Tag: NMIMS

  • Apurva Jani gets expanded marketing role at Intel India

    Apurva Jani gets expanded marketing role at Intel India

    MUMBAI: He’s spent a large part of his early career in the automotive industry at leading brands and firms. However, Apurva Jani  has been at global chip leader Intel for the almost a decade, rising to director of marketing for Intel’s sales, communications, and marketing group in India. 

    Now the chip maker has expanded his remit to include the amplification of the company’s brand presence and driving growth in both consumer and B2B markets, according to a news report on storyboard18.

    A mechanical engineer and a  PGDBA in marketing from NMIMS, Apurva began his career at Tata Motors, moved onto Ford Motor as regional sales manager, then worked with Mahindra & Mahindra as DGM – marketing, crossed industries into health care as director of advertising promotions at GE Healthcare, before landing up at Intel as consumer marketing head in 2015, where he has stayed put since.

    According to Apurva, he has  have been successful in disrupting the norms in highly competitive industries over his 23-year long career. Intel probably is relying on him to do so once again!

  • Print Media: The undeniable edge for engaging parents in marketing higher-education programs

    Print Media: The undeniable edge for engaging parents in marketing higher-education programs

    Mumbai: The Print Media industry in India has been an example of resilience and growth, defying global trends and showcasing consistent year-on-year success. Alongside Germany, India stands out as one of the few markets where print media has flourished despite the digital revolution. This remarkable growth can be attributed to several factors that hold significance from both the advertiser’s and the consumer’s perspectives.

    In the education industry, connecting with students and their parents presents a unique challenge. While online media undoubtedly provides an excellent platform to engage with students, Print media plays a crucial role in capturing the attention of parents, particularly in non-English reading markets. Regional newspapers, renowned for their focus on local news and events, have garnered immense popularity among readers in the 40 plus age group. By strategically featuring educational institutes alongside such localised content, there is a tremendous opportunity to enhance visibility and resonate with parents.

    The recent report by CRISIL reaffirms the positive trajectory for the print media industry in India. According to CRISIL, the revenue of print media is expected to jump by 13 to 15 per cent this year, reaching an impressive Rs 30,000 crore. According to the report, this surge in revenue is primarily driven by higher spending on advertisements by corporates and the government, particularly due to the upcoming elections. This positive outlook translates into increased profitability for the sector, with an expected growth rate of 10 to 14.5 per cent.

    The CRISIL report also highlights that customers in India continue to have a preference for print media. Over the past two years, physical newspapers have witnessed an impressive growth of 8 to 10 per cent in subscription revenue. This year, the sector is expected to witness a 5 to 7 per cent jump in subscription revenue, largely driven by moderation in prices. This growth underscores the enduring value that print media holds for Indian readers.

    This is in fact great news for the education sector where print media plays a pivotal role in engaging parents and conveying the value proposition of educational institutions. While online media provides an excellent channel to connect with students, print media holds a unique position in capturing the attention and trust of parents. With their localised content and readership in non-English reading markets, regional newspapers present a valuable opportunity for educational institutes to gain visibility among parents and foster meaningful connections.

    I firmly believe that print media offers a distinctive avenue to engage with parents and convey the value proposition of educational institutions. The enduring appeal of physical newspapers and their localized content creates a unique bond with readers, enabling educational institutes to forge meaningful connections. By leveraging print media’s credibility and trust, institutions can effectively communicate their offerings and showcase their commitment to academic excellence.

    In a country as diverse as India, print media plays a vital role in reaching out to a broad spectrum of readers. While online media caters to the digital-savvy generation, print media acts as a bridge that connects with a more traditional audience. This is especially important when it comes to parents who often rely on print media as a trusted source of information and guidance for their children’s educational journey.

    Moreover, print media’s prominence in non-English reading markets cannot be underestimated. In these regions, where a significant segment of the population prefers regional languages, regional newspapers play a crucial role in disseminating news and information. By strategically aligning educational content with regional newspapers, educational institutions can tap into this vast and often untapped market, capturing the attention of parents and fostering a sense of familiarity and trust.

    While digital media continues to evolve and offer new avenues for engagement, the resilience and consistent growth of print media in India present an undeniable opportunity for the education sector. By embracing print media as an integral part of their marketing strategy, educational institutions can effectively engage with parents, showcase their unique strengths, and stand out in a competitive landscape.

    The author of this article is Narsee Monjee Institute of Management Studies (NMIMS) director of marketing & PR Burzeen Bhathena.
     

  • NMIMS appoints Madison Media as media AOR

    NMIMS appoints Madison Media as media AOR

    Mumbai: SVKM’s Narsee Monjee Institute of Management Studies (NMIMS) has appointed Madison Media as its media agency on record, following a multi-agency pitch. The mandate will be handled by Mumbai-based Madison Media Alpha.

    The agency is tasked with scaling up media presence and generating higher reach for NMIMS across the country. It will handle traditional and digital media services including visibility in print media and radio for the institute, said the statement.

