Tag: OOH

  • Philips retains Carat as its media agency, adds MPG for certain geographies

    Philips retains Carat as its media agency, adds MPG for certain geographies

    MUMBAI: Consumer electronics major Philips has continued its global strategic media partnership with Carat across all its business segments and corporate organisation.

    While global media agency MPG has been hired to handle the consumer lifestyle sector in America, France and southern Europe, Carat will continue to provide media agency services in all other geographies.

    Philips consumer lifestyle, chief innovation, marketing and strategy officer Antonio Hidalgo said, “Continuing our relationship with Carat is testimony to the strength of their strategic offering and the trusted partnership we have built in the recent years. The addition of MPG for specific geographies reflects Philips’ focus on identifying strong local partners to deliver business results.” 
     
    Aegis Media Asia Pacific CEO Nick Waters added, “Asia is a
    predominantly important market for Philips. In retaining Asia we have held on to their fastest growing and most dynamic markets in the world. We are happy that Philips has affirmed our strength in this region, and following a long-standing relationship of over a decade, this win is proof of the true partnership we have developed.”

    Carat India MD Kartik Iyer said, “I am absolutely delighted with retaining the business and believe that it bears testimony to the integrated solutions we have been providing Philips across offline media, digital media, OOH, retail and activation over the years in the region. We would definitely like to thank the Philips India team for all the support they have given us and look forward to a long, continuing relationship with Philips.”

  • Big Street retains OOH mandate for Line II of Delhi Metro till 2016

    Big Street retains OOH mandate for Line II of Delhi Metro till 2016

    MUMBAI: Reliance Broadcast Network’s OOH arm, Big Street, has retained the mandate for Line II of the Delhi Metro Rail Corporation (DMRC) till 2016.

    This 10.46 kilometres stretch covers commercial, office, shopping and government office areas of central Delhi through its nine stations – Vishwavidyalaya, Vidhan Sabha, Civil Lines, Kashmiri Gate, Chandni Chowk, New Delhi, Rajiv Chowk, Patel Chowk and Central Secretariat. 
     
    Big Street business head Rabe T Iyer said, “We feel proud to have bagged this OOH mandate of DMRC for the second time in a row. The DMRC metro service is probably the most widely used public transport in Delhi whose passengers are mostly professionals across relevant SECs.

    Within a short time of being in the business we have firmly established ourselves as innovators for a wide variety of our clients who found value for money in campaigns initiated on their behalf by Big Street. We will continue to provide innovative platforms connecting marketers to relevant audiences.”
     
    RBNL claims that DMRC has already been one of the most successful mandates for Big Street, and especially Line II and Big Street has hosted a host of innovations for its clients that boast of marquee brands across sectors – BFSI, FMCG, consumer goods, automobile, fashion etc.

    With this retention of Line II and other DMRC mandates i.e. Line III (21 stations between Barakhamba and Dwarka) as well as Delhi Metro Airport Express, Big Street claims access to 40 Metro stations and nearly 75 per cent of the commuters, making it the largest OOH player in Delhi Metro, the company said.

  • News Corp exits from OOH biz in Russia & Romania

    News Corp exits from OOH biz in Russia & Romania

    MUMBAI: US media conglomerate News Corp has completed the sale of its 79 per cent stake in News Outdoor Russia and News Outdoor Romania to a group of investors led by VTB Capital.

    The two other investors are Nooh Investments Coöperatief U.A., representing Peter Gerwe, and Marathon Outdoor Coöperatief U.A., which is managed by Alfa Capital Partners.
     
    The management has retained its 21 per cent holding in the business.

    News Outdoor Russia is an outdoor advertising company in Russia with billboards in more than 50 cities.

    This transaction completes News Corp’s divestment of its outdoor advertising business, with the exception of News Outdoor Czech Republic.

     

  • Sercon 141 ups Rajesh Ghatge to CEO

    Sercon 141 ups Rajesh Ghatge to CEO

    MUMBAI: Bates 141 has promoted Rajesh Ghatge as the chief executive officer of its specialised “below the line” marketing services agency, 141 Sercon.

