Tag: Unilever

  • Eggfirst brings on senior hires to bolster business

    MUMBAI: Two new senior egg-xecutives have rolled into Mumbai based creative agency Eggfirst. Both have oodles of agency experience under their shell.

    Hitesh Sohandani who has been hired as business head has worked for nearly 15 years in agencies such as Triton Communications (11 years in two stints of around five years each) and Everest Brand Solutions, apart from hopping over on to the client side (Suashish Diamonds for a short stint. Sohandani was part of the team that rebranded water purifier brand Aquaguard Total.

    Sunil Balan has been recruited as the agency‘s client servicing director and has close to 10 years experience with agencies such as Quadrant Communications (seven years) and also Creative Juice (an agency he helped start).His expertise lies in marketing communications, brand management, digital marketing and strategic communications.

    Says Sohandani: “I am absolutely delighted and am looking forward to the exciting opportunities at Eggfirst. Given the ambitious growth plans, I am relishing the challenges that lie ahead.”

    Adds Balan: “Eggfirst is the place I was looking to work with to do some really exciting work. With an immensely hard working team, I am keen on working with them to take it to the next level”.

    Eggfirst chairman & managing director Ravi Banka believes that their joining his agency is going to really strengthen the management. Says he: “In the ever-evolving business environment where consumers are co-creators of brands, and with the competition being cutthroat among agencies, Eggfirst is looking at getting on board clients known for their creative breakthroughs. I am confident that Balan and Sohandani will play an important role in helping Eggfirst expore new endeavours in coming years.”

    Eggfirst is a full service advertising agency which offers end to end creative solutions. It has two other wings – 5 degrees which digital provides end to end digital marketing and social media strategy solutions. It also has a specialised retail wing called Eggfirst Mandi. The agency’s clients have included Unilever, Vim, Hari Darshan, Tata Consulting Services, Tata Salt, Shalimar Paints, Reliance Digital, Maya Digital, Shivam autozone and Blaupunkt.

  • CNBC teams up with Lotus F1 team

    MUMBAI: CNBC, the world‘s leading business and financial news network, has teamed up with Lotus F1 Team as its Official Business Media Partner.

    Throughout the 2013 Formula 1 season, this new agreement will allow Lotus F1 Team‘s partners to benefit from CNBC‘s unmatched reach of affluent and influential business leaders with commercial advertising campaigns airing on its international network. This new relationship builds on the team‘s recent partnerships with brands such as Microsoft, Unilever and The Coca-Cola Company.

    The partnership will see CNBC branding on the nose of the team‘s 2013 car, as well as on driver and pit crew overalls, team uniform, branding around the paddock and on marketing materials.

    “CNBC‘s partnership with Lotus F1 Team is extremely exciting. It‘s an innovative marketing solution which provides branding and commercial opportunities for both parties. The Formula 1 audience is complementary to our own influential and affluent viewer base around the world. We look forward to working with Lotus F1 Team and wish them success in the 2013 season,” said CNBC VP Marketing & Communications Charlotte Westgate.

    Lotus F1 Team Team Principal Eric Boullier said, “CNBC is a fantastic partner which highlights the growing importance of Lotus F1 Team as a vehicle for the business world. We are working with household brands such as Microsoft, Unilever and The Coca-Cola Company;brands whose actions are watched closely in the business world. Our partnership with CNBC brings us greater exposure in this environment and allows our business-to-business platform to flourish.”

  • Havas shuffles two key executives to drive growth

    MUMBAI: Havas has made some changes, shuffling people within its sister outfits. Andrew Benett has been appointed as Havas Worldwide global president and Robert LePlae as Arnold Worldwide global CEO.

    Both will report to David Jones, who will remain Global CEO of the Havas Worldwide network.

    Benett will retain his chief strategy officer role at Havas Creative Group. He is currently Arnold Worldwide (Havas‘ creative company) global CEO. In the new role, he will assume responsibility for leading the day-to-day management of the global network.

