• What I'm Doing...

    With family and friends after a long time.
    13 hrs ago

    Love Chrome, but it still needs some ironing
    2 days ago

    scavenging the flea market for stuff for my home
    2 days ago

    More updates...

  • Back from Goa!

    April 6, 2008 – 7:02 am

    Back from the Club Mahindra Varca Beach Resort in Goa, where the annual sales conference and the marketing meet was held. Spent more than 50 hours traveling by bus and train. But in the end it was fun, adventurous and great way to catch up with the rest of the zonal marketing team.

    In the meanwhile, here is a slideshow of the photos.

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    Digital Advertising Agencies - The Woes and Ways ahead

    March 21, 2008 – 1:29 pm

    Advertising on the Internet is almost a decade now, but its potential and benefit to marketers have only been realized fairly recently. The measurability, the innovativeness, the cost benefit and the unprecedented reach to a global audience has made marketing on the Internet a favourite amongst a growing number of marketers.

    However, because this is a new medium, the number of online marketing agencies that can handle a client’s end-to-end internet marketing requirements are virtually non-existent. There are specialists in all kinds of areas - from SEO (Search Engine Optimization), PPC (Pay Per Click), Blogging, Online Media Buying, Banner Creatives, Facebook applications, Virals etc.

    The good part is that there are many good specialists in their area of expertise, the problem is that all these areas are relatively incoherent. You need someone to orchestrate your campaign, route it to all these specialist areas and bring it all together to make the campaign successful.

    If you manage the online initiatives for your company, you will relate with it, especially if your company has a big budget in the online space.

    There are many so called generalists who claim to provide end-to-end, seamless online marketing solutions. But dig the surface, and most of these agency claims are empty and fail to deliver on their promise.

    Many of the traditional advertising agencies have forayed into the digital marketing space, and are attempting to fill the gap for their clients. Their “attempt” however leaves a lot to be desired. Most of the client servicing guys handle the Internet business with the legacy of traditional advertising, and handle this medium with the same gloves.

    That said, some of the big agencies are also acquiring specialist digital agencies, in the hope of completing the spectrum. It will be interesting to watch, how these acquisitions pan out over the years.

    Will good digital marketing agencies thrive on their own, or would they need to be part of a traditional agency needs to be seen. Whatever may be the case, marketers/clients need a single point interface and a partner to maximize the brand and revenue potential.

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    Ad Lib - What makes a great advertisement

    February 25, 2008 – 1:20 pm

    According to me, there are only two kinds of ads. The ones you remember and the ones you don’t.

    Of the ones that you remember, I’m not getting into the details of awful looking ads because the rub-off to the brand is also negative.

    In the days of Doordarshan (legacy Indian TV channel, state controlled) when content was limited to only one channel, advertisements were a welcome break and people remember the ads (aired in the 80s) even now. In those days, it wasn’t about great concept or execution, just the lack of clutter that made it amazingly easy for ads to create the brand association.

    Times have changed, and television content and channels have proliferated beyong the wildest imagination. Where there is content, there are consumers, and where there are consumers, there is commerce. All that potent umpteen ad space/spots are occupied by an umpteen brands with their ads.
    Some of them are so common and “stenciled”, that you would need to watch it several times over to even know which brand its associated with. Others are so bad in execution, that you wonder if there was a kid behind the creatives.

    Even worse are the ones that want you to stretch your imagination, requiring a cryptologist to understand what it means. Perhaps those ads were meant to win awards, please the intelligentsia, make it a bait for future pitches. But did it connect with the customer and improve the perception, increase the sale? Who cares, the awards lie decorated in the shelf!

    A great ad may never win an award, but it remains in popular perception long after it is gone. Great Ads, like the Orange (Hutch -> Vodafone ->? …) faithful dog or the Coke “Thanda matlab…” managed to linger long after and created a pleasant association with the brand.

    With a thousand brands floating around, the mind choses to remember only the ones that make a distinction.

    If a good ad reaches out to the intended audience, a great ad holds on to it.

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    Selling Strawberries - Inspirational Business Series

    February 7, 2008 – 12:22 am

    The following are excerpts from a speech first delivered as the keynote of the American Marketing Association annual meeting in New York City in 1973. It was published the Saturday Evening Post in 1974, October issue.

    James Lavenson owned a marketing and advertising company before being invited to become a senior management executive with Sonesta International Hotels. He was given responsibility for the company’s hotel and food interests and some non hospitality businesses, including the famous Mad Magazine and Hartman Luggage. For the last three years of that period he was president and chief executive officer of the chain’s ‘flagship’, the famous Plaza Hotel in New York City.

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