Tag: Disney India

  • Disney India launches ‘Gajju Bhai’ with Hyundai and Patanjali as sponsors

    Disney India launches ‘Gajju Bhai’ with Hyundai and Patanjali as sponsors

    MUMBAI: After thrilling the tiny tots with the action adventure series Arjun, Disney India is all set to win more hearts with its latest action comedy original animation series, Gajju Bhai that premieres on Monday 18 April.  Co produced by Disney and Toonz Animation India,  Gajju Bhai is about the coming of age story of a legendary ‘jollywood’ superstar and his transformation from a reel life to a real life hero. Add to that a mix of fantasy as he finds himself transported to a fantastical kingdom and solving young prince Iravan’s problems.

    Slated to air  on Mondays at 6 pm, with repeats throughout the day and the week, the show is targeting kids between the age of 6 to 10 years of both genders. Explaining the concept of the story, Disney India  Content and Communications, Media Networks – head and VP Vijay Subramaniam shares, “While Gajju Bhai knows he isn’t a hero in real life, after being sucked into prince Iravan’s fantastical kingdom, and finding out how the prince is a huge fan of his, he has to live up to his screen image, and by doing so he somehow manages to save the day in the end.”

    While the show will showcase long and plot heavy arcs, the format of the program is mostly episodic with each 22 minute long episode telling a story in itself. So far the network has slotted 52 episodes  in the first season along with a full length 90 minute movie that the channel plans to air two months into the show. Apart from the high quality 2D animation, the show also boasts of a 90 second song sequence in each episode. On an average each episode has cost the channel between Rs 20 to 25 lacs.

    When it comes to marketing, the channel has opted for conventional modes of communication and is hedging on its own network to create the initial buzz with music being the focus of the promotions. “We also plan to do an on ground activation around the middle of the show, to build the buzz up to the premiere of the full length feature. You can expect costumed characters and fun interactive activities surrounding the show’s characters then,” Subramaniam adds.

    On sponsorships, Subramaniam reveals that while Disney India doesn’t do title sponsors, there are a couple of lead sponsors on board the Gajju Bhai including  automobile brand Hyundai and FMCG brand Patanjali Juice. “The show will be driven by Hyundai and in association with Patanjali Juice. Each of our local animations has gotten a very welcome response from advertisers. Local animation has a lot of purchase among all our advertisers and Gajju Bhai isn’t any exception,” revealed Subramaniam further.

    The channel is strategically launching the show early into the summer, so that it airs during the full length of vacation season and builds a connection with the young audience. “Summer is the time when kids have more time to be in front of the TV. As a kids channel we plan to make the most of it and cater to the variety of demands the kids have. We understand that children do not want the same type of story to entertain them and therefore we have a different show every month for the,”

    With an aim to launch a new original programming every month during summer, the channel has two more soon to be launched shows in its kitty in the upcoming months.

     

  • Disney India launches ‘Gajju Bhai’ with Hyundai and Patanjali as sponsors

    Disney India launches ‘Gajju Bhai’ with Hyundai and Patanjali as sponsors

    MUMBAI: After thrilling the tiny tots with the action adventure series Arjun, Disney India is all set to win more hearts with its latest action comedy original animation series, Gajju Bhai that premieres on Monday 18 April.  Co produced by Disney and Toonz Animation India,  Gajju Bhai is about the coming of age story of a legendary ‘jollywood’ superstar and his transformation from a reel life to a real life hero. Add to that a mix of fantasy as he finds himself transported to a fantastical kingdom and solving young prince Iravan’s problems.

    Slated to air  on Mondays at 6 pm, with repeats throughout the day and the week, the show is targeting kids between the age of 6 to 10 years of both genders. Explaining the concept of the story, Disney India  Content and Communications, Media Networks – head and VP Vijay Subramaniam shares, “While Gajju Bhai knows he isn’t a hero in real life, after being sucked into prince Iravan’s fantastical kingdom, and finding out how the prince is a huge fan of his, he has to live up to his screen image, and by doing so he somehow manages to save the day in the end.”

    While the show will showcase long and plot heavy arcs, the format of the program is mostly episodic with each 22 minute long episode telling a story in itself. So far the network has slotted 52 episodes  in the first season along with a full length 90 minute movie that the channel plans to air two months into the show. Apart from the high quality 2D animation, the show also boasts of a 90 second song sequence in each episode. On an average each episode has cost the channel between Rs 20 to 25 lacs.

    When it comes to marketing, the channel has opted for conventional modes of communication and is hedging on its own network to create the initial buzz with music being the focus of the promotions. “We also plan to do an on ground activation around the middle of the show, to build the buzz up to the premiere of the full length feature. You can expect costumed characters and fun interactive activities surrounding the show’s characters then,” Subramaniam adds.

    On sponsorships, Subramaniam reveals that while Disney India doesn’t do title sponsors, there are a couple of lead sponsors on board the Gajju Bhai including  automobile brand Hyundai and FMCG brand Patanjali Juice. “The show will be driven by Hyundai and in association with Patanjali Juice. Each of our local animations has gotten a very welcome response from advertisers. Local animation has a lot of purchase among all our advertisers and Gajju Bhai isn’t any exception,” revealed Subramaniam further.

    The channel is strategically launching the show early into the summer, so that it airs during the full length of vacation season and builds a connection with the young audience. “Summer is the time when kids have more time to be in front of the TV. As a kids channel we plan to make the most of it and cater to the variety of demands the kids have. We understand that children do not want the same type of story to entertain them and therefore we have a different show every month for the,”

    With an aim to launch a new original programming every month during summer, the channel has two more soon to be launched shows in its kitty in the upcoming months.

     

  • The Jungle Book:  ROI-centric marketing or a missed opportunity for brands?

    The Jungle Book: ROI-centric marketing or a missed opportunity for brands?