    Benett has been with Havas for nearly a decade. Prior to his role at Arnold Worldwide, he served as global chief strategy officer for Euro RSCG Worldwide and CEO of Euro RSCG New York. During his recent three-year tenure leading Arnold Worldwide, he and his team grew the agency by more than 30 per cent, winning and growing relationships with clients including The Hershey Company, Jack Daniel‘s, Unilever, Volvo, American Eagle Outfitters and fab.com. The team also dramatically enhanced the agency‘s digital capabilities, while expanding the micronetwork‘s offerings in Amsterdam, London, Moscow, Shanghai and Sydney.

    Benett said, “I am very proud of what we‘ve accomplished and delivered together. The leadership team at Arnold is one of the most passionate and committed I‘ve seen, and they are further strengthened by the expertise and experience Robert brings. I am looking forward to my new role. Havas Worldwide‘s digital strength and leadership in the areas of social media and social responsibility have put the agency at the cutting edge of the industry and we have high expectations of what we can accomplish in 2013.”

    LePlae was previously Arnold Worldwide global president. He brings a wealth of experience to his new role. He spent 11 years at TBWA, including five years as CEO of TBWAChiatDay Los Angeles, leading to his appointment as president of TBWA North America. He also spent two years in Japan as founding CEO of an international joint venture company to run the Nissan business globally. He is considered to have been a cornerstone in the emergence of TBWA Worldwide as a leading global creative network. Immediately prior to joining Arnold, he served as McCann Worldgroup North America president.

    “When I joined Havas last year, its reputation as the most agile, entrepreneurial and integrated of all the big communications groups was incredibly appealing. Stepping into the CEO position at Arnold is an inspiring chance to deliver results for a first-rate group of clients, and to lead a world-class, innovative team at Arnold,” added LePlae.

    “Both Robert and Andrew will have a similar focus in their new roles – making successful businesses even more successful. When we moved Andrew to Arnold, we put him there to develop and execute a plan to turn around the agency – he‘s done that very successfully. The move to Havas Worldwide provides a different opportunity as the agency is coming off one of the best new business streaks in its history, having in the last few weeks won the global Unilever data business, the European Central Bank account, Louis Vuitton globally, Berluti globally, and Citibank CRM and eCRM as just a few of the highlights. His key focus will be leveraging his strategic strength to lead the business to even more rapid growth,” said Jones.

    Jones added, “This is an incredibly exciting time for our industry, presenting fantastic opportunities for big talents like Andrew and Robert, who are motivated by change. The momentum at Havas is very strong at the moment, following the successful rebranding of Euro RSCG to Havas Worldwide, the unique co-location of all our media, creative and digital teams into one building in Paris and in New York, and a great fourth quarter of new business wins and digital growth. These senior management moves represent another important step in delivering our strategic plan.”

  • GroupM agrees to acquire majority stake in Netbooster Asia

    MUMBAI: WPP’s wholly owned operating company, GroupM, has agreed to acquire a majority stake in NB Agency Asia Holding Limited (“Netbooster Asia”), the Hong Kong holding company of digital marketing agencies in the Philippines and Indonesia, subject to regulatory approval.

    Netbooster Asia was founded in 2007 and is based in Manila and Jakarta and is a digital marketing agency offering media, production and creative services. It has an employee strength of 110 people and caters services to clients like Unilever, L’Oreal, Del Monte, Globe, BDO, Wyeth and Intel. Post the acquisition, Netbooster will be rebranded as Movent in the Philippines. In Indonesia, the agency will be consolidated into GroupM’s digital offering.

    Netbooster Asia‘s unaudited revenues for the year ended 31 December 2011 were approximately $2.4 million, with gross assets at the same date of approximately $2.4 million.

