| Mumbai,
July 28, 2005:
Advertising Agencies Association
of India (AAAI), as part of its Diamond
Jubilee Celebrations organized the Diamond
Jubilee Seminar “Beyond the Horizon”
on 21st and 22nd of July 2005 at Hotel Hilton
Towers, Mumbai. Click
Here to see the Photographs taken during
the event.
On the eve of Thursday, 21st July 2005,
with the lighting of the ceremonial lamp
as the symbolic gesture, Mr Srinivasan K
Swamy delivered a short
welcome address (pdf link) replete with
facts and figures.
Mr Swamy threw light on the origin of AAAI
and breezed the audience through the journey
of AAAI from its inception in the pre-independence
days (21st September 1945 to be precise),
and how the advertising body had contributed
in shaping the advertising industry through
its initiatives.
Going down memory
lane, Mr Swamy said, “From a total
billing of Rs 3.5 crore in 1953, the advertising
industry has grown to a robust Rs 12,000
crore industry today. Through the years,
the AAAI has addressed various relevant
issues and also helped in formation of bodies
like Advertising Standards Council of India
(ASCI) as well as IBF. Most recently, AAAI
took up the issue of fringed benefit tax,
which subsequent to the initiative, was
removed for advertising expenses.”
Among the many things that AAAI has on its
agenda are launch of a book – History
of Advertising – arranging four one-day
seminars, a new code of best practices and
promotion of talent by a campaign showing
advertising as an interesting job prospect.
The occasion was also
well-timed for the annual, much looked forward
to AAAI-Premnarayen Award ceremony. The
17th AAAI-Premnarayen Award, for the year
2004, was conferred on Mr Goutam Rakshit,
Managing Director, Advertising Avenues,
for his outstanding contribution towards
the growth and development of professionalism
in the advertising industry in India.
Mr Rakshit has been a
Past-President of the AAAI for three terms
and also has the distinction of having been
at the helm of key industry bodies like
ABC, NRSC and ASCI. He is currently a trustee
of STACA and was the first Indian to chair
the Asian Federation of Advertising Associations
(AFAA). He also played a stellar role in
steering Ad Asia (Jaipur) 2003.
Mr Rakshit, who started
off as a management graduate at Cadbury’s
joined Clarion Advertising as an account
director in 1980. He formed his own home
grown agency called Advertising Avenues
in 1982 to help develop smaller brands,
and has managed till date to keep to that
vision. He was a key catalyst in changing
the mind-sets between the advertiser, advertising
professional and the media. “This
is truly an honour, as it is coming from
my own peers and my industry and this is
one award that I will cherish for long.We’ve
grown well from a cottage industry to a
world-class industry today. This industry
is a knowledge industry and we are in the
business of creating brand ‘India’
and should endeavour to succeed in doing
that,” Mr Rakshit said while accepting
the award.
Mr Andrew Robertson, President
& CEO, BBDO Worldwide, New York -- one
of the youngest industry professionals to
be elevated to this global position, and
who took over as the CEO of BBDO Worldwide
at the age of 43 -- then delivered his inaugural
address to an elite gathering triggering
off, on 21st July evening itself, the AAAI
Diamond Jubilee Seminar with some thought
provoking insights which set the tone for
Seminar.
Mr Robertson was undoubtedly
the highlight of the evening. He spoke about
the digital economy which he referred to
as the attention economy. “One can
move from world to world at a touch of a
buttun; its no more called multi-tasking
but serial monotasking,” Mr Robertson
said.
Throwing light on the fact
that it was easier today that ever before
to move between options for consumers, and
hence the advertising industry today is
posed with a major challenge. Robertson’s
solution to beat the fast paced and bustling
growth of digitalization was to provide
compelling creative content. “It’s
not the medium and the technology, but the
quality of content; in fact the message
is the medium.” Validating his point,
Robertson cited examples of Rowling’s
Harry Potter which was sold out in the first
couple of hours after it hit the stands.