    MUMBAI:  Goofy Baloo, protective Bagheera, daredevil Mowgli and majestic Sher Khan – these characters’ from ‘The Jungle Book’ need no introduction, especially in the land of the story’s conception, India. From kids who have grown up listening to Mowgli’s adventure tales, to parents whose inner child takes a somersault whenever they hear ‘Jungle Jungle’ at the distance – The Jungle Book story garners a huge emotional connect with the people.
    That is why when Disney announced a movie in 2016 to relive Rudyard Kipling’s celebrated children’s tale in live action, its studio in India was faced with both an opportunity and a challenge — to tap into its vast resonance within the country, while staying true to the essence of the story.
    And the answer lay not in reaching into deep pockets for marketing spends, but in completely redesigning the movie’s treatment in India. Releasing The Jungle Book in India on April 8, a week before the film’s US release was a start.

    Double treat:

    At its core, the campaign for the movie was tailored such that fans of The Jungle Book would go watch the movie twice – and thus it needed to treat the Hindi release as a separate entity altogether, and not a version. “Jungle Book isn’t just another Hollywood film with a Hindi launch in India,” Disney India studios VP Amrita Pandey shares, “Indians own the story and the nostalgia surrounding the characters. It is very important how we treat the film’s release here. Our prime objective is to play on the nostalgia for The Jungle Book as well as get the newer generation excited about it.”   

    Explaining the studio’s strategy for marketing in traditional media, Pandey adds, “Unlike most international movies, a lot of our print ads, even in English newspapers have the Hindi voice cast advertised. This will be part of our last week push before the release.” The cross mentioning isn’t limited to print, but television advertisement as well. Having said that, Pandey acknowledges that the marketing budget for The Jungle Book in India was less than  “our budget for an average Hindi release.”

    A star studded affair:

    And the key to this was getting the Hindi script for the film right. “To ensure this, we roped in renowned dialogue writer Mayur Puri to script Hindi dialogues for the dubbed version of The Jungle Book. Once we had that in order, the challenge was to cast the right voice actors for the lead characters. We wanted actors and not just celebrities so we approached Priyanka Chopra as Kaa and Irrfan as Baloo, Om Puri as Bagheera, Shefali Shah as Raksha.”

    Reprising Nana Patekar in his role as the voice of Shere Khan was a casting success. Patekar had dubbed for the ferocious Bengal tiger for Doordarshan’s animated Jungle Book series back in the 90s.  To further breathe life into the campaign in India, Disney India also flew Mowgli aka Neel Sethi to Mumbai to interact with his fans there – a rarity for an international release. The child actor’s Twitter interaction with Priyanka Chopra and other voice actors of the movie further drew in digital eyeballs.

    Down memory lane:

    Banking on its strength in digital reach, the studio added the cherry on the top  the new rendering of the very popular ‘Jungle Jungle’ song. “It wasn’t an easy decision. The old song was more innocent, while the movie, targeted at both kids and adults touches a wider range of emotions. We turned to the original masterminds — lyricist Gulzar and composer Vishal Bhardwaj – to revive the childhood anthem of every 90’s kid, Jungle jungle baat chali hai… for Disney’s The Jungle Book,” Pandey informs.

    As soon as the song was launched, it crossed over 2 million views  (20 lakh) in less than a week. Not stopping at that, talented musician Vishal Dadlani has also been roped in to sing Bare Necessities. After Disney India put out a strong content for the Hindi speaking market, an equally strong campaigning is being carried out for Tamil and Malayali markets, though no celebrity actors have been roped in for the voice acting.

    Tie ups:

    Given the reach and the strong brand value of The Jungle Book property, brand integrations and out of movie associations were inevitable, even though the studio’s main marketing focus was not brand integration but content promotion. Until now, Disney India has officially tied up with eight major brands. The particulars of these out of movie associations range between media deals to merchandising rights; which, as per industry experts, would be worth Rs 1.25 crore each.

    In the FMCG sector, Fruit Shoot has come on board as licensing and co-branded promotion partner. The brand would be giving out Jungle Book merchandizing and  has also has made The Jungle Book neck tags. The association is being promoted on TV and the digital medium. Complan as a co-branded promotion partner is also giving out The Jungle Book merchandise and its campaigns would be promoted on TV and digital platforms and also at modern trade retail outlets.

    In the financial sector, ICICI Bank has launched The Jungle Book range for ICICI bank Debit Card holders.  Among eCommerce players, Myntra is launching a kids’ special range which includes T-shirts and flip-flops inspired by The Jungle Book. The film has also tied up with Bookmyshow, Uber (cab service app) and Grofers (Grocery delivery app) where The Jungle Book will be promoted on their app in the release week. The combined reach of these platforms is more than 3 million (30 lakh). Apart from these, Shoppers Stop, Max, Penguin Random House and SKI are other brands that have tied up with the studio to cross promote their products riding on The Jungle Book wave.

    While the list looks promising enough, several media planners and industry observers feel The Jungle Book is an opportunity missed for brands. “Indian brands mostly opt for ‘out of movie’ associations with Hollywood movies. The number of brands associated with this movie are fairly good for a Hollywood movie in India,” opines Fountainhead MKTG vice president Sidharth Ghosh.

    Having said that, Ghosh can’t deny the high resonance that brand Jungle Book enjoys in the market. “The Jungle book and its symbolic anthem have a huge following with the Indian audiences. We all have grown up watching it and can easily relate to it. With a movie of this stature, there’s scope for more extensive and innovative brand integrations with amplification, not only through traditional media, but on-ground as well.”

    Where Disney India’s marketing for The Jungle Book currently stands, one can assume that it is banking high on the IP’s vast organic reach to take the buzz for the launch forward. Thus its keen investment to solidify the Hindi and other regional content for the movie, instead of going all guns blazing on media campaigns, makes sense. Whether this strategy will bear fruit and give The Jungle Book its due audience on 8 April, only next week’s box office figures will tell.

  • The Jungle Book:  ROI-centric marketing or a missed opportunity for brands?

    The Jungle Book: ROI-centric marketing or a missed opportunity for brands?

