • ‘TV will continue to be important, but its importance will decline’ : Rahul Welde – HLL general manager – media services

    ‘TV will continue to be important, but its importance will decline’ : Rahul Welde – HLL general manager – media services

    For over 50 years FMCG major Hindustan Lever has dominated the Indian market with brands that have become a household name for many. Now it is about to turn over a new leaf to welcome its mother company Unilever. After having hogged the media space, especially television and now opening its doors to new media like internet and radio, the time seems right to question its experts on their outlook to the fast developing media landscape.

     

    In conversation with Sujatha Shreedharan and Renelle Snelleksz, HLL general manager – media services Rahul Welde, who is most uncomfortable in front of a camera, puts aside all his inhibitions once he begins speaking on his area of proficiency – media and advertising.

     

    Excerpts:

    With the HLL name change announced, the next question is how would this pan out in terms of a branding and marketing strategy?

    Since it’s just been announced, we haven’t really planned that out as yet. It will be put to vote in the AGM in May, after which it will get adopted and implemented.

    One of the biggest advertisers on television, HLL is now looking beyond the medium. What kind of media mix does HLL now look at? You have also maintained that TV is bound to decline?

    Television will continue to be important. However it will also continue to decline in importance. The reason for this primarily has to do with the way consumers are reacting to television messages. Studies indicate that there is a greater degree of ad avoidance, greater degree of clutter on television and that has resulted in lesser interest in television by consumers.

     

    Simultaneously people are spending more time outdoors, doing other things than just watching television. As a result television is facing a lot of competition from the other media.

     

    There was a time when there was no television and print had all the advertising – but that lasted only until television made an appearance. It ate big time into print advertising. Something similar will happen to television with the advent of radio, internet, mobile communication and other types of new media. Eventually they will fight for the same share of the rupee.

     

    I don’t think anything as drastic as the death of television is bound to happen anytime soon but it is staring into the face of a huge challenge even while other media grow at an exceptionally fast pace. The same applies to our understanding of media buying as well. Our focus has shifted to alternate media and is much higher than what it used to be two years ago.

     

    Also, I must say that there is also nothing like an HLL mix, as it depends on our brands. Some will focus on TV and spend nothing on print and vice versa, so the strategic thinking as to what to use comes from the brand and consumer lens. We are thus excited about the internet when it comes to youth brands, while outdoor and DD are key for brands like Wheel. From an industry perspective, I think radio will experience growth.

    With HLL always known to be television heavy, what happens in the case of mass channels and niche channels, what strategy would you follow in that case?

    Well, we do spend on niche and mass channels, but with the whole area of fragmentation of audiences with multiple channels emerging, where stickiness is a challenge and competition is high. Now what it really means for us is that segmentation and multiplication of channels provides the opportunity to peg note and talk to the consumer.

     

    Unfortunately, the costs have increased and given that the overall advertising pie is fixed. The ad pie doesn’t grow because there are more channels, but what is happening is money is shifting from the big to the small or from the leaders to the challengers.

     

    The growth of channels, we will see an increase in the number seconds, but what is often interpreted is that spends are also increasing in the same proportion. It is of course a big challenge as fragmentation makes the task of planning even more difficult, where agencies will produce software and optimizers making the process more sophisticated. This scenario is good for segmentation, bad for costs. Thus I don’t know whether to call it a ‘happy situation’ because after a point of time your returns become sub-optimal when costs are high. Then that becomes a worry.

    Given that you are the biggest advertiser on kid’s channels, what is the potential that you see in this space and how do you (as an advertiser) think it will shape up in the coming years?

    For us it is important, but the degree of importance it would be very low because you have to look at it from the brand and consumer fitment perspective. There are a few of our brands that actually talk directly to kids while a larger percentage of our brands look at the older demographic.

     

    Even then we are the largest advertisers. So you can imagine if kid’s were to become important then we would really have to up our spends. But the interesting part is that kid’s involvement in influencing the purchase decision is growing. Now does that mean that they participate in the decision to buy a laundry powder? My guess is that they don’t.

     

    Thus, it’s not really a major part of our media thinking but it’s interesting because there is a lot of stuff happening in the kid’s space.

