Tag: Rajendra Khare

  • SureWaves wins award for excellence in emerging technologies

    SureWaves wins award for excellence in emerging technologies

    MUMBAIMedia convergence venture SureWaves MediaTech has won the award for Excellence in Emerging Technologies for the year 2015. At the ceremony held in Mumbai recently, the award was conferred to SureWaves by Indian Merchant Chambers.

     

    The award was constituted to recognize and reward the accomplishments of the IT industry across a varied spectrum. 

     

    SureWaves chairman and managing director Rajendra Khare said, “We are extremely honored to receive this award. We thank IMC, Mr. Lalit Kanodia – chairman, IMC IT Committee and the esteemed jury for bestowing us with the ‘Excellence in Emerging Technologies Award’. This award is a validation of the groundbreaking technology and sheer strength and value of the SureWaves Spot TV Network for advertisers. It will motivate us to continue striving for bringing in more innovation to further transform and revolutionize the television advertising in India.”

     

    The award winners were selected by a jury, which included several former chairpersons of NASSCOM. The jury comprised Mastek executive director Ashank Desai, Hexaware Technologies chairman Atul Nishar, Padma Bhushan and TCS founder F. C. Kohli, Zensar Technologies VC & CEO Ganesh Natarajan.

  • SureWaves & Hansa Research to audit Spot TV Network

    SureWaves & Hansa Research to audit Spot TV Network

    KOLKATA: SureWaves MediaTech, a Bengaluru-based digital media-technology company, has joined hands with Hansa Research, to carry out third party audit and validation of the entire SureWaves Spot TV Network.

     

    SureWaves MediaTech aggregates television audiences on diverse and fragmented cable and satellite channels in the country.

     

    The association of Hansa Research with SureWaves Spot TV Network, brings an additional seal of accountability to a revolutionary, new age media platform, fulfilling a long felt industry need and is likely to cause a major shift in media buying on television. 

     

    New age technology led media platforms are fast emerging as the biggest trend in the media industry. Advertisers are tapping into the vast potential these mediums offer in terms of reach and diversity of audiences.

     

    SureWaves assists brands to reach out to a vast, diverse and hitherto untapped audience in a cost efficient manner with its flagship solution – SureWaves Spot TV Network. With the help of its patented technology, SureWaves has aggregated more than 450 television channels on its digital platform offering around 90 million households across 29 states in India.

     

    “The third party audit and validation of the SureWaves Spot TV Network by Hansa Research will cover random physical verification of technology deployment at channel studios and online audit and validation of SureWaves ADEX Logs with LIVE monitoring of channels. To further increase the trust and confidence levels we felt that opening of the technology behind SureWaves Spot TV Network to third party audit and validation by a reputed research agency like Hansa is a logical step forward,” said SureWaves chairman and managing director Rajendra Kumar Khare.

  • SureWaves Media to expand its operations in south Asian countries

    SureWaves Media to expand its operations in south Asian countries

    KOLKATA:  SureWaves Media Tech, a Bengaluru based digital media-technology company, is looking beyond the Indian shores. The company is planning to expand its presence and operations in the south Asian countries.

    “We are extending the frontiers for growth. Since, we have covered the length and breadth of India, we are setting out to expand our scope and look for additional geographies. Nepal and Sri Lanka are on the radar now,” said SureWaves founder Rajendra Khare exclusively to Indiantelevision.com.

    According to Khare, there are advertisers in India that are looking at consumers in these countries.  And so, through a single gateway, SureWaves is now extending its scope and reach in order to enable the advertisers in these markets with the ease of technology. “We are also looking for additional strategic partners,” added Khare.

    The services will be fully functional in the next quarter. “Many product companies, auto sector, FMCG and e-commerce players have shown a strong interest,” he informed.
    Both Sri Lanka and Nepal markets are not yet digitised and so have a combination of terrestrial, cable and satellite channels. SureWaves is in the process of tying up with around 12-15 top media properties in Sri Lanka and another six to eight media channels in Nepal.

    “Bangladesh is also important for us,” he hinted.  As for Pakistan, Khare said that it would depend on the relationship between India and Pakistan.

    Currently, the company, through its internal team in the south Asian countries, is working on the initial research. “The geography and culture in the south Asian markets is not very different from that of India,” he said.

    SureWaves provides real-time data monitoring of ads, which for the first time, has made cable TV advertising accountable.

    The company, which has penetrated over 100 different markets across India by tying up with close to 250 local channels, plans to approach more satellite channels to extend its solution in the country.

