Time For Regional Brands - In MINT HINDUSTAN TIMES

1:30 AM

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Here's a thanks to Abheek Bhattacharya and the rest of the Hindustan Times Mint editorial team. A slightly different version of my previous post "Is the recession a Blessing in Disguise for Regional Brands" has been published in today's edition entitled "Time for Regional Brands", check it out here

Amit Budhiraja

Slumdog Creating Millions

2:49 AM

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Check out the latest post at contentSutra.com titled "
Interest In Slumdog Content Peaks Post Oscars; Caller Tune Subscriptions Jump". 

While Slumdog Millionaire is becoming something of a wildfire rage across the world, just about every business which has anything to do with media is cashing in on its popularity. to borrow from the original post by contentSutra - 

-The search volume for Slumdog Millionaire content has doubled in India and tripled worldwide over the last 48 hours.

-More that half a million mobile subscribers in India have set Jai Ho as their caller ring back tone.

-There are approximately quarter of a million searches per day for film content in India; the maximum searches over this weekend were related to Slumdog Millionaire.

-More that 80% of the Slumdog Millionaire content searched is for Jai Ho.

-On iTunes, Slumdog Millionaire is the top album and Jai Ho is the 7th most downloaded track. On radio, the focus on Jai Ho and A.R. Rahman peaked yesterday.

I read somewhere else that Tata Sky made a cool Rs. 37.5 Lakh ($78,000) in just three days by airing it on its pay per view channel.

There is, rather all of a sudden, a revitalized interest in AR Rahman's works and Reliance Mobile is creating two brand new sites dedicated to Slumdog and AR Rahman. 

Both lead stars of the movie, Freida Pinto and whats-his-name are already getting brand endorsement offers. their price? a cool 1-2 crores per endorsement. 

Marketing lesson in this is very simple - CASH IN ON FADS. 

Every product will have fads that will impact your business. If you are in media, as is quite obvious from the above, films, music, celebrities all have the potential to turn into a fad and create income streams for your business. 

If you are an FMCG company - the FAD could be something as simple and as strong as the current consumer interest in "wellness'' "health" "nutrition". or it could yet again be a film that is becoming a rage with a part of your TG. remember the "Krish" rage with the kids? here branded merchandise is your key to getting your TG go into a rush for your products. 

what else? 

Industry : Property Developers. FADS that can impact - Interest in Vaastu Shastra, Feng Shui, "Green" homes and so on.

So this is what i think we as marketers should be doing - we need to idea and creat a probable list of fads that can impact our busines and can have the potential for us to either boost or create a new income streams. Keep a tab on these fads and how they are developing and strike when its crossing a threshold. 

Sorry if you thought this was another blog praising slumdog millionaire for its brilliance, i will reserve my comments about this movie for another post, another blog. though i can tell you that these comments are less than reverent. 

Amit Budhiraja

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Is the Recession A Blessing in Disguise for Regional Brands?

4:52 AM

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The CEO of Electronic Arts (don’t tell me you are googling Electronic Arts!) said at a recent conference that the recession is actually a good thing as it will take all the ‘junk’ off the shelves. While that may be true in the gaming world, I am inclined to think otherwise for most other industries. 

It is important to understand that for the average consumer a recession is not just a bunch of statistics or an inconsequential but recurring headline. It is a very real phenomenon which forces him to rationalize his consumption behaviour to a far greater extent than he would have in the good days. It is a time when the average consumer, if lucky is holding on to a job with dear life otherwise the worst has already happened, in either case though, is worried about his future income stream and is desperate to cut inches of his bills.

Now the problem is this – cutting inches of bills is also the first thing that strikes every VP, MD, CEO worth his corner office. ‘Cut Costs’ comes the proverbial inter-department memo and nothing takes the axe quite like the marketing budget does. Speaking at the recent FRAMES summit organized by FICCI, Punitha Arumugam, CEO of Madison noted that the Indian advertising industry grew by 17% in 2008 and then came crashing down by 20-30% in Nov\Dec, Jan-09 saw another 30% dip in advertising revenues. This is testament to probably several such ‘cut costs’ memos floating around in various corporate offices.
Couple the two together – a company trying to hold back marketing & advertising expenditure and a consumer trying to trim his expenses – what do you get? A lot of demand for regional brands, which are almost always a better value offering for the consumer. This presents a huge opportunity for them to get a foothold in the consumer mind space, slowly but surely nudging out the big national brands.

Are the big national brands just going to sit back and watch?

Well, while the obvious strategy for national brands would be to continue focussing on reinforcing the brand values and keeping the connect with consumers alive, the fact remains that coming from a year of rising costs and seeing your profits disappear over night, concepts like brand equity and consumer connect do start sounding a little abstract, especially when you have a bunch of shareholders demanding some answers to some rather unpleasant questions.

So I reckon this sequence of events is not about to change some time soon, which brings me back to the almost vulgarly huge opportunity the regional brands are hence presented. This is their day in the sun and I think they should go full hog. Make product quality improvements, bring packaging up to speed, pump up distribution. Nothing will connect with consumers quite like ‘value’ in this trying time and this is what the regional brands need to shout. This is the plank that most regional brands have always operated on but somehow this voice got lost in the loud intonations of the Shahrukh Khans and the Sachin Tendulkars.

This is the much awaited breather, a private space and a listening consumer. It is indeed a blessing, but the need of the hour is to act fast as this window of opportunity might not last long.

Amit Budhiraja

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Dilbert: Shoelaces for dinner !!

3:39 AM

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haha !! i know nothing to do with marketing, little humor never hurt nobody!

Amit Budhiraja

Link : Interesting piece on afaqs!

5:31 AM

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Interesting article by afaqs! on 'The Business of Repeat Economics on Indian Television'. lot of cool insights in there, for example did you know that on an average creating 30 mins of original programming costs these channels anything between Rs. 8 - Rs. 12 lakhs (roughly $20k)?

Amit Budhiraja

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And we are finally off the mark!

2:58 AM

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I am now officially tired of searching for that perfect template which will make this blog immensely attractive to readers and will in some quasi-magico-scientfic way keep readers coming back for ever more!

and now that I've already been through 10s of websites generously offering loads of beautiful templates and am still none the wiser, I figure what the heck, let's get started with something simple and functional, design is after all only the first date. 

alright so, I will be putting up more content soon, so keep checking once in a while!

Amit Budhiraja