Tag: Kumkum Bhagya

  • Star Plus and Colors rise in individual data in TAM TV ratings wk 25

    Star Plus and Colors rise in individual data in TAM TV ratings wk 25

    MUMBAI: In the week 25 of TAM TV ratings, the ranking order of the Hindi general entertainment channels (GECs) remained unchanged. The only channels to gain were Star Plus and Colors with the former registering a significant rise in viewership.

     

    Star Plus retained its leadership position among the Hindi GECs and scored 252 GRPs, up from 241 GRPs in individual data in the previous week. Colors at number two recorded 213 GRPs, up from 210 GRPs in individual data. Moreover, Life OK retained its viewership data with 141 GRPs.

     

    On the losers front, Zee TV stayed steady at number three with 154 GRPs, down from 167 GRPs. Sab dipped from 144 GRPs to 141 GRPs in the week 25. Sony Entertainment Television (SET) too witnessed a marginal drop in the ratings and clocked 117 GRPs, down from 119 GRPs. &TV managed to remain stable with 68 GRPs in individual data.

     

    Talking about the top 10 shows, Star Plus’s Ye Hai Mohabbatein, Saathiya Saath Nibhana and Yeh Rishta Kya Kehlata Hai are the three most watched shows in the genre that rated 3.82 TVR, 3.81 TVR and 3.72 TVR respectively.

     

    Zee TV’s Kumkum Bhagya stood at number four with 3.57 TVR followed by Star Plus’s awards property – Star Parivaar Awards on 14 June which fetched 3.57 TVR. Sab’s Taarak Mehta Ka Ooltah Chashma occupied the sixth spot with 3.43 TVR.

     

    However, Colors had four of its shows in the list. Indias Got Talent-Ab Hunar Dega Jawaab  at number eight registered with 3.2 TVR followed by Meri Aashiqui Tum Se Hi which closed the week with 3.03 TVR.  Chakravartin Ashoka Samrat at number nine clocked 2.9 TVR while Udaan at number ten scored 2.87 TVR.     

         

    Click here for the full individual data report

  • BARC week 19: Star dominates GEC; Sony leads sports

    BARC week 19: Star dominates GEC; Sony leads sports

    MUMBAI: Star India’s Hindi general entertainment channel (GEC) Star Plus continues to dominate the satellite waves.

     

    According to Broadcast Audience Research Council (BARC) India’s Week 19 analysis, Star Plus leads with a rating of 163554 (000’s sum). With 144899 (000’s sum), Viacom 18’s Colors is placed at the second position while Star India’s other entity in the same genre Life OK with 121931 (000’s sum) sits comfortably at the third position over Zee TV 99794 (000’s sum).

     

    Sab with 73738 (000’s sum) is the only channel from Multi Screen Media (MSM) to feature in the top 5 channels in GEC category.  

     

    Star Plus’ dominance is not limited amongst channels only but the most popular programme with 2442 (000’s sum) Saath Nibhaana Saathiya also comes from the broadcaster. Zee TV’s Kumkum Bhagya with 1917 (000’s sum) is placed second, followed by Colors’ Sasural Simar Ka at the third position with 1818 (000’s sum).

     

    MSM emerged as the clear dominant in the sports category courtesy the Indian Premier League (IPL). Sony Max and Sony Six, official broadcasters of the IPL are placed on the first and second slot with 187924 (000’s sum) and 52731 (000’s sum) respectively.

     

    Backed by the strong fan base of WWE action and UEFA Champions League, Ten Sports with 15954 (000’s sum) managed to clinch its third spot back from Star Sports1.

     

    The Hindi News broadcasting space did not see much of a change in the list of top three channels as Aaj Tak with 14155 (000’s sum) continued to be in the first spot. Meanwhile, a close battle for the second spot was witnessed between ABP News with 12981 (000’s sum) and India TV with 12589 (000’s sum).

     

    Times Now led by the flamboyant Arnab Goswami continued the dominance in the English News broadcasting space with 378 (000’s sum) followed by Headlines Today at 296 (000’s sum). Narrowing the gap, 236 (000’s sum) NDTV 24/7 was placed third in the list of top three.