    Ghatge was formerly the executive director and COO at 141 Sercon.

    In addition, Ghatge is also appointed to the Executive Committee (EXCO) of the Bates India Group. The Board is headed by Group CEO Sandeep Pathak and includes India chairman and regional ECD Sonal Dabral, regional planning director Dheeraj Sinha, 141 Wallstreet VP Praveen Vadhera and finance director Dinesh Shetty.

    In his new role as the CEO, Ghatge will build on the agency‘s expertise in “intelligent activation” – solutions which engage consumers across touch points and enable them to experience brands, products and services. With the use of proprietary tools and technology, the agency is able to deliver large scale, ROI-driven activations for B2B and B2C clients across Asia.

    Ghatge co-founded Sercon in 1996, which was later acquired by Bates in 2007. He was instrumental in leading Sercon to become one of India‘s largest activation and marketing services agencies with a footprint across India and Southeast Asia.

    Ghatge has more than 15 years of experience in planning, creative and execution of regional and local campaigns for leading brands including Bausch & Lomb, Carlsberg, Castrol, Nokia, Oracle, Shriram Life Insurance and Sun Microsystems.
     
    Pathak said, “Since Sercon joined the Bates family, it has played a very strategic role. Together with our advertising and design units, and out-of-home and retail offering, we have the full capability to help our clients drive maximum engagement, by getting brands to become the subject of new conversations.”

    Ghatge added, “Rapid change is happening constantly and all around us in. Clients want to understand changes in consumer‘s media and shopping habits and what are the implications for engaging them effectively. I look forward to working closely with the Bates regional and local leadership teams to grow our expertise, so that we can deliver more innovative and effective solutions for our clients, and bring people closer to brands.”

    Dabral stated, “Rajesh has been key to driving Sercon to become one of the top ranking activation agencies in India and Southeast Asia. Rajesh will continue to grow our specialized skills and solutions for India and regional clients by helping them to better engage consumers, generate demand and influence preference.”

    In India, the Bates operations spans Delhi, Mumbai, Bangalore and Kolkata, and includes the largest retail and OOH network in India across 20 states and into 400 rural towns. It offers full integrated disciplines – brand strategy, advertising, design, outdoor/OOH, retail, B2B and B2C activation, digital, CRM and event management.
     

  • IDBI retains Maxus as media partner; Mudra Max wins OOH biz

    IDBI retains Maxus as media partner; Mudra Max wins OOH biz

    MUMBAI: IDBI Group has retained Maxus India as its media partner and assigned Mudra Max the Outdoor, below the line (BTL), direct and digital duties.

    Maxus managing director Ajit Varghese confirmed the business retention of the IDBI account to Indiantelevision.com.

    Mudra Max said it won the account following a multi-agency pitch. The account will be handled out of the agency‘s Mumbai office. 
     
    The pitch for the Outdoor business was called in March and was part of the tender which IDBI Bank floats every three years, as per applicable government guidelines.

    The agency will be responsible for handling its various sectors which includes IDBI Bank Ltd, IDBI Capital Management Services, IDBI Intech and IDBI Assets Management.

    Mudra Max CEO Pratap Bose said, “It‘s a significant win for us and I am happy with the way we are moving ahead. We look forward to IDBI Bank Group bringing innovative thinking and a strategic direction to the brand.”

    Mudra Max-OOH president Mandeep Malhotra added, “IDBI Bank has shown faith in who we are and what we bring to the table. We are positive this partnership will be mutually beneficial. We hope to rise to the challenges offered by the brand, in terms of path-breaking and innovative methods of reaching the TG.”

  • JCDecaux Advertising appoints Duggal as GM, sales

    JCDecaux Advertising appoints Duggal as GM, sales

    MUMBAI: JCDecaux Advertising India has appointed Alok Duggal as general manager, sales.