  • Unilever splits biz between Mindshare, PHD and Initiative

    MUMBAI: Unilever, which had initiated a global review in early 2012 in line with company policy to evaluate media agency arrangements periodically, has split the business between Mindshare, PHD and Initiative globally.

    In India,As a part of the announcement, WPP‘s Mindshare will continue to buy and plan media for Unilever in markets including Europe (UK, Ireland, Netherlands, Belgium, Germany, Austria, Switzerland, France, Italy, Spain, Sweden, Denmark, Finland, Norway, Romania, Bulgaria and Serbia), North America (US, Canada and Caribbean), Asia (India, Indonesia, Thailand, Malaysia, Singapore, Viet Nam, Australia, Pakistan, Sri Lanka and Bangladesh) and Africa (South Africa and sub-Saharan Africa).

    Omnicom‘s media agency PHD has been appointed in Europe (Poland, Estonia, Latvia, Lithuania, Czech Republic, Hungary, Slovakia, Slovenia, Croatia and Bosnia-Herzegovina), Asia (China, Hong Kong, Taiwan and New Zealand) while IPG‘s media agency Initiative has been appointed in Latin America (all countries including Mexico, excluding Brazil) and Europe (Greece, Portugal, Russia, Ukraine and Belarus).

    Additionally, PHD will also handle the global communication planning account for personal care, refreshment, foods and homecare brands. Global planning for Household Care will be managed by Initiative, as part of an integrated IPG solution.

    Unilever SVP Global Media Luis Di Como said, “We are confident that we have the right agency partners to service our business. They will help us leverage our scale and engage with consumers around the world in effective and meaningful ways, in order to fulfill our ambition of doubling the size of our business while reducing our environmental footprint and increasing our social impact.”

    “We greatly value the long-term relationships that we have with our agency partners and look forward to continue working closely with them to deliver our marketing strategy, Crafting Brands for Life, and our ambition to continue leading in the digital marketing space,” Di Como added.

  • Nielsen goes live with its cross-platform ratings measurement

    MUMBAI: Nielsen, a global provider of information and insights into what consumers watch and buy, has taken a major step forward for cross-platform advertising measurement by launching Nielsen Cross-Platform Campaign Ratings.

    Leveraging the Media Rating Council-accredited Nielsen Online Campaign RatingsTM and proprietary national TV panel, Nielsen Cross-Platform Campaign Ratings will deliver reach of video advertising across screens. The solution will be commercially available beginning 1 October.

    Nielsen Cross-Platform Campaign Ratings has been through extensive trials with a number of the industry’s biggest players across the advertising ecosystem. ESPN, Facebook, GroupM, Hulu and Unilever are among the dozen industry leaders who participated in trials for this service, which provides unduplicated and incremental reach, frequency and GRP measures for TV and Internet advertising.

    “Sports fans are on the cutting edge of changing consumer media behavior,” said ESPN Vice President of Integrated Media Research Glenn Enoch. “ESPN‘s participation in the Nielsen Cross-Platform Campaign Ratings trial reflects our constant exploration for new ways to measure cross-platform usage.”

    “Better understanding of the ads consumers see across all media is critical for marketers to build great campaigns – and for publishers to demonstrate the true value of their inventory,” said Facebook Head of Measurement and Insights Brad Smallwood. “Nielsen Cross-Platform Campaign Ratings is the first product that truly addresses this issue. Having a holistic, consumer-centric view of a campaign is a big step forward for the industry.”

    “As consumers watch their favorite TV shows across Internet-connected devices, measurement in this area becomes critical to the long-term health of the entire industry,” said Hulu Senior Vice President, Advertising Jean-Paul Colaco. “We are supportive of Nielsen‘s approach in advancing the reliability of cross platform measurement and look forward to continuing our collaboration with them.”

    “Nielsen Cross-Platform Campaign Ratings helps us determine who is seeing our advertising on TV compared to our digital advertising. This is increasingly important as we discuss how to spend our money across these critical media platforms,” Unilever, Director of Media Investment and Partnerships Jennifer Gardner.