    You’ve shown a lot of enthusiasm about radio. But it seems HLL mostly uses AIR and not private station. How do you view private FM?

    I see private FM as a very exciting space for us because suddenly with the addition of newer towns, viewers will have more choice in media. This viewer engagement will attract more advertising, so from our perspective which brand will resort to using radio will depend on the brand and consumer fit. Right now we are in the process of taking stock of radio advertising and as we see it increasing to about 300 stations, but more importantly the excitement is about the increase in towns.

     

    Now whom we are in partnership with has to be strategically thought out, but we are in talks with several partners. The good part is that there are new and established players coming into the fray. Even now we are the largest advertisers on AIR and FM, this will only mean that our footprint will become broader within the radio space.

    Media planners are hesitant about radio due to the lack of key differentiators, what are your views on that?

    Somewhere a woman/man is being wooed and while people begin to analyze this space I think we will get on to the bus much faster. We have in the past invested in the medium and will continue to do so. We will not wait to see who emerges as different, as differentiators are what you create. You don’t view TV the way you used to therefore, radio will also be consumed differently. I don’t know what media agencies generally view this space, for us what is important is what we can do to it. Currently, we are holding our excitement.

    Following Wheel Smart Shreemati and Rin Mera Star Super Star will AFP’s be given greater importance going forward?

    All our AFP’s played out very well for us, Wheel was the top rated show on Doordarshan. Although, it may appear like something we mounted and happened to do well for us, but the truth is we were working on it for three years. In 2004, the germ of the idea began, 2005 we tested it on a smaller channel and 2006 we took it to DD. Our planning and research helped us get to where it is as the top rated show.

     

    The challenge is that you have to combine the arithmetic of the brand, communication and commercial and get the trio to work. However, the effort required for AFP’s is disproportionate. It calls for a genuine collaborated effort with the channel, the clients and the production house. It gives a new lens to the planning effort and it’s the next practice.

     

    We have been cautious with in-films as we don’t really know how it pays back. It is one step higher than AFP in terms of collaborative effort, in fact it ends up being more of a ‘punt’ than TV.

    Talking about the online space could you highlight what is currently being done with online marketing after Sunsilk Gang of Girls and Axe land?

    We have got stuff in progress but not in the development stage yet. The Gang of Girls gave us better results that what we expected both from the returns and consumer engagement we got. The sheer numbers were amazing, we tracked all the measures and it appears the time spent by these girls was almost 11 to 14 minutes. We did it to get engagement rather than exposure and it was a collaborated effort with partners like Monster.com, Elle and Cosmopolitan. It went beyond just talking about hair to discussing everyday issues among friends, to have an extended conversation with the consumer. So both thematically and in terms of engagement it played out very well.

     

    Also with Axe we did Axe Unlimited Academy and will roll out something along the lines shortly. So will we have all brands participate aggressively on the net? Probably no. But definitely our youth brands will, because it’s really about redefining the role of engagement. Therefore for us the whole space of internet is going to grow very fast and it will grow through a combination of such websites and simultaneously through traditional web based advertising. The net allows a huge amount of interaction but it depends on how you exploit it.

    How does this translate into sales?

    This was a brand building effort, but of course everything that goes towards building a brand must translate into sales. But it is about driving brand preference and an alternate way of communication.

     

    A big change is likely to be seen which is currently under the surface, but the in the coming years the numbers in terms of advertising will show that.

     

    The only thing that we consider is the brand and the consumer, the media needs to fit into that, so if online would largely be urban, but this is also applied to the rural I-Shakti programme, however, net penetration is still restricted to urban India, but progressively it will spread.

     

    Even the outdoor space is very interesting, however it’s not being exploited sufficiently. Every time people travel, it’s an opportunity for advertisers. In fact, among different forms of media there are definitely some that are really likely to rock!

    Could you name three different media that you think will rock in 2007?

    I think for the next two-three years radio will rock, maybe not in 2007 because lets not forget that print is some 1,000 crores (Rs 10 billion) and radio only some 100 crores. If I were to have a prognosis I believe that radio will really double, because it’s just the sheer scale that cannot be ignored. But within this space there are also so many players, coupled with the lack of measurement at the moment will make it even more difficult, so who do you back, how do you know it works? Thus a half baked science gets applied. But the minute you put measurement, predictability and science behind it that will cause inflection, otherwise people will be cautious.