Referring to India, Mr
Robertson cited the Cannes 2005 example;
while Thailand won 26 lions, Brazil –
62, Africa – 25, India landed itself
only 5. He said, “India has a vast
pool of rich talent and I would like to
see India making an impact by making its
work comparable to global creativity standards.
It has the potential and since the clients
need it, I am sure India will prove itself.”
He concluded by saying, “I hope to
come back for the AAAI – 75th anniversary”.
The next morning (22nd
July 2005) Mr Bhaskar Das, Executive President
of the Times of India, briefly introduced
Mr Ranjan Kapur, Country Manager, WPP India,
and thus started a veritable bouquet of
sessions. In his keynote address Mr Kapur
said, “someone once told me never
to predict the future, because you’ll
never be right. And if you feel you must,
then predict far enough into the future
so you won’t be around to face the
embarrassment when you are proven wrong.
But insanity has already begun to take hold
and I am about to take a crack at forecasting
what is in store for us in the next few
years,” he quipped.
Mr Kapur made some very
pertinent points on the estimated size of
the marketing communications industry in
India today, “the future is upon us
and we don’t even know it”.
Last year, China claimed that they were
$35 billion, while India was a mere $3 billion.
Are we underestimating our own Adex? questioned
Mr Kapur, "And if so, by how much and
are we missing something? I believe we are.
"I believe that non-traditional media
has grown considerably faster than our ability
to measure it. Some of the direct to consumer
businesses like Amway, etc., are billion
dollar businesses. And they use direct marketing
tools which go largely unmeasured. As do
rural brand building efforts and in-cinema
branding."
“I
believe that non-traditional media has grown
considerably faster than our ability to
measure it. I believe it accounts for at
least another one billion that has not been
measured,” Mr Kapur said. "Some
of the direct to consumer businesses like
Amway, etc., are billion dollar businesses.
And they use direct marketing tools which
go largely unmeasured. As do rural brand
building efforts and in-cinema branding."
He also spoke of how advertising
would continue to be the dominant medium
for a long time to come, but its importance
would continue to erode. The erosion would
come from non-traditional, non-measured
media. "Agencies will also have to
examine their media neutral stance".
An important hypothesis of Mr Kapur was
about brands built in the era of shortages
vis-a vis today's brands which are built
in the era of plenty. Plenty of choices,
plenty of goods and services, plenty of
financing options and plenty of disposable
incomes. Mr Kapur warned that those brands
which were built in times of shortages would
do well to reassess their notion of brand
loyalty.
Mr Kapur also said that
52 percent of India's GDP had grown up without
the help of the advertising industry as
companies like TCS, Infosys, Wipro and many
others have become billion dollar enterprises
almost without much help from agencies.
He said the future belongs to the media
independents whose financial models were
in tune with the times predicted that the
two big trends which would shape the advertising
business of the future would be the retail
boom and the mobile telephony phenomenon.
This was followed by a
high voltage and intellectually stimulating
series of discussions covering today’s
hot sectors of FMCG, Services, Media &
Entertainment and Evolving Sectors including
Automotive/Lifestyle, Healthcare & Retail.
Mr Balsara, Chairman and
MD, Madison Communications, expressed the
concern that the share of the FMCG sector
in advertising was declining from 76 per
cent in 1999 to about 50 per cent last year.
Thus, he said, it was necessary for the
FMCG industry to have some conclusive findings
in this area so that mistakes that might
have been made leading to the decline of
growth rates – with an exception of
last year’s growth of 6 per cent –
were not repeated.
Building on this, Mr Saugata
Gupta, Chief of Marketing at Marico said,
“The worst is over and this year,
growth will be more than 19 per cent and
there are a few trends that the industry
will witness. As India is getting younger,
increasing number of products will be directed
towards the youth and youthful segment.
Kids, too, pose as a strong segment with
their pester power. There is a lot of scope
out there as aspirations are high. Brands
will thus need to encourage multiple personalities.
There will be much stronger need for innovations.”
