Tag: Pro Kabaddi League

  • After Pro Kabaddi League Star Sports signs on as title sponsor for Premier Badminton League too

    After Pro Kabaddi League Star Sports signs on as title sponsor for Premier Badminton League too

    MUMBAI: Star Sports has signed up as the title sponsor for the Premier Badminton League which will see the world’s top shuttlers square off in India’s largest badminton tournament. Given the competition’s stature as well as India’s prominence on badminton’s global stage, the sport is central to Star Sports’ strategy to foster a multi-sport culture in the country. 

     

    The country’s star shuttler Saina Nehwal is currently world number 2, while others like PV  indhu, 12th in the standings, and K. Srikanth, ninth overall, have also made their mark on the sport. India’s largest broadcaster, Star Sports has already signed up as the League’s official broadcast partner.

     

    Star India COO Sanjay Gupta said: “The success of India’s badminton stars internationally has led to the emergence of a passionate fan base back home. As a result, like Kabaddi, badminton is now a sport that’s very close to the hearts of Indian fans. The prospect of our home heroes facing up against the best the world has to offer in our own backyard was a prospect that was too tempting to pass up. Strategically, it also made the most business sense for Star Sports given our efforts to create a vibrant sporting ecosystem in the country.”

     

    Star Sports plans to introduce several innovative broadcast initiatives to the League in its efforts to forge a deeper engagement with fans and place them right in the thick of this fast-paced sport. The broadcaster will project telemetry like players’ heart rates live on screen. It will also hand out four awards after each day of play for the best rally, the fastest smash, the player of the day and the fan of the day as selected through contests run by franchises across locations. The league will be packaged like no other badminton tournament has been before, with lights and music adding further dazzle to an already riveting and star-studded spectacle.

     

    Tweaks to the rules, like unpredictable player draws, Trump Matches’ – which are worth bonus points – and the newly-introduced ‘sudden death’ rule will add a further dose of excitement to the tournament.

    The Premier Badminton League kicks off January 2nd, 2016 and will be played until January 17th. Live telecast will be on Star Sports 2, Star Sports HD2, Star Sports 3, Star Sports HD3 and hotstar.

     

     

     

     

  • ‘Technology is the future of experiential marketing:’ Vidur Patney

    ‘Technology is the future of experiential marketing:’ Vidur Patney

    MUMBAI: When talking of marketing campaigns we often come across the term ‘on ground activation.’ While at a rudimentary scale, it’s how a brand markets itself through direct engagement with consumers, its utility and purview is infinitely evolving. The idea is to create a bond between the consumer and the brand beyond ‘buying and selling’ by immersing them in a fun and memorable experience, which evokes emotions within the consumers that they thereafter associate with the brand instead.

     

    From a simple handing out of Red Bull cans at a music concert to Multi Screen Media’s open air bus ‘Bulaava Express,’ which toured the country across 13 cities creating euphoria for the 2014 IPL — the beauty of experiential marketing lies in its flexibility of mode and scale to target the consumers.

     

    While the concept isn’t new to marketers, its rapid evolution over the years armed by technology and digitisation has made it increasingly important to understand experiential marketing from an insider’s perspective.

     

    With that in mind, Indiantelevision.com approached recently appointed Maxus national director – experiential marketing Vidur Patney to shed light on the changing landscape of experiential marketing, and the role it is going to play in the near future.

     

    Purview:

     

    From on ground and van activations through major cities to team building activities from brands at corporate level, experiential marketing plays on a wide range, and the possibilities are endless.

     

    How you use the formula to connect with your consumer, what chord you strike with them in the process is what puts you at an advantage when it comes to this form of marketing. The idea is to wow the consumers with unique interactions and engagements that leave impressions in their minds. Creating vanilla experiences that the consumers can then start associating with the brand is also part of the process.

     

    Though the possibilities are endless, it is getting increasingly challenging to come up with new ways to give consumers that vanilla experience. The only way forward is to use the available digital and technological tools at our disposal. By identifying how the consumers engage with such tools, we come up with concepts that allow us to make the most of it.

     

    Evolution:

     

    The evolution of experiential marketing has happened in three phases. Often considered an old school marketing art, the first hurdle was to get brands and marketers to realise its potential in the current ecosystem. To make them look beyond the generic TVC marketing and acknowledge that today consumers are not content with just knowing a brand through their television sets.

