Tag: Rajesh Kejriwal

  • Star India is one of the very few to get its design right: Kyoorius’ Rajesh Kejriwal

    Star India is one of the very few to get its design right: Kyoorius’ Rajesh Kejriwal

    At a time when content and disruption are mentioned in the same breath in every digitally charged summit, design often takes a backseat. It’s an open secret that several marketers, be they traditional or digital, neglect design. In fact, a couple of years ago the understanding of the subject or its importance in driving brands was practically not there.  Very little was done in the country to drive conversations around design and innovation.

    Things would have remained the same, were it not for Kyoorius, a one stop place that connects designers, brands, creatives and every stakeholder in between. Kyoorius founder and CEO Rajesh Kejriwal welcomed the change that his endeavour brought to the industry. Its flagship awards show, Kyoorius Creative Awards and design and innovation conference Kyoorius Designyatra have set benchmarks year after year. Now the Kyoorius Creative Awards is in its 3rd edition and has the likes of R. Balki, Kartik Sharma, and Fergus O’Hare on board as jury members, while Kyoorius Designyatra celebrated ten years during its last edition. Kyoorius has also expanded with a marketing and communication division with MELT, where it focuses on emerging technology and digital marketing.

    In a candid chat with indiantelevision.com’s Papri Das, Rajesh Kejriwal opens up on the state of design in the industry, what to expect from Kyoorius Creative Awards and MELT 2016 and how most of the media brands haven’t cracked the design code.

    Excerpts:

    Is there anything new that we can expect at MELT 2016?

    This year at MELT we will have 14 halls with parallel sessions. The content itself is massive compared to last year with almost 60 speakers on board. We don’t like to emulate the whole ‘panel’ system as that gives the audience an information overload with no real crux.

    We have reached out to GroupM, SAP, Kinetic and Happy Finish who we expected to participate in this year’s MELT in Delhi. Now that we have postponed MELT and we are likely to hold it in August, we are actually looking at two expo areas. One would be heavy on new  technology that might interest marketers such as Gear from Samsung etc., and the other would have the GroupMs’ and Genesis, etc., of the industry.

    Why was MELT 2016 postponed?

    In every event we do, we ensure that the content we put out is very strong. I have to hand it to the curation team that felt the content and line-up for MELT, which was scheduled earlier this year, didn’t match up to standards, and therefore we rescheduled it.

    What have been the game changers in the design and creative industry?

    Digital was no doubt the biggest game changer. From the Indian perspective, in the last five years, the major change has been the acceptance of design by corporate India as a strategic tool, not an aesthetic one.  It is not looked at with a fresh perspective by business leaders now. Consider this as an immense change in the mindset of people. This has led to designers being treated with a lot more respect and seriousness. Because it is only when you have good clients with big budgets can you work wonders for them. If you are paid peanuts there is only so much you can do.

    According to you, which brand in India has made the best use of design in recent times?

    In the FMCG sector, I would say Paperboat is a success story when it comes to brilliant use of design. Right from the material it uses for packaging, its layout and how it is branded, Paperbaot has paid attention to detail, not just in terms of looks, but what that look conveys to its consumers. I am glad to see a newcomer in the field understanding and using design creatively. Fastrack from Titan has always stayed ahead of the design curve. It has nailed it down perfectly well.

    Royal Enfield India is currently using design very strategically. Flipkart and Myntra too have done a good job. But these are all what I call the new Indian businesses.

    What about the media brands?

    When it comes to media and broadcaster channels, I feel all of them really need to redo their designs except for Star India. If you look at their packaging logo and interface from a visual perspective, Star has got it right. All the other broadcasters do not understand how important a cohesive language branding identity is. Design defines the DNA of a channel, and its identity. It surprises me that they don’t understand its importance, because some of these networks have global reach. One would expect them to see how international media use their design.