     

    Viacom’s Nick led the kids’ genre with 70516 (000’s sum) closely followed by Turner International’s Pogo with 67397 (000’s sum). Disney with 52086 (000’s sum) was placed at the third place.

     

  • Zee TV programming head Namit Sharma quits

    Zee TV programming head Namit Sharma quits

    MUMBAI: Zee TV programming head Namit Sharma has called it a day at the organisation after a stint that lasted a little more than a year.

    According to information available, Sharma put in his papers earlier this week and his last day at the organisation will be 8 May, 2015.

    In the interim,Zee TV business head Pradeep Hejmadi will be overseeing the programming at the channel till such time that a replacement is found.

    Confirming the development to Indiantelevision.com, Sharma says, “I’ve decided to move on from Zee TV and explore other opportunities.  I am happy that during my stint at Zee TV we have seen significant success with distinctive programming concepts in an extremely competitive genre. The last 14 months have been an incredible experience working with some of the best talent in the television business.”

    He further adds, “I am happy that our audience has reacted well to innovative content like Kumkum Bhagya, Jamai Raja, Neeli Chatri Waale and the recent DID Super Moms Season 2.  I have worked with a great team here and am confident that they’ll continue to lead the channel to even greater heights. As I complete 20 years in the entertainment business, it’s time to look forward to newer challenges.”

    Prior to joining Zee Entertainment Enterprises Ltd (Zeel) in February 2014, Sharma was Wizcraft Television and Films business head and chief creative officer. He had replaced Ajay Bhalwankar at Zee, who had quit to join Sony Entertainment Television (SET) as chief creative officer.

    As yet undecided on his next career move, Sharma will be taking a small mid-career break. “Honestly there are no plans as of now. But I will definitely be in the television business,” he informs.

  • ‘DID Super Moms 2’ clocks highest ever opening in week 13

    ‘DID Super Moms 2’ clocks highest ever opening in week 13

    MUMBAI: In week 13 of TAM TV ratings, it was Zee TV’s turn to ‘dance’ as one of its hot dancing property – DID Super Moms rated the highest ever opening episode since its inception. The show clocked around 9,441 TVTs and helped the channel boost its viewership from 394,303 GVTs to 411,915 GVTs. With this, Zee continued to hold its position on the third spot. 

     

    Sony was also the talking point this week, as it was the highest gainer with 221,802 GVTs, up from 200,620 GVTs. Though it continued to be at the bottom of the chart. On the other hand, Sab at number five grew from 275,000 GVTs to 282,000 GVTs in week 13.

     

    Talking about the losers of the week, Star Plus recorded 597,835 GVTs, down from 624,246 GVTs. Colors enjoyed its place at number two with 451,682 GVTs, down from 457,100 GVTs. Life OK at number four registered 289,000 GVTs, down from 302,000 GVTs. 

     

    Let’s take a look at the top 10 shows of the week – Zee TV’s Kumkum Bhagya turned out to be the highest rated show with 9,534 TVTs followed by DID Super Moms with 9,441 TVTs. 

     

    Moreover, Star Plus’ five shows made it to the top list chart. The channel’s Saathiya Saath at number third position clocked 9,140 TVTs followed by Diya Aut Baati Hum occupying the fourth position with 8,450 TVTs. At number five stood Star Plus’ Ye Hai Mohababtein with 8,128 TVTs followed by Yeh Rishta Kya Kehlata Hai at number six with 7,894 TVTs. 

     

    Colors’ Sasural Simar Ka garnered the seventh position with 7,513 TVTs followed by Sab’s Taarek Mehta with 6,289 TVTs at number eight. Zee TV’s Jamai Raja at number nine reported 6,229 TVTs followed by Star Plus’ Tu Mera Hero with 6,120 TVTs.

  • Zeel launches localised GEC – Zee Hiburan in Indonesia

    Zeel launches localised GEC – Zee Hiburan in Indonesia

    MUMBAI: After the launch of Zee Bioskop in Indonesia last year, Zee Entertainment Enterprises Limited (ZEEL) has now launched Zee Hiburan in Indonesia. 

     

    ‘Hiburan’ means ‘Entertainment’ in English. The general entertainment channel (GEC) will feature popular Indian serials localized for the mainstream Indonesian audience.

