Tag: MRUC

  • IRS Q2 2012: Publications see drop in readership

    MUMBAI: Daily publications continued to occupy all the spots in the top ten publications list, according to the Indian Readership Survey conducted by the MRUC. In fact, there is no change in the pecking order of the top ten publications.

    Hindi daily Dainik Jagran continued to rule the charts with an All India Readership (AIR) of 16.43 million in the second quarter of 2012 (AIR Q1 2012: 16.41 million). Dainik Bhaskar saw a drop in AIR from 14.55 million in Q1 2012 to 14.45 in Q2 2012 while third place occupier Hindustan Times increased its Air to 12.21 million in Q2 2012 from 12.16 million in Q1 2012. Seven out of the top ten publications saw a drop in AIR.

    The only change in the ranking of the Hindi dailies is the swapping of places by Navbharat Times and Prabhat Patrika. The former slipped from the No. 7 spot to be replaced by the latter. Navbharat Times’ AIR decreased from 2.588 million in Q1 2012 to 2.584 million in Q2 2012 while Prabhat Khabar’s AIR rose to 2.621 million in Q2 2012 from 2.437 in Q1 2012. Six out the top ten Hindi dailies lost out on readers in the second quarter of 2012.

    In case of the English dailies, the Times of India (AIR: 7.643 million) maintained its position at the top of the list followed by Hindustan Times (AIR: 3.767 million) and the Hindu (AIR 2.208 million). The only change in the rankings was Mumbai Mirror (AIR: 795000) replacing Economic Times (AIR: 789000) at number seven and ET slipping to number eight.

    Among the language dailies, Malayala Manorama held onto the top position with an AIR of 9.71 million followed by Marathi daily Lokmat at AIR of 7.507 million. In third place is Tamil publication Daily Thanthi with AIR measuring 7.431 million. Malayalam daily Matrubhumi (AIR:6.493 million) displaced Tamil daily Eenadu (AIR: 5.925 million) to take the number six spot.

  • IRS Q1 2012: Mags at top drop readership, India Today leads in English

    MUMBAI: Malyalam fortnightly magazine Vanitha has maintained its lead in the magazines segment even if its readership has decreased marginally, according to the IRS (Indian Readership Survey) first-quarter report released by Media Research Users Council (MRUC) and Hansa Research.

    Hindi monthly Pratiyogita Darpan continues to be second in the pecking order, though it too has lost out on readers. Vanitha’s average issue readership (AIR) has gone down to 2.44 million in Q1 2012 from 2.52 million in Q4 2011.

    Last quarter’s fourth place holder Samanya Gyan Darpan moved up to third spot this quarter, notwithstanding a decrease in AIR from 1.68 million to 1.64 million. Hindi fortnightly Saras Sahil experienced the maximum drop in AIR numbers from 1.77 million in Q4 2011 to 1.60 million in Q1 2012.

    Among English magazines, weekly publication India Today continues to lead with an AIR of 1.613 million compared to 1.611 million in the previous quarter. Also maintaining their respective positions at the number two, three, and fourth spots are General Knowledge Today (AIR 1.09 million), Readers Digest (AIR 1.04 million) and Competition Success Review (AIR 705,000).

    Pratiyogita Darpan with an AIR of 446,000 in Q1 2012 (AIR of 404,000 in for Q4, 2011) displaced The Week (AIR of 418,000) from the number 6 spot.

    In the regional magazine list, Malayam Manorama held on to its position on second rank position, though it experienced a reduction in AIR from 1.21 million in Q4 2011 to 1.16 million in Q1 2012.

    Bengali weekly Karmakshetra was also unmoved at the third spot with AIR of 1.14 million this quarter as opposed to 1.09 million last quarter.

  • IRS Q4: C&S, Internet continue growth momentum

    IRS Q4: C&S, Internet continue growth momentum

    MUMBAI: The cable and satellite (C&S) sector continued its growth momentum, posting a CAGR of 13.9 per cent as its reach rose to 462.38 million, according to the Indian Readership Survey (IRS) 2011 Q4 report, released today by the Media Research Users Council (MRUC) and Hansa Research. This, however, is lower than the 15.8 per cent CAGR the medium had recorded in the trailing quarter.