    At present around 150 brands including HUL, Wipro, Dabur, Parle, Aircel, Vodafone, Nestle and Honda among others are using SureWaves services in India. Of these, a few have already shown interest to use the services in the neighbouring countries as well. “We are also targeting national advertisers who want to reach all the markets,” he concluded.

  • IDOS 2014: SureWaves all set for the big digitised wave

    IDOS 2014: SureWaves all set for the big digitised wave

    GOA: Localisation is the new mantra, which businesses across the world are adopting to survive the highly competitive market scenario. Who would have thought of a paneer burger from the house of KFC?

     

    Taking a cue from that, national advertisers are increasing their spending on local cable television channels as it garners high viewership due to the locally relevant content it airs. The aim is simple: to target consumers in specific geographic areas.

     

    SureWaves MediaTech CMD Rajendra Khare during a fireside chat with Indiantelevision.com founder, CEO and editor in chief Anil Wanvari at IDOS 2014 spoke on ‘New drivers of monetisation for cable TV’.

     

    Cable reaches the remotest of hinterland and the national advertisers are looking for growth from these markets. “SureWaves is already on its way to becoming a game changer as far as geo-targeted advertising in the country is concerned,” he said.

     

    “The local content aired by the MSOs and the LCOs or the niche satellite channels has a great connect with the local audience. Not only in India but world over, people care more about what’s happening in their locality rather than what’s brewing at the national and global level,” he added.

     

    SureWaves MediaTech, a Bangalore-based digital media-technology company, offers the SureWaves Media Grid, an integrated advertisement aggregation, content delivery, network management, media planning and reporting platform. SureWaves provides real-time data monitoring of ads, which has, for the first time, made cable TV advertising accountable.

     

    Elaborating more about the company Khare said, “We build cloud based technology. We have our own devices, which we install at the studios of our channels partners.” The company positions a propriety device which is connected to the grid and the TV channels.

     

    It is learnt that the company has partnered with many channels, irrespective of the people watching those channels. “Here the national advertiser, who wants a large audience, benefits the most as the business house gets combined viewership of end number of channels together,” he said.

     

    As for the local channels, they are happy with the new advertising revenue coming in from the big players. The local channels till all these years never got access to the advertisement revenue from the national advertisers. So that problem is now getting solved. “We are solving the problems of the parties. Advertisers are experimenting with our platform,” he said.

     

    “This is the robust monetisation model that channel partners sign with us. We are accountable and instantly can see whether the advertisements are aired or not,” he highlighted.

     

    Stating the TAM report, Khare said that nationally these channels command around 4.5 per cent of the channels’ share and nationally it is top five channels. “The combined viewership of local channels is very large. As a standalone, these channels don’t get the national advertisers’ revenue as the national advertisers contribute a big chunk to the national television advertising spent,” he said.

     

    With the digitisation process in full swing, the country is expected to see satellite channels increasing, and post digitisation, the solution provided by the company would be more sought after. “In the digitised era, more niche high definition content would be there,” he said.

     

    Talking about the challenges, he agreed that it is problematic as some local broadcasters’ air pirated content. However, he further added that it is easier to screen content.

     

    He concluded by saying that the company is working on a solution to create content for the broadcasters, who are its partner.

  • Adversioning advertising gains currency

    Adversioning advertising gains currency

    MUMBAI: A national jewellery brand had to reach out to the diverse markets in south India. It needed a solution that would allow it to simultaneously beam on a national television channel different creatives for the diverse markets in the region, each featuring a regional celebrity.

     

    Thanks to technology solutions, the jewellery company could get its different creatives beamed to relevant demographics at the same time on the same channel.

     

    The concept is called adversioning or geo-targeted advertising in the media world.

     

    Technology for such simultaneous telecast of different advertisements on the same channel has been available for a few years now but advertisers have begun to use it on a significant scale only recently.

     

    Advertisers are increasingly making use of geo-targeting. These include fast moving consumer goods major Hindustan Unilever.

     

    The geo-targeted advertisements in value terms now account for about 20 per cent of total ads on television. In the US, the proportion of such ads is almost 40 per cent. According to GroupM, total advertising spend on television in 2013 was Rs 16,860 crore.

     

    But the potential for geo-targeted ads in India is seen to be much, much higher considering the extent of diversity in the country, says SureWaves founder Rajendra Khare. SureWaves is a technology solution provider for geo-targeted advertising and had provided its service to the national jewellery brand but decline to disclose the name of the brand.

     

    Khare says it makes sense for any advertiser to opt for geo-targeted advertising to not only break the language barrier but also to target differently the different the socio-cultural groups across the country with a sharp and direct emotional connect.