     

    Zeel business head – Asia Pacific Sushruta Samanta said, “Zee Hiburan in Indonesia is our third launch in the APAC region in the last 14 months, following Zee Bioskop and Zee Nung. Zee Hiburan will consolidate our position and market share in Indonesia, which is one of the fastest growing Pay-TV markets in the region. Our initial interaction with the distributors was very encouraging, which propelled us to launch a GEC within a year of launching our Bollywood channel, Zee Bioskop in the market. Indian content has created a huge wave in the local FTA space and with Zee Hiburan, we believe that we will be able to take it to the next level.”

     

    Zeel country head – Indonesia Maria Liza Ginting added, “With Indian stories narrated like never before, Zee Hiburan promises to engage the viewers with shows that travel from the eras of the kings and queens to the modern world. The channel is positioned as ‘Color Your Life’ showcasing every emotion in the most colorful fashion. Inspired from paper puppets and paper quilling art forms, the channel packaging is artistically designed to merge the Indonesian and Indian cultures.”

     

    The channel will showcase Zee shows and dramas like Ramayan, Jhansi ki Rani, Jodha Akbar, Kumkum Bhagya, Pavitra Rishta, Kasam Se, Sapne Suhane Ladakpan, Jab Love Hua and Fear Files amongst others.

     

    Zee Hiburan – Warnai Hidup Anda (Zee Entertainment – Color your life) is currently available as a pay channel on ICTA – Indonesia Cable TV Association and the DTH platform K Vision. It will soon be available on more platforms in the market. 

     

  • Zee TV partners with YuppTV

    Zee TV partners with YuppTV

    MUMBAI: Zee TV, the flagship channel of Zee Entertainment Enterprises Ltd., has announced the launch of Zee TV’s Hindi programming on YuppTV, one of the largest Internet TV providers of South Asian Content. The content will be made available on YuppTV’s OTT (over-the-top) platform, which is available for download on both Google Play and Apple’s App Store.

    Through this new partnership, viewers can now enjoy Zee TV programming across multiple channels on Internet enabled devices such as smart phones, tablets, smart TVs, and more. The full package of Zee TV’s programs including prime time drama series, television movies, theatrical films, specials and daytime dramas will be made available on YuppTV’s platform. Viewers will be able to enjoy the added benefit of Catch-Up TV for their favourite shows such as Kumkum Bhagya, Jodha Akbar, Satrangi Sasural and Sa Ra Ga Ma Pa – Little Champs.

    Zee TV senior vice president – International business Tripta Singh said, “As the premier Hindi channel in Singapore, we are delighted to be able to offer our award-winning content on YuppTV’s platform. As our viewers span across all age groups and lifestyle habits, we are constantly on the lookout on how we can better serve audiences through additional and relevant distribution channels.”

    “With the goal to offer the finest entertainment to viewers in Singapore, we are excited to extend our partnership with Zee TV, one of India’s most popular channels, to offer quality content to our subscribers in Singapore. We are confident that the Indian Diaspora in Singapore will be delighted to watch their favourite shows on Zee TV anytime and anywhere,” said YuppTV CEO Uday Reddy.

    Zee TV is among the top five cable and satellite channels in Singapore. The city-state is home to one of the largest overseas Indian populations and its’ variety programming is watched by Indian and now increasingly, Malay audiences locally. Almost half (46 per cent) of Zee TV viewers’ have a HHI range which ranges between SGD 4,000 – 10,000 per month. Zee TV continues to dominate in the Hindi General Entertainment Channel content category across local affiliate platforms Starhub and Mio TV.

     

  • 2014: A year of change for GECs

    2014: A year of change for GECs

    2014 was a year of change and evolution for Zee TV. The game is not over yet, I think we are still evolving everyday and so are our audiences and that is the real excitement. This year, we saw a lot of buzz and excitement on the channel, around the new properties and we are carving our own identity year-on-year in the general entertainment space.

    The channel created some extraordinary concepts in 2014 and now we are seen as a channel that has clutter-breaking ideas within the traditional format. We have launched shows with very different type of protagonists from Jamai Raja to Bandhan.