    Duggal will oversee the media offerings of the company that includes a property base of bus shelters and Street Furniture in New Delhi and Mumbai, and an exclusive advertising concession with Bangalore International Airport.

    Duggal moves in from ING Bank of India, where he was head of marketing.

    Duggal said, “This will be a new experience for me as the role
    involves interacting with multiple brands. The focus is to provide complete solution to the brands in terms of visibility and brand salience, be it in Delhi and Mumbai (Street Furniture) or at Bangalore International Airport.”

    JCDecaux India MD Pramod Bhandula said, “Duggal has full understanding of brand marketing and appreciates the importance of outdoor. He will be instrumental in bringing on board all the brands which have been missing the potential that OOH offers.

  • Percept OOH Bangalore appoints Rasiq Sultan as branch head South

    Percept OOH Bangalore appoints Rasiq Sultan as branch head South

    MUMBAI: Percept Out Of Home, Bangalore has appointed Rasiq Sultan as the branch head – Karnataka and Tamil Nadu.

    Prior to joining Percept, Sultan was working with Outdoor Advertising Professionals as branch head, Karnataka. He was also associated with companies such as Khodays Contact Center, India Nexus.

    Sultan said, “I am delighted to join the Percept family. The challenge is to grow business and to enhance the current business in Karnataka and Tamil Nadu. I also look forward to work with people and to build a good team here”

    Percept Out Of Home business head – Outdoor Rajneesh Bahl added, “Induction of Rasiq in South team will definitely add on to our growth in South. His overall exposure to Account & Media Management in South is incomparable. His capability of building teams and strategic planning will help us in more focused approach.”

  • Outdoor advertising underutilised

    Outdoor advertising underutilised

    MUMBAI: The outdoor advertising industry is not growing at a pace it should, said Bates 141 Asia regional executive creative director and Indian chairman Sonal Dabral at the seventh edition of Outdoor Advertising Convention.

    Bates 141 NCD Sagar Mahableshwarkar presented Dabral‘s video clips talking about the various aspects of outdoor ads. “It is not just billboards, but live shows and activation too form a part of outdoor advertising. Outdoor advertising should engage people and should not be considered as a reminder medium,” Dabral added in one of his clips.

    The examples of outdoor advertising happening around the world were shown and Dabral insisted that India takes inspiration from innovative ideas. He also feels that outdoor advertising is restricted and the potential is not fully tapped.

    Various other aspects of outdoor advertising were discussed in detail and the drawbacks were addressed.

    Innovation was one aspect of outdoor, which was on every speaker‘s mind.

    Vodafone VP marketing Anuradha Agarwal informed that it‘s just innovation that will create buzz. She established this fact by showing simple and innovative outdoor advertisements around the world and how it is remembered even today.

    While it was agreed that outdoor medium is not given its due importance, Cheil India COO Alok Agarwal believes that the business of outdoor advertising needs ‘re-thinking‘. He said, “OOH is a giant stage. The cost of an innovative idea may be high, but ROI, when measured in life-time value, will be much higher.”

    Agarwal also maintained that to a large extent, mobile is taking over OOH and one of the drawbacks of OOH is lack of measurability. “Apart from innovation, we need to work on connection and engaging the population. Innovation is restricted due to infrastructure and law but investing money in measurement will tell us how bright the future of OOH is,” he affirmed.

    Talking about the future of outdoor and how innovations can contribute to the growth, Times OOH MD Sunder Hemrajani spoke about “Signs of Tomorrow”.
    Hemrajani stated, “Not all innovations are expensive. We are an efficient economy which is moving towards the era of innovation and we must continue to keep monetising the economy.”

    Hemrajani underlined that we live in the era of innovation and outdoor advertising should go from OOH to WOW experience! “It‘s not just awareness that is important, experience is what will make outdoor advertising stronger and impactful.”

    Hemrajani concluded by saying, “There will be a better urban transport infrastructure over the next 20 years. There are digital innovations and technology too has taken a leap.”

