Tag: RPG Enterprises

  • CEAT promotes work culture via digital campaign

    CEAT promotes work culture via digital campaign

    MUMBAI: Tyre manufacturer CEAT recently launched its innovative digital campaign that gives expression to its organisational culture. Creating a humorous twist on some of the glaring issues in current workplaces, this campaign is designed to connect with a larger audience. The first-of-its-kind digital ad series will be on popular social media channels like YouTube, LinkedIn, Facebook and Twitter.

    The digital advertising series is broken down into three videos of 25 to 35 seconds each, which have a satirical take on some common workplace issues like gender bias, cons of bureaucracy and lack of transparency.

    CEAT Tyres SVP human resources Milind Apte says, “At CEAT, our constant endeavour is to stay relevant to all people who are part of our family. In order to do so, we engage in frequent conversations with them. These videos are based on insights from our employees, on what they like about working at CEAT. We believe it is a clear expression of our culture.”

    CEAT, the flagship company of RPG Enterprises, was established in 1958 and produces over 15 million tyres a year and offers the widest range of tyres to all segments and manufactures world-class radials for: heavy-duty trucks and buses, light commercial vehicles, earthmovers, forklifts, tractors, trailers, cars, motorcycles and scooters as well as auto-rickshaws.

  • Ad Club announces nomination list for ‘Marquees 2017’

    MUMBAI: India’s foremost advertising community The Advertising Club has unveiled the much-awaited nomination list for the  coveted Marquees 2017. Presented by News18 India, powered by Colors and MTV and partnered by One India in its debut edition, Marquees 2017  nomination list includes thought leaders who have been category game changers and innovators.

    The awards have been adjudged by industry stalwarts that includes Harsh Goenka, Chairman – RPG Enterprises, Ronnie Screwvala, Co-Founder – UpGrad; Agnello Dias – Chairman and Co-Founder, Taproot India; Naveen Chopra –  Ex COO, Vodafone and Sr Advisor, TPG Capital; Dilip Cherian – Founding Partner, Perfect Relations and CVL Srinivas, CEO South Asia – GroupM. These stalwarts along with Sanjiv Mehta, ‎CEO and Managing Director, Hindustan Unilever Limited as jury chair.  

    The Advertising Club president Raj Nayak said “The diverse  jury panel has nominated path breaking marketeers who who each played an instrumental role in redefining benchmarks in their respective categories. The brands that have been nominated have been credited with curating campaigns that have facilitated social and behaviorial change.”

    Marquees 2017 chairman Partho Dasgupta said, “Marquees 2017 jury  has nominated marketeers and brands who have challenged the conventional communication paradigm. We would like to congratulate   the nominees for making it to the coveted list of the debut edition of the marquees, curated  after extensive deliberation  and discussion by the esteemed jury panel.”

    Marquees is set to be a grand affair bringing together thought leaders and industry veterans from Advertising, Marketing and Media Fraternity.  The awards endeavours to evaluate and recognize success of the brands by judging them basis not only just how they advertised across platforms, but also taking into account important factors like the pricing, distribution and purpose the brand served for the consumers at the end of the day.  

     

    Category

    S. NO

    Nominee

    1

    Banking

    1

    ICICI BANK

    2

    STATE BANK OF INDIA

    3

    AXIS BANK

    4

    HDFC BANK

    5

    PUNJAB NATIONAL BANK

    2

    Insurance

    1

    HDFC STANDARD LIFE

    2

    SBI LIFE INSURANCE

    3

    NEW INDIA INSURANCE

    4

    LIC

    5

    UNITED INDIA INSURANCE

    3

    Food

    1

    PARLE PRODUCTS

    2

    GOKUL AGRO

    3

    FORTUNE FOODS

    4

    WAI WAI NOODLES (CG GLOBAL)

    5

    EVEREST SPICES

    4

    Home Care

    1

    SURF (HINDUSTAN UNILEVER)

    2

    GOODKNIGHT (GODREJ CONSUMER PRODUCTS)

    3

    WHEEL (HINDUSTAN UNILEVER)

