Tag: social media

  • “Something is technically wrong” with Twitter, yet again

    “Something is technically wrong” with Twitter, yet again

    MUMBAI: One of the most visited and used social media websites – Twitter, has faced a technical issue yet again this week. Similar issues have been noted over the last few days too.

    Some users have been facing problems with the portal both on mobile and the web.

    On visiting the website from the desktop, some users were greeted with the message, “Something is technically wrong. Thanks for noticing – we’re going to fix it up and have things back to normal soon.”

    This interruption from the popular microblogging site is expected to affect people across the globe who rely on Twitter for both business and pleasure.

    Officials from Twitter India have confirmed about the global technical outage.

    Due to these technical difficulties, platforms such as tweetdeck have also been affected. However, official quote or confirmation about the same has not been received.

    The technical issue went around for a span of almost 2 hours starting from 2:15 pm and was finally resolved at 4:05 pm.

  • ‘Channels will stop chasing TRPs if we had a proper subscription revenue model:’ Vikram Chandra

    ‘Channels will stop chasing TRPs if we had a proper subscription revenue model:’ Vikram Chandra

    In an industry where people change jobs every few years in order to quickly climb the ranks, his association spanning more than two decades with Dr Prannoy Roy’s NDTV Group speaks volumes about his commitment and stability. One of India’s leading journalists, he now helms NDTV Group as executive director and CEO. He is also the executive chairperson of the company’s online venture – NDTV Convergence.

     

    What’s more, even with the increasing managerial responsibilities, he manages to find time to anchor shows like Gadget Guru and The Big Fight and therein reflects his love for the Fourth Estate. He also flirted with the pen when he wrote his first fiction thriller titled The Srinagar Conspiracy in the year 2000. He is none other than Vikram Chandra.

     

    With many a feathers in his cap, Chandra is now well poised to take NDTV to newer heights with the expansion in the digital space. Tapping new avenues, NDTV now has its fingers dipped in multiple segments like wedding, fashion, auto, gadgets et al… and all under Chandra’s stewardship.

     

    In a chat with Indiantelevision.com’s Megha Parmar, Chandra sheds light on his journey, NDTV’s businesses ventures, cable TV digitisation, social media and the road ahead for the company.

     

    Read on for excerpts:

     

    NDTV is now expanding its digital footprint with gadgets, auto and retail. What drives you towards digital despite being a traditional broadcaster?

     

    This has been one of NDTV’s key strategies from a long time. Going digital is a key part of NDTV from several years. Way back in 1999 and 2000s, we started to believe that Internet is going to be a dominant part of our lives. While TV is still a core part of our DNA and plays an important role in everything that we do, we then wanted to expand into digital from a long time.

     

    Today, people can consume the same NDTV news though different streams. You can watch it on your TV, phone and the NDTV app. There are different ways to get the content that we are enabling for people. Going forward, we took a decision that there were individual niche areas where we want to make a major impact. That is what we are building on from the past couple of years; be it food, auto, wedding, retail and there are other things also coming into place.

     

    How much does digital contribute towards the company’s revenue?

     

    Digital’s contribution to the company’s revenues has been growing. It used to be around three – four per cent sometime back, but today because digital revenues are growing at a faster rate, digital accounts 20 – 22 per cent of NDTV’s revenue. The number is growing rapidly.

     

    What was the idea behind NDTV entering the online wedding market?

     

    Everything that we are doing in these areas has a very specific planned execution strategy. We thought it is a good proposition to be in and we got into it. We followed the same thing with Gadgets360 and the other portals. In weddings, we have found the same niche that we think is going to be very attractive. 

     

    Are revenues from television on the decline?

     

    The revenue from TV has grown over the years and will continue to grow. It’s just that the revenues from digital are growing at a faster rate almost at 15 per cent a year from a long period of time. While the share of digital revenue is increasing, it’s not that the TV revenues are declining.

     

    How long before revenue from digital will surpass that from television?