    MUMBAI:  Goofy Baloo, protective Bagheera, daredevil Mowgli and majestic Sher Khan – these characters’ from ‘The Jungle Book’ need no introduction, especially in the land of the story’s conception, India. From kids who have grown up listening to Mowgli’s adventure tales, to parents whose inner child takes a somersault whenever they hear ‘Jungle Jungle’ at the distance – The Jungle Book story garners a huge emotional connect with the people.
    That is why when Disney announced a movie in 2016 to relive Rudyard Kipling’s celebrated children’s tale in live action, its studio in India was faced with both an opportunity and a challenge — to tap into its vast resonance within the country, while staying true to the essence of the story.
    And the answer lay not in reaching into deep pockets for marketing spends, but in completely redesigning the movie’s treatment in India. Releasing The Jungle Book in India on April 8, a week before the film’s US release was a start.

    Double treat:

    At its core, the campaign for the movie was tailored such that fans of The Jungle Book would go watch the movie twice – and thus it needed to treat the Hindi release as a separate entity altogether, and not a version. “Jungle Book isn’t just another Hollywood film with a Hindi launch in India,” Disney India studios VP Amrita Pandey shares, “Indians own the story and the nostalgia surrounding the characters. It is very important how we treat the film’s release here. Our prime objective is to play on the nostalgia for The Jungle Book as well as get the newer generation excited about it.”   

    Explaining the studio’s strategy for marketing in traditional media, Pandey adds, “Unlike most international movies, a lot of our print ads, even in English newspapers have the Hindi voice cast advertised. This will be part of our last week push before the release.” The cross mentioning isn’t limited to print, but television advertisement as well. Having said that, Pandey acknowledges that the marketing budget for The Jungle Book in India was less than  “our budget for an average Hindi release.”

    A star studded affair:

    And the key to this was getting the Hindi script for the film right. “To ensure this, we roped in renowned dialogue writer Mayur Puri to script Hindi dialogues for the dubbed version of The Jungle Book. Once we had that in order, the challenge was to cast the right voice actors for the lead characters. We wanted actors and not just celebrities so we approached Priyanka Chopra as Kaa and Irrfan as Baloo, Om Puri as Bagheera, Shefali Shah as Raksha.”

    Reprising Nana Patekar in his role as the voice of Shere Khan was a casting success. Patekar had dubbed for the ferocious Bengal tiger for Doordarshan’s animated Jungle Book series back in the 90s.  To further breathe life into the campaign in India, Disney India also flew Mowgli aka Neel Sethi to Mumbai to interact with his fans there – a rarity for an international release. The child actor’s Twitter interaction with Priyanka Chopra and other voice actors of the movie further drew in digital eyeballs.

    Down memory lane:

    Banking on its strength in digital reach, the studio added the cherry on the top  the new rendering of the very popular ‘Jungle Jungle’ song. “It wasn’t an easy decision. The old song was more innocent, while the movie, targeted at both kids and adults touches a wider range of emotions. We turned to the original masterminds — lyricist Gulzar and composer Vishal Bhardwaj – to revive the childhood anthem of every 90’s kid, Jungle jungle baat chali hai… for Disney’s The Jungle Book,” Pandey informs.

    As soon as the song was launched, it crossed over 2 million views  (20 lakh) in less than a week. Not stopping at that, talented musician Vishal Dadlani has also been roped in to sing Bare Necessities. After Disney India put out a strong content for the Hindi speaking market, an equally strong campaigning is being carried out for Tamil and Malayali markets, though no celebrity actors have been roped in for the voice acting.

    Tie ups:

    Given the reach and the strong brand value of The Jungle Book property, brand integrations and out of movie associations were inevitable, even though the studio’s main marketing focus was not brand integration but content promotion. Until now, Disney India has officially tied up with eight major brands. The particulars of these out of movie associations range between media deals to merchandising rights; which, as per industry experts, would be worth Rs 1.25 crore each.

    In the FMCG sector, Fruit Shoot has come on board as licensing and co-branded promotion partner. The brand would be giving out Jungle Book merchandizing and  has also has made The Jungle Book neck tags. The association is being promoted on TV and the digital medium. Complan as a co-branded promotion partner is also giving out The Jungle Book merchandise and its campaigns would be promoted on TV and digital platforms and also at modern trade retail outlets.

    In the financial sector, ICICI Bank has launched The Jungle Book range for ICICI bank Debit Card holders.  Among eCommerce players, Myntra is launching a kids’ special range which includes T-shirts and flip-flops inspired by The Jungle Book. The film has also tied up with Bookmyshow, Uber (cab service app) and Grofers (Grocery delivery app) where The Jungle Book will be promoted on their app in the release week. The combined reach of these platforms is more than 3 million (30 lakh). Apart from these, Shoppers Stop, Max, Penguin Random House and SKI are other brands that have tied up with the studio to cross promote their products riding on The Jungle Book wave.

    While the list looks promising enough, several media planners and industry observers feel The Jungle Book is an opportunity missed for brands. “Indian brands mostly opt for ‘out of movie’ associations with Hollywood movies. The number of brands associated with this movie are fairly good for a Hollywood movie in India,” opines Fountainhead MKTG vice president Sidharth Ghosh.

    Having said that, Ghosh can’t deny the high resonance that brand Jungle Book enjoys in the market. “The Jungle book and its symbolic anthem have a huge following with the Indian audiences. We all have grown up watching it and can easily relate to it. With a movie of this stature, there’s scope for more extensive and innovative brand integrations with amplification, not only through traditional media, but on-ground as well.”

    Where Disney India’s marketing for The Jungle Book currently stands, one can assume that it is banking high on the IP’s vast organic reach to take the buzz for the launch forward. Thus its keen investment to solidify the Hindi and other regional content for the movie, instead of going all guns blazing on media campaigns, makes sense. Whether this strategy will bear fruit and give The Jungle Book its due audience on 8 April, only next week’s box office figures will tell.

  • FICCI FRAMES: Broadcasting stalwarts feel it is possible to survive the digital wave

    FICCI FRAMES: Broadcasting stalwarts feel it is possible to survive the digital wave

    MUMBAI: Is the past too old to be relevant in the future, and will it actually ‘perish’ if ‘change’ does not take place?

