Tag: Sudhir Sitapati

  • In partnership with AAAI, SGF has hosted the lecture series, featuring top speakers for years.

    In partnership with AAAI, SGF has hosted the lecture series, featuring top speakers for years.

    Mumbai: The Advertising Agencies Association of India (AAAI) and the Subhas Ghosal Foundation (SGF) have announced that award-winning independent digital journalist Faye D’Souza will deliver the AAAI Subhas Ghosal memorial lecture 2025 on 5 March at St. Regis, Mumbai.

    Established in memory of Subhas Ghosal, a towering figure in the advertising industry, the Subhas Ghosal Foundation promotes the professional values he upheld. In collaboration with AAAI, the Foundation has hosted the lecture series for several years, featuring distinguished speakers such as Rajan Anandan, Uday Shankar, Ronnie Screwvala, Aroon Purie, and Sudhir Sitapati.

    Speaking on behalf of SGF, Sam Balsara stated, “We live in an era where news and views shape our daily lives. Faye D’Souza, with her fearless journalism, will discuss the challenges and opportunities for independent journalists and the implications for democracy and public discourse. It promises to be an insightful session.”

    This year’s event also welcomes a new sponsor, Amazon MX Player.

  • Godrej Indonesia CEO Rajesh Sethuraman gets additional biz transformation role at GCPL

    Godrej Indonesia CEO Rajesh Sethuraman gets additional biz transformation role at GCPL

    MUMBAI: 6 December will end up being a memorable day for Rajesh Sethuraman. That is the day when the CEO of Godrej Indonesia was given an additional responsibility by the management of Godrej Consumer Products Ltd (GCPL) in Mumbai led by Sudhir Sitapati: to lead the group’s business transformation and digital agenda. GCPL made the appointment  public by sending it to the Bombay stock exchange as is required by responsible and transparent companies.

    The reason the responsibility was thrust on him was because the executive responsible for business transformation and digital Vijay Kannan at GCPL Mumbai was relocating to be with family in the United Kingdom.

    Sethuraman is known to be a hardworking and focused senior executive who gets things done. The engineering graduate, and MBA from XLRI began his career as a product  executive in Heinz India. From global brand manager -Radiant in Hindustan Unilever, he quickly rose to regional category leader south Asia laundry and then was moved to south Africa as vice-president Africa laundry.

    His performance saw him being quickly promoted to vice-president home care division Africa. He once again shone over there and was transported back to Mumbai to help the mothership accelerate growth by rewiring its operation to deliver a superior  customer experience. And in his words :”Unlock this across core sales and  planning operations right through order to cash. Leverage external industry leading partners to deliver an integrated process tech and org combination which is future fit.”

    That brought him to the notice of the GCPL management led  by  Sitapati -a former Hindustan Unilever man himself and who had worked with him while he was there – which made him an offer to build Godrej Indonesia and establish it as a best in class entity in Indonesia.

    Which he has been in the process of doing. Rather successfully. Hence, the additional responsibility. Because Sethuraman is an executive who knows how to get things done, and mostly in time.

    “He has previously led the digital transformation of Unilever’s operations across many markets in core sales and planning operations, from order to cash processes, successfully designing integrated operations, and leveraging technology and partnerships for business success,” GCPL informed the BSE in the regulatory filing.
     

  • Sudhir Sitapati’s compelling address takes center stage in AAAI’s Subhas Ghosal Memorial Lecture

    Sudhir Sitapati’s compelling address takes center stage in AAAI’s Subhas Ghosal Memorial Lecture

    Mumbai: Godrej Consumer Products CEO Sudhir Sitapati’s compelling address took center stage in AAAI’s Subhas Ghosal Memorial Lecture on Thursday. He shared many insights on building brands in today’s India and also some of his personal experiences.

    The event was held on Thursday, 18 January 2024 at 7:00 pm at ITC Grand Central Parel, Mumbai.