    We also came up with a weekend block of Zee Super weekends with Maharakshak Aryan and Neeli Chatri Waale and the other non-fiction shows. So, there was an attempt to provide differentiated content to the viewers and yet something that they will be familiar with very easily. This year, we have also observed a very quick traction for all our new shows. Be it for Kumkum Bhagya or Jamai Raja and even Neeli Chatri Waale which has seen strong growth within eight and nine weeks of its launch.  

    We are happy that people are attracted to the differentiated content that we are providing. 2014 was also a year of experiments in the non-fiction category, right from finding talent in India’s Best Cinestars Ki Khoj to Dil Se Naachein Indiawaale. Moreover, we are now coming back to the traditional Zee show Sa Re Ga Ma Pa Lil Champs as we enter the last leg of the year.

    The idea is to be happy with whatever you do because I think from a product and positioning point of view we have changed in the last nine months. We made a conscious shift about how we look and feel. There is certain uniformity in what we are doing and a certain sense of it coming together. The numbers have been good, so satisfied at that level. We are aligned with the legacy of Zee and yet evolving in a direction that we want to take the channel in.

    I see the same evolution being mirrored in the rest of the industry as well. Channels are providing content that is in the familiar zone but with very different types of protagonists and very different propositions. You may feel like you are watching a show which is in a genre that looks familiar but the story, characters, subjects, the way stories are presented are all different. There is a sense of innovation which broadcasters are giving and audiences are accepting. I think this is a beginning of a good phase.

    Not only Zee, but talking about the whole industry, what we as broadcasters will continue doing is living and breathing what our audiences want and giving them that.

    In 2014, we at Zee have started a new journey and it will take us to a very different place from where we were before. I hope the audiences will be with us in the journey.

    (These are purely personal views of Zee TV programming head Namit Sharma and indiantelevision.com does not necessarily subscribe to these views.)

  • Zee TV’s four shows top this year’s fiction launches

    Zee TV’s four shows top this year’s fiction launches

    MUMBAI: There is no dearth of entertainment in the country of 800 plus channels. Every now and then, new channels and shows are launched to keep the momentum going.

    For Zee TV, one of the oldest and leading general entertainment channel (GEC) of the country, launching a number of new shows in a year is nothing new; every channel does so at regular intervals. But what is noteworthy is the fact that the channel has produced top four weekday fiction launches of 2014.

    If one takes a look at the opening week averages of all the fiction launches across GECs for the year, it is very clear from the numbers that who ruled the ratings charts. ‘Jamai Raja’ leads the pack with 5488 TVTs, ‘Satrangi Sasural’ that opened in week 49 with 4970 TVTs stands at number two,  ‘Bandhan’ with 4366 TVTs  and ‘Aur Pyar Ho Gaya’ with 4044 TVTs followed at number three and four, respectively.

    If that wasn’t enough, the channel’s other property, ‘Kumkum Bhagya’, according to TAM data provided by the channel, while a four-week average for the pre-wedding period (starting week 21’14 to week 24’14) stood at 3,263 TVTs, the show has seen a 127 per cent increase in viewership.    

    According to the channel’s business head Pradeep Hejmadi there are two reasons behind this. He explains, “Shows open well when two conditions are served. One, the concept strikes an interesting chord and second, the promotions are well crafted to sound inviting. We have done rigorous work to ensure we fire as desired on both these pre-conditions. Hence, the not-so-surprising, but certainly noteworthy success with our launches.”

    With growth as its top priority, the channel hopes to sustain the upward trend in at least some slots. “A careful assortment of variety across shows, clutter-breaking ideas/concepts, consistency in audience targeting have been the three key corner-stones of our successes,” points out Hejmadi.

    The channel doesn’t believe in rating itself, but rather leaves it to its audiences (current and prospective). “From the numbers, they clearly seem to rate us well, so we are motivated to up the ante on this further,” he says.

    With a strong weekday fiction line up and recently-launched new weekend properties like ‘Maharakshak Aryan’ and ‘Neeli Chhatri Wale’, the channel hopes to continue entertaining its viewers.

    “Interesting and inspiring concepts that will set the tone for the category…” is how Hejmadi wants to see 2015.