    These questions were discussed by panelists at a session to discuss the formula to Survive the digital wave: Change or perish.

    On the dias were The India Today Group Chairman and Editor-in-chief Aroon Purie, Discvery Asia Pacific Managing Director and President Arthur Bastings Viacom 18 group CEO Sudhhanshu Vats, Disney India MD Siddharth Roy Kapur, NDTV Group Director and CEO Vikram Chandra, and Hungama CEO Neeraj Roy, and the session was moderated by Pranjal Sharma with questions also coming from the delegates.

    “The fundamental is still the same, produce quality and you will have consumers and that’s the way forward as far as I am concerned,” asserted Purie.

    Bastings said staying with the mood of the occurrences is a must. “We cannot only have a channel. We need to have, whatever is there in the ecosystem. Once you have everything you can decide your core business and the rest depending on the performances you can plan your investments,” he added.

    During the course of the discussion, the AVOD model was questioned numerous times. Offering content for free is habit forming which might hurt the ecosystem and what is happening to TV now can happen to OTT too a few years later.

    Vats, whose Viacom’s digital AVOD offering VOOT was launched recently, said: “The consumer is paying. He may not be paying me but is paying for the data. As the payment mechanism develops, bundling can happen. So to say that the consumer is not paying is actually not a correct conclusion.”

    Kapur had a somewhat different point of view as compared to Vats. ‘Waiting for later’ was is not a saleable proposition for him. “We launched 500 channels and did not make consumer pay anything for it. We believe if we form a habit that consumers will later come, pay and watch, does that mean that we open a series of screens and let people walk in for free. I do not think so.”

    “Yes, people are watching movies on mobile phones but that does not mean theatre screens are going away” he added

    Chandra said there was room for profits and opportunities, “It is possible to monetize and it is possible to make profits. But you cannot put archival content, you need to create content exclusively for that very platform and only then will you taste success. The mindset that I will put archival content on digital is a slightly wrong mindset that the broadcasters have been following.”

     

  • FICCI FRAMES: Broadcasting stalwarts feel it is possible to survive the digital wave

    FICCI FRAMES: Broadcasting stalwarts feel it is possible to survive the digital wave

    MUMBAI: Is the past too old to be relevant in the future, and will it actually ‘perish’ if ‘change’ does not take place?

    These questions were discussed by panelists at a session to discuss the formula to Survive the digital wave: Change or perish.

    On the dias were The India Today Group Chairman and Editor-in-chief Aroon Purie, Discvery Asia Pacific Managing Director and President Arthur Bastings Viacom 18 group CEO Sudhhanshu Vats, Disney India MD Siddharth Roy Kapur, NDTV Group Director and CEO Vikram Chandra, and Hungama CEO Neeraj Roy, and the session was moderated by Pranjal Sharma with questions also coming from the delegates.

    “The fundamental is still the same, produce quality and you will have consumers and that’s the way forward as far as I am concerned,” asserted Purie.

    Bastings said staying with the mood of the occurrences is a must. “We cannot only have a channel. We need to have, whatever is there in the ecosystem. Once you have everything you can decide your core business and the rest depending on the performances you can plan your investments,” he added.

    During the course of the discussion, the AVOD model was questioned numerous times. Offering content for free is habit forming which might hurt the ecosystem and what is happening to TV now can happen to OTT too a few years later.

    Vats, whose Viacom’s digital AVOD offering VOOT was launched recently, said: “The consumer is paying. He may not be paying me but is paying for the data. As the payment mechanism develops, bundling can happen. So to say that the consumer is not paying is actually not a correct conclusion.”

    Kapur had a somewhat different point of view as compared to Vats. ‘Waiting for later’ was is not a saleable proposition for him. “We launched 500 channels and did not make consumer pay anything for it. We believe if we form a habit that consumers will later come, pay and watch, does that mean that we open a series of screens and let people walk in for free. I do not think so.”

    “Yes, people are watching movies on mobile phones but that does not mean theatre screens are going away” he added

    Chandra said there was room for profits and opportunities, “It is possible to monetize and it is possible to make profits. But you cannot put archival content, you need to create content exclusively for that very platform and only then will you taste success. The mindset that I will put archival content on digital is a slightly wrong mindset that the broadcasters have been following.”

     

  • “Our carriage bill is down 30-35%; subscription up 14-15%”: Nikhil Gandhi

    “Our carriage bill is down 30-35%; subscription up 14-15%”: Nikhil Gandhi

    2015 will be remembered as a memorable year for Disney India’s TV biz. The mouse house took its TV channel distribution in its own hands when it terminated its joint venture with the Viacom outfit Indiacast.  For several years it had experimented with other distribution partners like Sun Distribution Services to Star Den, both of which are non-existent now.

    A new venture Disney Media Networks was set up and media vet Nikhil Gandhi – who was responsibile for revenue and profitability across Disney India media channels comprising of youth channels – Bindass and kids channels – Disney Channel, Disney Junior, Disney XD and Hungama TV, movies channels – UTV Movies and UTV Action –  was given its charge.

    His challenge: to jiggle out distribution and subscription  revenues from India’s fragmented cable TV ecosystem, while keeping affiliate fees under control even as he ensured carriage of Disney India’s eight channel bouquet.

    Six months down the line, Gandhi seems to have done well, if one goes by this exclusive interview to indiantelevision.com’s Anirban Roy Choudhury.  He speaks about the challenges he has and continues to face, and why he is still optimistic.

    Excerpts:

    How has the journey been so far? What made Disney decide to distribute its TV channels on its own?

    It has been a fabulous six months. The market has been receptive to whatever we are doing, which has been a major boost for us. We have been in the business for over 10 years now and we have been distributing through different partners. We started with Star, then we went to Sun and then to IndiaCast, following which we were on an agency relationship with them. Therefore we needed to take a call on what we really wanted to do.

    I think our network is one to reckon with. We have six per cent viewership share which is probably five or six times compared to the one following us. So we are the fifth largest broadcast network. That’s why we thought we could go out and take the business in our hands and see what we could do at the distribution level.