     

    What will also make a big shift, whether it will rock financially I cannot say, but the whole business of in-store on-screen advertising, suddenly you will find them all over the place and therefore it will peel off mainstream advertising and then get evaluated analytically by agencies.

     

    Even in the TV space, the whole area of Cas and DTH will keep the excitement alive. DTH is getting into rural space so that will be interesting. There is great action happening there as well, KBC 3 and others.

     

    Another thing is that regional media is also getting more and more important across all genres, whether it has been Marathi, Bengali, Oriya and traditionally Telugu, Tamil and Kannada have been strong anyways.

    We’ve talked conventional media and new media but HLL has always been a strong advocate of rural marketing? But the focus keeps shifting and after some time all talks of rural marketing die out. Can you give us an update on what has been happening on this front?

    The biggest challenge for us is that a large part of India is still media dark. What that means is that television or print does not really reach there. Then there is the problem of infrastructure and literacy. Therefore from our perspective we’ve really tried to concentrate on on ground activation- demonstration, sampling and events.

     

    While the problem of infrastructure, non motorable roads, etc. remains there is also a challenge of scalability. We’ve been active in the rural areas for a long time and progressively have increased our thrust in this area. The big change is of course in the scale. We have upped the scale in these initiatives.

     

    We’ve got two-three programmes which we have been looking at for the last few years. One of them is Lifebuoy Swasthya Chetana- a rural communication programme around Lifebuoy that has touched over 130 million consumers across Bihar, UP and Rajasthan. Similarly, there is Project Shakti. The Shakti Vani is a programme that we started keeping in mind communication with rural consumers.

     

    While Lifebuoy Swasthya Chetana is a brand specific programme, Shakti Vani cuts across all the brands to speak to the consumer. The action in rural India is all about being ‘their type.’

    Is there also a challenge of making these initiatives profitable? You have talked to us about scaling it up? Since you do talk about the challenges, how do you go about building your capabilities and expanding it?

    The issue is not so much about profit although there is a worry of cost effectiveness. So when you know that there is a cost involved in physically being there which cannot always be done. When I say scalability, the challenge is to do with two things – one is to do with researches on ground.

     

    If you want Western class communication to reach rural India, you need a full stream of resources which works down the line, is well trained and which understands what is being spoken about. The fact remains that the scope of the country is so vast and immense that no matter how much you do, it’s never going to be enough. Despite this, I don’t know any other company which does as much in rural marketing as we do.

     

    We work with one agency on our rural initiatives – Ogilvy Outreach and have built a strong network through our vendors. I think over time we have built our capabilities in this segment. As for expanding this further, yes we would look into that as well. We are expanding in almost every sphere and rural marketing will come under that focus too.

    Big monies are being pumped into cricket on TV, but I don’t see the same quantum of returns

    If we could just talk about HLL brand and brand categories. You have largely spoken about brands in the health and personal care segment, in this respect has the push in the food division been milder?

    We do have firm positions in beverages. In fact, we just re-launched Taj across a multimedia campaign. There is excitement in foods but the scale and salience is very different. It is largely to do with the category and not so much to with the brand itself. Our tea brands are the largest in the category but if you look at these brands in advertising terms they are not as active as the personal care. Inevitably you would see Lux, Lifebouy, Sunsilk, Surf, Rin as large media and advertising brands.

    As opposed to the parent company, which has a strong presence in the food category, therefore would the recent global alignment following the inclusion of Unilever into the companies name, mean that there expertise in foods would be brought to India?

    It’s outside my remit to comment on that because that’s a matter of corporate strategy and how the food units would grow and I can only comment on advertising. But in totality the investments in this space are as hot as personal care and it’s growing as much. It is smaller in scale but as active.

    Finally, with the World Cup Cricket right around the corner, any new initiatives or plans for the season?

    (Laughs) You know every year there is great excitement over World Cup Cricket among advertisers and also channels. We share that excitement too, but we don’t want to be carried away by it. We will have certain things in place for cricket, some of our brands will have World Cup Cricket branding. But the fact of the matter is that a lot of money is pumped into cricket on television. The question to ask is where does this extra resource come from? It is but obvious that it is either pulled out from some other kitty or companies start following a cost cutting plan. So while I may be excited about it, I don’t see the same quantum of returns in World Cup, so I am cautious.