He further said that marketers
would have to devise smaller packaging strategies
to find place inside the purse. “There
will be increased demand for brand consultants
and strategic account planning people to
drive the growth,” Mr Gupta pointed
out.
The second speaker on FMCG
was CavinKare CMD, Mr C K Ranganathan, focused
his presentation largely at looking beyond
television as an advertising medium to drive
awareness and volumes. Thus, he underscored
the need for experimentation by marketers.
He also said, “Today’s consumers
are looking for ways to look good and feel
good, so it’s a great opportunity
to drive per capita consumption. And instead
of waiting for income levels to increase,
marketers need to strategise to raise the
bar of hygiene level. Smaller packs are
and will be the way to go.”
Mr John Cahill of McCann
Healthcare (Singapore) and Ms Sudipta Sen
Gupta of Café Coffee Day were the
speakers at the next session on the Evolving
Sectors chaired by Mr Vivek Mohan of Abbott
India. The session on the Services Sector
chaired by Mr G Krishnan of TV Today provided
insights from Mr S V Prasad of Birla Sun
Life and Mr Atul Bindal of Airtel.
Mr Vivek Mohan laid the
ground for discussion by saying that there
were 200 million consuming class and this
would double over the next five years or
so. These consumers were willing to make
decision for themselves and there were growing
acceptance of lifestyle, automotive, healthcare
and retail. “Consumers are demanding
more from the market place, they need more
value for money, there is a greater demand
for better shopping experience. Debt no
longer is a dirty word,” said Mr Mohan.
Taking over from here, Mr John Cahill, Regional
Director, Asia-Pacific, McCann (Healthcare),
presented his point of view on the healthcare
communication industry. He said, “Even
if needles, doctors, pills, etc., come to
mind when one thinks of healthcare communication,
actually the communication is surprisingly
like other creative expressions. It’s
about real people and things affecting them.
Though the state of healthcare communication
in India has not been easy, driven by the
evolution of need and the state of health,
healthcare communication will look at more
meaningful contacts.”
Ms Sudipta Sen Gupta,
Senior General Manager (Marketing), Café
Coffee Day, gave her analyses of retail
emerging as an evolving sector. According
to her, “The growth of retail outlets
like Café Coffee Day and others has
got a great push from technology babies,
aspiring youth, balance seekers and retired
affluents. These retail outlets will have
to build strong brands.” She gave
the example of how Café Coffee Day
had built a brand without investing in above
the line advertising in its initial days
as well as the tie-ups with TVS Scooty and
Levis.
The last session in the
pre-lunch segment deliberated on the services
sector, where the chairman was TV Today’s
CEO, G Krishnan. He said that services today
had transgressed all boundaries like banks,
which was unimaginable a decade ago, but
had now become a simple reality. “The
discerning consumer of today is willing
to pay for quality, but is greatly intangible.
So there are issues as to how to measure
quality and manage it. Having said this,
the services sector will help India emerge
a global leader in next 10 years,”
affirmed Mr Krishnan.
Presenting at breathless
speed, Mr S V Prasad, CEO of Birla Sun Life
Asset Management Co., said, “There
is a rising affordability due to urbanization
and rising per capita income, but the consumers
are getting under-leveraged. We have a reservoir
of intellectual capital and this is India’s
greatest strength, which is making the country
one of the fastest growing economies. So,
there is consumption-led growth, mobile
telephony boom, tourism is witnessing a
strong growth as there is easy availability
of finance. India’s equity market
is also getting bigger and Corporate India
is in far better shape today. All this is
enabling Indian services sector to grow.”
Mr Atul Bindal, CMO of Airtel, spoke of
branding in context of telecom services.
He said that there would be some key shifts
and trends like brands would now equal experience,
there will be less rivalry and more competition,
there will be challenges of the next scoop,
there will need to be buyer behaviour paradigm
shift, non-voice will be the differentiator,
there content as strategic partnership and
the last technology led media planning and
delivery will important to note".