     

    So, the next time when you are on a trip to Chennai, don’t be surprised if you come across an ad by Fastrack Cabs on a national channel.

     

    The Indian market is a complicated one. From regional differences to numerous brands, one needs to stand out in a clutter to catch the attention of as many consumers as possible.

     

    Apart from SureWaves, there is amagi Media Labs that offers advertisers and broadcasters solutions for geo-targeted advertising.

     

    Geo-targeting or adversioning is done with the help of a barcode system and cloud-based infrastructure on which TVCs are stored. The technologies solutions then enable playing of different ads in different regions on the same air-time band on a particular channel.

     

    There’s a possibility of making available different solutions to meet different needs. For instance, Carat Media which handles baby products maker Libero’s account, wanted to reach out to non-Marathi female audience in Maharashtra. Amagi’s technology enabled Libero to use channels with a national footprint for the launch campaign of Libero in a specific market like Maharashtra.

     

    Amagi which had to answer a lot of questions when it started out in 2008 feels that those doubts have now been put to rest.

     

    “Today, largest national players like HUL, GSK too want to follow a regional plan and have different communication depending on the region,” says Amagi’s co-founder KA Srinivasan.

     

    Geo-targeting or adverisioning implies customised broadcast of creative communication to different markets in the same ad slot. In other words, it means splitting up of the national beam of a broadcaster into local beams akin to what national newspapers do for their local editions.

     

    ‘How can we sell a standardised product to local and different consumers?’ has been a dilemma for most marketers. However, with the adversioning concept, things are supposed to change.

     

    According to GroupM Trading (CTG) south Asia Managing Partner Prasanth Kumar, who is a big votary of adversioning, says, “clients can benefit in multiple ways as spill-over reduces, national channels can be used to run local promotions, the same 30 second slot can be used for multiple creatives (different brands in different markets, different language versions in specific markets). Majority of the clients who have used this availability are local clients.”

     

    There might be companies which don’t feel the need to make an ad locally oriented, but there are a few which opt to geo-target ads. One of the main reasons a brand may geo-target ads is because it only offers services/products within specific areas. There is a huge and compelling demographic component involved with geography that can influence click-through-rate (CTR) and conversion rates as well.

     

    Recalling how cable operators’ years ago would show local advertisements, Havas Media India managing director Mohit Joshi says if we take a look at the southern market, one can see a lot of local players which isn’t the case in the northern part of the country. “The concept makes sense for local clients/marketers a lot as it gives them a chance to target their TG.”

     

    But will the local marketers be able to find their place and compete with national players? Answers Kumar, “Yes. Local advertisers form a large part of the 2,000 plus clients who have tried this concept. They see value in placing their ads on national channels as these channels were earlier much more difficult to afford and local players have specific market requirements.”

     

    On the same lines, Pipal Majik CEO CD Mitra highlights how brands too have been emphasizing on “localisation” and if adversioning helps them achieve it then many will opt for it.

     

    “For example, if a particular tea brand wants to sell its particular blends in certain regions then this is the perfect solution for them to advertise in a certain regional beam of a national channel.”

     

    Talking about the cost of geo-targeted ads, experts say creative production cost is just a small segment of the overall marketing budget a brand allocates.

     

    The credit for the growth of the format and news, movies and GEC channels experimenting with it goes to the fact that vernacular media has been growing at a much quicker pace than the national media, Kumar elaborates.

     

    “The reason for the growing importance of Class B and Class C towns for advertisers, the growing education levels, expansion of vernacular publications into new markets with categories like retail, real estate along with FMCG is fuelling the growth,” he adds.

     

    Khare adds that a marketer needs to utilize both national as well as regional channels to reach out to as many people as possible. “It is not national vs. regional, but how one can utilize both for its benefit. We have to also understand the importance of spot TV which is the most cost effective way for advertisers to market.”

     

    Technology plays an important part of the concept to become a part of life, soon. Joshi says, “If the technology is not there to support the concept then it will surely fall flat in its face. We as an industry will have to invest in it to see it grow and become an integral part of advertising soon.”

     

    Apart from this, industry professionals feel that pricing too plays an important role here. The competition between national and local players will vary and also depend on it. “Broadcasters in the end need money. If they get it from local players or national ones, it doesn’t matter. Hence, stakeholders have to come up with attractive pricing and strategies to make it real,” says Mitra when asked if broadcasters would opt for local marketers over national ones.

     

    Zee TV has been selling ad spots split into regional beams since late last year and has had a good experience with it. Zeel chief sales officer Ashish Sehgal says, “The concept has helped us  increase number of clients if we offer them a strategic plan which will help them reach out to their TG better.”