    One, it was also important to get our carriage fee bill down, which each  broadcaster is trying his level best to do. Two and the most important one was to get the subscription business in order. 

    What are the challenges that you faced and how did you counter them?

    We had to inform the ecosystem – the MSOs’ and the DTH players about Disney Media Networks, that we have eigh channels, we have very high premium brands. We had to tell them what we are and what value we could add to them. I think that at certain point after our initial efforts, they did realise that they had never seen Disney as an entity in its own right. They began to understand the value that we brought to the table in terms of packaging. They realised we were the leaders in kids and youth channels and we had a sizeable movie business. We were not just another bouquet, we were leaders of sorts. The challenge was to communicate that and the team did a fantastic job.

    I think that the deals that we have struck are our biggest achievement. We have reached very big milestones in the first year itself. To begin with we have got our carriage bill down by 30 to 35 per cent and at the same time we have taken our subscription revenue up 14 to 15 per cent and it happened after rounds of negotiations and discussions with our carriage partners.

    When you talk about distribution success, do you mean a pan India success or is it a particular market?

    It is a pan India success for us. We are distributed nationally. Our channels reach east, west, north and south. And that is because of the fantastic work done by our teams on ground. We got a fantastic bunch of talented people from across different fields. They have successfully communicated what really Disney Media Networks stands for, and most of the negotiations are done by them. So whenever we talk about success or numbers, it is pan India that we are talking about, and not a particular market.

    What is your opinion about the CPS model? If rolled out properly, will it enhance your subscription revenue?

    CPS is there…and yet it’s not there as a whole. In phases I and II, we know what is going on. Phases III and IV will take shape with time. It’s good that we’ve digitized, now what really matters is how it is being addressed, how the CAF is filled up and how it is packaged. 

    It is a great move forward, and as a broadcaster and content provider, we can only add value to the process by giving superior content and a brand which will enhance ARPUs.

    CPS will happen as the progression of packaging happens and the progression of addressability happens.

    The MSO-LCO equation needs to change and become more mature. Yes, the moves are very positive, but we are still not there, there are areas where we need some amount of investor players to come and change the game at least from a mind-set point of view. CPS will go up with ARPU going up.  And when there is a transparent system in place that enables addressability, subscription revenue will move up in the right direction.

    What is your opinion on the regulators stand so far?

    The regulators have been very pro industry, which is a great thing. We have seen how there was a hard stance when it came to the phase III deadline. So I think it’s a very bold move, because for them also, it’s about getting the industry which is so big in size organised and deriving the maximum out of it in terms of entertainment tax and other revenue generating propositions. And an organised platform is always more transparent, and transparency is the need of the hour for the industry. So I think the regulator’s stand so far has been immensely pro industry.

    Do you think content, if paid for in India, will grow?

    ARPUs’ have been flat for last 10 years. So obviously India is not paying for content, but the moot point is that India is capable of paying more. We, at Disney, are manufacturers; we are content providers. There are platforms and there are wholesalers and retailers involved.  It is the retailers and the wholesalers who need to drive the ARPU and there are many elements on which it all depends.

    At a pricing level we are restricted by the RIO model, and then on the ground level there is the LCO who by no means is interested as it might hurt him. I think to drive payment for content, the LCO – MSO equation needs to change, DTH needs to play its role and it all needs to happen in a collaborated manner.

    I think there is a need for standard pricing similar to any other industry. You buy toothpaste the price is the same everywhere.  In India there is a legacy involved in the way it has been run. The legacy needs to change. It is changing, we expected it to change fast, but it’s actually changing at a snail’s pace.

    Can the broadcasters not play a role in ensuring higher ARPU?

    Look at what the broadcasters are offering these days. Look at the quality of the content. It’s premium content created with superior sophistication. There are HD channels offering HD content. A few of them have rolled out 4K channels.

     So while ARPU has remained same over the last 10 years, the investment on content did not stop. It kept on going. New formats, acquisitions, new and bold ways of storytelling have been explored, and then there are the additions in the number of channels every year.

    Rs 300 for 50 channels 10 years ago, has now become 250 channels of superior quality for the same old price. We have witnessed a few ARPU movements at least in the metros with DTH and a few MSOs, but these are minuscule movements. The movements need to happen much faster because that’s where the motivation is. From a broadcaster’s point of view, there is nothing that we can do but play the game as per the nature of the business.

    You spoke about collaboration, recently we witnessed switching off of signals, what is your opinion on such acts?  

    Firstly, the switching off of services and disturbing the consumer at a fundamental level is very unfair, it should not happen. There could be differences on the negotiation table, but that by no means should disturb the end consumer. 

    The fact that the consumer is deprived of a service in itself is very sad.  I don’t subscribe to such negotiations. We have also gone through highs and lows in our negotiation process but, at the end of the day, you cannot starve your consumer of superior content, or any content for that matter, because the consumer has subscribed for it. The ecosystem is such that the business is dependent on ad sales, and that is why the switch offs’ happen.

    What should lead the business, subscription or ad revenue?

    Ad sales should be an icing on the cake, subscription revenue should steer the business. Look at the mature markets – subscription revenue is leading the business, the negotiations that happen there are at a different level.

    Fundamentally the broadcast business has to be a subscription led business. You can have an advertising-based play that we are seeing with the FTA’s and that’s majorly because of the huge population of our country and the market size and the reach that TV offers. But a premium pay channel creating original superior content needs to be pay first.

    What is your take on the growing OTT business?

    At the heart of the OTT ecosystem is bandwidth and the bandwidth needs to improve.  What will be interesting to see is if it becomes subscription based (SVOD) or advertising based video on demand (AVOD). 

    Now if you are providing superior content for an AVOD model you are not creating a great environment as such. It’s all about how you form the habit. Consumers who consume OTT content are paying about Rs 1,000 for data, and we tend to think that the same consumer will not pay for  content. This mentality is not a long term one, we need to think 10 years ahead and then take steps.

    Smart TVs are in place; people are talking about 8K.  There are great leaps in terms of technology, but if we don’t take the correct steps, we won’t be able to get value out of the OTT business.