In the post-lunch session
on the Media & Entertainment Sector
chaired by Mr Arvind Sharma of Leo Burnett
saw Mr N Ram of The Hindu and Mr Peter Mukerjea
CEO of Star India debate and discuss issues
and challenges faced by the Media and Entertainment
industry, as well as their impact on Ad
agencies and related streams.
Mr Sharma spoke more about the growing media
and the various platforms to advertisers
today to build brands. Establishing the
base, he invited his first panelist, Mr
N Ram, who spoke about the value of good
content in journalism.
In an upfront presentation, Mr Ram pointed
the problems that the print industry was
facing. “The newspaper industry faces
a full fledged crisis today,” he said.
He enumerated various encouraging signs
also pertaining to the industry, speaking
about Asia being in the top three countries,
which had the highest number of readers,
India being No 2 in the list. Mr Ram also
referred to literature, highlighted the
buoyancy in Indian language papers, concluding
that literacy, good transport and communication,
and finally the existence of political events,
have lead to the growth in the medium.
Bringing out the pressures that advertising
brings on editorial and the readers evolving
drastically at the same time, Ram cautioned,
“Newspapers will decline rapidly unless
there are radical changes to connect with
the reader. Good journalism can laugh at
concepts of the ‘give the reader what
they want’ and ‘Infotainment’,
but the bottom line is that we have to see
these issues seriously now.”
Apart from these concerns,
he also pointed out that presence of a paper
on the web, even though it hadn't eaten
into the readership much presently, going
forward it would. Leaving the audience with
all these issues, he concluded on the note,
“We have to value good journalism,
quality content if the medium has to survive.”
Even as the audience was
worrying on this set of issues, Mr Peter
Mukerjea brought out another set of concerns.
He began his Internet-linked presentation
with the quoting of Don Schultz from the
foreword of the book Life After 30-second
Spot. He said, “Consumer is different
today, but advertising is not. It is still
30-second ads format for a consumer, who
cannot be formatted.”
He pointed out the gradual
movement to consumer-generated content and
the emergence of concepts like Direct Marketing
and PR for the marketing success of a product.
To the shatter myths that
we faced today, Mr Mukerjea brought out
points that were issues earlier, but over
time had ceased – whether it was the
prediction of television never taking off
or consumers turning into ‘serial
clickers’ ending the advertising era,
as soon as the remote control was invented.
He pointed that people still kept coming
back.
Nonetheless, the medium
was transforming now. From a situation,
where media was controlled, a technological
revolution had led to the consumer controlling
the media. Mr Mukerjea explained that with
the growth of digital communication, the
nature of production, distribution and finally
consumption of TV had changed, and so would
TV advertising.
He cited the examples
of IPTV and BT delivering content over phone
lines, Interactive TV like SKY News Active,
PVRs, X TV and so on, emphasizing that competition
only got accentuated going forward, pressure
on programmers intensifying to actually
leading to a scene where only the best would
survive.
Throwing light on some
future trends, Mr Mukerjea said, “There
would be complete technological convergence,
product integration, sponsorships would
be more meaningful. Even if the digital
immigrants will not become native, there
is a need to be accustomed to the digital
culture and then, only sky is the limit.”
The response from the
Agency Panel had Mr Sunil Alagh of SKA Advisors
in the chair, while advertising industry’s
heavyweights like Mr Piyush Pandey of O&M,
Mr Madhukar Kamath of Mudra Group and Mr
V Shantakumar of Saatchi & Saatchi provided
their perspectives on the challenges and
opportunities that lie ahead.
Even before the session
began, Mr Alagh informed the audience that
the panelists would just voice a thought
they regarded as relevant to the industry,
and then opened the floor to the audience,
a privilege not seen in some of the earlier
sessions.
Mr Alagh began with the
need to going to fundamentals for a problem,
but not intellectualizing the issue and
not being restricted by benchmarks. Mr Pandey
was the first panelist to address the crowd,
who began with a movie clip and the question,
“Are we bugging consumers too much?
In our excitement of new things, we are
forgetting the basics and the result is
that 85 per cent of what we see today is
utter crap!”
