CVS ’Venke’ Sharma, Senior Vice-President & Director, Arc Worldwide
All the money that’s spent on your ATL and BTL converges at retail. In India, marketers are just waking up to the fact that the shop is where it all matters. The fact is that many still look towards London or the US for solutions to retail design. While the work done in London and the US in the retail space is phenomenal, we need to understand that the purchase path of Indian consumers is quite unique.

All the money that’s spent on your ATL and BTL converges at retail. In India, marketers are just waking up to the fact that the shop is where it all matters. The fact is that many still look towards London or the US for solutions to retail design. While the work done in London and the US in the retail space is phenomenal, we need to understand that the purchase path of Indian consumers is quite unique.
A business management professional with over 12 years of experience in building and managing strategic business units in marketing communication services and IT, CVS Sharma, better known as ‘Venke’, is currently associated with the Publicis Groupe as Senior Vice-President and Director for Arc Worldwide (India). A Gold medallist in MBA, Venke began his career with the Indian Navy. At 22, he started 3I Promotions, a market research, events and promotions company. Thereafter, he formed Sphinx Infotech, a web solutions company. In 2000, at 24, he joined Mudra as Business Manager in Hyderabad and later handled various responsibilities as Corporate Manager and Divisional Manager.
One of the most significant accomplishments of his career includes turning around the fortunes of Magindia, a marketing, advertising and media resource centre, within a short span of six months. In the process, he found a successful business model for the digital agency, Digital Branding Solutions, which later became Tribal DDB India. As its Founder and Country Head, Venke has been instrumental in making it one of the most successful digital agencies in Indian advertising history.
He has handled a wide range of exciting and prestigious client engagements ranging from Citibank, Reliance Industries, Reliance ADAG, LIC, MSN India, Air France, Malaysian Airlines, Crompton Greaves, IIM-Ahmedabad, Green Peace and Madura Garments, among others. He has also built insourcing models to cater to clients in Europe and the US; the most notable being British Telecom, London.
In the last eight months of his association with the Publicis Groupe, Venke has built a successful integrated marketing services agency model for Arc. At present, Arc in India has offices in Mumbai and Delhi, and has clients like Centurion Bank of Punjab, UTI Mutual Fund, ICICI Prudential, Procter & Gamble, Samsung IT, Petronas and Reliance Communications.
In conversation with exchange4media’s Pallavi Goorha and Rosy Ngaihte, Venke talks about the Indian retail space, Arc’s ‘Effective Solutions Planning’ approach, and more. Excerpts: Q. Tell us something about the India operations of Arc Worldwide.
Below-the-line services in India are extremely cluttered and unorganised. Currently clients are forced to deal with multiple agencies that push packaged competency sets like an interactive division, outdoor division, DM division, events and promos division, etc. Often this turns out to be a nightmare in coordination. The specialist units often miss out on the bigger picture. For a client, the issue is not just getting a website up, a DM campaign running, an event organised or an ad released. It’s all about delivering the marketing numbers. The line is becoming irrelevant – above and below. The future belongs to agencies that can deliver through the line.
Arc in India is one such agency which is focused on delivering specific measurable results to the client’s marketing challenges with innovative ideas, skill combinations and customised execution approaches spanning direct, interactive, out of home, promotional and shopper marketing. Often our brief is just a marketing challenge faced by the client. We get back with an idea that is not married to any one medium. This is backed up with a robust execution mechanism, which uses multiple touch points and results are tracked. In the last one year, Arc has won many believers to this approach – P&G, ICICI Prudential, Tata Salt, Samsung, HP, Centurion Bank of Punjab, Petronas, Reliance Communications and UTI Mutual Fund. Apart from these clients, we have been successful in attracting some terrific talent across disciplines that have chosen the integrated Arc path.
Q. Arc Worldwide has been appointed as the interactive marketing agency for beinggirl.com, the website for teenage girls created by P&G’s female care brand Whisper recently. Tell us more about it?
It’s a work in progress and it is too early to comment on it.
Q. How do you get clients? Do you also pitch for businesses?
Often you might have heard clients saying that BTL is a messy affair. The way agency BTL arms are organised is a reason to blame. More importantly, due to the vastness of the challenge, good ideas can get lost in execution. We pitch in at different points. As I said, our entry point could be an interesting problem or an interesting client. We have clients for whom we are doing website design, retail shop design, creating search and call centre optimisation programmes. For some clients we handle their feet on street (FOS) and retail activation programmes, while and or some like Centurion Bank of Punjab, we are the brand custodians providing integrated marketing communications. Therefore we have numerous entry points into a client’s business. Most importantly, since a part of what we do mirrors closely to some of the KRAs of marketing heads of client organisations, we constantly find innovative ways to address their marketing challenges.