    If you look at the packaging, and everything, it doesn’t reflect the brand identity of the channels. If one were to take away all text and show the channel to us, I can tell which one Star is, but any other brand would be a hard guess, because the visual language is missing. It is sad because that is what binds the consumers to the brand. Being in a mass consumer industry, broadcasters should get their design right.

    There is a tendency amongst some media organisations to rebrand themselves, and while they are at it, they change it in parts and pieces. I would hear from them that they have changed their show packaging without changing their identity branding. I think that is the wrong way to go about it. Design can’t be done in bits and pieces.

    What according to you is going wrong with the design industry in India?

    Where most designs go wrong is when the company or CEO decides what design suits the company. Design isn’t an opinion, it’s a solution. The right design isn’t as per the CEO’s fancy, but as per the consumer needs.

    Let me tell you the difference between the old India and new India. For old India designers, you would go to them as a client and ask for a logo. They would show you a logo and tell you it’s the best for you as it was ‘fresh’. Has any client in the world has asked for a stale logo? It clearly means the designers created a good looking logo, and told a story to fit the logo with the company, whereas a good designer will find that story before designing the logo. A good designer will figure out the strategy, the positioning, the brand identity, the target group and manifest that into a design. New India does it the latter way. But there is still a lot of India stuck to the old ways.

    You initially were from the paper and printing industry. What made you take interest in the design and creative field?

    Predominantly we were paper merchants who would purchase paper manufactured in other markets, bring it to India, brand it and sell it here. One of the ways to fuel these purchases was to influence the decision makers, i. e., the creatives and designers. Designyatra was first thought of to reach out to our clients and start a design revolution in India.

    To fuel this design movement, we had to expose the industry prevalent in India to what was happening globally, and make them feel proud of being designers. To do away with the bureaucracy involved in the entire system, I decided to go with the non-profit format.  Suddenly from being a vendor to the industry I was their friend, so Designyatra and Kyoorius definitely helped my paper business.

    From being a promotional method to becoming the actual business; tell us how did Kyoorius evolve?

    It happened soon after the paper industry slid downhill, though it didn’t happen overnight. Gradually the entire set up changed. While being a business man it wasn’t too difficult for me, it was a difficult transition for Kyoorius. Earlier it acted as promotion for my paper business. Now when the model changed, Kyoorius had to be sustainable or profitable.

    When it really came down to making a difference in the industry, Kyoorius actually had to be profitable, not run up losses. It had to be actually profitable and use that profit to make a positive difference in the industry. So that transition from not caring whether it made money or not to making Kyoorius sustainable was the real challenge.

    How did you manage this transition?

    Prior to this realisation we didn’t have sponsors. When we decided to make it sustainable, one of the obvious means for any conference to be functional is to have a sponsor. So we looked for one. This wasn’t easy because no one believed in the design industry in 2008 and 2009. In those days if you did something in the advertising sphere, major broadcasters would easily come on board. But design was an offbeat road to travel on that only a small breed of people was interested in.

    We were lucky in 2011, we managed to get Zee to take cognizance of the fact that design was important for the industry and the country and that’s how it came on board. And since then, Zee has remained a partner for Kyoorius and signed on year after year. We also started looking at pricing the tickets right, something which we didn’t pay attention to earlier.

    Post transformation what is the current structure of Kyoorius now?

    Currently we have two sides to Kyoorius. One is the marketing and communication section where advertising, media and digital, social media and emerging technologies or MarTech is covered, and the second is the design and innovation side.

    These are the two broad headers under which we operate, mostly because if you have a capable team, you can’t have a single event a year to keep it occupied.

    What is your take on sponsorship for events?

    For the creative awards, we have Colors, HT, Rishtey Happy Finish and Kinetic. Apart from this we have supporting partners like Addikt.tv etc.

    If an award show has to sustainably exist for a long period of time, in an ideal scenario, 80 per cent of the revenue should come from the ticketed sales or entries in guest registration. In India it is actually the reverse. Sponsorship is between 70 to 80 per cent while the rest is maybe tickets or miscellaneous.