    Will you make yourself available on OTT platforms? Star has Hotstar, SPN has Sony Liv, ZEE has a couple of them and Viacom is launching VOOT. Is Disney also looking towards launching an OTT platform?

    Anywhere where consumption is there, we will make ourselves present. That’s the way forward for us. We do have plans, but we are at a very nascent stage as far as OTT is concerned. As a linear service we will be available on all OTT platforms, but when it comes to launching our own venture we will evaluate when the time is right.

    Where are you generating more subscription revenue from, DTH or cable?

    DTH has a slight edge over cable when it comes to our subscription revenue. We are gradually moving towards level contributions from both the platforms. Now with DAS phase III, I think the headroom for growth is massive in the case of cable. At this stage I think that DTH, given its organised and transparent nature, has the edge.

    Is it the bouquet mode of distribution that you are looking at, at this stage?

    Most of our deals are all bouquet offerings, if there is any platform that requires a youth offering or kids offering or a movie offering, such deals happen at a very high CPS price and we create those packages. We are there on a la carte as an offering, but there is a very small set of consumers who subscribe to the service. So it’s largely all bouquet.

    What is it that Disney Media Networks is looking for in the foreseeable future?

    I have mandated the team in Disney that the subscription business needs to overtake the ad sales business over the next three years’  and that will change the entire ecosystem. An MSO cannot then threaten me with a switch off and that’s what we are targeting. We were at about 65:35 ratio, now we have become 60:40 so we are moving towards that direction. Over time the target is to make it 40:60 or 30:70 for that matter.

     

  • “Our carriage bill is down 30-35%; subscription up 14-15%”: Nikhil Gandhi

    “Our carriage bill is down 30-35%; subscription up 14-15%”: Nikhil Gandhi

    2015 will be remembered as a memorable year for Disney India’s TV biz. The mouse house took its TV channel distribution in its own hands when it terminated its joint venture with the Viacom outfit Indiacast.  For several years it had experimented with other distribution partners like Sun Distribution Services to Star Den, both of which are non-existent now.

    A new venture Disney Media Networks was set up and media vet Nikhil Gandhi – who was responsibile for revenue and profitability across Disney India media channels comprising of youth channels – Bindass and kids channels – Disney Channel, Disney Junior, Disney XD and Hungama TV, movies channels – UTV Movies and UTV Action –  was given its charge.

    His challenge: to jiggle out distribution and subscription  revenues from India’s fragmented cable TV ecosystem, while keeping affiliate fees under control even as he ensured carriage of Disney India’s eight channel bouquet.

    Six months down the line, Gandhi seems to have done well, if one goes by this exclusive interview to indiantelevision.com’s Anirban Roy Choudhury.  He speaks about the challenges he has and continues to face, and why he is still optimistic.

    Excerpts:

    How has the journey been so far? What made Disney decide to distribute its TV channels on its own?

    It has been a fabulous six months. The market has been receptive to whatever we are doing, which has been a major boost for us. We have been in the business for over 10 years now and we have been distributing through different partners. We started with Star, then we went to Sun and then to IndiaCast, following which we were on an agency relationship with them. Therefore we needed to take a call on what we really wanted to do.

    I think our network is one to reckon with. We have six per cent viewership share which is probably five or six times compared to the one following us. So we are the fifth largest broadcast network. That’s why we thought we could go out and take the business in our hands and see what we could do at the distribution level.

    One, it was also important to get our carriage fee bill down, which each  broadcaster is trying his level best to do. Two and the most important one was to get the subscription business in order. 

    What are the challenges that you faced and how did you counter them?

    We had to inform the ecosystem – the MSOs’ and the DTH players about Disney Media Networks, that we have eigh channels, we have very high premium brands. We had to tell them what we are and what value we could add to them. I think that at certain point after our initial efforts, they did realise that they had never seen Disney as an entity in its own right. They began to understand the value that we brought to the table in terms of packaging. They realised we were the leaders in kids and youth channels and we had a sizeable movie business. We were not just another bouquet, we were leaders of sorts. The challenge was to communicate that and the team did a fantastic job.

    I think that the deals that we have struck are our biggest achievement. We have reached very big milestones in the first year itself. To begin with we have got our carriage bill down by 30 to 35 per cent and at the same time we have taken our subscription revenue up 14 to 15 per cent and it happened after rounds of negotiations and discussions with our carriage partners.

    When you talk about distribution success, do you mean a pan India success or is it a particular market?

    It is a pan India success for us. We are distributed nationally. Our channels reach east, west, north and south. And that is because of the fantastic work done by our teams on ground. We got a fantastic bunch of talented people from across different fields. They have successfully communicated what really Disney Media Networks stands for, and most of the negotiations are done by them. So whenever we talk about success or numbers, it is pan India that we are talking about, and not a particular market.

    What is your opinion about the CPS model? If rolled out properly, will it enhance your subscription revenue?

    CPS is there…and yet it’s not there as a whole. In phases I and II, we know what is going on. Phases III and IV will take shape with time. It’s good that we’ve digitized, now what really matters is how it is being addressed, how the CAF is filled up and how it is packaged. 

    It is a great move forward, and as a broadcaster and content provider, we can only add value to the process by giving superior content and a brand which will enhance ARPUs.

    CPS will happen as the progression of packaging happens and the progression of addressability happens.

    The MSO-LCO equation needs to change and become more mature. Yes, the moves are very positive, but we are still not there, there are areas where we need some amount of investor players to come and change the game at least from a mind-set point of view. CPS will go up with ARPU going up.  And when there is a transparent system in place that enables addressability, subscription revenue will move up in the right direction.

    What is your opinion on the regulators stand so far?

    The regulators have been very pro industry, which is a great thing. We have seen how there was a hard stance when it came to the phase III deadline. So I think it’s a very bold move, because for them also, it’s about getting the industry which is so big in size organised and deriving the maximum out of it in terms of entertainment tax and other revenue generating propositions. And an organised platform is always more transparent, and transparency is the need of the hour for the industry. So I think the regulator’s stand so far has been immensely pro industry.