    As a memorial to one of the most influential figures in the history of advertising, Subhash Ghosal, the Subhas Ghosal Foundation was established by a group of senior communication professionals who lived during his era. One of the primary objectives of the foundation is to promote the professional values Ghosal embodied throughout his lifetime.

    Sitapati delivered the Subhas Ghosal Memorial Lecture at the Advertising Agencies Association of India (AAAI) event on Thursday on the topic he titled “Does the advertising industry need a dose of its own medicine?”

    Before that, Sitapati stated that when he joined as the MD and CEO of Godrej Consumer Products (GCPL) two years ago was to “dramatically” increase the company’s ad spends. “Even if it came at the cost of profitability,” he said.

    Sitapati addressed many issues. He said that he considers himself “one of the advertising fraternity” and made some points, calling for increased synergy between agencies and advertisers.

    He stated that Ghosal, the legendary adman who was JWT’s first Indian CEO, would be disappointed that J. Walter Thompson, the agency where he had worked for 50 years, has now been subsumed in VML.

    He also talked on some key reasons as to the decline of advertising in today’s times. He said that Ghosal would blame it on the change of the commission model where agencies would make 15 per cent commission from media owners for the advertisements they bought. “The fortunes of advertising died with the current fee model that leaves no room for investments in people and research and no real incentives for agencies to push the business of the client to the maximum,” he noted.

    He shared that in 1983, in an article titled ‘Advertising a Critique’ Ghosal argued for more spending on advertising and said that the sector contributed to about 0.2 per cent of GDP while in Indonesia it was close to 0.6 per cent. 40 years later advertising now contributes to about 0.5 per cent of Indian GDP.

    On of the main points he notes was that of the FMCG sector. He stated that FMCG is still the largest spender on advertising in India and advertising is in turn its lifeblood. The Indian companies are much more profitable than their global peers. The top five listed FMCG companies spend 15 per cent of their revenues on advertising whereas 10 per cent in the global top 5.

    “FMCG is the bell-weather consumption and compass for most consumer companies. It’s not unfair to therefore assume that advertising has played such an important role in FMCG. It has played perhaps a slightly less, but nonetheless crucial role in consumption in general,” he said.

    Sitapati shared three basic points for folks in advertising: “Spend more time with the CEO, CFO and other non-marketing people, have a unique point of view on how advertising works and advertise it in a line and finally talk more numbers.”

    He said the first step in marketing is to know your target consumer well. “Who the consumer is for the agency depends on what you want. If your objective is to structurally reset the profitability of the sector because the profitability of the sector is not a reset. The consumer is not the brand manager or the marketing head but the CEO. “CEOs are only willing to pay substantial amounts if they see something that drives their share price in the next 12-36 months.”

    He further shared that in today’s post-modern world, we recoil at a definitive answer on how advertising works instead of listing the various ways it could work. “We are more concerned with being never wrong rather than being often right. There may be many roads to advertising heaven, but an agency must choose one of these roads and convince the CEO that their religion is the true one.”

    He said that his own beliefs on advertising were shaped by two epiphanies. “As a brand manager on Surf Excel in the mid tweens I noticed that whenever a measure on our Milward Brown brand tracker called ‘Proven ad recall’ rose then a few weeks later our sales rates went up as well. In other words, all it took for consumers to buy more was to be able to narrate the story of the ad impromptu.

    “I call this principle “Be famous before you get persuasive”. Don’t sell, just be known for what you sell. Once you buy this belief system there are some necessary concomitants – the power of the big idea that helps you stand out, consistency, fewer copies, risk taking etc.,” he noted.

    Sitapati’s second epiphany, he said, was shaped around that same time when he read a book that now seems to be on everyone’s bookshelf – ‘How Brands Grow ‘ by Byron Sharp.

    “His thesis is that brands grow not by heavy users consuming more but by non-users or very light users consuming a bit more. Penetration not consumption drives growth. Penetration is driven by salience, not equity attributes and salience is driven by making your brand mentally available to the maximum number of people. In media terms its reach and not impact that matters,” he said.