    In our case thankfully, we have struck a healthier ratio with 60 per cent from sponsorship and 40 per cent from ticket sales. I hope we can soon invert this ratio for Kyoorius Creative Awards, as we have done for Designyatra.

    MELT is a difficult IP when it comes to ticket sales as it will always be about partners. I can’t charge each person Rs 20,000, so the prices for MELT tickets will always be lower. Given the content we showcase in MELT, the budget can only be met through sponsors.

    Last year it was Rs 8,000, and this year we are planning to have another optional ticket without dinner included that will be sold for  much less. It’s for those newcomers in the industry or students who want to attend, but for whom budget is an issue.

  • Around 2000 delegates expected for Kyoorius’s Zee MELT 2016 marketing and advertising meet in August in Delhi

    Around 2000 delegates expected for Kyoorius’s Zee MELT 2016 marketing and advertising meet in August in Delhi

    MUMBAI: ZEE MELT 2016 – a festival bringing together advertising, digital, marketing, emerging technologies and the media & PR industry – is to be held in August in Delhi, bringing more than 2000 creative and marketing people to discuss, inspire and learn through sharing and interaction.

    The event had been planned earlier for March, but Kyoorius has now announced that it will be held on 26 and 27 August at Hotel Pullman & Novotel in the Aerocity in the capital.

    Aerocity is a commercial complex mainly housing hotels near Terminal Three of the Indira Gandhi International Airport.

    MELT is conceptualized by Kyoorius in partnership with Zee Entertainment, Hindustan Times, GroupM, and D&AD.

    Kyoorius founder and CEO Rajesh Kejriwal said, “We didn’t want to dilute the content that we had planned for our delegates at MELT. We are known for our focus on content and we want to ensure that we deliver on our promise. That is the reason why we rescheduled our event and went back to the speakers for fresh dates. We are now ready to engage and excite and hope to have a brilliant season of sharing and collaboration.”

    MELT 2016 will consist of a range of conferences, seminars, exhibitions, showcases, workshops and networking sessions for delegates from advertising, digital, media & PR, marketing and emerging technologies by industry experts, catering to all experience levels.

    The content for MELT 2016 is divided across four key pillars – Learning, Showcase and Gallery, Networking and Celebration. Each of these pillars will be driven by content partners and participating brands at MELT 2016.

     

  • Around 2000 delegates expected for Kyoorius’s Zee MELT 2016 marketing and advertising meet in August in Delhi

    Around 2000 delegates expected for Kyoorius’s Zee MELT 2016 marketing and advertising meet in August in Delhi

    MUMBAI: ZEE MELT 2016 – a festival bringing together advertising, digital, marketing, emerging technologies and the media & PR industry – is to be held in August in Delhi, bringing more than 2000 creative and marketing people to discuss, inspire and learn through sharing and interaction.

    The event had been planned earlier for March, but Kyoorius has now announced that it will be held on 26 and 27 August at Hotel Pullman & Novotel in the Aerocity in the capital.

    Aerocity is a commercial complex mainly housing hotels near Terminal Three of the Indira Gandhi International Airport.

    MELT is conceptualized by Kyoorius in partnership with Zee Entertainment, Hindustan Times, GroupM, and D&AD.

    Kyoorius founder and CEO Rajesh Kejriwal said, “We didn’t want to dilute the content that we had planned for our delegates at MELT. We are known for our focus on content and we want to ensure that we deliver on our promise. That is the reason why we rescheduled our event and went back to the speakers for fresh dates. We are now ready to engage and excite and hope to have a brilliant season of sharing and collaboration.”

    MELT 2016 will consist of a range of conferences, seminars, exhibitions, showcases, workshops and networking sessions for delegates from advertising, digital, media & PR, marketing and emerging technologies by industry experts, catering to all experience levels.