    “NMIMS is well known for its consistent academic quality and research-focused approach along with developing a sense of community among students, to achieve holistic education,” said NMIMS director – marketing and PR Burzeen Bhathena. “I am confident that Madison Media will help us establish an impactful media presence and build a strong brand with its innovative approach. I look forward to working with them.”

    “We are looking forward to this exciting opportunity with NMIMS, which is one of the few universities in the country to have established a global footprint. NMIMS’ continuous endeavour to develop and achieve new education and research milestones is in line with the radically changing landscape of the education sector. By leveraging our digital-first and outcome-driven approach, we are confident that NMIMS will achieve its goals and surpass industry expectations. Madison is committed to further NMIMS media presence with strategic planning at all levels,” added Madison Digital VP Chintan Soni.

  • DoIt Talent Ventures appoints Priya Goradia Shah as business head

    DoIt Talent Ventures appoints Priya Goradia Shah as business head

    MUMBAI: DoIt Talent Ventures, a talent management firm, has appointed Priya Goradia Shah as the business head for entertainment and culinary. Led by Darshana Bhalla and Radha Kapoor Khanna, the company marked its entry into the Indian market in April this year.

    Shah exclusively told Indiantelevision.com, “Twelve years of spearheading the brand endorsements at MATES has been a very enriching experience for me. Excited to be a part DO IT Talent Ventures where I look forward to managing the entertainment and culinary verticals by bringing value to our talent roster and brands.”

    After a one-year stint with PMG Sports, Shah moved to Mates, the entertainment unit of Madison communication in 2005. Having started as an assistant manager, she rose to the position of VP celebrity management and solutions during her 20-year tenure at the company.

    Shah joins DoIt Talent Ventures with over 10 years of experience in the celebrity management and solutions business.

    She holds a MBA degree in marketing from Narsee Monjee Institute of management studies (NMIMS).

    Within a span of three months, DoIt Talent Ventures has already signed a number of personalities across films and TV like Farhan Akhtar, John Abraham, Lara Dutta, Kajal Aggarwal and Neeraj Pandey.

    When it comes to sporting talent, the brand now works with Virender Sehwag, Mahesh Bhupathi, Geeta Phogat, Ashwini Ponnappa, Robin Singh, Viren Rasquinha and Aparna Popat.

    Dharshana Bhalla is a former CEO of Mates, while Radha Kapoor Khanna is founder and executive director of DoIt creations.

    Also Read:

    DoIt Talent Ventures appoints Murtuza Madraswala as business head

    Do IT talent venture has big plans for the unorganised sector

  • WAT’s Your Big Idea 2.0 gets bigger

    WAT’s Your Big Idea 2.0 gets bigger

    MUMBAI: After the success of its inaugural edition last year, digital and social media agency WATConsult has launched WAT’s Your Big Idea (WYBI) 2.0. It is the second season of WYBI, a digital ideation competition for colleges across India that provides a unique platform and opportunities to the next generation in the field of digital advertising and marketing.

    This year, besides the cash prize, endorsed certificate, and an assured job offer, the winning team will also get an opportunity to visit Cannes Lions in 2018.

    During WYBI,students get an opportunity to work on live projects, understand the nuances of creating digital campaigns for notable brands, and showcase their creative skills to the best brand marketers in the country.

    The agency has partnered institutes such as MICA, SIMC, IIM Bangalore, IIM Indore, SP Jain, Jamnalal Bajaj, NMIMS, and Jai Hind along with brands like Swarovski, Madame Tussauds, HE face wash, Savlon (ITC Group), Jack and Jones, and Naturolax (Piramal Healthcare).

    WATConsult founder and CEO Rajiv Dingra said, “Considering the overwhelming responses from students last year, we decided to offer them an international platform to meet, be inspired, and interact with the advertising stalwarts of the world. The winning team will have the opportunity to win an all-expenses trip to Cannes Lions 2018.”

    Dentsu Aegis Network chairman and CEO South Asia Ashish Bhasin added, “Last year was a benchmark setter. The students came up with some exciting and innovative ideas and I am looking forward to the entries this year. WATConsult’s initiative has helped us find some really good talent and we will continue supporting their efforts.”

  • Originals are a big play for us, says Viacom 18’s Gaurav Gandhi

    Originals are a big play for us, says Viacom 18’s Gaurav Gandhi

    If you look at Gaurav Gandhi’s CV, you will see that this NMIMS graduate began as a strategic business media executive with the Sam Balsara-promoted Madison Communications way back in 1998. He then took the plunge into television, joining Turner as a researcher and planner, and then, Star India. He followed that up with a stint in NDTV Imagine. 

    But, for the past six years, he has been associated with the Viacom18 brand – first as the commercial head, then moving on to distribution of traditional television with various assignments in Sun18 and IndiaCast, before being given the responsibility of steering the company into the digital space in late 2015. 

    Burning the midnight oil for more than seven months, he and his team, rolled out their first offering – a VOD service called Voot in March 2016. Rivals such as Star India, and Zee TV had their versions – Hotstar and DittoTV — in play for a longer period. But, that did not faze Voot COO who is known to be a feisty fighter. He is quite clear of the direction that Voot is taking, and he spoke about its journey so far in a tete-a-tete with Indiantelevision.com’s Megha Parmar. Read on to get some Gandhi insights on the Indian OTT space.