     

    We’re a long way from there. There is a lot of action going on TV also and we are also expecting regulatory changes to happen soon. If everything goes fine, the revenues from TV will also grow at a faster rate. There is no competition between the two. As long as the both are growing and are doing well, that is what we want.

     

    What are your plans with Gadgets360 and Auto? Do you see enough monetisation opportunities?

     

    Gadgets360 is by now a very dominant property. It is not just the number one gadget site in the country, it’s four or five times far than the number two in the entire world and has gained a very massive position. With Gadgets360, we tend to hold a position of considerable dominance in the space. If the people want to buy a gadget and want to know about anything related to it be it news or reviews, they have to refer to some or the other NDTV’s properties. It gives us a good position to build a strong community around the gadget loving and gadget dying population. We have now started to do some select launches of individual products that we think are interesting on the website. Many e-commerce transactions have also started to happen on Gadgets360 and the initial response has been quite astonishing. The first two three phones that we tried to sell were sold out in a month’s time, which surprised us. So now we are planning to do more such things, which will surprise us in many other ways.

     

    Auto is an area where we have built a powerful franchise over a long period of time. We have a good combination of content like carandbike.com and technology package combined with good engineering. This will help the auto portal also scale up both from the content side and from the transactions point of view.

     

    Do you see enough monetisation opportunities in Gadgets360 and Auto?

     

    Gadgets360 is doing well for us and has stayed ahead of our expectations. The monetisation is coming in. Once you have strong communication in various communities, it’s not just an attractive proposition from the revenue point of view but also from advertising. From an advertiser’s perspective, where else would you want to put your money than on a leading portal in that space? If you have a leading tech, auto or food content portal, that’s where you will want to put your money. Auto is also emerging successfully.

     

    What kind of investment is being pumped in for these new ventures?

     

    Well these have raised funds already. Food is the recent one, which has raised funds to the tune of $12 million roughly. Each of these have been visualised as an individual entity and they have a life of their own. Each of them have been done in a very entrepreneurial manner like start-ups. We don’t have the group dynamics playing; it’s all done by individual entrepreneurial team. They have raised their own money including some of the top investors.

     

    Can you share your overall plans for NDTV Convergence? It’s already the leader in its space but now there have been others joining in too.

     

    There will always be competition and that’s good. We are not scared of the competition. The more the activity and action in the field, the more it will help in growing the market. Today, only a small fraction of our population has access to the internet but the number of people who are going to use the service five years down the line is huge. It’s a vast untapped market. If more people come in, it will just expand the market. So far, with competition, it has not changed our position, market share or even the traffic that we get. We are in a comfortable position.

     

    In the age of clutter, competition & multiple start-ups mushrooming in the country, how does NDTV plan to have an edge over the others in the new areas that it has ventured into? 

     

    There are things that we do and focus on. So far we have managed the competition right. If you look at the page views or the traffic, it’s clear that there are a couple of clear leaders and while a few competitors are at some distance behind. We know how to manage the space.

     

    How do you see digitisation changing the game in India for broadcasters in terms of content, revenues, etc?

     

    Digitisation was always anticipated to be a game changer but to some extent we are disappointed. What is causing disappointment in the market is that the business models have not changed after digitisation.

     

    Digitisation was supposed to transform the business models for broadcasters where distribution revenues start to become a very major contributor, where subscription money starts to flow and also lower the reliance on advertising. That was the logic that digitisation was supposed to drive.

     

    There was also a strong economic business rational for this that in analog systems you only had 40 slots for 200 channels but now you have no capacity constraints. What we really would want to see in 2016 is concerting actions to be taken especially by the government and the regulators to try and persuade people that the model needs to change and formulate what the correct model should be.

     

    There is an effect on the content model as well. If subscription revenues were robust, then it sets up a business model where quality channels will have money to invest in quality content and a channel’s revenue will be based on subscription and not around chasing the advertising. Then what will be the need of content if one is chasing advertising? It’s not only chasing advertising; the channels are chasing TRPs, which is to some extent evident in the news space. They are clearly following tabloid type of news content, creating sensationalism and other things that are basically designed to get more TRPs. If you had a proper model wherein channels could make money from subscription, then people will not want to chase the TRP game. They will do good quality content and would gain some money from subscription.