    The second advertising principle for Sitapati which is media related has been “It is better to whisper to many than to shout to a few”. “This too has its concomitants – never getting carried away by impact, keep looking at the cheapest media, at consumer cohorts who never see your brand ever and don’t over segment markets.”

    “It’s not just important to have a theory of advertising, it’s equally important to have a proposition that your agency believes in and everybody in the agency repeats at all forums. With just these two principles consistently at play I’ve winged my way through marketing for the last 15 years.”

    He also said that his final suggestion on marketing advertising is for the agency world to speak a little bit more in numbers to brands.

    “We as clients would love it if you had more data at your disposal on how an ad is working than we do. If you came to us and said this isn’t working, pull it off or it’s working you’ve got to spend more money on it. Not based on gut, which you do quite often but based on hard facts. Agencies need an entire department on marketing effectiveness – you’ll have to invest in the databases and in people but I can assure you that whenever a consultant or an external advisor has proprietary data on my brand or company, I take that very seriously.”

    He concluded the session by stating the first line of Ghosal’s book “Making of Advertising”. It stated that, “When I was asked to speak on the subject for this session, “Advertising strategy, how to make it work”, my instant response was what a wonderful opportunity to combine experience and discipline into a presentation from which the speaker was bound to get much more than the audience. This is almost always true, because the speaker tends to take his subject far more seriously that the audience does just like an advertising.”

  • Sudhir Sitapati to deliver AAAI Subhas Ghosal Memorial Lecture on 18 January 2024

    Sudhir Sitapati to deliver AAAI Subhas Ghosal Memorial Lecture on 18 January 2024

    Mumbai: The Advertising Agencies Association of India (AAAI) and the Subhas Ghosal Foundation (SGF) announced that the Subhas Ghosal Memorial Lecture will be delivered this year by managing director and CEO, Sudhir Sitapati, as the esteemed speaker. The event will be held on 18 January 2024 Thursday at 7:00 pm at ITC Grand Central Parel, Mumbai.

    While talking about his personal and professional experiences, Sudhir Sitapati will share many valuable insights on building Brands in today’s India.

    As a memorial to one of the influential figures in the history of advertising, Subhas Ghosal, the Subhas Ghosal Foundation was established by a group of senior communication professionals who lived during his era. One of the primary objectives of the Foundation is to promote professional values. Ghosal embodied throughout his lifetime. With the support of Advertising Agencies Association of India (AAAI), the Foundation has been hosting its ‘AAAI Subhas Ghosal Memorial Lecture’ series, for several years, where luminaries like Rajan Anandan, Uday Shankar, Ronnie Screwvalla, Aroon Purie have delivered motivational and informative talks.

    On behalf of SGF, Sam Balsara says, “We live in a world where brands play a very important role in consumer lives and have become money spinners for those members of India Inc. who know how to create and nurture them. Sudhir, with his extensive experience of building Brands at Unilever and now at Godrej Consumer Products Limited will deliver, I am sure, a very insightful talk that will be invaluable for all of us in the Marketing, Advertising and Media World”.

    Ahead of the lecture AAAI president, Prasanth Kumar said, “Sudhir is an experienced and proven Brand builder and AAAI is delighted that he has agreed to deliver the Subhas Ghosal Memorial Lecture.”

    All members of the Advertising, Marketing, Media and Digital community are welcome. However entry is only by invitation. Please send an email to Mr. Chetan Salian at AAAI on his email id aaai@aaai.in to receive an invitation.

    The lecture is made possible by ABP NEWS’s gracious support, which the organizers are deeply grateful for.

  • HUL’s Sudhir Sitapati joins Godrej Consumer Products as MD & CEO

    HUL’s Sudhir Sitapati joins Godrej Consumer Products as MD & CEO

    Mumbai: Godrej Consumer Products Limited (GCPL) today announced changes to its leadership team, effective 18 October 18 2021. Sudhir Sitapati will join GCPL as managing director and chief executive officer. Nisaba Godrej, currently the chairperson and MD of the company, will continue to serve as executive chairperson. Sitapati’s appointment will enable GCPL to leverage his significant experience in building sustainable and profitable businesses to guide the growth strategy going forward.