    How has the response to Voot been so far?

    The response has been very good. We are happy where we are. To get to be the third largest streaming website in watch time in a short period that we have is very encouraging. It’s been a good journey. We know that, as a market, we have close to 100 million users now, which will go to 400 million. So, the 4x growth is happening in the market, and we are riding that well.  There are three things that really encourage us. First, 45 minutes per day per user on an average is a very good number, so the watchtime is there. We have a large user base now, which excites us. Second is the fantastic response to our content. Of our three properties (TV, kids and originals), specifically for television, there is so much to do around a reality show. Thirty per cent of the views come from the extra stuff that we do around it. We shoot a lot of things along with our TV counterparts. And having 50+ advertisers on board definitely gives us a sense that we are going in the right direction.

    What were the learnings in the past few months?

    There has been a lot of learning. With our kids, we know exactly what is going on.We have a publishing cycle in place and the way it works is to make sure that we refresh it thrice a day. Kids will come back from school by 4 pm, and we thought that we should put our best content there and market it. Reality happened to us at 9 pm as the kids were watching it at that point of time when their parents are busy with dinner. That was the learning, which came alongside. Actually, the father’s phones have been used far more on weekends.

    We initially were of the opinion that 500 cities are enough for us but, in the third month, we crossed 1000 cities. There are viewers in 1100 cities right now who regularly consume Voot.  It’s all been a great learning. We had originally thought that it was about currency or new shows, but the catalogue has been watched by people for new stuff.

    People repeatedly come to us for something they love such as the MTV show, Kaisi Yeh Yaariyan. We look at the data and have witnessed that a lot of people consume data when in office between 1:30 am and 3 pm. There is a big surge of content.

    The kids demo peaks at 9 pm, the GEC at 10 pm and youth escalates from 11 pm to 1 at night. Our traffic only goes down from 2:30 am to 5 am. That is the time when we have some time with us, say, to solve a technical problem. Those things are very different. This is a consumer business, B2C, as against the past. We have not been going to  the consumers directly. We are consumer brands now, and that is an interesting proposition.

    When you say that 75 per cent of video consumption is now happening through WiFi and it is expected to change after digitization, after which a majority of the consumption will happen through telcos. The telcos are also coming into play with their own offerings of VOD and aggregation OTT platforms such as Jio, Wynk, Idea TV. Are the VOD platforms going to be at a disadvantage?

     Let me be honest with you, there is no dearth of platforms, and there will be none going forward. It’s like we have approximately 600 to 800 channels right now technically, and it still has a demand because people are watching. We are ultimately providing content. Those are platforms wherein everything is available but ours is a video-on-demand platform where you can choose what you want to watch and at what time.

    If you are talking from the content front, if you have a clear direction on the partnerships, the consumers as well as the content creation that you are doing, I don’t see a threat. Second, telcos are building services out. How we work with them and tie up is yet to be seen. The fact that we are over the top, we are available to every single person. We are an OTT service and we are available to all.

    Telcos are only concerned about one thing: consumer data. We work very closely with Jio and many other players. I think, from a telecoms perspective, they want to give their users everything possible and encourage them to consume data. From our point of view, we are talking about the fact that we want maximum viewership and that converts to eyeballs, money, and so on. So it’s very much a complementary situation. We provide content, and they get the users to use that content on their network. We get our eyeballs they get their consumption.

    What type of growth do you see after 4G rolls out completely?

     I see currently 120 million digital video users overall to go to 400 million next year. That’s three and a half times growth. You are doubling the user base over digital video every year. Now, if that is the case, all the players will grow automatically. Obviously, there will be top three, four, five, naturally who will see more growth because of more content.

    The other part of India is an interesting challenge because top five or six companies control 80 per cent of the IP. They are investing on the IPs and they are building more and more. Naturally, they will have a bigger advantage. Telcos will build their interesting products. How you will work with the telcos and how they launch their products will be interesting to see.

    Currently, it’s an ad-supported market largely, and that leads to getting more eyeballs because you are making it available to a large set. We foresee growth to be fairly phenomenal in the next 36 months for everyone in the market. We want to grow at a faster pace — naturally.

    So, you think an ad supported model is faring well for you, and that is the way to go? Or, will you also experiment with other models?

    There are multiple models that you can play with. The reason that, today an ad supported model works, and is the right way is because of three main reasons. One, people are psychologically prepared to pay for content. You get 400 channels for Rs 300, and if you go back 10 years, the cable TV monthly subscription was around Rs 200. Channels have increased, it’s become digital, HD has arrived, etc., but the amount you are paying is the same. People think that this is our birthright, we will get it anyhow. So, there is a big mindset shift that needs to happen and it has to happen with the distribution industry. But, till then, the value of content in the mind is benchmarked to the amount you pay on TV, especially if it a subscription base. If it is event based, for eg, paying for a movie where you are paying for the experience of movie, you will not pay the same amount for watching a movie at home. You are paying for the outing, the experience, so there is a challenge.

     The second challenge is data prices, that are very high. To pay for data and to pay for content together for a consumer is very steep today.