     

    How much importance do you give social media? Do social media insights play a vital role in penning down your strategy?

     

    Social media is a very powerful tool and helps people connect with each other. There are obviously issues around and you should not think that social media is everything, which sometimes you pretend to do. Social media sometimes acts as a platform for the loudest voices but with a disproportionate scare. For a journalist too, it’s one of the first bases where you might get breaking news and information about what’s happening around you. But you do need to be careful about how you use social media and how you engage with social media. You should not believe on everything that goes around.

     

    Having said that, I don’t think social media plays any key role in driving our strategy back at NDTV.

     

    The credibility of a news story is now defined by a trending hashtag. If your story leads to a trending tag, it’s a successful story, otherwise it’s not. Is it a fair proposition?

     

    I don’t agree to that. It’s good to have your story trending but you can do a very successful strong and powerful story, which does not necessarily need to trend. It should not be the only metric. As a journalist, I think that it’s not necessary that something that drives more clarity or will trend means that it’s the only form of journalism you can do. You can still do very powerful journalism in various areas, which may not drive TRPs or trend on Twitter.

     

    Do trending #tags like presstitutes bother you?

     

    I think on social media a lot of the language and discourses have become disappointing. The language used, at times, is inappropriate. There are some people using abusive language. I think this is dangerous as at times you will find accusations, which aren’t true. People are straightforward and mature and also are definitely using social media for the right purpose but there is a possibility that they sometimes might pick up something, which is incorrect or not accurate and is a total fabrication. Someone will put something on social media and then it will be re-tweeted repeatedly and will be passed around, which is not true and will cause damage. 

     

    Social media has helped us in democratically using the voice of the people. Anyone can access it and express their views on anything, which should be rolled forward. But everything has a sad part attached to it and here the issue is about how we control the worst impulses of a few people putting something, which is invalid or not factual. We have to find a solution to how we can control such things from taking place on social media.

     

    Suppose a journalist is doing a hard hitting story like on child smuggling or malnutrition or about what is going in the Vidarbha region; these are not negative stories but are strong powerful development stories and may lead to some transformation happening in one place or other.

     

    We often hear people commenting on why we don’t publish positive stories or development stories. The answer is, these stories are done but are not the kind of social stories that will either make TRPs or be trending on Twitter. You do a great story on solar power and publish it; it will not work that much. But the story should be done. We should find ways to tweak the model that those stories are done on and are broadcast without anyone worrying about TRPs or trends.

     

    How important are ratings in the larger scheme of things?

     

    Ratings are a currency. TRPs will always reward a certain type of content over another type of content. That is one another intrinsic problem with the rating system. Now we are seeing new methods of measurement also coming out with a much larger monitoring system and a larger sample of people, which is interesting. At some point, I am sure BARC India and others will start monitoring digital data as many consume news not only from television but also from live streams.

     

    For a long time, NDTV has not been trying to sell on the basis of TRPs alone. I think the sales team has done a great job. Many of the powerful and important brands are keen to be a part of NDTV now.

     

    Is digital gradually taking over TV when it comes to news? What should TV players be doing to keep the audience intact?

     

    I don’t think it is going to be an either or situation… just as television and print have co-existed from such a long time. It’s not that after the invention of TV the newspapers shut down. Digital is another facet of it.

     

    We at NDTV are content providers and will provide content to  consumers in whichever format we can. It will be on TV, desktops, mobiles, etc. Wherever the consumer is consuming content, we will be there in that space. We are visible in most of the areas. So I think TV and digital will go together.

     

    From Doon School to journalism to Chief Executive Officer, how would you define your journey so far?

     

    Well, it’s been an interesting journey. I have worn so many hats so far. I have always enjoyed my years as a journalist and I still enjoy my anchoring. I get a lot of satisfaction especially from things like the special projects that I do and the big campaigns in which I play an active role as an anchor.

     

    Other than Gadget Guru and The Big Fight, I don’t get to do so much journalistically, which taps some area of regret within me. 