    Do you think content, if paid for in India, will grow?

    ARPUs’ have been flat for last 10 years. So obviously India is not paying for content, but the moot point is that India is capable of paying more. We, at Disney, are manufacturers; we are content providers. There are platforms and there are wholesalers and retailers involved.  It is the retailers and the wholesalers who need to drive the ARPU and there are many elements on which it all depends.

    At a pricing level we are restricted by the RIO model, and then on the ground level there is the LCO who by no means is interested as it might hurt him. I think to drive payment for content, the LCO – MSO equation needs to change, DTH needs to play its role and it all needs to happen in a collaborated manner.

    I think there is a need for standard pricing similar to any other industry. You buy toothpaste the price is the same everywhere.  In India there is a legacy involved in the way it has been run. The legacy needs to change. It is changing, we expected it to change fast, but it’s actually changing at a snail’s pace.

    Can the broadcasters not play a role in ensuring higher ARPU?

    Look at what the broadcasters are offering these days. Look at the quality of the content. It’s premium content created with superior sophistication. There are HD channels offering HD content. A few of them have rolled out 4K channels.

     So while ARPU has remained same over the last 10 years, the investment on content did not stop. It kept on going. New formats, acquisitions, new and bold ways of storytelling have been explored, and then there are the additions in the number of channels every year.

    Rs 300 for 50 channels 10 years ago, has now become 250 channels of superior quality for the same old price. We have witnessed a few ARPU movements at least in the metros with DTH and a few MSOs, but these are minuscule movements. The movements need to happen much faster because that’s where the motivation is. From a broadcaster’s point of view, there is nothing that we can do but play the game as per the nature of the business.

    You spoke about collaboration, recently we witnessed switching off of signals, what is your opinion on such acts?  

    Firstly, the switching off of services and disturbing the consumer at a fundamental level is very unfair, it should not happen. There could be differences on the negotiation table, but that by no means should disturb the end consumer. 

    The fact that the consumer is deprived of a service in itself is very sad.  I don’t subscribe to such negotiations. We have also gone through highs and lows in our negotiation process but, at the end of the day, you cannot starve your consumer of superior content, or any content for that matter, because the consumer has subscribed for it. The ecosystem is such that the business is dependent on ad sales, and that is why the switch offs’ happen.

    What should lead the business, subscription or ad revenue?

    Ad sales should be an icing on the cake, subscription revenue should steer the business. Look at the mature markets – subscription revenue is leading the business, the negotiations that happen there are at a different level.

    Fundamentally the broadcast business has to be a subscription led business. You can have an advertising-based play that we are seeing with the FTA’s and that’s majorly because of the huge population of our country and the market size and the reach that TV offers. But a premium pay channel creating original superior content needs to be pay first.

    What is your take on the growing OTT business?

    At the heart of the OTT ecosystem is bandwidth and the bandwidth needs to improve.  What will be interesting to see is if it becomes subscription based (SVOD) or advertising based video on demand (AVOD). 

    Now if you are providing superior content for an AVOD model you are not creating a great environment as such. It’s all about how you form the habit. Consumers who consume OTT content are paying about Rs 1,000 for data, and we tend to think that the same consumer will not pay for  content. This mentality is not a long term one, we need to think 10 years ahead and then take steps.

    Smart TVs are in place; people are talking about 8K.  There are great leaps in terms of technology, but if we don’t take the correct steps, we won’t be able to get value out of the OTT business.

    Will you make yourself available on OTT platforms? Star has Hotstar, SPN has Sony Liv, ZEE has a couple of them and Viacom is launching VOOT. Is Disney also looking towards launching an OTT platform?

    Anywhere where consumption is there, we will make ourselves present. That’s the way forward for us. We do have plans, but we are at a very nascent stage as far as OTT is concerned. As a linear service we will be available on all OTT platforms, but when it comes to launching our own venture we will evaluate when the time is right.

    Where are you generating more subscription revenue from, DTH or cable?

    DTH has a slight edge over cable when it comes to our subscription revenue. We are gradually moving towards level contributions from both the platforms. Now with DAS phase III, I think the headroom for growth is massive in the case of cable. At this stage I think that DTH, given its organised and transparent nature, has the edge.

    Is it the bouquet mode of distribution that you are looking at, at this stage?

    Most of our deals are all bouquet offerings, if there is any platform that requires a youth offering or kids offering or a movie offering, such deals happen at a very high CPS price and we create those packages. We are there on a la carte as an offering, but there is a very small set of consumers who subscribe to the service. So it’s largely all bouquet.

    What is it that Disney Media Networks is looking for in the foreseeable future?

    I have mandated the team in Disney that the subscription business needs to overtake the ad sales business over the next three years’  and that will change the entire ecosystem. An MSO cannot then threaten me with a switch off and that’s what we are targeting. We were at about 65:35 ratio, now we have become 60:40 so we are moving towards that direction. Over time the target is to make it 40:60 or 30:70 for that matter.

     

  • Revisit Disney India’s ‘Beauty and the Beast’ with season II

    Revisit Disney India’s ‘Beauty and the Beast’ with season II

    MUMBAI: With a successful season one, Disney India is all geared up to please audiences with season II of the timeless classic Beauty and the Beast. Developed locally in India, the new season will be back in the summer. The second edition of the show will retain the original script and the memorable music of the original Broadway show. Season II will run in Mumbai through May followed by Delhi in June.

     

    Beauty and the Beast season II promises to be the most immersive Broadway scale show. Globally, in most of the markets, Beauty and the Beast is a traveling show, but for India, unlike any other country, Disney decided to produce it locally at a scale and grandeur bigger than the original show. The format and staging of the show is exactly the same as that of the first season. With more than 100 local performers, the musical show will preserve the eminent names involved in the Indian production.

     

    Led by Disney India’s Live Entertainment show director and creative head Vikranth Pawar, the musical score for the Beauty and the Beast season II will be created by Lesle Lewis and Terence Lewis will be in-charge of the choreography. The extravagant set will be designed by Varsha Jain, the costumes will be designed by Gavin Miguel, while Pallavi Devika will take the audiences back in time and place with her hair and makeup skills. Suzanne D’mello has been roped in as the vocal trainer.