     

    So it is great that the advertisers are looking at World Cup. For us the larger worry is the movement of eyeballs from the general entertainment channels to the sports and news channels. Finally it’s a question of checks and balances. Is this rupee spent worth it? Any advertiser would ask himself that before putting up his money. Otherwise it becomes like a punter’s game.

  • Impasse over Tamil Channels continues in Bangalore

    Impasse over Tamil Channels continues in Bangalore

    BANGALORE: The impasse over the airing of Tamil channels continues here, the capital of the southern state of Karnataka, with seemingly no end in sight since the Kannada organizations are strongly against broadcast of the same.

    MSOs had stopped telecast of Tamil channels after the verdict on sharing of Cauvery river waters that Karnataka finds unfavorable for it.

    A source in the Karnataka State Cable TV Operators Association reveals that MSOs and cable operators are in favor of restarting airing Tamil Channels, but are facing stiff resistance from Kannada activists. “We fully support the people of Karnataka on this issue, as do the Tamil people based here in Karnataka. Entertainment should be kept away from issues that are politicized. Have Tamil channels on DTH been stopped? Have flights or trains between Tamil Nadu been stopped?” pleads a cable operator. “Cable is reachable and hence threatened,” adds another.

    The Tamil basket in Karnataka consists of around eight or nine channels, depending upon the MSO, area and the cable operator, from a possible bouquet of 11-12 channels. Of these, the Sun Group has five, Raj TV three, Jaya TV two, along with one each from DD and Vijay.

    Currently 2-3 channels are being aired in Bangalore. Sun’s KTV and Star’s Vijay were available in some areas while some had DD’s Tamil channel and other areas had Sun being aired since today, and yesterday. One Sun Tamil channel was switched on in monochrome in some areas.

    Regular Tamil channel broadcast in many areas of the state are on against token resistance from activists, as per information from some districts. However, the situation in some sensitive areas such as Mandya, Mysore and the surrounding areas could not be verified at the time of filing this report.

    The sharing of the Cauvery waters issue has plagued the southern states, with the major protagonists’ being Karnataka and Tamil Nadu since the past few decades. The interim water sharing verdict in December 1991 saw riots break out in Bangalore and the state, with loss of life and property. Even the 5 February verdict saw protests and a ‘bandh’ recently.

    The Karnataka government has yet to file an appeal against the 5 February verdict – they have 90 days to do so.

    Meanwhile, the people of Bangalore, a significant percentage of whom are non-Kannadigas, with Tamils forming a big chunk, are impatient and want entertainment to be kept away from these kinds of issues and enjoy their TV fare.

  • Neo Sports to give live feed to DD for 17 Feb ODI; no action against Nimbus

    Neo Sports to give live feed to DD for 17 Feb ODI; no action against Nimbus

    NEW DELHI: Following an assurance that it was prepared to give live feed to Prasar Bharati and action against it was unwarranted, Nimbus was today directed by the Delhi High Court to provide live feed for the cricket match between India and Sri Lanka to be played on 17 February in Visakhapatnam.

    The bench comprising Justice Vikramjit Sen and Justice JP Singh passed the order after Nimbus counsel Gopal Jain mentioned the matter before the bench seeking protection against the showcause notice issued by the information and broadcasting ministry alleging there had been violation of the provisions of the Sports Broadcasting (Mandatory Sharing with Prasar Bharati) Ordinance 2007.
    Nimbus wanted the court to direct the Centre not to take action against it as it had offered to provide live feed of the match to the Prasar Bharati. Under the ordinance, the licence given to Neo Sports owned by Nimbus can be suspended.

    The court directed the government not to take any decision or action till 9 March, the next date of hearing.

    The court also issued notices to the Centre and Prasar Bharati on a petition filed by Nimbus challenging the ordinance, which makes it mandatory for private broadcaster to share live feed with the pubcaster.