     

    What role has Dr Prannoy Roy played in your career?

     

    He has been a guide and a mentor in more ways than one. I went to TV because I saw Prannoy anchoring a show. That’s when I decided to make a career in the same field. He has been a role model for me and many of us. I wouldn’t have been a journalist if it wouldn’t have been for him.

     

    What can we expect from NDTV in the coming year?

     

    We are hoping for another change in the TV business model in 2016. On TV, we will continue to target growth and profitability. We will focus on our three basic aspects of TV, i.e. digital content, TV  and e-commerce business. Each have their own targets and matrices against which we will be evaluating them. We will go to the bottom line and get the profitability up as much possible.

     

    In digital content, we will try to consolidate our leadership position. On the e-commerce side, this is a crucial and critical year of all our new ventures that we are launching and we are hoping that the success that they have seen in the initial stage will turn into strong marketing business model.

  • Social media & e-mail marketing top preferred channels for Indian marketers in 2016

    Social media & e-mail marketing top preferred channels for Indian marketers in 2016

    NEW DELHI: Customer acquisition will be the primary focus for marketing activities to be carried out in 2016 for 58 per cent of Indian marketers, a study shows.

     

    The study by Octane Research shows that Social Media (66 per cent) topped the list of marketing activities planned for 2016. 

     

    Email marketing was not far behind, with a 53 per cent share of Indian marketers. What’s more, according to the study, more than 50 per cent of marketers are planning to increase investment in all these activities.

     

    Social media updates are the top choice for achieving maximum customer engagement (46 per cent), followed by email campaigns (28 per cent). SMS marketing was the least preferred (eight per cent).

     

    A total of 64 per cent of Indian marketers believe that social media helps in improving brand reputation and increasing awareness. Social media also helps in extending the reach of email content to new markets and accelerating the growth of subscribers.

     

    As per the study, around 80 per cent of Indian marketers believe that integrated campaigns (email, social and mobile) can result in a moderate to significant increase in conversion rates.

     

    About 85 per cent of the Indian marketers are tracking revenues generated through e-marketing activities. A total 50 per cent of respondents shared that e-marketing activities are contributing to more than 10 per cent share of their revenues.

     

    Email marketing proved effective for over half of the respondents, as 53 per cent of marketers found email marketing “effective” or “very effective.”

     

    Reaching out to target audience (54 per cent votes) and acquiring new email addresses (50 per cent) surfaced as the top challenges faced by Indian marketers in 2015. Increasing the conversion rates was also a challenge faced by 35 per cent of marketers.

     

    For the 2016 issue of this annual state of online marketing in India study, India’s leading industry associations – Internet and Mobile Association of India (IAMAI), Retailers Association of India, Direct Marketing Association of India and Digital Defynd extended their support to Octane Research resulting in an active participation from 450+ Indian marketers from 400+ Brands.

     

    Referring to the Annual Industry Report, Octane marketing director and co-founder Punit Modhgil said, “2015 was the year that digital firmly established in India. With more than 400 million India consumers on the internet now, India CMOs have dialled up their investments in digital marketing. In terms of impact, Indian marketers have recorded Social and Email Marketing to be the top performing online marketing channels.”

  • Titan marketing campaign wins at World Watch Awards

    Titan marketing campaign wins at World Watch Awards

    NEW DELHI: Titan Raga and IWC Portofino Midsize watch launch received the ‘Best Integrated Marketing Campaign’ Award at the sixth edition of the annual Watch Awards this year.

     

    HUBLOT ICC World Cup Association bagged the ‘Best-Organised Event’ and ‘Best use of Ambient Media’ awards, while ‘Titan Gift of Time’ campaign was awarded the ‘Best use of Social Media’ award.

     

    SEIKO, Lulu Mall, Cochin picked the ‘Best Boutique’ award.

     

    Marketing categories had been included for the first time in the Watch World Awards hosted by the Chitralekha Group here.