    TV sector’s reach recorded a CAGR of 6.9 per cent, increasing from 539.87 million in Q3 to 549.86 million in Q4.

    However, the reach of radio and cinema continued to record a decline with a negative CAGR of 5.8 per cent and 5.2 per cent respectively. While radio recorded a reach of 156.70 million in Q4 from 158.28 million in Q3, cinema’s reach grew from 76.83 million in Q3 to 75.77 million in Q4.

    The press’s reach showed a positive CAGR of 1.5 per cent at 350.35 million in Q4 compared to 349.89 million in Q3.

    Continuing to expand its reach, the Internet sector recorded a positive CAGR of 46.7 per cent. The medium grew 11.4 per cent from a reach of 634.88 million in Q3 2011 to 639.71 million in Q4.

     

     

  • MRUC, MRSI unveil new SEC grading system

    MRUC, MRSI unveil new SEC grading system

    MUMBAI: The Media Research Users’ Council (MRUC) and the Market Research Society of India (MRSI) have unveiled a new Socio-Economic Classification (SEC) system.

    The new system will replace the previous one crafted in the mid-1980s.

    The formulation of the new SEC system has largely been done using the Indian Readership Survey (IRS) database. The developmental work has also used IMRB’s ‘Household Panel’ data.

    The decision to revisit the SEC grading system was initiated over five years ago by MRUC and MRSI.

    MRUC chairman and Tata Teleservices corporate monitoring president Lloyd Mathias said, “In 2006, extensive research and inputs from industry experts had thrown up a burning need to revisit the classification system, given that the market environment, as also consumer profiles, preferences and attitudes had undergone a sea-change over the last three decades.”

    The findings led to the setting up of a core team to work on putting together a new SEC system that would reflect the standing of Indian households.

    The new system classifies Indian households by using two parameters — educational qualifications of the chief wage owner in the household; and the number of assets owned (out of a pre-specified list of 11 assets). Based on these two parameters, each household will be classified in one of 12 SEC groups — A1, A2, A3, B1, B2, C1, C2, D1, D2, E1, E2 and E3. These 12 groups are applicable to both urban and rural India.

    The top-most new SEC class A1 comprises 0.5 per cent of all Indian households. Nearly 2 per cent of urban households and less than 0.1 per cent of rural households belong to the new SEC A1. More than half of all SEC A1 households reside in the top six Indian cities — Delhi, Mumbai, Kolkata, Chennai, Bengaluru and Hyderabad.

    At the other end of the spectrum, the bottom-most new SEC class E3 comprises 10 per cent of all Indian households. Only 2 per cent of urban households and 13 per cent of rural households belong to new SEC E3. Nearly 93 per cent of all SEC E3 households are in rural India.

    A committee representing both MRUC and MRSI had identified some key requirements for the development of a new SEC System:

    The new SEC system needed to be more discriminating, with sharper identification of the upper-most segment of the society;
    The new system needed to continue to be easy to administer; and There needed to be a common classification for urban and rural India
     
    IMRB International president Thomas Puliyel said: “The new Socio-Economic Classification system is the culmination of many years of hard work by some of the best brains in the industry. With the growth of the economy and of small towns and rural, it has become imperative to look at a single system for both urban and rural India.”

    Praveen Tripathi, who has been involved with the development of the new system, said, “Given that the new SEC system classifies households on parameters different from the old system, it will not be proper to compare the old SEC classes with their equivalent ones from the new SEC — even if the two carry the same alphanumeric tags e.g., class A1 of the new SEC system should not be confused with class A1 of the old system. Indeed, New SEC A1 is more homogenous, owns more assets, and is more affluent than old SEC A1.”
     

  • MRUC appoints Hormusji N Cama as vice chairman

    MRUC appoints Hormusji N Cama as vice chairman

    MUMBAI: Media Research Users Council (MRUC) has elected Hormusji N Cama as its new vice chairman. He replaces Bharat Kapadia, who had resigned citing personal reasons.
     
    Cama, who is director of Gujarati daily Bombay Samachar, has taken over the new position from 7 March.
     
    Cama has been in the Board of Governors of MRUC since September 2007. He has been actively involved with various publishing and industry bodies and is also on the Board of Directors of Press Trust of India (PTI) and is a former president of the Indian Newspaper Society (INS).
     