    The third one is payment gateways. How do you pay for content? Not many people have credit cards, and people are not using it for recurring charge.

    I see this mindset changing in the next 36 months as well. The data prices will fundamentally come down, you will have data, bundled deals of content, you will have better speed connectivity, you will be offered premium services, HD service and various other services. Even the gateways will emerge. All these things will allow me to do a subscription model or a TVOD model as well. But, the large belly of the business is the ad-supported model.

    To run an advertising model you need humongous volumes. If you are a niche player, however good you might be, you can’t get business on advertising because the whole model of advertising is built on the number of eyeballs.

    It is a very expensive business. There are technology costs which are very high, there are content costs, there are costs of marketing and acquiring a customer, there are costs of streaming to the customer.

    The more content you watch on Voot or Hotstar or Youtube, there are two things which tend to happen. You are charged for data and it will also cost more to me as well as I have to pay the CDN (content delivery network) cost. So, the more you watch, the more I am paying. So I have to recover that cost. Unless you are a large volume player, you can’t do ad-supported. If you are a small player, you have to charge a sensible price to recover that cost. Netflix  – taking the sliver of the market at that price point, saying I only want these people – is one model. You are paying Netflix month on month.

    I think there will be more interesting models emerging in India going forward to break the psychological barrier in people’s mind. It’s not only an affordability barrier, but also a psychological barrier.

    We have to traverse the journey from ‘completely free’ to ‘completely pay.’ That journey has to pass through the consumer’s point of view, who is trying to pay for somethings. Once you are hooked on, then you tend to convert into a smaller package. The consumers will convert, but you can’t straight away give them a shock that tomorrow morning you will have to pay Rs 700. You will then get some, but a small portion.

    However, that’s not enough as in this country you have to build volumes. We are in the volume business. But, with some products, you can say that I want to play the international market game and play on the subscription part. It makes a lot of sense.

    But, one player has minimalised its rate to say the cost of a samosa. What do you have to say about that?

    We are not comparing with them. They only offer channels and not video on demand. I don’t know how are they doing it. Any strategy in my mind has to be sustainable. If they are able to offer all the channels in the world at Rs 20, then I think cable companies should talk to them and figure out why are they not charging that amount for the same channels.

    But, think of it logically. If you have all channels, everything for life at Rs 20 per month, then why would you pay the cable operators? You can choose to acquire customers from any route. You have a different way of acquiring customers and then you can hope them to stay hooked. I think it’s a marketing strategy from their point of view. People use different marketing strategies. But, I don’t think it makes business sense.

    I personally consume Voot content while it also is a ritual for me to catch up on Splitsvilla. But, there is a lag of around eight hours. Why?

    Splitsvilla has a humongous catch-up. There was a day where the Splitsvilla Sunday numbers were bigger than the next three days put together combined in a total value. I am a firm believer that consumers should have an ad model but you also need to understand that an ad supported model, you are getting this absolutely free as compared to me providing it to a cable or a DTH operator who is charging customers for it. There needs to be some gap. I could make this little pay and make it at the same time. But, if it is absolutely free here, you can play it, Chromecast it, share it, then personally I don’t feel that it is the right model. But, you can argue with me why it has to be eight hours? Why can’t it be six hours or a four hour lag? Those things are workable from my point of view but currently we have started with this strategy to put it up next morning. So, the way it works is TV airs it, we then process it, which takes about two to three hours. The team comes up here at 5am and publishes it on for the TV, tablet, mobile, website, etc. By 7:30 am, the content gets published most of the times.
    Is there scope of providing live content? How much, according to you, can the window be narrowed which also makes sense to your business?
    I am not going to comment on live, but, from case to case, we might have a much shorter window. I can narrow it down to zero also but, right now, I am not taking up that call because putting it up in the morning makes sense. You have to look at the larger thing. Currently, TV is measured on ratings and that’s how channels and advertisers are making money. TV has a large business there. This type of an emerging business has a separate sales, cost, structure, separate consumer base; we have to grow both businesses. It can’t be at the cost of the other. Definitely, it can’t be that you are actually working against the partners of yours especially on the distribution side by providing it free or live at the same time. I know some of my competitors have done it on the same time or even before, but as a stunt it is fine. But, if you do it continuously, I think it is should be made a free channel, which should be also free for the cable operators.

     I think giving it absolutely free at the same time is something I am not completely convinced right now. It is just a commercial business challenge to figure out whether it makes sense.

    We at the same time are also trying to increase the ARPU of the consumers. The business will grow but it also needs value. If I say that the same channel is available here for free and you stream it whereas there you are charging Rs 600 for it, then why will you pay? For what? The consumers will come and leave. We are just four months old, and this is an evolving space for us. At this time, we feel a six to eight hours lag is good. But, sometimes we reduce the lag.

    Do you plan to have Colors Infinity content on Voot?