  • ‘The challenge is to differentiate in a cluttered market’ : HDFC Life executive VP marketing and direct channels Sanjay Tripathy

    ‘The challenge is to differentiate in a cluttered market’ : HDFC Life executive VP marketing and direct channels Sanjay Tripathy

    HDFC Life‘s advertising spend will stay flat this year as it seeks to turn profitable for the first time.

     

    The insurance company, which ranks No. 4 among the top 10 advertisers in the category in terms of ad volumes, is looking to spend more judiciously and utilise a 360 degree approach to reallocate money across new mediums like digital and OOH.

     

    While 70 per cent of HDFC Life‘s marketing spend goes towards above the line, 50 per cent of this goes towards television. On television, HDFC uses news and sports for advertising as it fits into the 25-45 male target audience.

     

    Print, radio and OOH play a supportive role. HDFC Life has also started using social media to engage the youth.

     

    In an interview with Indiantelevision.com’s Ashwin Pinto, HDFC Life executive VP marketing and direct channels Sanjay Tripathy talks about how insurance companies need to differentiate in a cluttered market and build a brand equity that includes the youth.

     

    Excerpts:

    Why did HDFC Life go in for a brand makeover last year?
    We did a brand equity study as we wanted to see where our brand is and how it is faring versus competition. We had last done a similar study way back in 2005. We wanted to see the changes; we wanted to know how through our cmmunication and marketing activities the brand had progressed in people’s minds.

     

    Consumers found the brand ethical and the service value was strong. Then we asked about the areas where they felt the brand could be improved upon. They wanted it to look like belonging to the same HDFC family; they felt that the brand could look more modern and dynamic.

     

    Indian consumers are getting younger. People work in areas like BPO and they look at life insurance at an early age. A person buys their first insurance product between 23-28 years of age. As a brand, we wanted to attract the youth towards our products; we needed to be in the youth segment. We spoke to our board and got a favourable response.

     

    Also, the word standard only conveyed the basic level of facilities; it was not giving the message of Standard Life being an international brand. We wanted to be seen as being a customer centric brand. Through the rebranding, we wanted customer centricity to come out more strongly for us. The new logo represents a youthful, energetic HDFC brand.

    How do consumers perceive HDFC Life as a brand compared to the competition?
    Our awareness has gone up by 30 per cent over last year. Our communication has been well accepted.

    When marketing to consumers, what challenges do insurance companies like you face?
    The market is cluttered. There are over 23 players. The challenge is to differentiate and ensure that consumers can see your service offerings and products.

     

    We need to be seen as having products that are more consumer friendly; the challenge is to see that the consumer understands your brand and products.

    How do you build and leverage brand equity in the insurance category which is getting more competitive?
    We started six years back to find out why consumers buy insurance. We found that they bought it as they do not want to depend on anybody else; they want insurance for self respect. They do not want to depend on their parents; similarly, the parents do not want to depend on their children. This is how the thought for our campaign came about which is – Sar Utha ke Jiyo. We positioned our brand under the ‘self respect’ motive.

     

    Over time, we took the thought of Sar Utha ke Jiyo across our platforms – be it for children, pension, youth or home loan cover. It gives you a long term solution for pressing needs and self respect. Insurance operates in a long term savings plan; investment in insurance has to be linked to a long term need. This is what we have focussed on and have built consumer segments.

    To what extent will your marketing budget go up for the year?
    We are maintaining a similar spend as last year. This is the first year we are trying to become profitable. We are looking to spend more judiciously and utilise a 360 degree approach to reallocate money. New mediums have come in like digital and OOH. The aim is to make a more judicious mix of mediums available.

    “Our ad spend will stay flat this year. We are looking to spend more
    judiciously and utilise a 360 degree approach to reallocate money. New
    mediums have come in like digital and OOH”

    To what extent was this category affected by the economic downturn in terms of sales and marketing spends?
    New companies are spending heavily. Some of the older players who want to go for a public listing and want to make marketing money work harder are keeping a check on their spending. Spending in this category went down by around 20 per cent during the downturn.