    4

    PATANJALI AYURVED

    5

     VIM (HINDUSTAN UNILEVER)

    5

    Durables

    1

    SAMSUNG ELECTRONICS

    2

    GODREJ

    3

    LG ELECTRONICS

    4

    VIDEOCON

    5

    HAIER

    6

    Beverages

    1

    TATA GLOBAL BEVERAGES

    2

    COCA COLA

    3

    FROOTI (PARLE AGRO)

    4

    BROOKE BOND (HINDUSTAN UNILEVER)

    5

    GLUCON D (KRAFT HEINZ)

    7

    Personal Care

    1

    CLINIC PLUS (HINDUSTAN UNILEVER)

    2

    COLGATE

    3

    NIHAR (MARICO)

    4

    LIFEBUOY (HINDUSTAN UNILEVER)

    5

    HEAD & SHOULDERS (PROCTOR & GAMBLE)

    8

    Telecom: Services

    1

    VODAFONE

    2

    RELIANCE JIO

    3

    IDEA CELLULAR

    4

    BHARTI AIRTEL

    5

    BSNL

    9

    AUTO: 4 Wheelers

    1

    HYUNDAI MOTOR

    2

    RENAULT

    3

    MARUTI SUZUKI

    4

    NISSAN MOTOR

    5

    TATA MOTORS

    10

    AUTO: 2 Wheelers

    1

    HERO MOTORCORP

    2

    HONDA MOTORCYCLE & SCOOTER

    3

    TVS MOTOR

    4

    BAJAJ AUTO

    5

    ROYAL ENFIELD

    11

    E-Commerce

    1

    PAYTM

    2

    MYNTRA

    3

    AMAZON INDIA

    4

    FLIPKART

    5

    EBAY INDIA

    12

    Telecom: Handset

    1

    SAMSUNG ELECTRONICS

    2

    VIVO SMARTPHONES

    3

    XIAOMI SMARTPHONES

    4

    OPPO

    5

    MICROMAX

     

    Category

    S. NO

    Nominee

    1

    Banking

    1

    ICICI BANK

    2

    STATE BANK OF INDIA

    3

    AXIS BANK

    4

    HDFC BANK

    5

    PUNJAB NATIONAL BANK

    2

    Insurance

    1

    HDFC STANDARD LIFE

    2

    SBI LIFE INSURANCE

    3

    NEW INDIA INSURANCE

    4

    LIC

    5

    UNITED INDIA INSURANCE

    3

    Food

    1

    PARLE PRODUCTS

    2

    GOKUL AGRO

    3

    FORTUNE FOODS

    4

    WAI WAI NOODLES (CG GLOBAL)

    5

    EVEREST SPICES

    4

    Home Care

    1

    SURF (HINDUSTAN UNILEVER)

    2

    GOODKNIGHT (GODREJ CONSUMER PRODUCTS)

    3

    WHEEL (HINDUSTAN UNILEVER)

    4

    PATANJALI AYURVED

    5

     VIM (HINDUSTAN UNILEVER)

    5

    Durables

    1

    SAMSUNG ELECTRONICS

    2

    GODREJ

    3

    LG ELECTRONICS

    4

    VIDEOCON

    5

    HAIER

    6

    Beverages

    1

    TATA GLOBAL BEVERAGES

    2

    COCA COLA

    3

    FROOTI (PARLE AGRO)

    4

    BROOKE BOND (HINDUSTAN UNILEVER)

    5

    GLUCON D (KRAFT HEINZ)

    7

    Personal Care

    1

    CLINIC PLUS (HINDUSTAN UNILEVER)

    2

    COLGATE

    3

    NIHAR (MARICO)

    4

    LIFEBUOY (HINDUSTAN UNILEVER)

    5

    HEAD & SHOULDERS (PROCTOR & GAMBLE)