    We do have it with us. The stage is there. We already have all the Indian productions of Infinity. At this time, it will only be home-grown content because the international content has two challenges, one is the third-party rights and the international players are a little more circumspect about putting content on ad-supported models. They want to put it on premium models. So, we are working with them to see what we can do. We have the format for ‘24’ with catch-up available. So, we get the stuff we create here. I think it is a journey. There are only two large ad-supported models in the world i.e China and India. They have never seen many big ad-supported models in the world.

    It’s a shift for us as well. If you talk to large players, they come to India and are amazed by the advertising growth here. Their mindset has changed. Netflix charges $8 in US which is like Rs 500 for us. But, that is their price point. I think as you are playing with the consumers in the market, you also have to adjust your prices and look at that.

    Some are B2B players who don’t talk to consumers directly. It takes sometime for them to figure out their life. So, I think it will take some time to convince the big studios to put their content on the ad-supported model in English.

    How are your originals doing onVoot?

    Very good. We only started with a few. There is a surge in catch-up audience or the ones who were more skewed towards TV content. ‘Chinese Bhasad’ has done well for us. ‘Badman’ has won awards India and internationally as well. ‘Shaadi Boys’ have seen a crazy demand and we have some episodes in place for the next season to come up shortly. The kind of traction we get for trailers is mind-blowing. I have got my competitors writing to us saying the content is phenomenal. Just now, someone from Star wrote that you are killing it with your shows. So, we are very happy with the response. I think the idea really is to create differentiated content that people don’t get on television but also have it relevant. We don’t want flaky things at all. We want to connect with the audience, and this is mature show. This is for everybody who is either married or is in relationship. It is not for a 15, 18 or 20 year old.

    Do you plan to package separately for your originals on Voot?

    As we speak, we have launched six shows. But, overtime, we will create a separate section of Voot Originals on the app. That is the way for us. Totally! Originals are a big play for us.

    Data is crucial for OTT and VOD. Are advertisers buying (agreeing with) the data you are giving them. What do they expect?

    Fifty advertisers on board, it’s not a small number. Everybody can see us as the third largest platform in the country in terms of size, in terms of minute data. You look how we have gotten million downloads. We are amongst the first guys who shared our data weekly dashboard to advertisers. Before us nobody used to do that. We are proud of what we have pursued in the first few months but it’s a long way to go. So advertisers are very keen. We have deals with several agencies, all the big clients are on board, we have long term deals as well.

    What is the sweet spot for advertising rates for OTT and VOD platforms? Let’s say for Voot?

    That is very hard, I can’t guesstimate. Let me tell you that we are on the higher end of the market. Because you know what you get here are the premium audiences – in the sense that they would not be buying Porsche and BMW but a loyal audience who can actually be fully measured and targeted.  You will be able to get a sponsorship opportunity, content, several integrations and lot more things surrounded. Sometimes, you are able to own the entire show as well.

    SonyLiv, Hotstar, Amazon Prime are going to be bidding for IPL rights? Where will that place platforms such as Voot as compared to the one who gets it?

    See, we don’t play in sports. Whether it comes on OTT or television, the reality of it is very simple. When there is cricket and when there is India playing, people are watching something. I do not buy the fact people are watching both things at the same time. The statement that you are watching TV and you are watching Voot or Hotstar or whatever it might be does not work.

    I actually believe that a sport, especially cricket, is something which you watch with a lot of people together. It’s an event-based thing. People watch it so numbers are there is no doubt about it. But, in my mind, it’s not as if those two hours or four hours or three hours of a match impacting my Voot journey too much. Contrary to that, I think we have a clear strategy on three big or four big types of content and I want to put my money behind that and that’s why what I am doing with kids, originals, reality. It is a clear indicator that I was actually putting my money before advertisers came on. I commissioned the shows in originals before they came on right. I am not waiting for the next guy to come who will give me money so that I can start.

  • Originals are a big play for us, says Viacom 18’s Gaurav Gandhi

    Originals are a big play for us, says Viacom 18’s Gaurav Gandhi

    If you look at Gaurav Gandhi’s CV, you will see that this NMIMS graduate began as a strategic business media executive with the Sam Balsara-promoted Madison Communications way back in 1998. He then took the plunge into television, joining Turner as a researcher and planner, and then, Star India. He followed that up with a stint in NDTV Imagine. 

    But, for the past six years, he has been associated with the Viacom18 brand – first as the commercial head, then moving on to distribution of traditional television with various assignments in Sun18 and IndiaCast, before being given the responsibility of steering the company into the digital space in late 2015. 

    Burning the midnight oil for more than seven months, he and his team, rolled out their first offering – a VOD service called Voot in March 2016. Rivals such as Star India, and Zee TV had their versions – Hotstar and DittoTV — in play for a longer period. But, that did not faze Voot COO who is known to be a feisty fighter. He is quite clear of the direction that Voot is taking, and he spoke about its journey so far in a tete-a-tete with Indiantelevision.com’s Megha Parmar. Read on to get some Gandhi insights on the Indian OTT space.

    How has the response to Voot been so far?