    The content for MELT 2016 is divided across four key pillars – Learning, Showcase and Gallery, Networking and Celebration. Each of these pillars will be driven by content partners and participating brands at MELT 2016.

     

  • Kyoorius introduces  Media Awards at Kyoorius Creative Awards 2016

    Kyoorius introduces Media Awards at Kyoorius Creative Awards 2016

    MUMBAI The Kyoorius Advertising and Digital Awards has been renamed Kyoorius Creative Awards with the addition of Media Awards this year. The awards will have three juries, Advertising, Media and Digital, in 2016.

    Kyoorius Creative Awards in association with D and AD will open for entries from Tuesday 15 March 2016 and close on 12 April 2016. Submission of physical entries for the awards will then remain open for a week. Kyoorius is calling for entries across a total of 15 categories and 135 sub-categories. The awards can be entered by any company or individual and is not restricted to agencies. Kyoorius will promote the awards across corporate, production houses and agencies – advertising, media, event, digital, etc

    Kyoorius, for the first time ever, introduced the concept of Open Jury – the jury sessions are open to the industry people to watch, learn, check and benefit from the discussions and display of entries. The Jury session will be held from 4 May to 7 May in Mumbai. In coordination with D&AD, the jury will be a mix of International (West and East) and local jurors. Like every year, the awards will uphold the zero-tolerance policy for scam ads.

    Kyoorius CEO and founder Rajesh Kejriwal said, ‘Awards are primarily to inspire and motivate the industry achievers and I am delighted to announce the inclusion of Media Awards and the renaming of the awards to Kyoorius Creative Awards. I am also happy with the response that we have always got for having a transparent open jury process and we shall continue to do so. I personally feel that many agencies have done brilliant work in the last year and hence I am expecting a lot more entries this year including participation of more agencies.’

    The Kyoorius Creative Awards show will be held on Friday June 3 2016 at The Dome, NSCI in Mumbai and as always will be a spectacular show of creativity. The awards show will be attended by well over 1,500 professionals including CEO’s, marketing directors, brand managers, creative and media gurus, etc.

    The Kyoorius Creative Awards are presented by Colors, powered by Hindustan Times and Rishtey and the other main partners include Happy Finish, Kinetic.

  • Kyoorius introduces  Media Awards at Kyoorius Creative Awards 2016

    Kyoorius introduces Media Awards at Kyoorius Creative Awards 2016

    MUMBAI The Kyoorius Advertising and Digital Awards has been renamed Kyoorius Creative Awards with the addition of Media Awards this year. The awards will have three juries, Advertising, Media and Digital, in 2016.

    Kyoorius Creative Awards in association with D and AD will open for entries from Tuesday 15 March 2016 and close on 12 April 2016. Submission of physical entries for the awards will then remain open for a week. Kyoorius is calling for entries across a total of 15 categories and 135 sub-categories. The awards can be entered by any company or individual and is not restricted to agencies. Kyoorius will promote the awards across corporate, production houses and agencies – advertising, media, event, digital, etc

    Kyoorius, for the first time ever, introduced the concept of Open Jury – the jury sessions are open to the industry people to watch, learn, check and benefit from the discussions and display of entries. The Jury session will be held from 4 May to 7 May in Mumbai. In coordination with D&AD, the jury will be a mix of International (West and East) and local jurors. Like every year, the awards will uphold the zero-tolerance policy for scam ads.

    Kyoorius CEO and founder Rajesh Kejriwal said, ‘Awards are primarily to inspire and motivate the industry achievers and I am delighted to announce the inclusion of Media Awards and the renaming of the awards to Kyoorius Creative Awards. I am also happy with the response that we have always got for having a transparent open jury process and we shall continue to do so. I personally feel that many agencies have done brilliant work in the last year and hence I am expecting a lot more entries this year including participation of more agencies.’

    The Kyoorius Creative Awards show will be held on Friday June 3 2016 at The Dome, NSCI in Mumbai and as always will be a spectacular show of creativity. The awards show will be attended by well over 1,500 professionals including CEO’s, marketing directors, brand managers, creative and media gurus, etc.