    During his 22 years at Hindustan Unilever Ltd (HUL), Sitapati led teams across categories and functions in India, Europe, South East Asia and Africa to create significant value for the business. He was appointed to the HUL management committee as an executive director in 2016, making him one of its youngest ever members. Under his leadership, HUL built up its foods and refreshments business as one of the largest in India. This included the $5 billion merger and integration of GlaxoSmithKline Consumer Healthcare with HUL, the largest deal of its kind in the FMCG sector in India.

    Sitapati is currently the co-chair of the CII National Committee of Food Processing and is a past co-chair of the FMCG Committee. He has an MBA from the Indian Institute of Management, Ahmedabad and a BSc in maths with economics honours from St. Xavier’s College, Mumbai.

    Nisaba Godrej said, “I am delighted to be welcoming Sudhir to Godrej. His significant experience and passion for building sustainable and profitable brands and businesses aligns very strongly with our purpose at GCPL. Sudhir’s values-based leadership style also makes him a great fit with the Godrej culture. I look forward to his partnership in unlocking the amazing potential of our company and leading its next phase of growth.”

    Sitapati added, “I am very inspired by the legacy of the Godrej Group, and GCPL’s purpose of bringing the goodness of health and beauty to consumers across emerging markets. I am excited about working closely with the talented GCPL team to build on the incredible work they are doing and create sustainable, long-term value for our company.” 

    In his previous roles, Sitapati was instrumental in creating a world-class tea business for HUL in India and leading HUL’s Soaps business in the country. A passionate marketer, he has worked closely on internationally acclaimed purpose-led marketing campaigns for some of HUL’s most iconic brands, including Surf Excel’s ‘Dirt is Good’, Lifebuoy’s ‘Have you washed your hands with Lifebuoy?’ and Brooke Bond’s ‘Taste of Togetherness’.

  • Sudhir Sitapati moves on from HUL, to be replaced by Srinandan Sundaram

    Sudhir Sitapati moves on from HUL, to be replaced by Srinandan Sundaram

    NEW DELHI: Hindustan Unilever (HUL) executive director foods and refreshment Sudhir Sitapati is moving on from the FMCG major. He will be replaced by Srinandan Sundaram, currently executive director – customer development. The appointment will be effective 1 July 2021.

    Sitapati is leaving the organisation to pursue an external opportunity.

    He joined HUL as a management trainee in 1999 and has successfully managed roles across sales and marketing. As executive director – foods and refreshment, he led the transformation of the brand’s Tea portfolio into a purpose-led category that regained market leadership and gained shares for the last three years.

    During his tenure, he also led the merger of Adityaa Milk and more recently, GSK Consumer Healthcare business into HUL, bringing iconic brands like Horlicks and Boost into the Unilever family. The Unilever Food Solutions business was also rewired and transformed into a growth engine.

    Sundaram joined HUL as a management trainee in 1999 and over the last 22 years, has had a strong track record in both customer development and marketing. In his current role, Srinandan has been at the forefront of bringing in leading-edge technology and transforming the company’s CD organisation into a high tech – high touch team. The Shikhar app, launched under his leadership, has lent a competitive edge to the business, especially during the pandemic and is the largest eb2b app in India today.

    HUL chairman & MD Sanjiv Mehta said, “I would like to thank Sudhir for his immense contributions to the company over the last two decades. We cherish iconic ad campaigns like Daag Acche Hain and Swad Apnepan Ka that were created under his leadership. He played a pivotal role in the merger of GSK CH into HUL. I wish him the very best as he embarks on a new chapter in his career. I am delighted with the appointment of Srinandan as head of foods and refreshment and I’m certain that he will take the business to the next level of performance.”