    Earlier in the day, Nimbus had approached another Bench of the Delhi High Court presided over by Justice BD Ahmed seeking protection from the Centre’s threat to cancel its licence if it did not respond to the government’s show cause notice by today.

    However, Justice Ahmed had said then that the broadcaster should raise the issue before the Division Bench that was already hearing two cases on the issue – Nimbus’ challenge of the ordinance and the appeal by Prasar Bharati against a single bench’s order permitting a seven-minute deferred telecast of the cricket matches.

  • Delayed feed: I&B issues showcause to Nimbus

    Delayed feed: I&B issues showcause to Nimbus

    NEW DELHI: The information & broadcasting ministry has issued a notice to Nimbus Communications to show cause why Neo Sports owned by it has failed to comply with the provisions of the ordinance issued recently for mandatory sharing of live sports feed with Prasar Bharati.

    Nimbus Communications has been given time till tomorrow to reply to the notice, which was issued yesterday, failing which the government is “free to take action as permissible under the ordinance”. The showcause was issued on the orders of I&B minister Priya Ranjan Dasmunsi.

    What has irked the mandarins in the ministry is that for the ongoing One-Day International series involving Sri Lanka, as well as the earlier one that pitted the Boys in Blue against the West Indies, DD has been forced to telecast the matches with a seven minute delayed feed.

    The Sports Broadcasting Signals (Mandatory Sharing with Prasar Bharati) Ordinance 2007 has a clause embedded in it that states that television channels that fail to comply with the terms of the ordinance for compulsory sharing of live feeds with the national broadcaster Prasar Bharati would have to pay a penalty up to Rs 10 million and also face possible revocation or suspension of license.

    The ordinance promulgated on 3 February has retrospective affect from 11 November, 2005, which was when the government had issued its guidelines for downlinking of TV channels. The Uplinking Guidelines had been issued on 12 December, 2005. It has also been stipulated that no action of the government could be challenged in any court of law.

    With the Guidelines coming in the ambit of the Ordinance which is expected to be replaced by an Act of Parliament in the ensuing Budget session, the government has taken upon itself the powers to enforce them with retrospective effect. The guidelines are already the subject matter of two petitions in the Delhi High Court.

    It may be recalled that the Delhi High Court had on 12 February refused to stay the operation of the ordinance asking private sports channels to share live feed of cricket and other sports events with the pubcaster.

    A High Court division bench headed by Justice Vikramajit Sen has posted the matter for further hearing tomorrow.

  • Sun ready, DTH play becoming hot chase for satellite space

    Sun ready, DTH play becoming hot chase for satellite space

    MUMBAI: Having finalised on Malaysia-based Astro as his 20 per cent equity partner, Sun network chairman and managing director Kalanithi Maran is preparing the ground to launch his direct-to-home (DTH) service. He has decided on Iredeto as the encryption system while the set-top boxes (STBs) will be from Coship Electronics in China and South Africa-based UEC Technologies, a source close to the company says.

    “He is also looking at more STB vendors. Besides the basic box which will be competitively priced, he will have graded STBs. Multiple vendors will ensure supply safety in case of a huge demand for his service,” adds the source.

    Maran will be using MPEG-4 technology that will allow him to compress more TV channels per transponder. While MPEG-2 can pack in around 12 channels, the advanced compression technology will be able to accommodate over 20 channels.

    Maran will have seven Ku-band transponders on Insat-4B, which launches on 10 March, while Prasar Bharati’s free-to-air (FTA) package DD Direct Plus will have five on the same satellite.

    He may consider himself lucky when the launch of Insat-4C satellite failed in July 2006 after the rocket carrying it veered off course and exploded. He had booked six Ku-band transponders (and one more for digital satellite news gathering) on it for Sun Direct’s DTH service.

    By being located on the same satellite, Sun’s subscribers will be able to access DD Direct’s channels without Maran having to separately put them on his transponders.

    Dish TV which was sharing the NSS-6 satellite with DD, will not be hit badly after the migration. Since NSS-6 is at 95 degree East, a minor realignment of antenna will be required for receiving the channels as Insat-4B shall be located at 93.5 degree East. Tata Sky, on the other hand, will have to recarry DD channels on their transponders.