    Which marketing vehicle is the most effective for you – print, TV, radio, online?
    Seventy per cent of our marketing spend is for above the line activities; fifty per cent of this goes towards television as it is the most effective medium for us.

     

    As we are present in over 700 cities, television offers a more cost effective reach. It provides an emotional touch point. You can link the customer with your brand and emotional thought. You can explain your concept in a situation linked to his day to day life.

     

    Print, radio and OOH play a support role. We have started using social media more to engage the youth.

    Which genres do you use on television?
    News and sports for TG 25-45 males works. Apart from cricket, we also do on-air sponsorship of Euro, Fifa World Cup and Wimbledon. We also spend on regional news and regional entertainment; they are pretty big for us.

     

    The aim is to get the top-end audience in metros and mini metros. The cost of contact may be high but cost of impact and cost to the top-end segment is less compared to other vehicles. This is the most profitable customer segment for insurance.

    Do you advertise heavily only during the end of the financial year?
    We advertise across the year. Our IPL campaign is running at the start of the fiscal. When schools open, we can run a ‘Children Plan’ campaign. Advertising in the insurance category has moved from just being end of the year to being more spread out.

    What about the festive time?
    Advertising at that period does not work. People think about spending and not about saving. It could be a counter campaign to do it in Diwali; this has not worked in the past.

    Do you use brand ambassadors?
    No! HDFC Life is a product for the common people. The thought is powerful when you connect to people; they want to see communication where people like them are investing rather than seeing somebody who does not need life insurance but is still talking about it.

    What campaigns have been done recently?
    The last campaign was a rebranding one. You don’t need to spend Rs 3-5 billion for this if you realise the core thing that you need to convey. It is not that overnight you have to change every single collateral and signage. The consumer has to be convinced that your rebranding is actually being delivered on the ground; they look at rebranding more in terms of on-ground delivery rather than on just an image or a design change.

     

    We also did a children’s plan campaign. We used more persuasion which was different from what was done earlier. We explained that while the child is doing fine, seats are limited and competition is severe. Parents need to plan properly; it will help the child reach that goal and get into the institution they like. The aim is to make a parent see that while things are happening normally, they still need to do something.

    As a platform, how has the Rajasthan Royals deal worked out for you?
    We look at associations where there is a good brand fit. In case of Rajasthan Royals, while Shane Warne is the captain, ordinary Indian players who people might not have heard of are given a platform. Warne helps them think like winners. If you look at the premise of believing in yourself, this goes well with our tag line ‘Sar Uthake Jiyo’.

     

    As a team they support youth and some of them have started playing for India. Shane Watson’s career also got revived with this team. It helps youth to think that they can beat world beaters.

    In terms of activation with that IPL franchise, what innovations did you do this time around?
    We brought a social angle into our activities for the home games. We used to take employees and distributors to meet players. We also used players for ads. We gave fans the opportunity to get tickets to enjoy the match and spend time with the cricketers. We took fans for the toss. This was run on Facebook. We also gave tickets to underprivileged people.

    Last year the franchise got into trouble with the BCCI. Did that force you to temporarily change tack in terms of your campaign?
    Not really! The IPL was over by the time these issues came up. The team management kept us informed about the steps they were taking and why they believed that they were in the right. They said that there were no issues and kept us in the loop all the time. We have a one year deal with them.

    Rajasthan Royals has not fared well during the IPL. Are you concerned at any negative brand rub off for HDFC Life?
    No! For a while, they were in the top rung of the points table. You have to look at the core strength of the association rather than one off wins or losses. The youth looks at ‘Sar Uthake Jiyo’ in a different light. The team has more youngsters compared to the previous year. So we came up with the tag line ‘Sar Utha ke Jeene ka Naya Andaaz’.

    How many campaigns do you do in a year and are there new audiences that you have started to address?
    We will do four to five campaigns and are looking at new audience segments. We have done a lot of research on this.