     

  • “Failures can teach you, what success can’t”: Namit Sharma

    “Failures can teach you, what success can’t”: Namit Sharma

    From directing fiction shows at Cinevistaas to film production and script writing at Yash Raj and handling events and non-fiction properties at Wizcraft International Entertainment, he has done it all.

     

    Namit Sharma, the programming head of Zee TV, has bought to the table years of expertise.

     

    The channel, which is running strong at number three at the TAM TV ratings chart, currently, has explored new concepts this year. With Zee’s three shows not only being the slot leaders, but also in the top 10 fiction shows category, Sharma feels it is in a happy space to be in but believes that  there should always a hunger for more.

     

    In his first interview, after taking charge at Zee TV, Sharma chats with indiantelevision.com’s Disha Shah in his office about challenges in churning out newer concepts and how to understand audiences’ likes and dislikes amongst other topics.

     

    Excerpts…

     

    It’s been almost nine months since you took charge as the programming head of Zee TV, how satisfied are you with the current positioning of the channel?

     

    There are two answers to it.

     

    The idea is to be happy with whatever you do because I think from a product and positioning point of view we have changed in the last nine months. We made a conscious shift about how we look and feel. There is certain uniformity in what we are doing and a certain sense of it coming together. The numbers have been good, so satisfied at that level. We are aligned with the legacy of Zee and yet evolving in a direction that we want to take the channel in.

     

    But at the same time, we will always be dissatisfied because we are hungry for more.

     

    From handling events to broadcast, did you face any challenges in the transition? Were you prepared for it?

     

    When you come from a creative background, the easiest part is always about interacting with the industry and getting the best talent to work with you.

     

    When you take charge or join a new team then there is always a lot of excitement and energy and people expect you to bring newer ideas to the table. At Zee, I have always been encouraged for bringing in fresh thinking. I am very happy the support I have received from the management and the team.

     

    The challenge always is to try and get inside the consumers’ mind, create products for them and then wait for their reaction to understand what they like and don’t like. Then, after a few months again one has to figure out a way to surprise with with something new and exciting. It is a vicious cycle.

     

    How difficult it is to churn out new concepts always? What kind of concepts you are looking out for?

     

    With general entertainment channels (GECs) widening their scope and a number of GECs being launched, the challenge that all broadcasters will face henceforth is that now everybody will dip into the same research pool or try to align themselves to a very uniform way of working.

     

    While, the uniform way of working is a good thing, one should never allow oneself to not think out-of-the-box. You work towards your TG, create content for them; you sort of know your audience but at the same time you should have the ability as a creative person to surprise yourself and them. There are some happy surprises and there are some not so happy surprises (laughs) and that’s roughly the unpredictability of what we do, that’s the challenge and excitement.

     

    Yes, it’s difficult to find clutter-breaking ideas but we have this year we did manage to create some extraordinary concepts. We are now seen as a channel that has clutter-breaking ideas within the traditional format. The classic example is Jamai Raja, within the family drama fun, there is a prime-time daily soap with a male protagonist. KumKum Bhagya is another clutter breaker and Jodha Akbar has been a clutter breaker for over year and a half now. They are also slot leaders. Jodha Akbar and Jamai Raja are consistent slot leaders. KumKum Bhagya is a recent convert and we are hoping to stabilise it as a number one show at 9pm for a very long time with very interesting characters and unpredictable twists and turns in the story.

     

    I am happy with the fact that Zee is now being identified as a platform, as a destination where you can consume the new traditional form of content and where shows are designed for the entire family and yet they provide newer twists, newer characters and clutter breaking ideas. Each show now comes with a new idea and that’s important to us.

     

    For a very long time now, Zee has been stuck at number three in the ratings chart, according to you what went wrong and how do you plan to rectify it?

     

    We sustained the number two position for a very long time; we will be back sooner than later. We don’t analyse this on a weekly basis because it is healthy to work in a scenario where everybody is active and fighting hard to keep their spot and aim higher. The greater satisfaction is not only in the numbers, but in the consumers’ appreciation and good feedback on a daily basis.

     

    All shows don’t click so according to you, what kind of content works on television today?