     

    Once that was established, phase two was to explore the various ways in which experiential marketing can be used, and integrated with the headlining campaigns. This was the period we saw an increase in on-ground activities, contests, product launches where consumers could interact with brand ambassadors, etc.

     

    Once that was achieved, we had to think how to expand the reach of experiential marketing, take it from being a space restricted solution, to a trigger that leads to conversations and interactions about a brand on a larger scale. That’s why currently we are concentrating on making way for more and more shareable experiences using the digital platforms.

     

    Role of technology:

     

    There’s no denying the fact that technology is the way forward when it comes to marketing, be it at the concept level or while executing. It has become an integral part of our consumers’ lifestyle. We can not only target consumers better with analytical tools made available to us through technology, but also engage consumers to give them the best of experiential.

     

    Technology is also the differentiator when a brand wants to stand out and grab eyeballs. It is no longer something people are averse to. People are willing to accept technology into their lives and know more. As a result, to customise for them, to garner more participation and deliver a powerful brand message, technology plays a very important role.

     

    The tools could be one on one engagement through technology, giving consumers a virtual experience. Use of technology is important because it is something today’s generation is excited about. If used right, it helps give that wow factor and conveys a much stronger message for the brand. Also, it goes a long way into consumers accepting what you are saying and giving them something memorable.

     

    For example, the recent use of virtual reality (VR) and augmented reality technology can and has opened up new avenues when it comes to experiential marketing. People can now get a first hand interaction with how a brand functions. These are extremely useful tools for automobile and technology related brands where a consumer can see the inner workings of a car or a phone. It has a much bigger impact than simply sharing the specs with a consumer. But its use is endless when it comes to other sectors as well. One may argue that applying virtual and augmented reality in marketing may rack up the cost of marketing for brands but that’s just the initial phase. Just like any other technology, it’s the first investment that costs more, after which one can cash in on them while enjoying more innovations.

     

    Going beyond metros:

     

    Experiential marketing can be a very important marketing tool when it comes to tier II and tier II cities. We have noticed that while on ground activations work in metros, its reach is becoming limited. It only draws in a niche crowd. The urban consumer isn’t easily wowed by simple events, you need to spend more and innovate your engagement concepts to keep their interest. They get easily bored. Consumers in tier II and tier III cities, on the other hand, can still be catered with vanilla experiences by creating simple engaging moments. With brands now looking their way to expand consumer base, use of experiential marketing becomes crucial in those areas.

     

    We recently did an on-ground activation for a movie screening in Indore where hundreds of kids and their parents turned up by simply allowing them to play games on an app we developed for the event. In a metro that would have only interested a niche group, way below hundred.

     

    Experiential marketing in sports:

     

    If there is one section where experiential marketing dominates, it is sports. We all interact with sporting events for a personal connection, be it our passion for the sport, our loyalty to a team or love for a favourite player. That is why brands love to associate with sporting events. It is easier to create those memorable moments, which brands would to be credited for. They want consumers to associate their favourite on ground memories with the brands.

     

    There are numerous possibilities for experiential marketing for any sporting event, be it Indian Premiere League, Indian Super League, Pro Kabaddi League, etc.

     

    A holistic marketing solution:

     

    Experiential marketing and digital marketing forms two important pillars of the core media solution that we provide our clients. Having an experiential marketing arm gives Maxus an added advantage of providing a holistic marketing solution.

     

    It’s a three way communication within Maxus that helps us achieve that. When it comes to digital technology and bringing it on ground, we have Metalworks. Figuring out how that technology can be used to wow and create a memorable experience for the consumer is what we at Experiential Marketing do. When these come together with Maxus’s core media vertical, we are able to give brands the best possible solution to engage with the consumer.

     

    Going only experiential:

     

    So far experiential has worked in collaboration with core media and other arms of marketing. While there are certain brands that can go only experiential as their marketing strategy, it highly depends on the brand’s target audience and the type of campaign. There are some products for which experiential gets the lion’s share of the marketing budget.

     

    While there is no set rule, more and more brands are keeping budgets aside for experiential marketing because it’s the last mile of communication between the brand and a consumer.

     

    Experiential works best when it’s area specific. If a brand launches a product aimed at consumers of a certain area, having a localised approach makes more sense rather than a TVC.