    MRUC chairman Lloyd Mathias said, “Hormusji’s vast experience and knowledge will be a great asset as MRUC continues its growth and benefit to media users. Despite being a reputed publishers Hormusji is keenly interested in the development of other media.”

  • MRUC inks pact with Roy Morgan Research to bring Single Source research to India

    MRUC inks pact with Roy Morgan Research to bring Single Source research to India

    MUMBAI: Media Research Users Council (MRUC) has joined hands with Australia‘s oldest independent market research company, Roy Morgan Research (RMR), to launch the country‘s first national ‘Single Source‘ survey.

    The survey will enable advertisers, advertising agencies and media companies with an authoritative source of market and media measurement across media metrics, media research and consumer market information across a range of industries on a continuous basis.

    Said MRUC CEO Joseph Eapen, “The insights it (Single Source) provides will revolutionise the way we reach out to consumers. Targeting based on socio-demographics only will become history, psychographic segmentation will soon be here; overlay that with usage (brand, product and media) and lifestyles.”

    While Hansa Research Group (HRG) will continue to conduct the Indian Readership Survey (IRS) for MRUC, MRUC-RMR will roll out the ‘Single Source‘ study across the same geography. The RMR tenure as of now is perpetual but may be revisited after five years.

    The survey directs all the questions to each individual; the questions asked relate to lifestyle and attitudes, media consumption habits (including TV, radio, newspapers, magazines, cinema, catalogues, pay TV and the Internet), brand and product usage, purchase intentions, retail visitations, service provider preferences, financial information and recreation and leisure activities.

    Averred Roy Morgan CEO Research Michele Levine, “Roy Morgan Research is delighted to be working with the MRUC of India to create the world‘s largest Single Source Survey that will be the ‘authoritative‘ source of market and cross-media research for India. The Indian market with its large diverse population is an exciting challenge for many companies. It represents huge growth potential for many products and services, and Roy Morgan Research believes that access to solid market and
    cross-media data will facilitate this growth.”

    Roy Morgan Single Source users will soon be able to subscribe to marketing and advertising planners (MAPs) of their choice ranging from finance, automotive, telecommunications, tourism, utilities, FMCG, QSR, packaged foods and snacks, beverages, retail, media, direct marketing and sponsorship, among others.

  • ‘In-house researches are very questionable’ : Abraham Thomas – Red FM COO

    ‘In-house researches are very questionable’ : Abraham Thomas – Red FM COO

    Sitting in a make shift office with everything from ‘superhit music’ to the constant chatter of the Red FM staff around thrown in, I sit down to interview Red FM COO Abraham Thomas who mentions that the brand new FM station office will be up and ready in a few weeks. The station has every reason to celebrate – the recently declared ILT results show Red FM at number 2 in Delhi and number 3 in Mumbai.

    Indiantelevision.com’s Sujatha Sreedharan catches up with Abraham Thomas to understand the story behind those numbers and what is up the Red sleeve for the year ahead.

    Excerpts:

    The ILT 2007 Round 1 numbers threw up a surprise. Despite all the hype and hoopla around radio players, the listenership has actually seen a decline. What do you think are the reasons for this?
    Although the ILT numbers are more or less in line with our in house research, I am clearly surprised as well that despite all the high profile launches in Phase II, programming innovations and advertising concepts, listenership has dropped by 6 to 7 points in Mumbai and Delhi. I don’t know whether it’s the anomaly in sampling or data, but I would have expected it to at best stay flat. There has been a lot of effort to increase listenership, so these numbers have definitely come as a surprise.

    With radio, the basic question that arises is about ILT and its methodology. I know that people are suddenly distancing themselves from the results or abandoning the data. But my point is that we shouldn’t throw the baby out with the bath water. There are shortcomings in the ILT – the MRUC has not really been proactive and has not been looking at the broadcasters’ concerns as they should.

    More than a year ago, I had raised the issue of cross checks. A couple of suggestions I had passed on included – a simple cross check whereby after the sampler is asked ‘what radio station are you tuned in to’, also ask him to give the name of a radio jockey from that station or a radio show on the station he listens too. Even if one of these questions is answered correctly, one can actually validate that data. MRUC agreed and said that these suggestions would be implemented but again they have gone back to their old ways.