     

    He further says the sum of revenues from a divided ad spot has been higher than the revenue it would have got having sold it as one national beam.

     

    Sehgal says Zee TV has seen an increase in local marketers through geo-targeting. “In the past few months, around 25-30 SMEs have come to us to use the platform.”

     

    Bennett Coleman & Co president corporate development Sunil Lulla says adversionsing is very much a reality now with many brands and broadcasters using it.

     

    However, he says that a broadcaster has to be clear about this with the clients otherwise it can hurt some advertisers who pay for a national beam but sometimes local/regional beams could be sold to another client. “We (broadcasters) have to understand that there is a big (regional) market which can be tapped through this and it will benefit everyone.”

  • SureWaves raises Rs 35 crore in second round of funding

    SureWaves raises Rs 35 crore in second round of funding

    BANGALORE: SureWaves MediaTech (SureWaves) has announced that it has secured Rs 35 crore in a second round of funding that was led by Canaan Partners.

     

    It also saw participation from existing investors Accel Partners India and India Innovation Fund.

     

    SureWaves’ ground-breaking technology enables large scale aggregation of audiences across multiple television channels and offers a single window interface to large national advertisers to effectively reach out to mass audiences on a market by market basis. SureWaves claims that its Spot TV Network is one of the largest connected television networks of its kind anywhere in the world spanning across 28 states and seven union territories in India through partnerships with over 280 cable TV channels that reach more than 80 million households and 400 million viewers.

     

    SureWaves founder and CMD Rajendra Khare says, “Our vision is to leverage the power of media through use of technology for all-round and inclusive socio-economic growth. The funding will be used to invest in the growth of the company and support further innovation. The backing from such prestigious investors is a clear and strong sign that they believe in our vision and the market itself. ”

     

    Canaan Partners India partner Alok Mittal says, “SureWaves is revolutionising television advertising by infusing the smartness of digital media like internet and mobile into the mainstream medium of television. Canaan recognises the huge potential of SureWaves to become one of the foremost media company in television advertising and we are excited to be associated with them”.

     

    Accel Partners in India Partner Shekhar Kirani says, “SureWaves has built a completely disruptive technology that solves the challenges arising out of growing media fragmentation in television and we are excited to continue supporting SureWaves”.

     

    India Innovation Fund’s Rajesh Rai says, “We’ve been associated with SureWaves since 2011, since that time we’ve seen the business grow and evolve into a robust model and we wish them solid momentum in 2014”.

     

    SureWaves is headquartered in Bangalore with offices in Mumbai, Delhi and Kolkata.

  • SureWaves is one of the top 5 media options: Rajendra Khare

    SureWaves is one of the top 5 media options: Rajendra Khare

    BENGALURU:  The office of SureWaves CMD and founder Rajendra Khare has the word ‘connectivity’ splashed across its walls while that of his colleague and SureWaves co-founder Anant Kansal sports ‘diversity’ on its walls. According to Khare, the two words sum up what the pioneering media convergence company is all about. In an interaction with Tarachand Wanvari of indiantelevision.com, Khare talks about SureWaves’ journey so far and the road ahead. Excerpts…

    What role does SureWaves play? Tell us something about your team.

    SureWaves is a technology-driven media company that infuses the smartness of digital media like internet and mobile into the mainstream medium of television.

    A leading advertising medium for a vast number of advertisers, television accounts for 40% to 50% of overall ad spend in most parts of the world. With close to 800 satellite TV channels in India, the audience is fragmented and reaching them in a cost-effective manner is difficult. Distinct socio-cultural regions in India necessitate advertising be communicated in the right language and in a locally relevant context. Cable TV is a viable alternative to satellite channels in delivering highly targeted advertising and at lower costs. As reported by TAM, regional cable enjoys significantly higher viewership than most satellite channels. The challenge is to be able to aggregate the inventory across cable TV channels in India to provide a single window for advertisers to buy inventory and provide accountability.

    In one of the biggest technological initiatives in the Indian television industry, SureWaves has been working on nation-wide integration of cable TV advertising through the ‘SureWaves National Spot TV Network’. With over 250 cable TV channels run by key MSOs in different parts of the country now connected to SureWaves’ central grid, it offers instant access to the combined viewership of regional cable on a market-by-market basis. The SureWaves network is now positioned as one of the top five media options for national advertisers in all parts of the country.