  • Ronnie Screwvala’s grand plans for Kabaddi

    Ronnie Screwvala’s grand plans for Kabaddi

    MUMBAI: If you’ve got to invest in sport in India, then it has to be the multibillion cricketing extravaganza the Indian Premier League (IPL) which attracted audiences like a zillion bees to a honeypot. Nothing else comes even close to it. Well at least that was the perception a couple of years back.

     

    But cricket’s hypnotic influence is waning, as other sports have begun to attract a following. And that’s mainly because game changing innovators have got into develop the business of sports. Amongst them figure Mashal Sports promoter and TV commentator Charu Sharma, Star India boss Uday Shankar and firm believers in disruption like Ronnie Screwvala. The trio picked up a game you and I have all played at some time or the other during our school days.

     

    A game that is played in each and every part of India, a game which the national team has emerged triumphant in each and every level it has participated; a game that we all know but did not talk about much. In no time, it has  emerged as the second most popular sport on television.

     

    We are talking about the game called kabaddi which has flowered as the Star Sports Pro Kabaddi League, a tourney that Screwvala’s Unilazer Sports had an eye on from day one. The entrepreneur invested and acquired the Mumbai franchise and named it U Mumba. The first season saw his team play well. Well enough to reach the finals. But not well enough to take home the gold and the trophy; second place was all that it could manage.

     

    But second best was not good enough for Ronnie. Came ProKabaddi League Season II, and Ronnie’s boys took home the gold.  What helped them across the winning line?

     

     “It’s teamwork. From day one we focused on teamwork, and it has worked for us,” pat comes Screwvala’s response. “Ours was the only consistent team which reached the finals in both the seasons. In sport, talent nurturing, morale and teamwork are most important things, so once you get that right – the body language, the aura around it, and the perfection falls in place.”

     

    The success of U Mumba was not limited to the ground. It was reflected in the number of sponsors on the team jersey, in the full houses at the arena when the team played, and in the balance sheet as well in terms of revenue generation.

     

    “I think we had a very focused approach to winning, to perform and that’s what sport is all about, and I feel that’s what has worked for us,” explains Ronnie.  “So when people look at it and say this is the organization which is committed to take sports further, it is committed to its people. It is unlike any other organization when you see the body language and when you see the culture of the company; people invest in the culture of the company. We want to win.”

     

     He has been working on another level too: that of building the franchise of kabaddi. Like other team owners he realized that there were limitations with the ProKabaddi League. Being a once-a-year competition played over a few days, it could not stack up against other sports like cricket or tennis or football that are played throughout the year and have large mind spaces amongst sports lovers. Hence, sustaining its brand value would be difficult[ – forget about enhancing it – which is what most team owners want: an appreciation in the value of their investment in their teams.

     

    So he initiated a discussion with the other stakeholders and they came up with an answer, make the ProKabaddi League a twice a year proposition.

     

     “The thought we had was very clear and I think it came from everybody saying that we should have a longer season or two seasons. In cricket you can have a six weeks league and it still captures people’s minds as the sport is played throughout the year. Our point was that if you want to make a  sport a national interest sport and build it up into an even bigger property, you can’t play it just six days a year. We were pushing everyone and proposing to everyone that we should have two seasons a year and that was our goal. It took all of a year but fortunately now we will we will have season three in January 2016,”  says Screwvala.

     

    The ingredients are all there to make kabaddi a national phenomenon like cricket. The sport has its popularity across India but it was considered to be a non-glamorous sport played on the streets or on dusty grounds by the not so-well-off Indians; not something the rich or the upper middle-class could enjoy. Earlier coverage of the sport on television, especially Doordarshan, had also made it look unappealing.

     

    Hence, kabaddi needed many an innovation to make it look exquisite on television. And there came the great collaboration between Mashal Sports, Star India and the Kabaddi federations. Making the game compact was an important first step, explains Screwvala,  

     

    Says he: “I think what Star and Mashal have done to the sport is incredible. What Mashal did is put the sport on a platform that would make everyone look good. And that’s where the line, time, mat came into picture. If the game was played on mitti (soil) in an open field the compactness would have been missing. The sport would be even more engaging when the spectators were close enough to feel like they were a part of the action.”