     

    If I knew that, I would have sealed a 20-year deal with Zee TV (laughs). I think there are some thumb rules that we all live by and within that thumb rules we try to find innovation and newness. Everybody talks about new launches, but the greater challenge as a programmer is on-going shows. Once the show is on-air and you have put behind the mad eight months of hard work into the launch and then everyone is scratching their heads saying what should we do next on this show to keep the momentum going. And that’s where the criticism comes in and then you are reacting, you are trying to clear your mind about how the story should go now, so these are bigger challenges.

     

    Frankly, I love failures because failures can teach you what success can never teach you. Your successes teach you nothing. You just become worse as a person with every success because then you are like “I know everything”. As a creative and a television person, I have to start my day saying, “I don’t know anything”. Sometimes the audience will teach you, sometimes a writer who walks in will teach you something. Every day you can learn so much from different people.

     

    Today, there is nobody in the world, who has 100 per cent track record of success, there is no creative person or network or programmer or broadcaster who has a 100 per cent success rate.

     

    From mature markets in the US and UK to slightly less mature markets like us to under developed markets, be it film or television, you will always find that sometimes a product works and sometimes it doesn’t and that’s how the cookie crumbles.

     

    We always fine tuned the formula a little bit and it is not linked to success but is about coming closer to the audience. For me, as a programmer, the most satisfying moment is when the consumer says “the product is really good”. Numbers is like cash, they come and go. When we meet our consumers, they tell us anything they don’t like about the show, that criticism is well accepted and when they tell us that they like something, that appreciation is also welcomed.

     

    This year we saw a lot of new shows to the kitty, so what is your strategy in terms of programming? Have you been able to understand your audience and their liking and disliking?

     

    This is going to be an on-going process for anybody who does this job. There is an audience which changes every day and we will change with the audience. This is an on-going process of understanding the consumer, trying to find the best concepts and trying to make that concept work. This is what we do in the business, seven days a week, be it as broadcasters or writers or producers. And that’s what we live for. That basic essence is never going to change, but yes, in the coming months you would see a certain alignment of the programming within itself. You will see certain kind of alignment in the content within the brand values and a certain coming together of the Fixed Point Chart (FPC) with very exciting new products.

     

    You tried stand-up comedy through Bh Se Bhade, but didn’t really click with the audience, what new offering are you looking at for the audiences?

     

    Yes, Bh se Bhade did not survive for very long. Then we had Gangs of Haseepur which ran for six weeks, some weeks did well, some weeks did not do well, fair point. And then we launched Neeli Chatri Waale, which is about 10 weeks old. It’s been delivering decent numbers. More than numbers on Neeli Chatri Wale, we feel pride because in it because it’s a show that is about hopes and aspirations of a middle class family. We are really proud of the show because it is something unique and has the good old formula of good storytelling, good characters, good humour, seek and moral built into every episode. So while it’s delivering in its slot, and is fairly delivering to what we had expected it to deliver but we always see the show from a very different filter. We always protect the show and make sure that we don’t touch the soul of the show.

     

    How do you see competition coming from other channels?

     

    Competition is an everyday part of our life. They are competition to us and we are competition to them. Nobody is resting, nobody is sleeping easy, and nobody has a peaceful existence (laughs). We are possibly on one of the hyper dynamic businesses ever. You really have to not love yourself to do this because everybody is firing salvoes from all different corners on an everyday basis and there is really no choice of waking up in the morning and fighting a new battle with a smile on your face and a hope in your heart.

     

    On the non-fiction space, don’t you feel it’s time that Zee moves forward from the dance reality show regime and brings in freshness? Are you looking at reviving Sa Re Ga Ma Pa?

     

    We are very sure that we don’t want to be different just for the sake of being different. If our consumers like something and if we do well, then we are happy to do it differently. It’s like saying, why is there a love story in a soap? People always question song, dance, and entertainment value of a non-fiction show. Similarly, why don’t one question relationships or love stories in a family drama? This is bread-butter, how do you package it, how aspirational, emotional and engaging we make it defines the success of that particular show.

     

    Non-fiction is a bit like playing black jack. It’s very easy to risk something very big and it’s very easy to think that you can play safe and you can still lose. Unlike fiction in which you can go wrong and go then correct it within the show. Because non-fiction shows have a 13-week cycle, you can win big or lose big. That’s the risky part of doing it, but that’s also exciting because it allows you to innovate and experiment every 13 weeks.