    8

    Telecom: Services

    1

    VODAFONE

    2

    RELIANCE JIO

    3

    IDEA CELLULAR

    4

    BHARTI AIRTEL

    5

    BSNL

    9

    AUTO: 4 Wheelers

    1

    HYUNDAI MOTOR

    2

    RENAULT

    3

    MARUTI SUZUKI

    4

    NISSAN MOTOR

    5

    TATA MOTORS

    10

    AUTO: 2 Wheelers

    1

    HERO MOTORCORP

    2

    HONDA MOTORCYCLE & SCOOTER

    3

    TVS MOTOR

    4

    BAJAJ AUTO

    5

    ROYAL ENFIELD

    11

    E-Commerce

    1

    PAYTM

    2

    MYNTRA

    3

    AMAZON INDIA

    4

    FLIPKART

    5

    EBAY INDIA

    12

    Telecom: Handset

    1

    SAMSUNG ELECTRONICS

    2

    VIVO SMARTPHONES

    3

    XIAOMI SMARTPHONES

    4

    OPPO

    5

    MICROMAX

  • ‘Expanding home video relationships with the Hollywood studios into other areas will be a big ticket for us’ : Subroto Chattopadhyay – RPG Enterprises – Ent. Sector president and CEO

    ‘Expanding home video relationships with the Hollywood studios into other areas will be a big ticket for us’ : Subroto Chattopadhyay – RPG Enterprises – Ent. Sector president and CEO

    Saregama, India’s oldest music company, is in makeover mode. Having slipped into the red with a net loss of Rs 211 million in the nine-month period ended 31 March 2004, the RPG Group company has chalked out a five-year growth plan in music, movies, TV content, home video, events and digital formats.

     

    The man responsible for this new script: RPG Enterprises – Entertainment Sector president and CEO Subroto Chattopadhyay. The company has turned around and in FY06 posted a net profit of Rs 88.7 million on a turnover of Rs 1.19 billion.

     

    The focus so far has been to put in place the management bandwidth for running the businesses. Now it is all set to execute these plans and scale up operations as a content company available on all platforms.

     

    In an interview with Indiantelevision.com’s Sibabrata Das, Chattopadhyay talks of the efforts made to regain the grand old company’s status as a creative hothouse and of the challenges he faces in establishing Saregama as an entertainment powerhouse with stress on bottomline.

     

    Excerpts:

    How has Saregama managed to turn around after slipping into the red?

    We have put in place a five-year strategy. We have decided where to place our bets and where to withdraw. We, for instance, have taken a stance that we won’t get into owning radio stations. We have divided our businesses, are getting into adjacent areas and have identified touch points.

    What is the plan for the music business with T-series grabbing the lion’s share in acquiring rights to new Hindi movies?

    We have decided to be a content company in music and not a distributor of CDs and cassettes. We will create, acquire and make available to consumers music while remaining platform agnostic. We will be exploiting different delivery systems like mobile and radio. That is a positioning we have taken as part of our restructuring strategy. And we are buying music rights for new Hindi movies like Gangster, Bluff Master, Anwar, Kaliyug and Vivah.

    Have you tied up with the mobile and FM radio station operators?

    We are doing such deals through the Indian Performing Rights Society (IPRS) and the Phonographic Performance Ltd (PPL). That is a strategic decision which we took upfront. We have tied up with all the mobile operators. We also see upside in revenues from radio stations which would soon be springing up across the country. Out of our total revenues, 15 per cent comes from digital format. Our earnings from digital exploitation should go up. Digitisation is critical to our business model.

    What are your digital initiatives?

    We are launching an entertainment portal and it is likely to be called saregama.com. The aim is to make it the digital supermarket of entertainment. Consumers can download music and later on we will add movies. We are behind schedule by four months as we are adding many other features.

    How much of Saregama’s library is digitised?

    We have digitised 190,000 out of the 300,000 tracks we own. We will have the remaining content digitised and work on it will start by April-May. This process, in fact, has helped us discover our vast library. We, for instance, came to know that we have 30,000 tracks in Tamil. The challenge is for us to go out and make our products locally relevant.

    Valuations are too high at this stage for acquisitions. We are in the make rather than buy mode

    Saregama had stopped producing movies as it started losing money. Why is it making a re-entry?