     

    Commenting on Beauty and the Beast season II, Disney India MD Siddharth Roy Kapur said, “Given the response received for season I, we are now bringing season II to Mumbai and Delhi because of popular demand the musical generated in both markets. The first season of the show last year, was an experiment in introducing a large scale Broadway-style musical to the country and it met with huge success. We are thrilled to have pioneered a new genre in live entertainment in India and to have been able to provide our audiences with the quality of entertainment experiences they deserve.”

     

    To bring alive the story, the company had chosen a stadium and not a conventional auditorium for the first season. In Mumbai, like last year, Beauty and the Beast season II will be performed at the Dome@NSCI SVP Stadium starting from 6 May extending to 15 May 2016. In Delhi also, the performance will be held at last year’s venue – the Thyagaraj Sports Complex.  Each of these venues can accommodate about 2500 people per show.

     

    The total ticketing revenue from Mumbai will count to approx. Rs. 77 lakhs with 2000 seats being sold out in the range of Rs-1500- 7500.

     

    Shedding some light on the new genre that Disney has experimented with ESP Properties national director Vinit Karnik said, “Theatre is a popular format globally. From an Indian perspective it is good to see Broadway shows here. Initially the issue was the infrastructure, but now both the infrastructure and the audience have matured. With the new age infrastructure, the viewers get a good experience”.

     

    Disney is in talks with multiple potential partners for this season. “There were many brands who reached out to us during and post season one who were keen to partner. We hope to engage with like-minded partners for this season too”, informed Kapur.

     

    Through the second season, Disney India plans to spread the magic of the show to kids and families who have the inclination and the ability to enjoy experiences of this kind. The company hopes to bring back audiences that loved the first edition of the show and would like to watch it again, and of course draw in audiences that missed out the first time around due to completely sold-out shows.

     

    Disney India has planned a specific targeted marketing approach on mass media through OOH, print, TV and digital. Direct marketing communications will be focused on reaching out to those who have experienced Beauty and the Beast in the previous season. The company believes that it is the audience’s’ word of mouth in the last season that promoted the show in a big way.

     

    “We are hopeful that the same will be the case this time too. Our experiment in bringing audiences a new genre of entertainment worked wonderfully well last year and we are hoping for the same response this time round as well,” said Kapur.

     

    The tickets of the shows are available on BookMyShow.

  • Revisit Disney India’s ‘Beauty and the Beast’ with season II

    Revisit Disney India’s ‘Beauty and the Beast’ with season II

    MUMBAI: With a successful season one, Disney India is all geared up to please audiences with season II of the timeless classic Beauty and the Beast. Developed locally in India, the new season will be back in the summer. The second edition of the show will retain the original script and the memorable music of the original Broadway show. Season II will run in Mumbai through May followed by Delhi in June.

     

    Beauty and the Beast season II promises to be the most immersive Broadway scale show. Globally, in most of the markets, Beauty and the Beast is a traveling show, but for India, unlike any other country, Disney decided to produce it locally at a scale and grandeur bigger than the original show. The format and staging of the show is exactly the same as that of the first season. With more than 100 local performers, the musical show will preserve the eminent names involved in the Indian production.

     

    Led by Disney India’s Live Entertainment show director and creative head Vikranth Pawar, the musical score for the Beauty and the Beast season II will be created by Lesle Lewis and Terence Lewis will be in-charge of the choreography. The extravagant set will be designed by Varsha Jain, the costumes will be designed by Gavin Miguel, while Pallavi Devika will take the audiences back in time and place with her hair and makeup skills. Suzanne D’mello has been roped in as the vocal trainer.

     

    Commenting on Beauty and the Beast season II, Disney India MD Siddharth Roy Kapur said, “Given the response received for season I, we are now bringing season II to Mumbai and Delhi because of popular demand the musical generated in both markets. The first season of the show last year, was an experiment in introducing a large scale Broadway-style musical to the country and it met with huge success. We are thrilled to have pioneered a new genre in live entertainment in India and to have been able to provide our audiences with the quality of entertainment experiences they deserve.”

     

    To bring alive the story, the company had chosen a stadium and not a conventional auditorium for the first season. In Mumbai, like last year, Beauty and the Beast season II will be performed at the Dome@NSCI SVP Stadium starting from 6 May extending to 15 May 2016. In Delhi also, the performance will be held at last year’s venue – the Thyagaraj Sports Complex.  Each of these venues can accommodate about 2500 people per show.

     

    The total ticketing revenue from Mumbai will count to approx. Rs. 77 lakhs with 2000 seats being sold out in the range of Rs-1500- 7500.

     

    Shedding some light on the new genre that Disney has experimented with ESP Properties national director Vinit Karnik said, “Theatre is a popular format globally. From an Indian perspective it is good to see Broadway shows here. Initially the issue was the infrastructure, but now both the infrastructure and the audience have matured. With the new age infrastructure, the viewers get a good experience”.

     

    Disney is in talks with multiple potential partners for this season. “There were many brands who reached out to us during and post season one who were keen to partner. We hope to engage with like-minded partners for this season too”, informed Kapur.

     

    Through the second season, Disney India plans to spread the magic of the show to kids and families who have the inclination and the ability to enjoy experiences of this kind. The company hopes to bring back audiences that loved the first edition of the show and would like to watch it again, and of course draw in audiences that missed out the first time around due to completely sold-out shows.

     

    Disney India has planned a specific targeted marketing approach on mass media through OOH, print, TV and digital. Direct marketing communications will be focused on reaching out to those who have experienced Beauty and the Beast in the previous season. The company believes that it is the audience’s’ word of mouth in the last season that promoted the show in a big way.

     

    “We are hopeful that the same will be the case this time too. Our experiment in bringing audiences a new genre of entertainment worked wonderfully well last year and we are hoping for the same response this time round as well,” said Kapur.

     

    The tickets of the shows are available on BookMyShow.