     

    Bollywood actor Yami Gautam, Nimrat Kaur and Pallavi Sharda were among those present at the function, which also featured entertainment frills including a comic act by Delhi-based stand-up comedian Vasu Primlani.

     

    Watch World Awards creator and Chitralekha Group president & publisher Mitrajit Bhattacharya says, “With each edition, the awards have been able to touch the right chord with the watch brands and watch aficionados across the world. Watch World Awards has attained the stature of being one of world’s most coveted award on horology with its six editions till date. The participation from the world’s top watch brands is a testament of our success over the years.  As always, we came up with an incredible jury team hailing from watchmaking, design, sports, collaborative art, marketing, to celebrate the art and science of watchmaking.”

     

    Filmmaker Apoorva Lakhia was a member of the four-member jury that judged the product category. Senior marketing & business transformation specialist (automotive & retail) Nitish Tipnis judged the marketing category.

  • IT experts & professionals to endorse Digital India

    IT experts & professionals to endorse Digital India

    NEW DELHI: In a break with tradition, four non-celebrities have been appointed as brand ambassadors to promote the Digital India programme.

     

    The brand ambassadors appointed by the Government for a period of one year include author and ethical hacker Ankit Fadia and computer scientist and author of ‘Sixth Sense’ Pranav Mistry of Samsung in the United States.

     

    In addition, there are two student brand ambassadors: Satwat Jagwani and Krati Tiwari who are both All India IIT-JEE – Advanced student Toppers for 2015. 

    The Communications and Information Technology Ministry said no other person has been appointed as brand ambassador for Digital India and reports indicating that a Digital India brand ambassador has been appointed other than these four are wrong. 

    As part of the Digital India week (1 – 7 July) these four brand ambassadors were nominated for a period of one year to propagate the product and applications being launched by the Department under Digital India programme. 

     

    The services of these brand ambassadors will be used, as and when required for generating mass awareness for the programme.

  • Rentrak acquires social media tracker SponsorHub

    Rentrak acquires social media tracker SponsorHub

    MUMBAI: Rentrak has acquired SponsorHub, the Big Data platform for the sports and entertainment industry, offering proprietary social media measurement for sports, political and advertising brands.

     

    SponsorHub offers the most trusted industry benchmarking for top brands in the sports technology and entertainment space. Its tools measure and track brand engagement in sports and branded entertainment initiatives, ranging from the Olympics and World Cup, to TV and movies.

     

    Rentrak’s acquisition of SponsorHub advances its mission of providing unprecedented audience measurement and targeting to enable marketers to reach the right audience at the right time. Through its acquisition of SponsorHub, Rentrak will offer products that measure the effect of social media on television, dynamic ad insertion, online video advertising, movies and branded content integration.

     

    “TV continues to be more social and our industry-leading analytics greatly complement Rentrak’s services. The combination of Rentrak’s current products with SponsorHub’s social media SaaS platform will provide the most precise set of tools to measure the effect of social media. We’re looking forward to the new products that will be developed through this acquisition,” said SponsorHub CEO Robert Johnston.

     

    “We are excited to add social media measurement to our TV Everywhere products, as it will give additional transparency and purchasing flexibility for brands and agencies through SponsorHub’s social media products,” added Rentrak vice chairman & CEO Bill Livek.

  • Govt. bows to votaries of free social media, withdraws controversial draft on Encryption Policy

    Govt. bows to votaries of free social media, withdraws controversial draft on Encryption Policy

    NEW DELHI: Following protests by votaries of a free social media, the government today withdrew a draft of an encryption policy, thus exempting mass use encryption products, which are currently being used in web applications, social media sites, and social media applications such as Whatsapp, Facebook, Twitter, etc

     

    In a statement, the Department of Electronics and Information Technology said that it had “noted public sentiments viz-a-viz this draft. It is clarified that the above mentioned draft is not the final view of the Government on the matter.”

     

    The draft had been prepared by a High-level Committee as part of an attempt to ensure secure transactions in Cyber Space for individuals, businesses and Government and prepare a National Encryption Policy. 