     

     Star India too brought its production and creative skill sets to the table and made the sport look larger than life. Ronnie highlights out that Star did not film the league like they would cover a local sport, rather they went the Full Monty, with all the bells and whistles to make it look like a global spectaclur sport.

     

    “Indians like action. The action genre is very big here and the gladiator feel that Star’s coverage has brought is incredible” says Ronnie praising Star India. 

     

    Having tasted success and taking home the booty with his team U Mumba as the champ, Ronnie is brewing further plans relating to ProKabaddi.  

     

    “The sport needs to become aspirational. And we can do that through an animation series, TV series, movies and games. At least two of them will be unveiled in the coming one year,” says the billionaire media baron turned investor. “We have a plan drawn out for the next 18 months and we will do everything possible to make kabaddi an aspirational and regular sport in India. We are investing in a national hunt for new talent, so that we have future stars ready. This is a program to develop kabaddi at the grassroots level. It is an initiative to discover 100-200 Kabaddi talents across pan India. The interaction in rural area has been quite magical so far.”

     

    He is pretty happy with the returns he has got. “Last year we had revenues of Rs 12 crore,” he reveals with a wide smile on his face. “In 2016 we are targeting Rs 40-50 crore.  Mashal kept the acquisition price low and reasonable and thanks to that break even has already happened.”

     

    In terms of sources of revenue, despite the ticket prices being high, sponsorships and alliances lead the tally, followed by gate collections and TV revenue.

     

    “We did decently well in first season but now we are looking for a FourX jump,” he clarifies.” We cannot undersell Kabaddi rather we should not undersell Kabaddi. It is the number 2 sport in the country in terms of viewership…above football so it cannot be the number 4 sport in terms of advertising. It is watched by urban as much it is watched by rural so why do we under sell it?”

     

    He believes a lot more can be achieved if advertisers and agencies correct their perceptions about kabaddi.  Says he with a lot of passion in his voice:  “My only problem is certain advertisers who are in complete la la land.. the complete dinosaurs in my opinion. They still ask questions like:  are urban people watching it? Lets do a research and see who is watching it. And my answer to them is that we will find urban is as much into it kabaddi as rural is. So these perceptions are amateurish.”  

     

    Indeed this is a man who has made it a business to build enterprises and then finding customers who buy into them. And making a fat packet in the process for himself. Not once but several times over. The last one was when he got a very stringent media and entertainment major, the mouse house, Disney to buy out his interests in UTV. Kabaddi is definitely going to be a lot easier. 

  • Zee Cinema to telecast WWE in Hindi

    Zee Cinema to telecast WWE in Hindi

    MUMBAI: Come 13 September and the action of World Wrestling Entertainment (WWE) will expand its viewership platform. The sport, which is currently broadcast on Ten Sports, will also be aired on Hindi movie channel Zee Cinema. The channel will telecast WWE in Hindi from 7 – 9 pm.

     

    WWE is one of the top rated shows in the sports genre, according to the Broadcast Audience Research Council (BARC) India report. “Zee Cinema wanted to do something new and thus decided to air WWE on the channel,” said a source close to the development.

     

    Zee Cinema, which as per the BARC India week 33 ratings data, is at the second position in the movie channel space, is looking at getting new audience on to the channel by airing WWE.

     

    “Action entertainment is the preferred genre on the channel and thus the decision to telecast WWE, which will be a fresh breather from the movies,” added the source.

     

    According to the channel, WWE is still a niche property, which is broadcast on sports channels and is mostly in English. “We are hoping to make it a more mass sport and thus bringing it on Hindi movie channel and with Hindi commentary,” informed the source.

     

    Christened Action Mania, the sport will be aired everyday for the first two weeks, starting 13 September. “After two weeks, the show will be aired once a week. It is a strategic decision taken by the conglomerate to take WWE to a new set of audience,” said another source from the sports channel.     

     

    Airing popular sport properties on Hindi movie channels by networks is not new. Be it the Indian Premiere League (IPL) on Sony Max, or Pro Kabaddi League (PKL) on Star Gold, Hindi movie channels have gained traction for  sport properties. Whether airing WWE will take Zee Cinema from the current number two position to the numero uno remains to be seen.