    The DTH play in India is, indeed, turning out to be a hot chase for satellite space. If Tata Sky had to wait for the launch of Insat-4A as rival Dish TV aggressively went on mopping up customers, it is now the turn of Anil Ambani’s Bluemagic and Bharti Telemedia to plead with the Indian Space Research Organisation (Isro) to provide them with Ku-band transponders.

    In the sprint to start DTH before the market gets taken away, Bharti may be the clear loser. Unless, of course, it gets the approval from Isro to be on Measat-3, a foreign satellite launched from the Astro Group.

    “Measat has made their Ku-band transponders available for us and have supplied the data. We are studying it technically and are making an internal evaluation,” says Isro contract management and legal services director SB Iyer.

    The satellite has 49 dbW (decibel Watts) as compared to Insat’s 53. “We have indicated this problem and Measat has said that it would examine it and come up with a solution. Insat-4B has 53 dcW and offers a powerful beam across the country. We will have to ensure quality and also come into an agreement with Measat. Besides, the users will also have to express their interest in the satellite,” says Iyer.

    Measat-3 has 24 Ku-band transponders and has been designed to provide capability for data services and DTH applications in Malaysia, Indonesia and the Indian Subcontinent.

    If no clearance is given to Measat, Bharti will have to wait the longest with Insat-4G launching only by 2008-end. The DTH market could possibly have settled by then with the spoils being distributed among Dish TV, Tata Sky, Sun and Reliance’s Bluemagic.

    Anil Ambani will get a shot at the DTH market after Insat-4CR (replacement) launches in the quarter beginning July this year. Reliance has asked for eight Ku-band transponders and Isro is reserving the remaining four for other users like National Informatics Centre.

  • HC refuses stay on sports telecast ordinance

    HC refuses stay on sports telecast ordinance

    NEW DELHI: The Delhi High Court today refused to stay the operation of the ordinance asking private sports channels to share live feed of cricket and other sports events with public broadcaster Prasar Bharti.

    A division bench headed by Justice Vikramajit Sen adjourned the matter till 15 February for further hearing.

    Senior Counsel Dushyant Dave, appearing for Prasar Bharati, pleaded that the ordinance could only be stayed under extraordinary grounds.

    In any case, he argued, the conditions to share the live feed with the Prasar Bharati was part of the tender documents, and very much known to Nimbus Communications.

    The reply filed by the Government to the petition by Nimbus challenging the Sports Broadcasting (Mandatory Sharing with Prasar Bharti) Ordinance 2007 said it had been made clear to the Board for Control of Cricket in India (BCCI) that any party getting the rights to telecast the matches would have to share the live feed with Doordarshan and All India Radio, the application filed by the government in reply to the private channel contended.

    Additional solicitor general PP Malhotra, appearing for the government, said the petition should be dismissed as it was not the fundamental right of Nimbus, who own Neo Sports channel to monopolise the telecast of cricket matches. In any case, Nimbus should abide by the contract it had signed in February 2006 to share the live feed.

    Terming it as “bad in law”, the petition had said, “The ordinance transgresses the constitutional limits and apart from violating the petitioner’s fundamental rights, it also interferes with the power of the court to review the circular enforcing the private channels to share the feed.”

    On 23 January, in an interim order, the court had allowed Prasar Bharati to download the feed of Nimbus Communications and telecast the India-West Indies ODI series in a delayed transmission of seven minutes on DD and broadcast commentary live on AIR.

    The High Court has decided to merge the hearing of the appeal by Prasar Bharati against this order, and the petition by Nimbus challenging the Ordinance.
     
     

  • Former TWI chief Bill Sinrich is dead

    Former TWI chief Bill Sinrich is dead

    MUMBAI: Bill Sinrich, the former NBC newsman who became CEO of London-based sports producer TWI, died unexpectedly last Friday, 2 February 2007, after a short illness.

    He was being treated for depression at the time, according to a statement issued by his widow Nicola Cornwell.
    Sinrich, who joined TWI in 1987, is credited as being the man who helped the Indian cricket board break the Doordarshan monopoly on cricket telecast in the country.

    Sinrich left the company last February not long after IMG/TWI was acquired by New York private investment firm Forstmann Little & Co. His departure was reportedly due to disagreements with the new owners over the future course the company should take.