    The Kyoorius Creative Awards are presented by Colors, powered by Hindustan Times and Rishtey and the other main partners include Happy Finish, Kinetic.

  • Kyoorius Designyatra kicks off with IAA Kyoorius Digiyatra, 2015

    Kyoorius Designyatra kicks off with IAA Kyoorius Digiyatra, 2015

    MUMBAI: Kyoorius Designyatra being held from 10th until 12th September, 2015 concluded the first day dedicated to digital – IAA Kyoorius Digiyatra, 2015.
     

    The third edition of IAA Kyoorius Digiyatra brought together some of the world’s most influential experts to showcase the future of digital and explore this year’s theme, ‘What pumps your heart’.

     
    As digital marketing has grown to be one of the most effective platforms to create brand awareness and brand engagement, this day dedicated to the digital age brought together industry stalwarts who participated in talks, workshops and breakout sessions.
     

    Moderated by Laura Jordan Bambach (Mr President) and Kevin Finn (TheSumOf), the day of talks explored the immense and untapped possibilities in the digital space, and many of the speakers touched on ways in which it can touch people’s lives and make them a little easier. Nick Law kicked off the day, explaining R/GA’s model of combining narratives with systematic thinking, or data and story to create impactful campaigns. Daan Lucas and Mike Pelletier (Random Studio) wowed the audience with beautiful imagery and installations created for brands that combine art, technology and design. Laura Jordan Bambach followed with her philosophy on how to keep work interesting rather than following the norms. She touched on Mr President’s take on social media through the Bacardi campaign.

     
    Satya Raghavan (YouTube) entertained audience’s post-lunch with his insights into what people are really watching online. In a special session called “What can digital do?”, Mukesh Jha and Janardan Prasad, co-founders of Autowale, showed us how an app can provide a sustainable income to rickshaw drivers. Nishant Patni, founder of CultureAlley talked about his app, Hello English, which is teaching millions of Indians how to speak English by localizing the experience for different languages and contexts. Lydia Winters from Mojang, makers of the incredibly successful game, Minecraft, talked about how the game is building communities online and effecting change in real life, through their collaboration with UN Habitat, Block by Block.
     

    John McHale took the audience through his journey from college football to band member to designer and the four pillars that keep him inspired.

     
    IAA Kyoorius Digiyatra will be followed by Kyoorius Designyatra from 11th and 12th September, 2015, which culminates with the 2015 Kyoorius Design Awards on the 12th evening.
     

    Rajesh Kejriwal, Founder CEO of Kyoorius, commented, “We had a packed house on the first day at IAA Kyoorius Digiyatra, both intellectually and at the conference. Delegates will hopefully leave today with many ideas and insights on how to make the most of digital, and one of the themes today was the need to humanize it and bring it into the physical world. I’m looking forward to the next two days ahead, with many more great ideas to come as we continue our 10th Anniversary festivities.”

  • Hungama partners Kyoorius Designyatra 2015 to raise charity for ‘Laadli’

    Hungama partners Kyoorius Designyatra 2015 to raise charity for ‘Laadli’

    MUMBAI: Hungama has partnered with Kyoorius Designyatra 2015 (KDY) to be held in Goa, to raise awareness for a social cause while adding a musical note to the 10th anniversary of KDY.

     

    Hungama and Kyoorius Designyatra 2015 will create one of the biggest live-request playlists to raise the funds via a Twitter activity. By tweeting #HungamaKDY2015 and the name of the song, it will be played at the event. While the activity will contribute Rs 100 per song streamed at the event, it will also allow participants to actively contribute in the process to raise donations.