    This has been made possible only through the sustained passion and efforts of the SureWaves team – a rare combination of top talent in technology, media, marketing, research and analytics. SureWaves co-founders Anant Kansal and Tapan Datta bring significant experience in technology-based operations and marketing communication. Chief Operating Officer Mandar Patwardhan is a media veteran who has served long innings in mainstream television and radio. Our business leadership team is constituted by people who’ve had stints in organisations like Star, ESPN, Zee, NDTV, Times, Radio Mirchi, Radio City, Group M and Reckitt Benckiser.

    Please describe the technology deployed by SureWaves.

    At the heart of our technology is the ‘SureWaves Media Grid’, a cloud-hosted scalable platform which allows instant access to multiple TV channels, filters them basis geography and genre, checks on available inventory, and schedules commercials. The grid also provides telecast reports in near-real time for each spot across all channels with time stamps.

    The ‘SureWaves Media Grid’ works in conjunction with edge devices called ‘SureWaves MediaStation’, which reside in the respective television channel studios or cable-head ends, and perform seamless insertion of ads during scheduled commercial breaks. Technology allows not only the capability of centralized delivery, scheduling and monitoring of advertisements but also integrates with industry standard tools to enable effective campaign evaluations to seamlessly integrate with the clients’ media planning process.

    In effect, SureWaves technology is a solution for large scale media fragmentation, whereby people can watch what they like through the growing number of niche and regional channels of their choice and yet, it is possible for advertisers to reach out to people, irrespective of what they are watching. Technology makes it possible to buy inventory on a market-by-market basis, achieving a sharp targeting capability on television for greater efficiency and effectiveness. SureWaves has been a pioneer in the field and has filed several national and international patents for its innovative technology.

    You tinker only with the cable operators/MSOs’ own content, own channel, not the broadcasters’ content aired through the cable operators’/MSOs’ infrastructure?

    That’s right. We partner with MSOs, who run and own their channels and also own the channels’ commercial inventory. We do not tinker with broadcasters’ content, where the MSO is acting only as a last mile distributor of the content through their cable network. Some niche and regional satellite broadcasters have also joined the SureWaves network, and partnered us to benefit from the seamless access made available to their inventories to national advertisers by us.  

    What is your estimate of the market size?

    What SureWaves offers is comparable to the top four or five GECs in the country in terms of reach and viewership.  Top national advertisers have already tasted the benefits of our network and are making it a part of their regular media plans. In addition to the huge viewership and reach, SureWaves also offers sharp targeting capability on a market-by-market basis. International trends show that marketers and advertisers gravitate towards media, which enables superior targeting. In bigger media markets like the US, where choice of market-wise targeting on television has been available to national advertisers through Spot TV, Spot TV commands nearly 20% of the overall television ad spend on account of national advertisers.

    What kind of infrastructure do you have in place, and in which regions of India?

    The ‘SureWaves Media Grid’ is a cloud-based infrastructure which works in conjunction with Media Stations that are deployed in the studios of each of the channels who are part of the SureWaves network. We now cover all 28 states and union territories of India and deliver upwards of 80% regional cable viewership in all markets. 

    So you depend on TAM or maybe BARC, once the data is in place. Don’t you think that the sample size is too small, particularly in the case of regional cable, to present the true broader picture?

    Industry has already taken cognizance of the sample size being small for a large country like India, and concerted efforts are being made to increase it. Since the viewership measurement is presently limited to metros and 160-170 large towns, a big majority of the television-viewing population in India which resides in the 7000+ small towns and in rural India is not covered. Cable TV channels have a relatively stronger hold in these areas and the numbers for regional cable would begin to look even better as and when these towns begin to get included in measurements. In the coming years, tier-2/tier-3 and LC1 towns will be seen as real growth engines and advertisers are already beginning to factor the power of regional cable despite the gaps in formal measurement in these markets.

    Since you have a Broadcom background, don’t you think that a reverse signal will take care of a number of problems? Is a reverse signal possible, given the infrastructure at the last mile? What kind of changes will have to be made at the MSO end? Will it be cost-effective for all players, viewers and the current ecosystem?

    Reverse signal can help to an extent but it also needs to be combined with demographic data, which is an important part of the people meter-based approach to viewership measurement. There are new technologies that can be applied for recognition of television viewers. However, standard STBs serve a different purpose and are not designed to gather and transmit back the measurement data through reverse signal. Further, reverse signal data would also need to be further collated from the MSO head-ends to the measurement agencies, which may not be trivial. It is a good problem to solve but industry is in a comfort zone and there has been no real momentum in using the reverse signal for audience measurement by leading measurement agencies. A combination of reverse signal and secondary research data is perhaps an option.