    The response has been very good. We are happy where we are. To get to be the third largest streaming website in watch time in a short period that we have is very encouraging. It’s been a good journey. We know that, as a market, we have close to 100 million users now, which will go to 400 million. So, the 4x growth is happening in the market, and we are riding that well.  There are three things that really encourage us. First, 45 minutes per day per user on an average is a very good number, so the watchtime is there. We have a large user base now, which excites us. Second is the fantastic response to our content. Of our three properties (TV, kids and originals), specifically for television, there is so much to do around a reality show. Thirty per cent of the views come from the extra stuff that we do around it. We shoot a lot of things along with our TV counterparts. And having 50+ advertisers on board definitely gives us a sense that we are going in the right direction.

    What were the learnings in the past few months?

    There has been a lot of learning. With our kids, we know exactly what is going on.We have a publishing cycle in place and the way it works is to make sure that we refresh it thrice a day. Kids will come back from school by 4 pm, and we thought that we should put our best content there and market it. Reality happened to us at 9 pm as the kids were watching it at that point of time when their parents are busy with dinner. That was the learning, which came alongside. Actually, the father’s phones have been used far more on weekends.

    We initially were of the opinion that 500 cities are enough for us but, in the third month, we crossed 1000 cities. There are viewers in 1100 cities right now who regularly consume Voot.  It’s all been a great learning. We had originally thought that it was about currency or new shows, but the catalogue has been watched by people for new stuff.

    People repeatedly come to us for something they love such as the MTV show, Kaisi Yeh Yaariyan. We look at the data and have witnessed that a lot of people consume data when in office between 1:30 am and 3 pm. There is a big surge of content.

    The kids demo peaks at 9 pm, the GEC at 10 pm and youth escalates from 11 pm to 1 at night. Our traffic only goes down from 2:30 am to 5 am. That is the time when we have some time with us, say, to solve a technical problem. Those things are very different. This is a consumer business, B2C, as against the past. We have not been going to  the consumers directly. We are consumer brands now, and that is an interesting proposition.

    When you say that 75 per cent of video consumption is now happening through WiFi and it is expected to change after digitization, after which a majority of the consumption will happen through telcos. The telcos are also coming into play with their own offerings of VOD and aggregation OTT platforms such as Jio, Wynk, Idea TV. Are the VOD platforms going to be at a disadvantage?

     Let me be honest with you, there is no dearth of platforms, and there will be none going forward. It’s like we have approximately 600 to 800 channels right now technically, and it still has a demand because people are watching. We are ultimately providing content. Those are platforms wherein everything is available but ours is a video-on-demand platform where you can choose what you want to watch and at what time.

    If you are talking from the content front, if you have a clear direction on the partnerships, the consumers as well as the content creation that you are doing, I don’t see a threat. Second, telcos are building services out. How we work with them and tie up is yet to be seen. The fact that we are over the top, we are available to every single person. We are an OTT service and we are available to all.

    Telcos are only concerned about one thing: consumer data. We work very closely with Jio and many other players. I think, from a telecoms perspective, they want to give their users everything possible and encourage them to consume data. From our point of view, we are talking about the fact that we want maximum viewership and that converts to eyeballs, money, and so on. So it’s very much a complementary situation. We provide content, and they get the users to use that content on their network. We get our eyeballs they get their consumption.

    What type of growth do you see after 4G rolls out completely?

     I see currently 120 million digital video users overall to go to 400 million next year. That’s three and a half times growth. You are doubling the user base over digital video every year. Now, if that is the case, all the players will grow automatically. Obviously, there will be top three, four, five, naturally who will see more growth because of more content.

    The other part of India is an interesting challenge because top five or six companies control 80 per cent of the IP. They are investing on the IPs and they are building more and more. Naturally, they will have a bigger advantage. Telcos will build their interesting products. How you will work with the telcos and how they launch their products will be interesting to see.

    Currently, it’s an ad-supported market largely, and that leads to getting more eyeballs because you are making it available to a large set. We foresee growth to be fairly phenomenal in the next 36 months for everyone in the market. We want to grow at a faster pace — naturally.

    So, you think an ad supported model is faring well for you, and that is the way to go? Or, will you also experiment with other models?

    There are multiple models that you can play with. The reason that, today an ad supported model works, and is the right way is because of three main reasons. One, people are psychologically prepared to pay for content. You get 400 channels for Rs 300, and if you go back 10 years, the cable TV monthly subscription was around Rs 200. Channels have increased, it’s become digital, HD has arrived, etc., but the amount you are paying is the same. People think that this is our birthright, we will get it anyhow. So, there is a big mindset shift that needs to happen and it has to happen with the distribution industry. But, till then, the value of content in the mind is benchmarked to the amount you pay on TV, especially if it a subscription base. If it is event based, for eg, paying for a movie where you are paying for the experience of movie, you will not pay the same amount for watching a movie at home. You are paying for the outing, the experience, so there is a challenge.

     The second challenge is data prices, that are very high. To pay for data and to pay for content together for a consumer is very steep today.

    The third one is payment gateways. How do you pay for content? Not many people have credit cards, and people are not using it for recurring charge.

    I see this mindset changing in the next 36 months as well. The data prices will fundamentally come down, you will have data, bundled deals of content, you will have better speed connectivity, you will be offered premium services, HD service and various other services. Even the gateways will emerge. All these things will allow me to do a subscription model or a TVOD model as well. But, the large belly of the business is the ad-supported model.