    In addition to online video advertising, Nielsen’s approach measures online display and rich media advertising in combination with TV. Industry trials, run between March and August 2012 have demonstrated the power of a high-quality, third-party solution that provides directly comparable metrics across TV and digital, measuring unique audience on each, along with overlapping audience and total combined unique audience.

    “Creating a way to reach, measure and monetize inventory across screens and platforms advances the industry toward the high caliber, seamless standard that can provide new opportunities for players across the industry,” said Nielsen President, Global Media Products and Advertiser Solutions Steve Hasker. “Nielsen Cross-Platform Campaign Ratings is an exciting step in helping advertisers, agencies and publishers further understand the impact of their campaigns, wherever they run – across platforms and markets around the world.”

    The Nielsen Cross-Platform Campaign Ratings launch comes as more and more consumers are living cross-platform lives. According to the latest Nielsen Cross-Platform Report, in addition to watching 34-plus hours of TV per week, the average American spends nearly five hours online on the computer. More than half of Americans now watch video online, with online viewing increasing average weekly video consumption to roughly 35 hours.

  • ‘India is one of the few markets where making positive impact is possible’ : Wolff Olins MD Charles Wright

    ‘India is one of the few markets where making positive impact is possible’ : Wolff Olins MD Charles Wright

     

    Q. Why has Wolff Olins not set up shop in the rapidly growing market of India when it has caught the attention of every big global agency?
    We have no such plans to enter India soon as Mumbai is a very expensive real estate city. We do work for a lot of clients in India. But we have created Dubai as a hub from where we serve a much wider region. We service India from Dubai as a base.

     

    Q. So how do you get a feel of the local needs of the Indian clients?
    In our Dubai office, we have Westerners, Indians and Arabs working together. The mix is very important. If we only have an American or European team, there would have been huge cultural misunderstandings. So what we are offering clients is the best of both worlds. The benefit from this is that clients can be assured that while we are adding an international flavour, we are also taking into account the local needs.

    Q. Isn’t India a difficult market from a brand perspective as it is very price sensitive?
    I think we have now figured out a model for working in India. You have to, if you are to do business here. Everyone here likes to negotiate. People will bargain even if they don’t need to. I have seen people haggle when you think “why are you even bothering?” But I guess it’s a cultural thing.

    Q. So how do you deal with this?
    Initially, it was irritating but now I enjoy it. That is, perhaps, because Indian businesses do not have the luxury of money. The idea of everything being done frugally is something I have learnt from here. If you were working for a big corporation in America, you would be accustomed to spending large amounts of money. So you could do all sorts of things which here would be considered to be frivolous. It’s something like an athelete that has trained hard and we have now become fitter at running the race the Indian way.

    ‘We have no such plans to enter India soon as Mumbai is a very expensive real estate city. We have created Dubai as a hub from where we serve a much wider region‘

    Q. What other lessons have you learnt from here?
    Having Indians on the team have helped because people are direct even with me and say, “Don’t do that!” What I have learnt working here is that while in Europe modesty is a virtue, here modesty is a weakness. We have to be more forceful. As a foreigner, one might mistake forcefulness for rudeness, but it’s not so! It’s being just honest. I am still learning to be much more direct. There is a big positivity that comes from working in India.

    Q. What about growth?
    There are a number of clients that are super ambitious. Here more than most of the countries I have worked in, making positive impact is possible. It’s not easy, but it’s possible.

    Q. Do Indians value brands as much as the matured consumer markets?
    The word brand identity has been devalued today to mean logo – not just in India but everywhere. Having said that, I find there is a lot of interest in branding in India. You have special supplements and shows about advertising and branding. In the US, which is the most developed market, there are no TV shows on this topic. There are columns in the newspapers and trade magazines like Advertising Age, etc. Perhaps the reason behind this is that the stuff is fairly new here following liberalisation. More people can afford more things, so there is that interest in the topic. There is a curiosity about lots of things. India is like a sponge soaking up stuff not just about branding but a lot of things.