    The other suggestion we had made is that the IRS use mastheads in its survey. Radio surveys can also include audio mastheads or get the users to identify a stations’ brand jingle or ask them to identify a station’s logo id. It’s not very difficult to do such a survey. So I am extremely disappointed with the lack of any user interactive activity.

    So yes, there are shortcomings but I maintain that these are early days still. I’ve always believed that the trend across the different waves tell a story. And it is these trends that we should look at.

    Are there other methodologies that we could look at? What works internationally?
    We could look at some of the international methodology. Some of the players are now advocating what is called ‘diary method’. In this method the smaller player might be at a slight advantage as the sampler who is impaneled is is forced to maintain the dairy and is therefore more conscious of the radio listened to. However, the shortfall here is that you are not capturing the information when you are listening to it. You’re filling in the data when someone comes to collect it. So it still goes back to ‘the top of the mind’ function.

    But I still believe it works because you are conscious of what you are listening to. You can also tackle the shortcoming by collecting the diaries twice a week. It will be that much closer to the point of listening and therefore the errors could get eliminated. Like I mentioned, the small players might get some benefit since they will be listed. All in all, I am saying that we have to have a more robust method.

    You spoke about players who have disowned ILT and rely on their own listenership tracks. Isn’t that an unhealthy trend?
    I am not against in house research. We do a lot of our own in house research for our programmes and to understand our market. The fact is that when radio players disown a currency like ILT, it is a short sighted approach and we are doing a lot of harm to the medium. If you want advertisers to put in more money, you have to allow them to justify this ‘more money’. For this you need a common currency. Overall in house researches and listenership tracks are very questionable. You might call it Maruti or Indica or whatever it is you call it, but bear in mind that you are doing more harm to the medium than good.

    Because of this emerging scenario, people tend to rubbish all the research. We have to collectively arrive at one common industry currency and that is the only way to grow the ad pie. In fact that is the only way all of us can survive.

    So for a two-month-old player to disown a listenership track is very shortsighted. I don’t think they are doing justice to their own medium.

    The branding story for Red FM with its ‘baajate raho’ attitude has worked for it. Is aggressive branding a need for radio players to stand out from the cluttered space?
    Has the ‘bajaate raho’ branding worked for us? Yes, of course it has. But it’s a combination of different things. I think one of our hallmarks is that we are a ‘mass player’ doing the same things as other stations but trying to do it differently.

    We’ve been consistent with our music. We’ve been consistent with our attitude – both on air and off air. Whether its our RJs or the aggressive on ground activity we get into, they are all in sync with our branding. In fact on ground activation has played a big role for us. We’ve been visible in local trains, buses, cabs, at shopping malls or traffic signals- every time you’ve seen us there is that single consistent thought on ‘local issues’ that has made us stand out. Our music is consistently super hit. We don’t play different music at different day parts. This absolute consistency with the Bajaate Raho attitude – RJs, music, advertising- on air and off air- has really been a driving point for us helping us stand out from the clutter.

    Mumbai plus Delhi – which are what the advertisers really look at at least for now- we have managed to stay at a number two (Delhi) and close to the competition at number three (Mumbai). In Delhi especially we lead the competition by at least 2 lakh (200,000) listeners. We expect to increase that lead in the next wave.

    ‘Packaging by definition means discounting’

    The branding effort by radio players is evident; but when it comes to the differentiation factor it becomes elusive? Adult Contemporary Hits (AC), Contemporary Hits Radio (CHR), super hit only ….radio players may throw this in as differentiators. But is this the only differentiation point we have?
    Firstly and strategically as a brand we look at consumer benefit on two levels. At one level we are offering them a very functional benefit – Entertainment. Music, cricket, Bollywood, music and even the local programming all of these form part of mass entertainment that we look at. In this stage we have decided to be a mass market player and therefore we have decided to stick with content which is not very different from what others are playing.

    Within music, like I mentioned, 24 hours a day we play the same music. It’s like a hot water strategy, you open the hot water tap and that’s what you get all the time. There’s no retro at night and house wife in the afternoon kind of music. We also promise that every song we play is not just a hit, it is a super hit and we arrive at that through our research.

    This is very different from our competition which no doubt plays a variety of music but it may be a hit song, or an unheard of before song or even a tomorrow’s hit. We are very clear that we play the super hits of today.