    To run an advertising model you need humongous volumes. If you are a niche player, however good you might be, you can’t get business on advertising because the whole model of advertising is built on the number of eyeballs.

    It is a very expensive business. There are technology costs which are very high, there are content costs, there are costs of marketing and acquiring a customer, there are costs of streaming to the customer.

    The more content you watch on Voot or Hotstar or Youtube, there are two things which tend to happen. You are charged for data and it will also cost more to me as well as I have to pay the CDN (content delivery network) cost. So, the more you watch, the more I am paying. So I have to recover that cost. Unless you are a large volume player, you can’t do ad-supported. If you are a small player, you have to charge a sensible price to recover that cost. Netflix  – taking the sliver of the market at that price point, saying I only want these people – is one model. You are paying Netflix month on month.

    I think there will be more interesting models emerging in India going forward to break the psychological barrier in people’s mind. It’s not only an affordability barrier, but also a psychological barrier.

    We have to traverse the journey from ‘completely free’ to ‘completely pay.’ That journey has to pass through the consumer’s point of view, who is trying to pay for somethings. Once you are hooked on, then you tend to convert into a smaller package. The consumers will convert, but you can’t straight away give them a shock that tomorrow morning you will have to pay Rs 700. You will then get some, but a small portion.

    However, that’s not enough as in this country you have to build volumes. We are in the volume business. But, with some products, you can say that I want to play the international market game and play on the subscription part. It makes a lot of sense.

    But, one player has minimalised its rate to say the cost of a samosa. What do you have to say about that?

    We are not comparing with them. They only offer channels and not video on demand. I don’t know how are they doing it. Any strategy in my mind has to be sustainable. If they are able to offer all the channels in the world at Rs 20, then I think cable companies should talk to them and figure out why are they not charging that amount for the same channels.

    But, think of it logically. If you have all channels, everything for life at Rs 20 per month, then why would you pay the cable operators? You can choose to acquire customers from any route. You have a different way of acquiring customers and then you can hope them to stay hooked. I think it’s a marketing strategy from their point of view. People use different marketing strategies. But, I don’t think it makes business sense.

    I personally consume Voot content while it also is a ritual for me to catch up on Splitsvilla. But, there is a lag of around eight hours. Why?

    Splitsvilla has a humongous catch-up. There was a day where the Splitsvilla Sunday numbers were bigger than the next three days put together combined in a total value. I am a firm believer that consumers should have an ad model but you also need to understand that an ad supported model, you are getting this absolutely free as compared to me providing it to a cable or a DTH operator who is charging customers for it. There needs to be some gap. I could make this little pay and make it at the same time. But, if it is absolutely free here, you can play it, Chromecast it, share it, then personally I don’t feel that it is the right model. But, you can argue with me why it has to be eight hours? Why can’t it be six hours or a four hour lag? Those things are workable from my point of view but currently we have started with this strategy to put it up next morning. So, the way it works is TV airs it, we then process it, which takes about two to three hours. The team comes up here at 5am and publishes it on for the TV, tablet, mobile, website, etc. By 7:30 am, the content gets published most of the times.
    Is there scope of providing live content? How much, according to you, can the window be narrowed which also makes sense to your business?
    I am not going to comment on live, but, from case to case, we might have a much shorter window. I can narrow it down to zero also but, right now, I am not taking up that call because putting it up in the morning makes sense. You have to look at the larger thing. Currently, TV is measured on ratings and that’s how channels and advertisers are making money. TV has a large business there. This type of an emerging business has a separate sales, cost, structure, separate consumer base; we have to grow both businesses. It can’t be at the cost of the other. Definitely, it can’t be that you are actually working against the partners of yours especially on the distribution side by providing it free or live at the same time. I know some of my competitors have done it on the same time or even before, but as a stunt it is fine. But, if you do it continuously, I think it is should be made a free channel, which should be also free for the cable operators.

     I think giving it absolutely free at the same time is something I am not completely convinced right now. It is just a commercial business challenge to figure out whether it makes sense.

    We at the same time are also trying to increase the ARPU of the consumers. The business will grow but it also needs value. If I say that the same channel is available here for free and you stream it whereas there you are charging Rs 600 for it, then why will you pay? For what? The consumers will come and leave. We are just four months old, and this is an evolving space for us. At this time, we feel a six to eight hours lag is good. But, sometimes we reduce the lag.

    Do you plan to have Colors Infinity content on Voot?

    We do have it with us. The stage is there. We already have all the Indian productions of Infinity. At this time, it will only be home-grown content because the international content has two challenges, one is the third-party rights and the international players are a little more circumspect about putting content on ad-supported models. They want to put it on premium models. So, we are working with them to see what we can do. We have the format for ‘24’ with catch-up available. So, we get the stuff we create here. I think it is a journey. There are only two large ad-supported models in the world i.e China and India. They have never seen many big ad-supported models in the world.

    It’s a shift for us as well. If you talk to large players, they come to India and are amazed by the advertising growth here. Their mindset has changed. Netflix charges $8 in US which is like Rs 500 for us. But, that is their price point. I think as you are playing with the consumers in the market, you also have to adjust your prices and look at that.