  • U Mumba lifts PKL 2 trophy; Star India’s estimated earnings pegged at Rs 55 cr

    U Mumba lifts PKL 2 trophy; Star India’s estimated earnings pegged at Rs 55 cr

    MUMBAI: With Ronnie Scewvala’s U Mumba lifting the Pro Kabaddi League season 2 trophy, the second edition of the sport has come to an end. U Mumba won the final against Bengaluru Bulls with six points, after a nail biting match. While the winning team is celebrating, the other happy party is its official broadcaster Star India, which seems to have made moolah aplenty from the property. 

     

    Sources close to the development gave Indiantelevision.com an assessment that the broadcaster succeeded to generate revenue to the tune of Rs 55 crore.    

     

    While the native sport always had an enormous fan following in the country, what it lacked was proper packaging. When packaged in an alluring manner, the sport garnered a cumulative reach of 435 million in its debut season. In terms of viewership too, the sport managed to surprise many as it garnered annual viewership of 128 GVTs.  

     

    This year, the ratings have propelled and after 49 matches, the tourney garnered 1.25 TVRs compared to 0.81 TVRs of 2014. The average reach has also inclined from 3.74 per cent to 4.43 per cent. The time spent has gone up in the 2015 edition to 20.41 minutes compared to 16.88 minutes as per TAM Sports analysis. 

     

    While Star retained the title sponsorship with Star Sports, the broadcaster successfully roped in eight associate sponsors on board viz. TVS, VIP Frenzie, Bajaj Electricals, Thums Up, State Bank Of India, Flipkart, Government of India Department of Atomic Energy (DAE) and Mahindra Jeeto. On the other hand, while Radio Mirchi associated with Pro Kabaddi as radio partners, Britannia became the referee partner.

     

  • Pro Kabaddi League’s viewership registers significant incline

    Pro Kabaddi League’s viewership registers significant incline

    MUMBAI: The most talked about non-cricket sport in India, Kabaddi has been gaining more prominence. According to TAM Sports analysis, after 37 matches, Pro Kabaddi League’s (PKL) viewership has seen a significant incline.

    In terms of TVR, while the tournament in its debut season (2014) garnered 0.73 per cent after 37 matches, the number has gone up to 1.23 per cent in 2015.

    The incline was also observed in average reach analysis as the tourney has secured 4.39 per cent until now in 2015, while at the same stage in 2014, it managed a reach of 3.86 per cent.

    The time spend (TSV) has also gone up. While in 2015, the time spend per viewer registered so far is 20.02 minutes, in 2014 it was 16.33 minutes at the same stage.

    Last year the tournament was aired on Star Sports 1, 2, 3 & 4 and Star Gold, while this year Star India stretched the coverage to various regions with regional channel in order to enhance its reach. Maa TV, Plus Suvarna and Star Pravah were added to the list of channels showcasing PKL action.

  • Ronnie Screwvala to launch mobile games, animation series & movie on Pro Kabbadi League

    Ronnie Screwvala to launch mobile games, animation series & movie on Pro Kabbadi League

    MUMBAI: 10 Kabaddi, 9 Kabaddi will soon reach mobile screens as serial entrepreneur Ronnie Screwvala invests in setting up a mobile game with all the Pro Kabaddi League (PKL) franchises and players in it. 

     

    What’s more, Screwvala also envisions television and animation series alongside a movie around PKL. Screwvala, who is also the owner of PKL’s UMumba franchise, is of the opinion that such innovations around the traditional sport will help in making it more aspirational.  

     

    Kabaddi saw a decent beginning in its first year, attracting over 435 million television viewers, which prompted Screwvala to plan an array of properties around the sport. What’s more, the second season of Pro Kabaddi League picked up not only in terms of sponsorships, but also viewership. According to the TAM Sports analysis, PKL season 2 has seen a 60 per cent growth in viewership as compared to the last season for the first 26 matches. “It is a popular sport. Now, we want to make it into an aspirational one, give it some stature,” Screwvala was quoted as saying in an ET report. 

     

    Not only Screwvala, the sport’s success also garnered appreciation from veteran media mogul Subhash Chandra. “Star Sports is doing a great job and is packaging the sport well. It is sports like these, which will make India a sporting nation and not just a cricket nation,” he had said recently.