    Q. Isn’t that good news for a branding company?
    Being a branding company, we create or refresh brands. What makes us special is that first of all we try to work for companies that are ambitious and want to do something important. From our point of view, we also want that the work has a big impact. Our internal line is that we are optimistic and ambitious for our clients. So we are looking for clients that are looking at doing good for the world rather than just making money.

    Q. Are Indian brands receptive to this? 
    Hero is a company we have worked with and if you see the ads, they all tell a story or sing a song about how each of us is a hero. I think where we got to our work is that the motor bike isn’t the point. The point is what the two-wheeler or the bike can do for the guy. This ad is a dramatic example of what I am talking about; it reflects the optimism and the ‘doing good for the world’ concept. When you give a young guy or a young couple a bike when they get married, their life takes a different shape. And that, in a small way, is about celebrating the common man as opposed to the high fancy stuff, which to my mind is brilliant.

     

    In a similar way but in a different segment, Tata Docomo talks about enabling ordinary people to do stuff that they couldn’t do before. The common thread in these two brands is the positive impact we are trying to create.

     

    I would love to do work in the healthcare sector and financial services. Why is there no big financial group from India like in America and Europe? How come so many families do not have access to clean water? We would love to work with companies that are addressing the big issues of our times. We want to do stuff which has positive impact.

    Q. How do you select brands?
    We want to work with ambitious Indian clients. It could be a small company of designers or it could be companies that know about digital stuff. But they should allow us to do interesting stuff in tune with our philosophy.

    Q. Doesn’t this sound like you were born in a different age and era?
    The company is a child of the 60s. It was the decade of the Beatles in England. In fact, they were one of the first clients of the company. That was the time when the mood was for optimism, equality and freedom. One of the characteristics of the 60s was a desire to do good. There is a sense that the culture from back then has still lived on. These kind of things get us excited – and the good news is that there is lots of such work to do in India.

    Q. With such independent thinking, wouldn’t you have been better off staying separate rather than selling to Omnicom?
    A small group of us actually bought out the company in the mid 90s from the founders. We had an office in London and were active in Europe. We had another office in Spain and one in Portugal. But we had the dream of going fully international. We, thus, set shop in New York and started doing business in Japan because we thought that Asia would be the future.

     

    America, however, was a very tough market. So we approached Omnicom and told them that we needed their help to go international. We were willing to be acquired but wouldn’t want to be bulldozed because it’s the way that we work that makes us successful and not the size of what we do. So if we get acquired, it is on the understanding that the culture is what makes us successful and Omnicom has to trust us on this one.

     

    Omnicom agreed to our terms. The way it works is that at the start of the year we tell them what we are going to achieve and as long as you do that, they leave you alone. It is a very fertile environment for us.

  • JWT to acquire stake in Pakistan-based digital agency

    JWT to acquire stake in Pakistan-based digital agency

    MUMBAI: JWT has agreed to acquire a minority stake in Pakistan-based digital agency, Converge Technologies, as part of its strategy to add depth and breadth to its Asian digital offerings.

    The global agency has not announced how much stake it will hold and at what price. The acquisition is subject to regulatory approvals.

    Founded in 2007, Converge Technologies is based in Karachi and handles clients like Unilever, PTCL, Mobilink, HP, Bank Alfalah, Nokia and Pakistan State Oil.

    JWT Pakistan CEO Mansoor Karim Shaikh said, “This partnership will put both Converge and JWT Pakistan in a position to leverage each other’s strengths and scale up our integrated offering for our clients.”

    Converge offers services including digital media strategy, social media planning and management, platform, content, technology enablement, game and app development, mobility campaign planning and execution.