    When we sat down and took stock of the company, we decided that we had to be on the content side of the business. We identified our second vertical should be films because it is adjacent to music. The ecosystem is changing and we believe technology will have an impact. The game will change dramatically and we won’t have to depend entirely on the current star-loaded model.

    What is the business model you are adopting?

    We have identified creative people to head the business. We have taken on board BR Sharan of Lalita-ji Surf ad fame and noted film actor-director Aparna Sen who will look after the Hindi and Bangla movies. We will be producing movies in these two languages initially. Bangla is a widely spoken language and the overseas population (including Bangladesis) is large. There is shortage of good content and we can create a business out of this market. Noted cinematographer Vijaylakshmi will also be involved.

    What will be the budget size and how many movies will Saregama be producing in a year?

    We may start with mid-budget movies and see how we can scale up along the way. We have just taken in the people and will be firming up the business plan within three months. We will try and build a financial logarithm to movie making. Our focus will be to make good movies with strong scripts.

    Saregama already produces TV content in the southern languages. Will you be expanding into Hindi as well?

    We produce 14 hours of programming per week for the Sun group of channels. We will be transferring that capability to the other languages. We have Sharan, Sen and Vijaylakshmi to take care of the TV content business.

    Saregama was in negotiations to buy controlling stake in K Balachandar’s TV content company Min Bimbangal, but the talks failed. Is there a conscious decision not to take the acquisition route?

    We are in the phase where we realise that capability build up is crucial to us. We were in the buy mode, but now have decided to be rather in the `make your own product’ mood. Valuations are too high at this stage and the overall company philosophy is that we make rather than buy. It is because of a mix of both these reasons that we are not acquiring.

    Do you have plans to ramp up your home video business?

    We are exclusive partners with some major Hollywood studios like Paramount, Warner Bros, Universal, Dreamworks and MGM for distribution of their home videos in India. We have access to 20,000 films and it contributes around Rs 250-300 million to our revenues. It is a nice business to be in. If we can expand our relationships with the studios into other areas, it will be a big ticket for us. We also distribute Hindi movies but our fundamental positioning in the home video segment is that we provide the best of international flavour.

    Moser Baer has entered the home video segment and drastically dropped down prices of VCDs and DVDs. How do you see that impacting the industry?

    We don’t believe in price drops as a competitive strategy if we can hold them firm. People, after all, buy content. They will pay more for better content.

    Will you be getting into event management as well?

    We will have a presence in this vertical as it brings consumers and entertainment together. Our broad plan is to be available for music, home video, theatrical, domestic and international consumers.

    Saregama was earlier thinking of merging its two overseas subsidiary companies RPG Global Music and Saregama Plc. Is that plan dead now?

    We are happy being in the state of status quo. Our focus is to first fix the business and create clean surpluses in each subsidiary company so that they become robust. We use them to deliver products to consumers in different areas of the world. While Saregama Plc focuses on the UK, US, Europe, Canada, Caribbeans and South Africa, RPG Global looks at Middle East, South East asia and New Zealand. And as India globalises, our subsidiaries will become good and strong.

    What is the status of HamaraCD.com?

    We are changing the positioning and it will become B2C. Consumers can place an order and we will get it delivered to them.

    How much will Saregama be investing for expanding its business?

    We will be firming up our fund requirement after we decide what we will make and what we will buy. We are evaluating our options and haven’t taken the decision yet. We have been busy cleaning up our operations and strategising to be in businesses where our performance not only becomes successful but also sustainable.

    Won’t Saregama forego a big opportunity by chalking out a slow process of growth while some media companies are taking an aggressive route?

    We have been funding our growth from internal operations and internal accruals. Our purpose is to keep tight control and make the businesses sustainable. Our ability to accelerate will be better two years later. We have not yet become a creative hothouse as we were earlier. We are preparing ourselves towards that. The entertainment industry needs management bandwidth to run the businesses. None of that was required in this industry earlier. But those days are gone.

    Will you not then be left with too little space in the marketplace?

    We will be moving fast in the areas of exploitation, music and cinema content. We have formed business units and are building competitive advantage and strategy for them. If those dots join up, then it will be very exciting for us.