    We also believe that there is an aggressive differentiation on the emotional level- through content and packaging. That is the differentiation best exemplified by our ‘baajate raho’ line. If there is a topic that touches or concerns a common man in that city, we will play it, we will bajaao it. Clearly over the last year and a half, bajaate raho has become a local parlance. We have Bollywood coming on air and saying ‘please don’t bajaao us’, we have cricketers saying ‘you bajaaoed us today’. We have on air properties like Angry Ganesan, Kamla ka Hamla and Sharmajis ‘bajaaoing’ different issues. We have created a personality around Red FM.

    This functional and emotional benefit combined together is what sets us apart from competition. We also believe that this is a rule of three. The top three players will make most of the money. If you want to be in the top two or top three then you have to be mass market.

    If you are willing to be a niche, then you concentrate on different genres of music and programming formats. So you have to decide whether you want to position yourself as a mass player or a niche player. We clearly decided to be a mass player and we are gunning for leadership. Niches can be profitable too, provided you find your niche and market it aggressively.

    In a three to four player market, radio stations staying ‘mass’ may have seemed plausible. But in a multiple player city like Mumbai and Delhi, will it help to stay ‘mass’.
    In our case, we’ve consciously tried to build personalities within the radio with RJs like Malishka and Nitin who are likely to bajaao you if you meet them on the streets or within the studio. So our RJs, music, cricket will help us stay mass and we will try and build a personality for our station to stand out.

    There are format radios coming up that claim more music less talk or on the other hand talk radio. What’s in store for these stations?
    There are radio stations that are looking to play Hindi plus English music and for sure they will get their audience. You can go entirely English or play regional music – Punjabi, Gujarati, Marathi – you can differentiate on the context of language. You can also create a differentiation in terms of the content – for example talk radio.

    It is possible that these players might struggle in the beginning to monetize their content. While the top three will run away with all the money, the rest will find it better to define their target and then it depends on how well you service your segment.

    You can be a comfortable niche and make money. I believe that within a year or two radio stations and their audiences will get more defined. People will know where to go for what kind of music. One thing is very clear. You cannot be all things to all people. The leader who came into the market first, positioned himself very consciously.

    The radio entrants now will be forced to sharply focus their audience. The flip side of focus is that you have to give away one part. You decide your turf and then you focus.
    Within the mass space – 70 to 80 percent of the ad pie will be taken away by the top three.

    With the sheer number of players entering the markets, is there a fear that the space is getting cluttered or there are chances of a consolidation happening anytime soon?
    That is not what international trends show us. There are other cities in the world which have a number of stations catering to different tastes. There is a space for more stations to come up. But one of the reasons why we are still not getting a sense of differentiation is also because it is not possible to have more than one brand in the same city. When stations are allowed that there will be greater branding as well more genres of radio operating in the space. For now, since you are allowed only one station you want to be the biggest and the best.

    Given these constraints, where do you go from here?
    We have decided to be an entertainment station and if we have decided to be in the entertainment space then we have to work around these parameters. If we want to get into news and current affairs, then those are additional avenues. If cricket commentary was to be allowed tomorrow and I want to carry it on my existing station, I would have to do that at the cost of my music. There will be incremental new players who will come in and take those slots.

    But currently we look at a void in Bollywood entertainment and we are filling up that space. But the regulatory policies are fairly good and we are happy the way we are progressing for now.

    Almost every radio player says that – very happy with the way things are…
    If you were part of the Phase I, paying those exorbitant fees, you would be very happy with the playing field today as well.

    Non traditional advertising or activation units may be the new mantra but radio players have identified its benefits pretty early on. But where does it go from here?
    If you look at the three media- print, television and radio – there is a very distinct line dividing content and advertising. In television, you might blur these lines with programme placement and contests but in radio it is a seamless medium.

    Advertisers have been asking to be included into radio content a lot more, without being too obtrusive. Advertisers then started asking us to help them with 360 degree solutions for some of their products. We had a Ford Fiesta come to us and say that we have a car parked at a mall, can you have an RJ come down and do some gig around it.

    More and more people are asking that extra bang for the buck. This is the genesis of activation. It has also helped that advertisers have complained that there is a lack of a single, credible agency to carry out its promotions nationally. This is where we step in.