     

    The statement said the Department had also taken note of the ambiguity in some portions of the draft that may have led to misgivings. “Hence, the draft has been withdrawn and will be put up for consultation after appropriate revision.” 

     

    The removal of the draft also amounts to exemptions to SSL/TLS (Secure Sockets Layer/ Transport Layer Security) encryption products being used in Internet-banking and payment gateways as directed by the Reserve Bank of India and SSL/TLS encryption products being used for e-commerce and password-based transactions.

     

    Communications and IT Minister Ravi Shankar Prasad told newspersons that the draft was not the final view of the government. “The policy will consider the views of the public,” he said.

     

    Under the draft, which has now been withdrawn, every message that is sent through e-mail, Whatsapp or SMS was required to be stored in plain text format for 90 days from the date of transaction and made available to the law enforcement agencies on demand.

     

    The draft was to help introduce a New Encryption Policy under Section 84A of the Information Technology Act, 2000, and had called for public comments by 16 October.

     

    The stated mission of the policy is to provide confidentiality of information in cyber space for individuals, protect sensitive or proprietary information, ensure reliability and integrity of nationally-critical information systems and networks.

     

    “Users or organisations within B2B group may use encryption for storage and communication. Encryption algorithms and key sizes shall be prescribed by the government through notifications from time to time… On demand, the user shall be able to reproduce the same plain text and encrypted text pairs using the software or hardware used to produce the encrypted text from the given plain text,” the draft said.

  • I&B secy Bimal Julka stresses value of social media in reaching out to people

    I&B secy Bimal Julka stresses value of social media in reaching out to people

    NEW DELHI: Information and Broadcasting Ministry Secretary Bimal Julka has said social media initiatives of the government had provided people a platform to communicate directly with the government through methods such as Crowdsourcing, which encouraged such innovations.

     

    He stressed the need for qualitative information flow and interface of citizens with the communication strategy of the government. “This has led to people centric communication and facilitated enhanced outreach and visibility of government communication across platforms,” he said.

     

    Julka said this in discussions with Queensland University of Technology, Australia vice chancellor Professor Peter Coaldrake, here today.

    “The communication paradigm has undergone a shift with a 360 degree approach being adopted to address the communication needs and challenges,” he said.

     

    He also referred to flagship schemes of the government namely Digital India, Skill India, Make In India, which had provided an opportunity to media units to reach out to defined target audiences. 

      

    He specifically highlighted the use and effectiveness of initiating Talkathons, which provided a direct interface with the people leading to effective citizen centric communication. “Such initiatives would encourage a culture of inclusive and participative decision making,” he said.
     

    During the meeting, Julka and Professor Coaldrake reviewed the current training mechanism between the Ministry and QUT with regard to in-service training of Indian Information Service officers. Both agreed that the future training agenda should include contemporary issues related to media and communication studies. They emphasized that Skill Development was critical for in-service training of officers handling government communication.

  • IIFA 2015 takes world by storm on social media

    IIFA 2015 takes world by storm on social media

    MUMBAI: Social media is being used extensively to popularise shows these days and an example of this was the recently aired IIFA 2015. While #IIFA2015 trended at number one in India, on the day of its telecast on Colors, it also was among the top 10 trends internationally.

     

    This year’s campaign saw a plethora of innovative mediums that kept consumers engaged and enthralled by the excitement and glamour of the IIFA Weekend. On twitter, fans and stars tweeted constantly about their favourite moments of the show.

     

    Fans got a chance to be part of the Green Carpet at IIFA with Facebook video lounge where they could ask their favourite stars a question. With the ingenious use of Facebook API, a touch screen experience was created for celebrities to answer the questions. Each celebrity picked a question by tapping on one of the five profile photos of their fans. Not just this, #Fame beamed close to 200 hours of live content spanning three days. Celebrities lost their hold on gravity with Instagrams Gravity Booth.

     

    Wizcraft International director Sabbas Joseph said, “Social media is a revolution in technology that allows us to interface with events across the world as an almost first-hand experience. It is this pinnacle of interaction that we have tried to achieve through our social media campaign this year and I think we have successfully achieved this goal.”