    JWT Asia Pacific has moved aggressively into the digital space over the last year, expanding both organically and through acquisitions.

    JWT signed an agreement in 2011 to acquire A4A, a digital and social media marketing company in China. On 12 March XM Asia, a JWT company, acquired Indonesia-based digital agency Magnivate.

    “As one of the ‘Next 11‘ growth economies, Pakistan is a very strategic market for JWT. This deal adds yet more momentum to our regional digital growth strategy. We will continue to add depth and breadth to our Asian digital offerings over the coming month,” JWT Asia Pacific President Michael Maedel said.

  • Prime Focus Q3 net up 50% to Rs 262.9 mn

    Prime Focus Q3 net up 50% to Rs 262.9 mn

    MUMBAI: Prime Focus Limited has posted a consolidated net profit of Rs 262.9 million for tthe fiscal-third quarter ended December 2011, which is 50.4 per cent higher compared to the Rs 174.8 million the company posted in the same quarter in the previous fiscal.

    The company’s consolidated income also rose 67.6 per cent to Rs 2.13 billion for the third quarter compared to the Rs 1.27 billion that the company posted in financial year 2010 for the same quarter. Net income jumped to Rs 612.7 million for the current quarter as opposed to Rs 370.6 million in the previous fiscal for the same period.

    Prime Focus MD & CEO Ramki Sankaranarayanan said, “I am pleased to report a good set of results based on the continued strong performance of our 2D-3D conversion business, which is growing rapidly on the back of superior technology platform, View-DTM and service delivery to Hollywood studios. Five of the 10 Oscar nominations in the visual effects category this year are projects we are proud to have contributed our services to, clearly reflecting our global penetration in this space.

    “Our subsidiary Prime Focus Technologies (PFT) is in the forefront of cloud computing driven execution of digital processes in the media industry. As broadcasters and content owners embrace HD TV, file-based workflows and multi-platform delivery, new age standard operating procedures and engagement models are emerging in managing unified content operations. CLEARTM, our hybrid cloud platform, on the back of the successes in India with Star TV, Eros, Unilever, Balaji Telefilms and JWT, now have global wins as well reflecting its potential for the future."

    PFL is a global visual entertainment services group that provides creative and technical services to the film, broadcast, and advertising market.

  • ‘The pharma industry needs an absolute mind shift. They have to think FMCG and act pharma’ : McCann strategy director Manjunath Hegde

    ‘The pharma industry needs an absolute mind shift. They have to think FMCG and act pharma’ : McCann strategy director Manjunath Hegde

    Manjunath Hegde, masters in marketing management from Jamnalal Bajaj Institute, has over 23 years of experience in 360 brand management and consumer insight based strategy and creative. Over the years he has worked on some of the best brands – P&G, Unilever, Infosys, Taj Hotels, Lakme, ICICI, United Brewries, Marico, Zee TV, CRY. He is also associated with agencies such as Ambience Publicis, Leo Burnett and Bates Clarion.

    Hegde has also spent a couple of years in Dubai as COO, Liwa Advertising, restructuring the agency to global standards and getting business worth millions during the peak of recession. He also co-founded the brand consultancy firm ‘Chlorophyll‘.

    Hegde is presently McCann strategy director, specifically focusing on the pharmaceutical industry.

    In an interview with Indiantelevision.com‘s Anindita Sarkar, Hegde talks about the various advertising and marketing challenges that the pharma industry faces today.

    Excerpts:

    Unlike yesteryears, today there is a lot of brand communication talk happening within the pharma industry. Why this shift? 

    Until now pharma companies had not found a need for real brand management. But they are slowly waking up to the need. And this is because pharma companies have recognised that there is a need for multiple touch points to contact its various stakeholders – patients, chemists, doctors, relatives – for a range of categories as the market in ever expanding and is hugely competitive.

     

    You have been involved in branding at various levels. How similar or different is brand building in the pharma industry?