     

    At what intervals do you come up with the findings and how do you then change content on the channel?

     

    Zee has a very robust system of talking to its consumers and allowing the consumers to talk to the channel. Be it through programs or postal addresses earlier and now e-mail id, we are in constant dialogues with our audience. Over and above that we also actively keep talking to the audience through various forums to understand what they like and don’t like.

     

    Where do you Zee five years from now?

     

    Zee is the only channel that for over two decades has been a part of India and its life. It is a very difficult track record to beat for anybody and any competition. I really hope that five years from now we continue to be in hearts of the audience because that is exactly where we want to be.

  • Zee TV’s ‘Kumkum Bhagya’ gives tough fight at 9 pm slot

    Zee TV’s ‘Kumkum Bhagya’ gives tough fight at 9 pm slot

    MUMBAI: Zee TV, the channel that enjoys a steady second place on the TAM TV ratings chart is riding high on success and all thanks to its properties which have seen remarkable rise in viewership. But this week, what caught attention was Balaji Telefilms’- Kumkum Bhagya.

     

    It has seen a distinct spike in viewership ever since its protagonists Pragya and rockstar Abhi tied the knot clocking in 7,405 TVTs. The episodes from pre-wedding till the two tied the knot has seen a gradual rise in viewership.

     

    According to TAM data provided by the channel, while a four-week average for the pre-wedding period (starting week 21’14 to week 24’14) stood at 3,263 TVTs, the show has seen a 127 per cent increase in viewership in the last six weeks.

     

    So what has caught the attention of the viewers? Zee TV business head Pradeep Hejmadi believes that the ‘wedding track’ was a very important inflection point for people to gravitate to the series. He believes it is growing in terms of interest in all parameters.

     

    “The focus was on how fate can sometimes bring two very dissimilar individuals together. Then it is about how the relationship will take form and how they will conform to the institution of marriage as per our culture.”

     

    Kumkum Bhagya saw a surge in audience interest during the rather unlikely marriage of its protagonists – the flamboyant rockstar Abhi and the shy, serious girl-next door Pragya. The channel feels that due to its engrossing storyline coupled with believable performances, the show has been on a steady ascent, despite stiff competition at its time slot across GECs.

     

    Aired at 9 pm it picked a fight with slot leader Diya Aur Baati Hum (Star Plus) across Hindi GECs and has managed to grow exponentially. As per TAM, the show’s viewership has dropped by 22 per cent since week 16, when Kumkum Bhagya was launched. In the week 30, Diya Aur Baati Hum garnered 10,379 TVTs, down from 10,488 TVTs.

     

    Hejmadi believes that research forms an integral part during such competitive slots. Each show goes through a development process on how one would want to deal with a plot or the character.

     

    “Each story has its own promise and people who tune in are people who are bought into those promises or are keen to explore the relationships or the characters that stand out speaking to them. We concentrated on bringing out the key inflection points for the show and it was important because it is the core promise of KumKum Bhagya,” he says.

     

    At the marketing front, Hejmadi said that for any channel, marketing is the mix of two things – the on-air promotion on the network as well as promotion on other networks as additional activation.

     

    The show was heavily promoted through an aggressive 360 degree marketing campaign by the channel from the launch to the wedding highpoint to ensure traction kept growing week on week.

     

    Zee TV’s approach was one of sustained character building in all its communication across print, on-air and digital media. A judicious mix of mediums including high impact outdoors, print and innovatively crafted, personalised invites shared through social media on the day of the wedding created high visibility.

     

    The streamlined promotional strategy not only attracted eyeballs but also garnered a lot of word- of-mouth publicity, thereby creating an enormous buzz around the much touted wedding sequence.

     

    Hejmadi is confident that the series will continue to have the same kind of engagement level with the audiences. He goes on to say that in the fiction genre there are key points which mark the opportunity for an audience to start engagement. The channel has identified those key engagement points and will continue to focus on its other offerings as well.

     

    He believes that the ratings game is like running a marathon. But, with robust properties such as Kumkum Bhagya, Jodha Akbar and Qubool Hai ruling the roost, Zee TV is the only channel that has seen a 30 per cent increase in its weekday primetime viewership in the last six weeks.