     

    The mobile game around PKL being built for all platforms will seek to initially build brands out of some recognisable UMumba players such as Anup Kumar and Shabeer Bapu. Later, as the game grows, Screwvala plans to integrate other teams as well. His team at USports has been fielding queries from people to make a live action television series and an animation series around Kabaddi. For the animation series, Screwvala is looking at a feel-good kind of underdog story of a young kid, where characters from the UMumba team will guide the protagonist. “Eventually, we want to create characters. The idea is that kids should play this in school, make it more of an aspirational sport,” Screwvala said. 

     

    The ET report further suggests that in the live action TV series, the story is likely to focus on three friends who come from three different states and how their lives intertwine, through kabaddi. “Our experience also teaches us that if you want a game to arrive, you want to have a big screen attachment to it. So, therefore, a movie is also being planned,” he said, pointing out that scriptwriters are right now understanding the back story of kabaddi players. 

  • “Sports like Pro Kabaddi League will make India a sports nation:” Dr Subhash Chandra

    “Sports like Pro Kabaddi League will make India a sports nation:” Dr Subhash Chandra

    MUMBAI: Star Sports’ Pro Kabaddi League has found many admirers and amongst them is none other than Essel Group chairman Dr Subhash Chandra.

     

    Speaking about Pro Kabaddi League, Chandra said, “Star Sports is doing a great job and is packaging the sport well. It is sports like these, which will make India a sporting nation and not just a cricket nation.”

     

    When asked if Essel Group was mulling at starting something in the league, he said, “I am sure my sports team would be looking at it.”

     

    The second season of Pro Kabaddi League has picked up, not only in terms of sponsorships, but also viewership. According to the TAM Sports analysis, the sport has seen a 60 per cent growth in viewership as compared to the last season for the first 26 matches.

     

    The League, for the first 26 matches, has bagged 1.24 TVR as compared to 0.77 TVR in the last season. What’s more, Pro Kabaddi League season 2 has seen a 13 per cent growth in its average reach as well. This year it registered 4.45 per cent average reach as compared to 3.92 per cent in the last season.

     

    The Time Spent per Viewer (TSV) has gone up from 15.77 in season 1 to 19.91 in season 2.

     

    It can be noted that while in season one Pro Kabaddi League was being telecast on Star Sports 1, Star Sports 4, Star Gold, Star Sports 3 and Star Sports 2, in the second season, it is being aired on Star Gold, Star Sports 3, Star Sports HD2, Star Sports HD3, Maa Movies, Star Sports 2, Plus Suvarna and Star Pravah, thus giving it a larger reach and visibility.

  • Pro Kabaddi League’s Telugu Titans rope in TVS Tyres as associate sponsor

    Pro Kabaddi League’s Telugu Titans rope in TVS Tyres as associate sponsor

    MUMBAI: In a bid to build the brand in the after-market segment, TVS Tyres has come on board as the official associate sponsor for Star Sports Pro Kabaddi League’s Telugu Titans.

     

    The move also comes in the wake of introducing a new brand identity at the beginning of this year.

     

    With Pro Kabaddi League being the second most watched sport show last year, TVS Tyres’ aim is not only to popularize the sport through this partnership, but to also utilise this platform to enhance the brand’s visibility across Andhra Pradesh and Telangana.

     

    The brand will be supporting the team throughout all the matches, which will go on till 23 August. The matches in Hyderabad are being played from 4 – 7 August. 

     

    TVS Srichakra director P Vijayaraghavan said, “With the new mantra of our brand ‘Nayi Soch Nayi Pechaan,’ this initiative is taken to support a traditional sport, which is now being presented with a lot of freshness and indeed has tremendous prospect and possibility to become one of the most popular games.”

     

    As a part of this partnership, the company has adopted various marketing strategies to promote the brand. To gain prominence, TVS Tyres’ logo is used in the Telugu Titans official website, in-stadia digital display and perimeter boards and BTL activations. The jerseys and shorts of players will also sport the TVS Tyres logo. Special autographed merchandise and mementos by players as well as VIP match tickets are being given to after-market dealers to endorse the brand as well as the sport.

     

    To further strengthen and re-enforce the new brand identity amongst  customers and dealers, the brand carried out on-ground activations that included a meet and greet session with the players as part of the consumer campaigns and promotional events. The products of the brand are displayed at the team’s home stadium in Hyderabad along with distribution of co-branded cheering merchandise and freebies.