He said that there was
a need to correct the act immediately if
the future had to be secure and that the
key of great communication was in partnerships.
Following, this Mr Kamath
took charge of the crowd. He said, “Today
we are forcing ourselves to come up with
a new idea. We mustn't forget that there
are too many choices that consumers have
in every field and that it is time for integration,
across disciplines.”
One of the key points
he brought out was that the unbundling of
agencies into media and creative ones was
one of the generators of today's problems,
and that the solution now lay with agencies
returning to full fledged, full-service
agencies and strengthening partnerships
with clients.
Mr Shantakumar took Mr
Kamath’s point forward saying that
all changes happened in a context and mere
content could not be the driver of change.
“Just because there is new technology
doesn't mean we have to search for a way
to use it,” he pointed out. “Can
you bug someone to buy anything?”
he asked.
He further said that in
the long run, people believed in action
rather than words and that advertisers were
moving in the direction where they focused
more on what they wanted to say rather than
what they wanted to do.
“The
relations between the agency and the client
has been steadily deteriorating, and at
the end of it, we are to be blamed. We haven't
been able to provide clients with enough
transformable ideas,” Mr Shantakumar
admitted.
The Panel Response took
the seminar closer to its completion, where
20 industry professionals had spoken on
points of the media that were not seen or
spoken of often. The culmination came in
the valedictory address, delivered by Mr
Prem Mehta, the recipient of the AAAI-Premnarayen
Award last year.
One of the key events of
this ‘Beyond The Horizon’ seminar
was Mr Prem Mehta, Chairman and MD, Lintas
India, delivering the valedictory note.
Mr Mehta brought out the points that he
was taking from the seminar, the foremost
of which was the need to forge partnerships
to take the business forward. On a positive
note, he pointed that even as the concept
of fragmentation was fast emerging, the
fact was that it was accompanied with the
phenomenon of an evolving consumer –
both socially and economically.
He added, “Marketing
has come of age, but the Indian industry
is such that it has not seen the luxury
of evolution. Aspects like pricing are becoming
deciding factors. On the overall scene,
this has led to the reduced ability to invest
long term, which is a cause of concern.”
Mr Mehta concluded with
a call for the need to re-look at the media-creative
divide, moving towards integrated communications
outfits and in all the need for the ad industry
to re-establish. “The keyword of the
evening, I believe is partnerships –
that is the way forward,” was his
parting shot.
Mr Neville Gomes, the Chairman
of the AAAI Diamond Jubilee Seminar said
“This was an action-packed, insightful
Seminar. "With this event we wanted
to bring out issues of the industry that
do not always meet one’s eye, which
is what came across to the participants
– whether in the case of sectors like
FMCGs, Services, Media (both Print and TV)
and of course the response of the Advertising
fraternity."
For Mr Srinivasan Swamy,
President AAAI, “This Seminar, ‘Beyond
the Horizon’ went as AAAI had planned"
and this would be a huge encouragement for
the other events that the Association was
looking during it's Diamond Jubilee Year”.
Sam Balsara, Immediate
Past-President of AAAI, validated this,
“Right from Andrew (Robertson) to
Ranjan (Kapur) – some very thought
provoking insights have been brought forward.
I would say full marks to Peter (Mukerjea)
for really scaring us to some extent about
all the technological challenges that we
face.” On the flip side though Mr
Balsara said, “I am disappointed to
see that not as many marketers and agency
heads have been a part of this. There are
absolute pearls of knowledge which have
come out of this meet and a lot more people
should have taken advantage” .
Among other prominent industry
names, O&M’s Mr Piyush Pandey,
too, was content with the outcome of the
event. “Such events are an excellent
platform for people to come together and
discuss concerns of the industry. AAAI has
managed to put together a great event here
and everyone who has come as benefited from
this.”
Mr Arvind Sharma, Chairman
and CEO of Leo Burnett also agreed, “I
think this was an absolutely wonderful event.
I want to thank AAAI for putting something
like this together, which has brought out
some valid points that industry leaders
should look into”.
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