     

    With a theme like ‘What pumps your heart’ Kyoorius Designyatra’s 10th anniversary edition aims to engage participants and guests alike during the event with a live music request Twitter activity in association with Hungama. The activity will be a means to raise funds for ‘Laadli,’ a campaign that highlights the falling sex ratio of the country and their endeavours to correct the issue by making available relevant data, audits of documents received from Sonography clinics among other activities; of which the end goal is to stabilise the sex ratio difference.

     

    Hungama Digital Media Entertainment MD & CEO Neeraj Roy said, “It gives us immense pleasure to partner with Kyoorius Deisgnyatra 2015 to help raise charity and awareness for the social cause campaign ‘Laadli’. The campaign that aims to control female feticide has helped shed much light on the topic. With this association we are proud to leverage our platforms for this noble cause.”

     

    Kyoorius founder CEO Rajesh Kejriwal added, “We are happy to have Hungama partnering with us at Kyoorius Designyatra 2015. Music is an essential part of the conference experience, it’s one of the things that gets delegates really ‘pumped’, so I’m sure Hungama’s Digital Jukebox will be a huge hit. And it’s for a great cause, which makes it all the more impactful.”

  • Kyoorius unveils jury for 2015 Design Awards

    Kyoorius unveils jury for 2015 Design Awards

    MUMBAI: Kyoorius has unveiled the jury for the third edition of the Kyoorius Design Awards. The jury sessions will take place from 6-8 August, 2015 at the GD Goenka University in Gurgaon.

     

    The 2015 Kyoorius Design Awards Jury comprise the following:

     

    – Jury Foreman: GBH founder/co-creative director, and D&AD president Mark Bonner 

    – The Brewhouse founder Emilia Bergmans

    – Y&R Malaysia executive creative director Gigi Lee

    – Rice Creative founding partner and creative director Joshua Breidenbach

    – Codesign founding director, creative lead and designer Rajesh Dahiya

    – FITCH chairman and chief creative officer Tim Greenhalgh

    – Eureka Moment Design Company founder director, National Design Committee – ASSOCHAM ’10-’11 chairperson, and Mumbai Chapter – Association of Designers of India president Shanoo Bhatia

     

    This year, the Kyoorius Design Awards received a total of 488 entries across all categories, from independent studios, freelance designers, brand consultancies and agencies all over India, including Alok Nanda and Company, Codesign, Umbrella Design, NH1 Design, Locopopo, Kahani Designworks, RocketscienceLab, FITCH, DDB Mudra, JWT, Ogilvy and Star TV, amongst others.

     

    The Kyoorius Design awards recognize both comprehensive design projects as well as individual components. A specialist jury – selected together with D&AD and composed of the top creatives from across the world – will judge all submitted entries according to the Kyoorius and D&AD awards criteria. 

     

    The jury members will gather to review, discuss and elect the best of the best over three intensive days. The voting is done in private and never by a show of hands.

     

    Additionally, in their continued effort towards providing a truly neutral and ethical platform, the jury sessions will remain open for professionals, media and the community on 6-7 August, along with three jury tours conducted per day.

     

    Kyoorius founder CEO Rajesh Kejriwal said, “With the third edition of the Kyoorius Design Awards, we’re thrilled with the response as well as the range and quality of work submitted. The dynamic mix of international and Indian jury members balance global standards with local context and I’m sure they will have some tough decisions to make next week.”

  • Kyoorius Awards 2015: Ogilvy makes a clean sweep with 15 Elephants

    Kyoorius Awards 2015: Ogilvy makes a clean sweep with 15 Elephants

    MUMBAI: In possibly the best organised award shows in town, Kyoorius, in association with D&AD, announced the winners of the 2015 Advertising & Digital Awards at the DOME at the NSCI, SVP Stadium in Mumbai.

     

    Ogilvy won 15 Blue Elephants, 13 in advertising and two in digital awards. DDB Mudra won six Blue Elephants and was the only agency to bag the Black Elephant. Contract India bagged five Blue Elephants followed by Ideas@work with three Blue Elephant and BBDO India with two Blue Elephants.