    Red Activ works on two premises- we build properties on which multiple brands can be built. The 93.5 Car rally worked that way. We also do single brand activation, where we look at solutions for clients. It is a natural extension for us and our medium is used to drive footfall for the client.

    In this advertiser driven scenario, do you think having a station presence across the country would help. Would you look at scaling up?
    The activation is an idea business. It is about an idea which the brand can then ride. Radio is a medium between the idea and the operation. It is driven from the fact that I have an idea, not that I have a radio station and therefore I look at activation.

    Sure it’s an advantage if you have a station in that city so that you can leverage the local market as well.

    On the same note, some radio players believe that the success of a radio station is in leading a particular city not in its scale.
    Fact is if you want to reach your audience and advertiser in a particular city, you have to be relevant in that city; you should connect in that city. This is the basic premise on which the advertisers work. I don’t want to be a number 6 player in Pune; I want to be a number one or two in any market.

    That is the first factor. Then is the issue of packaging. If I am in twenty cities then it is easier for me to package it in all these cities collectively. I believe I am number six in 45 cities; therefore I give you a discount of 10 rupees. But what is your relevance in priority markets? It is the priority markets like Mumbai and Delhi that sets the trend.

    Packaging by definition means discounting. In our media industry, people don’t package their media collectively. They will sell television separately, radio separately and print separately.

    We believe that we have to sell premium. You can’t just fall back on sheer scale; you have to be relevant in each city.

    But please bear in mind, that at the end of the day, packaging means discounting.

    Considering that the Phase II cities are mostly non metros, are advertisers even excited about this kind of packaging?
    The non metros opening up are relevant to sectors like FMCG or telecos but the bulk of the advertising is still restricted to the top 8 metros. What happens is in the smaller markets it is the local advertising that will have a dominant role.

    So while in the larger cities, 70 percent is corporate advertising and 30 percent is local, in non metros the story will be reverse. Besides the smaller markets are markets of tomorrow, while these are markets of today. So yes, you will have to invest in the markets of tomorrow as well.

    They will create new advertisers and pull advertising away from local media.

    You’ve been called a reminder medium, a secondary medium, an incremental medium. But are you still playing second fiddle to mainstream mediums?
    Right now we get three percent of the advertising pie, while internationally that number is closer to a 6 to 8 percent. In Sri Lanka, the radio advertising amounts to almost 20 percent. Unless the share becomes about 8 to 10 percent, it is not viable for the advertiser and we understand that.

    Secondly in other countries, radio evolved and developed before television came in. In India, it is the reverse. There is a lot of television hangover that is happening. Until recently, the creative agency, the client and the planner were more worried about meeting their objectives in the primary market – television and print. In radio, they invariably did not have the time to create ads for the medium and would pass off television jingles to play on the radio station as well.

    Lastly and more critically, there is not enough information to justify the advertiser’s faith in the medium. We’ve spoken about the methodology, it encourages confusion. Unless you get a currency where advertisers can confidently say ‘yes I can put my money over here and this is the reason I want to do so’ the ad pie will not grow.

    But it is changing. Brands are being launched on radio. We’ve created a creative solutions team within our station that works for various clients – we say that don’t give us those television commercials, give us a brief and we will create an ad that is more relevant to the medium.

    But data that justifies the spend is a big concern. Most radio players however look at this as an advantage to pick and fight over each other instead of viewing it as an industry issue. They look at it and say … ‘good!let the small players bleed; we will look at how to milk this best’. There is a bit of a short term consideration. It will be a while before this matures into a more robust industry body.

    What would the road map for Red FM look like in the coming year??
    Radio is projected to grow rapidly. The growth however is more geographic at this stage. Within the city, the growth is encouraging but at a slow pace.

    In our case, we realized that a lot of our listeners are connected to our personalities, our RJs, our properties like Angry Ganesan or Kamla and therefore we have made them available to download on the mobile phone. We launched an initiative called the Red Mobile. We work with mobile2win and you can download all these properties for a price. That’s a logical extension. We are also looking at our net presence. In fact our site should be up this month. It will be interactive – celeb chats, blogs, trivia – you will find them all.