    The brand building process of a pharma product is very challenging. The principles of brand building will always remain the same; it‘s the manner of executing them that change when it comes to the pharma category.

    Look, for example, it is quite easy for the FMCG advertisers to create brands because they have access to the mass media. But when it comes to the pharma industry, there are media and legal restrictions; you need to take care of your audience and the key influencer, which is the doctor. Because, in this case, you cannot reach out to the consumer directly by foregoing the doctor.

     

    So, what is the communication challenge of an OTC product?

    See, an OTC product can be divided into two categories. The first kind is one which can be purchased across the counter and, therefore, can be advertised like cough syrups. The second category is where by repeat purchase (self medication), the product steadily falls into the OTC bracket again. And in both these categories, it is a must for the products to build an image of their own. The brand communication has to create space in the consumers‘ life; it has to be an experience by itself. It cannot behave indifferently. Only then will the brand be recognized by the consumer. And this is the communication challenge in this category.

     

    How do you deal with the branding strategy of a pharma product as against any other category?

    In the pharma industry, unlike an FMCG product which talks to masses or for that matter any other category, we are dealing with problems that are related to health issues. So, here you are talking to someone who is ill and while your audience is that one affected person, the relatives and family members also become an important audience. Also, here the communication has to be done with the key influencer or the qualified influencer, which is the doctor. And in addition to this, there are also the strict government rules which one needs to adhere to. So the category advertising by itself is extremely challenging and the treatment is very different. Here the product has to go beyond the regular talking about what it will do as a drug and rather become a part of the affected consumer through a new life changing story.

    For example, if it is a product that is made for diabetic patients, then it should talk about the healthy lifestyle approach that one needs to take if affected. It has to show support and concern. Only then will it become a part of the patient‘s life.

     

    What is the primary difference between promoting an OTC brand versus a general brand?

    In an OTC brand, you talk to the consumer directly. But for non-OTC, you cannot use mass media; you are not allowed to. These brands have to be prescribed by a doctor. So in this case, the communication is directed towards the doctor.

    Also, most brands decide not to go OTC (and sometimes they cannot go because its ingredient based) because it is a different ball game altogether. The media spends are higher, the exposure to competition is on a severe basis; it‘s a large market now and totally volume based. So it‘s largely a pull versus push strategy wherein you make the consumers come and ask for it. Whereas, when it comes to non-OTC, it is only a push and push strategy. The companies push it down to the doctors and then the doctors push it to the consumers.  

    ‘A larger trend is moving towards the wellness category – it is a huge market out there. So there is a huge growth opportunity in this segment.‘

     

    So many times is it a conscious decision to go non-OTC? 

    Absolutely. Many times it happens that brands have become OTC by default. And this means that at some point of time they were prescription based, but gradually the consumer has moved to buy the product on his own through repeated purchase. Now, one could take a decision to go OTC but in that case, it may lose out on the prescribed category because the doctor will now stop prescribing that medicine.

    The doctor has to and should refer a non-OTC brand and, therefore, companies who are pharma strong will give a window to the doctors.

     

    In a category like this where you cannot advertise through mass media, what are the primary marketing platforms? 

    In this category there is a need to be present so that you are seen and can touch consumer life in areas where you can meet them. These could be jogging parks, treadmill companies, doctor‘s clinics, conferences and forums. The brands have to talk about their own essence, and say, “I am there.”

    Also, the pharma industry needs an absolute mind shift. They have to think FMCG and act pharma. This means they have to look into the product from the consumer‘s point of view.

     

    Is there alternative medicine market in India (like ayurvedic products, etc.)? Is there a fair consumer tilt towards these?

    Today consumers are becoming more and more health conscious and, thus, there is a trend wherein people are moving towards organic and non-toxic products, courtesy the internet. A larger trend is moving towards the precaution and wellness category – it is a huge market out there. So there is a huge growth opportunity in the wellness category.