Tag: Sonali Dhawan

  • Thrive Global India teams up with Ariel for ‘Share The Load’ campaign

    Thrive Global India teams up with Ariel for ‘Share The Load’ campaign

    MUMBAI: On Women's Day 2019, Thrive Global India is partnering with P&G to amplify Ariel’s award-winning campaign of #ShareTheLoad – a movement that addresses inequality in the Indian household and encourages men and women to equally divide the household chores. This much-needed initiative compliments the mission of International Women's Day 2019 of creating a gender-balanced world, popularised as #balanceforbetter.

    It is also a perfect fit for Thrive Global India’s mission to end the stress and burnout epidemic in the country, where women are expected to manage both home and office work, which can lead to increased anxiety, stress and burnout. In its latest edition of #ShareTheLoad, Ariel is asking if we are teaching our sons what we have been teaching our daughters and is urging mothers to reanalyze the way they raise their sons. Since its inception, Ariel’s campaign has helped families realize that everyone, regardless of their gender, should be equipped to share the load of household chores.

    Now, Thrive Global India and Ariel are adding another layer to this much-needed conversation as they talk about “Sharing the Load for A Thriving Partnership”. Through this collaboration, Thrive Global India is helping accentuate Ariel’s message of addressing inequality in the household and to reiterate that both men and women have an equal responsibility in performing household chores like doing laundry. Through the partnership, Thrive Global India’s media platform now hosts a dedicated section, for this campaign, which provides readers curated resources across a range of digital assets to take Ariel’s movement to a newer audience.

    Talking of the partnership, Thrive Global’s founder and CEO Arianna Huffington said, “Thrive and P&G’s Ariel are united in our mission to add value to consumers' lives, and I'm thrilled to extend the work we've done with P&G brands into India, which has long held a special place in my heart ever since I was a student there years ago. With #ShareTheLoad, we hope to empower couples to support each other and unlock their greatest potential in both their personal and professional lives by rejecting the unreasonable societal expectations of women that lead to stress and burnout."

    Commenting on the movement, marketing director, P&G India and fabric care Sonali Dhawan, said, “Ariel India is committed towards progressing the lives of women across the country, because women are the backbone of our society. We started #ShareTheLoad movement in India back in 2015 to address the inequality that exists within Indian households. This year, we reignite conversations with the same intent, and go deeper into the cause of this disparity. In the context of right upbringing, we urge mothers to be changemakers, and raise yet another pertinent question – Are we teaching our sons what we have been teaching our daughters? If sharing the load is taught at an impressionable age, it becomes a part of their value system. Ariel believes in simplifying the lives of consumers and a happier household is one where both men and women share the load. Ariel encourages men to do their bit and take up tasks like laundry, because anyone can get the impeccable cleaning with Ariel, no matter who does the laundry.”

  • Ariel’s #ShareTheLoad campaign turning purpose into desirability and sales

    Ariel’s #ShareTheLoad campaign turning purpose into desirability and sales

    MUMBAI: Brands today aren’t just selling products, but are providing unique experiences that merge with their identity and consumers’ lives. Technically called purpose-driven marketing, the campaigns tend to touch the right chords.

    A number of national and international brands are currently using this mode of marketing to place their products not only on the shelves but also in the conscience of the consumers and laundry detergent brand from the vast portfolio of Procter and Gamble (P&G), Ariel has been one of the forerunners to use this power of brand image and loyalty into communicating something larger to the society.

    #ShareTheLoad campaign, which launched its first edition in 2015, is one of the most beautiful campaigns driving the message of ending gender-parity at home. The brand released its third edition (http://www.indiantelevision.com/mam/media-and-advertising/ad-campaigns/ariel-reignites-conversations-on-household-inequality-with-a-new-campaign-sons-sharetheload-190124) recently, and within a few days, its digital campaign has garnered 15 million views and a lot of praise online, including one from Facebook COO Sheryl Sandberg. Indiantelevision.com interacted with P&G India, and fabric care marketing director Sonali Dhawan, and BBDO  chairman and chief creative officer Josy Paul regarding what makes this campaign different from other purpose-driven ads in the market and what all went behind in creating its immense success.