     

    The night, which was presented by Colors, brought together over 1200 professionals from the advertising, digital and marketing industries and clients across India to celebrate in Indian creativity. Like it is said, in typical ‘Kyoorius fashion’ the night was unlike any awards ceremony – from the Times Square-inspired sets, to the sound and motion graphics. The entire visual experience for the night was created by Dutch studio Addikt.

     

    A total of 1419 entries (up almost 40 per cent from the previous year) were submitted across Advertising & Digital categories. Of the 163 In Book winners, 48 entries were awarded Blue Elephants, and one entry was awarded the ever-elusive Black Elephant.

     

    DDB Mudra, Ideas@Work, Ogilvy, Contract Advertising, Scarecrow Communications, Soho Square, BBH, BBDO India, Dentsu Webchutney, Madison, Madison BMB, ITSA Brand Innovations, Experience Commerce, Rediffusion Y&R, BBH, Famous Innovations, Havas Worldwide, Fanatics, Grey, Linen Lintas, PHD India, Sapient, Web Maffia, River Advertising, Creativeland Asia, Blink Digital, Whyness Worldwide, and TBWA were some of the agencies who were awarded the ‘Baby Elephant’ trophy as In Book winners.

     

    Of the 163 In Book winners, also nominees for Blue Elephants, the advertising and digital juries awarded 36 Blue Elephants in Advertising and 12 Blue Elephants in Digital categories.

     

    In the advertising categories, the 36 Blue Elephant winners included campaigns by Contract Advertising, Ideas@Work, Creativeland Asia, Ogilvy, Early Man Film, DDB Mudra, BBDO, Fanatics, Grey, TBWA and Linen Lintas.

     

    In digital categories, 12 Blue Elephant winners included work by PHD India, Pigeon & Co., Quasar, Quidich, Dentsu Webchutney, Experience Commerce, Leaf Design, Madison Media, Sapient and Ogilvy.

     

    Black Elephants are reserved for work that redefines the category it is entered in, by taking risks, creating a new conversation with the audience or lasting impact on the industry.

     

    DDB Mudra was awarded the only Black Elephant this year for the direct marketing campaign, Health Cha Shree Ganesh. The campaign for Nutralite, gave everyone’s favourite portly idol a healthy makeover – With a physically fit statue and equally fit priest, accompanied by sugar free modaks and offerings at a pandal in Mumbai. Devotees could participate in Zoomba workouts while waiting in line and donate calories while working out on a treadmill.

     

    Kyoorius founder CEO Rajesh Kejriwal said, “We are overwhelmed by the response this year, the 1419 entries are further acknowledgement of the industry’s support for the Kyoorius Awards. Our international jury and open format ensure that we are a truly neutral and transparent platform that stimulates the industry and nurtures future creative talent. Every year we notice certain trends that prevail in the work entered. This year we saw a lot of work around gender equality and women’s rights, reflecting the national sentiment surrounding these sensitive issues. And of course, in a World Cup year, plenty of cricket.”

     

    D&AD CEO Tim Lindsay added, “The Kyoorius Awards continue to grow in size and stature, and are an important indicator of the world class standards of the Indian creative scene. But the real heroes are the creatives themselves, who are producing ever more engaging, emotional and beautifully crafted work. D&AD are proud to partner.”

     

    Colors CEO Raj Nayak said, “Colors is proud to be associated with the Kyoorius Awards, and we are happy to see that it’s become so successful in the second year. Congratulations to all the elephant winners.”

     

    Alongside the Elephant winners, all nominations will be featured in the Kyoorius Advertising Awards Annual and the Kyoorius Digital Awards Annual – distributed to over 5000 corporate and creatives across India – providing an invaluable and unrivalled source of creative inspiration.

     

    The awards night marked the end of the two-day festival of creativity in advertising, media and marketing developed by Kyoorius in partnership with ZEE, GroupM and D&AD.