  • Smart packaging, relevant marketing among key factors behind Pro Kabaddi League’s success

    Smart packaging, relevant marketing among key factors behind Pro Kabaddi League’s success

    MUMBAI: A game that was played in the inert Indian villages amidst mud and puddle garnered reach beyond expectations when telecast on television because of the way it was packaged. Quality non-reflecting mats replaced mud and puddle as the outdoor game was hosted in premier indoor stadiums and in turn offered fans a great viewing experience courtesy the Pro Kabbadi League (PKL), which was launched last year.

     

    Kabaddi being a native sports always had space in the heart of people and hence when clubbed with quality packaging succeeded to make an impact instantaneously in viewers’ mind. Moreover, the organizers in association with federations twisted and turned the rules of the sport to rope in more opportunities of monetization.

     

    To add to that, the who’s who of Bollywood were spotted cheering for their favourite team during Kabaddi matches in the first edition, which also drove their fan base into the sport. In the second edition, every game will start with a renowned dignitary singing the national anthem, the tournament kick started with Amitabh Bachchan singing Jana Gana Mana.

     

    To cut a long story short, no stones have been left unturned to popularize and market the game to the viewers.

     

    After detailed analysis, GroupM’s specialist business wing – GroupM ESP (Entertainment and Sports Partnerships) in association with IIM Ahmedabad released the key factors, which orchestrated the success story of Star Sports’ Pro Kabaddi League. In its debut year, PKL garnered a cumulative reach of 435 million. What’s more, in its second season, which is currently underway, Star and Mashal Sports expect it to be bigger and better.

     

    Fan Acceptability of League: Kabaddi as a sport didn’t enjoy the huge native fan base to start with but a high decibel marketing campaign ensured relevance and the media push built hype to ensure viewer interest. Top notch game quality, best-in-the world talent pool & crisp program packaging made the league ‘likable’ amongst the audience, finds the research.

     

    Choice of Sports: Choosing Kabaddi as the sport was a bold decision to start with considering player popularity being low in the country. But at the same time, Indian Kabaddi contingent has been immensely successful at the global stage over the years ensuring early survival of the league.

     

    Game Format & Scheduling: Instead of aping the successful home and away format of the Indian Premier League (IPL), PKL went for a caravan format keeping the league short and crisp ensuring the league getting over before the initial hype died down.

     

    Players: Being an indigenous sport, although the players aren’t well known names amongst the audience; the quality of talent pool participating in PKL has been the best in the world.

     

    Design of The League: In the first season, the right holders managed to keep the expenses from central as well as team perspective under check beautifully making the league commercially viable and ensuring deep pockets for the team to spend on players. This in turn ensured level playing field between the eight teams making the league competitive right till the end and exhilarating for the audience.

     

    Team Location: City based franchise enabled association with fans of that particular region resulting in captive fan base.

     

    Fan Experience:

     

    .   Kabaddi as a sport doesn’t demand major infrastructure making it easy to host the matches in equipped auditoriums/multipurpose stadiums. This makes the on-ground fan experience memorable.

    .   Seek on-air production and packaging with informative commentary in regional languages helps build greater audience connect.  

    .   Live streaming on Hotstar will add to the on the go audience.

     

    League Federation Relationship: Pro Kabaddi League is a privately owned league, which is controlled and run by the league and the franchise owners bringing in accountability and professionalism. However, the league is sanctioned by international and national sports federation allowing the best talent in the world to participate.

     

    Celebrity Involvement:  High profile celebrity owners ensuring stickiness to the sport. Celebrity owners also cashed in on their existing audience to build initial loyalty. Broadcaster capitalized on marquee sports properties by introducing Salman Khan and continuously associating with him and his movie Bajraangi Bhaijaan to build the buzz. Additionally, getting icons like Amitabh Bachchan to voice “Le Panga” anthem added to the celebrity fervor.

     

    GroupM ESP sports and live events national director Vinit Karnik said, “Pro-Kabaddi League is a fine example of how a nation that is largely cricket-hungry can have its fair share of adulation, growth and success in a short span of time. It is heartening and optimistic for the business and growth of a sporting economy like ours. As a front-runner in the business of sports, ESP through this initiative listed all possible parameters that has made Pro-Kabaddi League a success. These findings are backed by the IIM-A and GroupM ESP report, a comprehensive paper that examines identifying factors for successful sporting leagues.”