    Some are B2B players who don’t talk to consumers directly. It takes sometime for them to figure out their life. So, I think it will take some time to convince the big studios to put their content on the ad-supported model in English.

    How are your originals doing onVoot?

    Very good. We only started with a few. There is a surge in catch-up audience or the ones who were more skewed towards TV content. ‘Chinese Bhasad’ has done well for us. ‘Badman’ has won awards India and internationally as well. ‘Shaadi Boys’ have seen a crazy demand and we have some episodes in place for the next season to come up shortly. The kind of traction we get for trailers is mind-blowing. I have got my competitors writing to us saying the content is phenomenal. Just now, someone from Star wrote that you are killing it with your shows. So, we are very happy with the response. I think the idea really is to create differentiated content that people don’t get on television but also have it relevant. We don’t want flaky things at all. We want to connect with the audience, and this is mature show. This is for everybody who is either married or is in relationship. It is not for a 15, 18 or 20 year old.

    Do you plan to package separately for your originals on Voot?

    As we speak, we have launched six shows. But, overtime, we will create a separate section of Voot Originals on the app. That is the way for us. Totally! Originals are a big play for us.

    Data is crucial for OTT and VOD. Are advertisers buying (agreeing with) the data you are giving them. What do they expect?

    Fifty advertisers on board, it’s not a small number. Everybody can see us as the third largest platform in the country in terms of size, in terms of minute data. You look how we have gotten million downloads. We are amongst the first guys who shared our data weekly dashboard to advertisers. Before us nobody used to do that. We are proud of what we have pursued in the first few months but it’s a long way to go. So advertisers are very keen. We have deals with several agencies, all the big clients are on board, we have long term deals as well.

    What is the sweet spot for advertising rates for OTT and VOD platforms? Let’s say for Voot?

    That is very hard, I can’t guesstimate. Let me tell you that we are on the higher end of the market. Because you know what you get here are the premium audiences – in the sense that they would not be buying Porsche and BMW but a loyal audience who can actually be fully measured and targeted.  You will be able to get a sponsorship opportunity, content, several integrations and lot more things surrounded. Sometimes, you are able to own the entire show as well.

    SonyLiv, Hotstar, Amazon Prime are going to be bidding for IPL rights? Where will that place platforms such as Voot as compared to the one who gets it?

    See, we don’t play in sports. Whether it comes on OTT or television, the reality of it is very simple. When there is cricket and when there is India playing, people are watching something. I do not buy the fact people are watching both things at the same time. The statement that you are watching TV and you are watching Voot or Hotstar or whatever it might be does not work.

    I actually believe that a sport, especially cricket, is something which you watch with a lot of people together. It’s an event-based thing. People watch it so numbers are there is no doubt about it. But, in my mind, it’s not as if those two hours or four hours or three hours of a match impacting my Voot journey too much. Contrary to that, I think we have a clear strategy on three big or four big types of content and I want to put my money behind that and that’s why what I am doing with kids, originals, reality. It is a clear indicator that I was actually putting my money before advertisers came on. I commissioned the shows in originals before they came on right. I am not waiting for the next guy to come who will give me money so that I can start.

  • Network18’s Joy Chakraborthy gets additional role as Forbes India CEO

    Network18’s Joy Chakraborthy gets additional role as Forbes India CEO

    MUMBAI: Joy Chakraborthy gets added responsibility as Forbes India CEO at Network18. Two months, Chakraborthy joined Network18 as president for revenue and business development in May 2016 and now he will be overseeing Forbes India as well.

    Chakraborthy comes with over twenty years of experience in the media industry and has worked across top companies such as the Times Group, where he was director-response handling the biggest revenue portfolio. Prior to that, he headed the Zee group as executive director in charge of revenues, channel placement and the entire niche channel business portfolio. He also served TV Today network as CEO soon after the Zee stint. He has also spent his early years as executive vice president at Star India for six years heading advertising sales of all the channels.

    Graduated from the National Defense Academy with a Master’s degree in marketing management from NMIMS. He has also completed Advanced Management Programme from the Harvard Business School.

  • Network18’s Joy Chakraborthy gets additional role as Forbes India CEO

    Network18’s Joy Chakraborthy gets additional role as Forbes India CEO

    MUMBAI: Joy Chakraborthy gets added responsibility as Forbes India CEO at Network18. Two months, Chakraborthy joined Network18 as president for revenue and business development in May 2016 and now he will be overseeing Forbes India as well.

    Chakraborthy comes with over twenty years of experience in the media industry and has worked across top companies such as the Times Group, where he was director-response handling the biggest revenue portfolio. Prior to that, he headed the Zee group as executive director in charge of revenues, channel placement and the entire niche channel business portfolio. He also served TV Today network as CEO soon after the Zee stint. He has also spent his early years as executive vice president at Star India for six years heading advertising sales of all the channels.

    Graduated from the National Defense Academy with a Master’s degree in marketing management from NMIMS. He has also completed Advanced Management Programme from the Harvard Business School.