     

    Terminology

     

    Unlike other awards programmes, Kyoorius Awards have no gold, silver or bronze, and it is the jury’s prerogative to award more than one Blue Elephant in a category, or none at all.

     

    In-Book: Work that stands out above the rest and meets the three judging criteria, for being 1) An original and inspiring idea, 2) Well-executed, and 3) Relevant to its context. Amongst the best pieces of work in the year, in-book winners are the nominees for Blue Elephants.

     

    Blue Elephant: Checks off all three criteria and reaches the Kyoorius Awards benchmark of creative excellence. Recognised as a symbol of the very highest creative achievement.

     

    Black Elephant: Best of Show. The ultimate prize. Work that is truly ground-breaking amongst all the judged work.

  • Kyoorius unveils debut line up for Melt 2015

    Kyoorius unveils debut line up for Melt 2015

    MUMBAI: Kyoorius has unveiled the event line up its two day festival Melt 2015.

     

    Kyoorius founder and CEO Rajesh Kejriwal said, “With Melt 2015, we’re pioneering an exciting new model where our partners co-curate content with us. Together, we have created opportunities to learn and interact in myriad ways, always keeping our partners’ brand goals and vision in mind. Melt 2015 is a chance for them to showcase what they do best.”

     

    As the knowledge partner, GroupM will empower the event with international speakers, workshops and seminars. GroupM agencies will also showcase new technology in advertising at ‘FutureReady’ in the Hall of Knowledge. Participants of Melt can expect to see the Loop Room by Mindshare, Moribus- the Behavioral Economics Lab by Maxus, great global work by Mediacom and MECFresh by MEC Global.

     

    The festival has a packed schedule of events including conferences, seminars, workshops, showcases, exhibitions and installations catering to a variety of audiences and disciplines.

     

    On 21 May, the HT Osmosis Conference will offer insights into advertising as it exists today and a glimpse into what it could be in the future. Speakers include Chris Sanderson (Future Laboratory), Daniele Fiandaca (Creative Social), Bo Hellberg (Brave and HeyHuman) and Hugh Macleod (Gaping Void). It will be followed by a IAA debate where industry stalwarts will battle it out on whether mobile has taken over TV as the default screen for viewer. Other events for the day include a series of seminars with consumers titled Kinetic Future Citizens.

     

    Zee MindSpace on 22 May will host a stimulating conference for industry leaders to discuss, debate and reflect on issues and challenges facing the industry. Speakers include Sir Martin Sorrell (WPP), Tom Goodwin (Havas Media), Adam Ostrow (Mashable) and Joshua Black (GroupM).

     

    The second day also features THiNK BARC India, a seminar developed by Broadcast Audience Research Council of India that will have global industry leaders presenting key insights into measuring content consumption.

     

    Delegates can get a first hand experience of augmented reality with Happy Finish global chairman Stuart Waplington and go behind the lens with him to create stunning 360-degree visual experiences on screen. A host of augmented and virtual reality tools will also be on display at Nehru Centre during the festival.

     

    YouTube will take over the Hall of Vision at Nehru Centre with a series of presentations hosted by YouTube India’s Satya Raghavan along with a select group of YouTube creators, who will go in-depth into developing a successful YouTube strategy for brands and creators. The seminar also gives room for delegates to sign up for a one-on-one consultation with a YouTube expert on how to develop compelling online content.

     

    Other events and discussions include invite-only workshop for brand managers explores mobile-first branding.

     

    Madhouse India will host a Mobile Masterclass with marketing consultant Tomi Ahonen. Hands-on workshops on branding and idea generation by D&AD Trainers Bo Hellberg of Brave and HeyHuman, and Alex Lampe of A+B Studio will also be held.

     

    Hyper Island Master Class speaker Daniele Fiandaca will lead two workshops discussing the most disruptive trends in digital and the challenges that the changing nature of work holds for modern creatives

     

    The festival will also have The Other Bookstore display its extensive collection of design and advertising books and publications.