    Dhawan shared that for her this is not ‘purpose-driven marketing’ but something greater than that. She noted, “Yes, there is a purpose to the marketing but that doesn’t mean any brand can make ads on any particular purpose. There are two very important things, which, if in place, can take the campaign indefinitely. First, is that your product should play a role in the social change you want to affect and second is that your brand should be in a position to influence. For us, the starting point of #ShareTheLoad campaign was the fact that Ariel makes it so easy to do the laundry that anyone can take it up. Ariel thus has a very important role in the conversation and that role can be expanded for a lot of causes.”

    Paul also reflected the same sentiments as he reflected, “There are a lot of people jumping in with cause and purpose but ‘without purpose’. What I believe is that the brand has to have not only the authority [to promote an idea] but it [the idea] has to be linked with what the brand can offer. When we say ‘share the load’, it actually resides in the basic truth about the product and the brand. We say it can wash the toughest stains and anyone can do it. That ‘…and anyone can do it’ is what Ariel reflects. It is linked to the brand promise and therefore we earn the license to say this.”

    The campaign has not only initiated a change in the core of the society at a very important juncture in time when women equality is actually a massive global phenomenon but has also helped the brand in increasing its sales. That makes it the perfect campaign to support the idea of equality while it also pushes the brand to perform.

    According to Dhawan, the reason behind this has been the authenticity with which the brand creates its campaigns. “If the brand is not authentic in its approach towards the campaign, the audience can read through it. P&G has always been authentic in its conversations. Be it Whisper talking about period taboos because it is a brand associated with periods, or be it Pampers talking about it takes two to parenting approach because it is a brand for babies. It is not about any brand picking any topic and saying I want to talk about it because I have the eyeballs there. Then the campaign will not make any impact,” she said.

    And how did they realise that its approach has to be towards targeting gender-parity? To this Dhawan replied that the idea came from the core thought of how their brand is affecting consumers’ lives. During a consumer interaction they heard women saying that it is so easy to do laundry with Ariel that they can now share the load with their kids, or their husbands. “At the same time, we did a Nielsen survey because we wanted to understand the state of the society in terms of equality at home. That survey showed us that 79 per cent of the men thought that household chores were only a woman’s job. We saw that there was huge inequality between the genders at homes. This was the second realisation, the first being that my product is great and it can help in many ways.”

    That’s when BBDO came in with the pitch of #ShareTheLoad campaign that talks about addressing the core of the problem—that is the conditioning people are given since childhood. The campaign started with a simple question “Is laundry only a woman’s job?”

    Paul shared, “When you start you do not plan that it will go into phase two or phase three. It starts with just an idea. But when we saw the response to our first campaign we realised that it was not just another campaign but a movement.”

    He further added, “The thing about a movement is that it is very dynamic. It’s not like a campaign where you plan something and now you push it out in the media and get it to distributing. Here you are constantly watching how the audience is reacting to it. So lot of social listening and observations happened and we realised that the campaign or the movement is working. People want to get involved, partners want to get involved, and then the client [Ariel] came to us that they want to go ahead with phase two of it.”

    Paul also shared how such campaigns serve a dual purpose of encouraging a change and also help the brand to grow. He said, “The beauty of this is not that it is just about social change. It is purpose-driven but it’s also something that talks about the brand. It allows the brand to be more loved. So, it’s quite interesting how purpose turns into love, love turns into desirability, and desirability turns into sales through such initiatives.”

  • P&G appoints Karisma Kapoor as brand ambassador for Olay

    P&G appoints Karisma Kapoor as brand ambassador for Olay

    MUMBAI: P&G has appointed Indian actress Karisma Kapoor as the new brand ambassador for its anti ageing skincare product, Olay Total Effects.

    Kapoor joins other actresses — Kajol, Shilpa Shetty, Tisca Chopra and Ira Dubey. 

    P&G Beauty head Sonali Dhawan said, “We welcome Karisma to the Olay Total Effects family, and are excited about having her on board as she exemplifies the Olay philosophy of challenge what’s possible.”

    Kapoor can be seen starring in a new television commercial for Olay Total Effects airing across major television channels.