    Right now of course we are looking at cricket. We have contests, tie ups and loads of prizes. As part of this initiative we have a tie up with Sports Bar at Phoenix Mills in Mumbai. We plan to extend this to other cities as well.

    Radio is no longer a passive medium. It is now well and truly an active medium both for the listener and the advertiser. By the end of this year we will look at local advertisers and how to target them as well.

    But bottom-line – We are gunning for leadership.

  • Radio Mirchi Q3FY07 turnover rises 31%, net profit up 14%

    Radio Mirchi Q3FY07 turnover rises 31%, net profit up 14%

    MUMBAI: The Times Group’s private FM Radio operator Entertainment Network India Ltd (ENIL) – which operates stations under the brand name Radio Mirchi – has announced its results for the quarter ended 31 December 2006.

    During the quarter (Q3FY07), total income grew by 30.6 per cent to Rs 484.1 million compared to Rs 370.7 million for the corresponding quarter in the previous year.
    The Company’s earnings before interest, depreciation, tax and amortization (Ebitda) grew 20.8 per cent to Rs 176.5 million and net profit stood at Rs 124 million, up 13.9 per centg YoY. On a like basis (7 Phase I stations only), Ebitda for Q3FY07 stood at Rs 151.1 million, up 3.4 per cent YoY.

    Total income during YTD December 2006 grew 46 per cent to Rs 1,263 million while Ebitda increased by 15.4% to Rs. 33.50 crores. On a like basis (7 Phase I stations only), Ebitda during YTD December 2006 stood at Rs 347.1 million, up 19.6 per cent YoY.

    The new stations namely Bangalore, Hyderabad and Jaipur recorded Ebitda margin of 28.2 per cent for the quarter. According to data based on Indian Listenership Track 2006 (ILT – Wave 2 conducted by MRUC) for the period September- November 2006, Radio Mirchi retained the number one position in Mumbai and Delhi while establishing itself as the dominant number one station in Kolkata too. Radio Mirchi has increased its lead over #2 player in Mumbai from 30 per cent to 40 per cent while maintaining its 2:1 lead in Delhi, a company release asserts.

    During the quarter, Radio Mirchi premiered the music of blockbusters which include Vivaah, Dhoom2, Babul and Guru on its network.

    Commenting on the performance of the company, Enil managing director and CEO AP Parigi said, “In the emerging competitive landscape, Radio Mirchi has again demonstrated not only its brand leadership in the new markets of Bangalore, Hyderabad and Jaipur but has also demonstrated robust growth in financial terms. In the new markets, within the short span of nine months, the company has achieved an Ebitda breakeven.”

    Based on the present rate of progress, the company is confident of completing rollout of the remaining 22 stations by 31 July, 2007.

  • Radio Mirchi Q2 net up 16% at Rs 49 million

    Radio Mirchi Q2 net up 16% at Rs 49 million

    MUMBAI: Entertainment Network India (ENIL),which manages the radio FM brand Radio Mirchi has posted a net profit of Rs 49.31 million for the quarter ended 30 September.

    According to an official release, the company has reported 16 per cent increase in net profit for the quarter. Net profit rose to Rs 49 million compared to Rs 43 million in the corresponding period last year.
    The company’s earnings before interest, depreciation, tax and amortisation (EBITDA) grew 17.6 per cent to Rs 99 million from Rs 84 million in the same quarter a year ago.

    On a like basis (comparing seven old stations only), EBITDA for the quarter stood at Rs 103 million, up 22.4 per cent year on year (YoY).

    Total income for the quarter recorded at Rs 424 million, while net sales (net sale indicates airtime sales) had been registered at Rs 411 million.

    The expenditure incurred amounting to Rs 325 million has been attributed to production expenses (Rs 24 million), license fees (Rs 21 million), marketing expenses (Rs 130 million), administration & other expenses (RsS 72 million) and employee cost (Rs 79 million).

    The company had introduced Employees Stock Option Scheme (ESOP) for its future and existing permanent employees and directors and future and existing permanent employees and directors of its subsidiary company and holding company.

    Quoting the data based on Indian Listenership Track (ILT – Wave 9), an independent research conducted by MRUC, for the period July- September ’06, the company states, “Radio Mirchi enjoyed the highest listenership of 4.46 million in Delhi out of a total listenership of 6.02 million listeners, comfortably ahead of the competition.”