    The rural areas have a lot of potential but the marketing vehicles that work in the major metros might not work there. So how do you connect with those consumers?
    More than just marketing, the basics of the business have to be in place. Insurance is a long term business – and you need to understand the rural area. We do pilots to understand the rural area much more; this has multiple models that have to be run simultaneously.

     

    You need partners like microfinance institutions so that you can reach out to them in a much more cost effective manner. The rural areas consist of the rural rich and poor. You need different products for them while their aspirations are similar.

     

    We are trying to do partner marketing at the moment. We do below the line activities with partners who have the trust factor in that area. The aim is to make the brand relevant and differentiated at a local level. We do things like street plays. We need somebody to carry the message and explain it. That is why below the line activities are important.

    Could you give me examples where experiential marketing has worked for you?
    We do ‘Spelling Bee’ in 35 cities. Children in classes six to nine participate. We have 300,000 children and over 1500 schools taking part. It allows children to understand things like vocabulary and sentence formation. Parents encourage children to do this. It is a good engagement activity. Parents are also engaged in terms of helping the child spell correctly.

     

    Somewhere your brand rub off is also very high. The parent thinks that HDFC Life has brought a competition which they want their children to participate in. Consumer engagement is key for our category. The consumer should keep engaging with you over a longer period of time. What we are seeing is that people buy five to six insurance products over a lifetime.

     

    People like a brand but the decision may be deferred. I need to stay engaged constantly. I may create an engagement now, but later you may buy competition. The engagement has to be done through different methods. That is why we look at a 360 degree approach.

    Could you talk about the growing importance of OOH for you?
    This has really increased. In metros and mini metros, consumers spend time out of home. TV viewing time has come down. There is innovative media available. Obviously, hoardings have been there for a long time. Airports and stations have OOH media. You have to figure out how you can catch your TG when they spend time away from their home.

    But isn’t lack of measurement a problem?
    This is why it is a support medium. If you utilise it for the right reason and use it to support the main communication, it works well. As a support medium, it gives good ROI. OOH always complements the TVC. I can measure ROI better that way.

    Do you address women?
    In India, most homes have a single income. The male is the breadwinner; women in the working segment are still small and their needs are similar to working men. Their media consumption is similar. The campaign for men works for them also.

     

    We addressed upwardly women through an endowment plan campaign. The only segment that is different from men is the unmarried working woman. Other categories for women are similar to men; so I do not need to do a separate campaign for them.

  • Wonderla Holdiays to up media spends, in expansion mode

    Wonderla Holdiays to up media spends, in expansion mode

    BANGALORE: Regional amusement park player Wonderla Holidays plans to increase its mass media communication spends to Rs 90 million this year, up from the Rs 50 million plus that it spent last year.

    Wonderla also announced two new amusement park projects in Hyderabad and Chennai by 2014 and its advent into the ‘three star’ category hospitality segment by way of resorts at the location of its amusement parks.

    The amusement park major has plans to invest around Rs 3 billion towards these new ventures. Wonderla also announced two new rides at its facility near Bangalore – The ‘Equinox’ ride and ‘Cine Magic 3D’.

    Currently, Wonderla has two amusement parks – one each near Bangalore and Kochi. It has been using the regional media – print, television, radio, OOH, and outdoor on a need basis.

    “We have been using two or three television spots per day on most of the regional channels in Karnataka and Kerala as and when the need arises. We typically spend around 10 per cent of our revenues on mass media communications, and based on our higher revenues we plan to spend around Rs 90 million this year. Some of these funds will go towards mass media communications for the new properties. Once we start operations in Hyderabad and Chennai, our media spends will also go up proportionately,” revealed Wonderla spokesperson.

    Besides within Bangalore and Kochi, the company also uses radio in the major towns around these cities. Typically, this would be 3 or 4 stations per town, and the spend would be anything between Rs.150,000 to Rs. 300,000 per station per year.

    Kerala-based Media Mate handles the creative work and part of the media buying, while Wonderla handles most of the media buying including television media buying directly.