    In Mumbai too, Radio Mirchi dominated listenership with 2.21 million out of a total of 4.98 million listeners. Commenting on the performance of the company ENIL CEO & MD AP Parigi said, “We continue to focus on building listenership through sustained innovations in marketing and programming as the latest listenership numbers in Delhi and Mumbai indicate. We are confident of magnetising this and maintaining our growth trajectory.”

    The company launched Visual Radio in Mumbai in September ’06 after it launched in New Delhi in July ’06.

  • Plus is all India ‘star’ in GECs, while Sun shines brightest among regional channels: IRS 2006

    Plus is all India ‘star’ in GECs, while Sun shines brightest among regional channels: IRS 2006

    MUMBAI: While in the regional space, Star Plus has managed to rise up on the charts more than any other Hindi general entertainment channel (GEC) in the last five years; the story is no different as far as the Top 10 television channels in the country are concerned.

    Since 2000, Star’s flagship channel has managed to topple DD2/Metro, Sony, Zee TV and Zee Cinema to claim the second position with a viewership share of nine per cent in 2006. DD1 (National Network) has maintained its top position over the years.

    DD1’s viewership in the Top 10 TV channels in the All India market in 2006 is 27.4 per cent as compared to its share of 43.2 per cent in 2000 according to the findings of IRS Round I done by Hansa Research and Media Research Users Council (MRUC). Going by these numbers, DD1 viewership on an all India basis has dropped by almost half in the last five years.

    DD2/Metro, which was second in line in 2000 with a share of 11 per cent has completely gone off the Top 10 television channels list in 2006.

    Sony Entertainment Television, on the other hand, which was the number three channel in 2000 with a viewership share of 9.4 per cent, has fallen to the seventh position in 2006 and currently has a share of 4.6 per cent. Rival channel Zee TV saw an even steeper fall over the years, but all the same has maintained its place in the Top 10 television channels list. From its third position in 2000 with a share of 9.2 per cent, Zee TV lost 5.6 per cent share to other channels and fell straight to the tenth position this year with a share of 3.6 per cent.

    The reason for the drop in Sony and Zee’s channel shares, which were the third and fourth best viewed channels after the national channels in 2000, could be because of the change in the program genre of these channels. Both channels focused more on music shows and game shows to garner viewership, reasons Hansa Research marketing and client servicing India head V Sudarshan.

    Going by the data thrown up, the fact remains that viewers are still hooked to the soaps and serials, which is clearly indicated by Star Plus viewership numbers, predominantly garnered by the ‘K’ serials. However, now both Sony and Zee have a robust line up of dramas like Thodi Khushi Thode Gham, Aisa Desh Hai Mera, Saath Phere and Jabb Love Hua in the primetime. Hence it remains to be seen whether the channels’ popularity soars on the charts riding on these shows. Zee TV’s Saath Phere, for one, has been consistently delivering for the channel in terms of ratings.

    While three channels from the Top 10 All India list have disappeared from the charts in 2006, three other channels have made their entry. DD2/Metro (second position), Star Sports (seventh position) and DD10 Marathi (eighth position), which were on the charts in 2000 seem to have made way for DD News (third position), Aaj Tak (fourth position) and Sun TV (fifth position) in 2006.

    One of the interesting trend that is seen in the current Top 10 and the Top 10 five years back is that in 2000, no news channel made its way to the Top 10 list. Whereas in 2006, DD News and Aaj Tak have been featured.

    “This explains a very big phenomenon, that there are possibilities that these news channels are now eating into the share of the print medium, and it could be that people are now preferring to tune rather than turn, for their news requirement. Viewers are interested in current news, and not yesterday’s news and this also reiterates the fact, why magazine readership has come down so dramatically over the period,” said Sudarshan.

    One channel that has maintained a consistent performance on the charts since 2000 is Zee Cinema. In term of viewership share, the channel has dropped only marginally from 6 per cent in 2000 to 5.3 per cent in 2006 and is now placed in the sixth position as opposed to its fifth position in 2000.

    Among the regional channels, apart from Sun TV, that have made a mark in the Top 10 channels in the All India market in 2006, are ETV (4.4 per cent) and Gemini TV (4.1 per cent) in the eighth and ninth position respectively.