Q. What’s your point of view on the Indian retail space?
Retail is the point of reality. All the money that’s spent on your ATL and BTL converges at retail. In India, marketers are just waking up to the fact that the shop is where it all matters. The fact is that many still look towards London or the US for solutions to retail design. While the work done in London and the US in the retail space is phenomenal, we need to understand that the purchase path of Indian consumers is quite unique. Arc has built fantastic case studies on retail design for various categories. We have a unique model that addresses challenges of marketers in Indian retail space by understanding consumer purchase path navigation, retail environment design and dynamics, visual merchandising and crew grooming as walking brands.
Q. Which are the companies you compete with and what kind of differentiation do you bring to the table?
I cannot recall any other agency operating on the same business model as we do. As I said before, most of the agency marketing services arms are rooted in their specialist units. Globally, Arc has been tremendously successful with this integrated approach. While we think media-neutral, we have specialists from each discipline like direct, retail, digital, promotions, and well-defined processes to ensure the execution is best in its class. The result is a campaign firmly rooted in a RoI-based approach.
If you look at Arc’s ‘Effective Solutions Planning’ approach, we start with the marketing challenge, identify whom we have to influence and thereafter distil the brand essence by marrying the latent and visible needs of the TG with how the brand meets with those needs. Then we try to understand how the TG is currently purchasing the product or service and where could our ideas make the biggest impact in the purchase cycle. The result is a master brief. Therefore, we don’t always expect our clients to be ready with a brief, because we believe a good brief is half the solution provided. They just need to give us their challenge and we will help put a brief and revert to them with an idea. Be it India’s longest clothesline or treasure hunt on marine drive – these ideas are a result of our ESP approach. Thereafter, we look at all the contact points and pick out the most RoI efficient and effective touch points to execute the idea.
Whether it is designing a retail experience or a web experience, or something as simple as a call centre telecaller script – creative innovation drives all our ideas.
Q. Having worked in the digital medium in India for over a decade, how do you see the evolution of Internet in the media space?
Internet as a medium has always been over-hyped. The hype has been such overkill that marketers at one point of time lost confidence in the medium delivering results. But now the expectations are a lot more realistic. There was a time when we had to hard sell to companies the need to have a well organised website. Now, most recognise the need to have a web presence. However, many think having a good looking website or an exhaustive content rich or a feature rich website is the key to maximising web presence. Information architecture, user centric design, secure site backend and a robust content updation process are the four key pillars for maximising web presence. There is also overkill on search and online advertising, with some finding nirvana in search and the rest in online advertising.
Search engine optimisation is a hygiene factor. On the other hand, search marketing can be compared to newspaper classifieds in some ways. It is important but cannot build your brand. For example, with an aggressive search marketing strategy, you will make sure your brand or service is found on every page where a user probably might go. But so can your competitor! After all, it’s an algorithm that is increasingly getting commodotised. But to make sure you get the click-in and a buy-in thereafter, not only do you need to be in the right place at the right time, but also have the right appeal. Now this appeal is something that is beyond those giant spiders crawling on the web. That’s where the beauty of online advertising, branding, and the 2.0 we all fondly talk about comes in. Having said that, classifieds do deliver results. Therefore, it is imperative that a part of your budget be set aside for search.
As far as online advertising is concerned, let’s admit it that most of us have developed a blind spot to most of the banners in the sites that we frequent. Cluttering sites with banners, buttons, site captures of all sizes and shapes are like those flower sellers and booksellers trying to stop us while driving on a high traffic street. You know where you want to go and more often than not, you do not want to be distracted. Therefore, it is not about how many impressions or how much media space you are going to buy, but how do you want to romance your customer. Analytics today give us something as close to one-customer-view. But just because you know that a particular girl comes to this particular bus stop everyday you can’t just go and propose to her. What’s your story? How are you going to build that interest, and the expectation about who you are? So, interactive communication is as much of a challenge as an opportunity. There are some fantastic global campaigns that have done the trick beautifully. Arc’s thebar.com, Cadillac campaigns and Philips Shave everywhere are a few examples. Striking a balance between content with the right appeal and media is extremely important for success in the online space.
Q. What is the way forward for Arc?
We intend to build more believers in the Arc way of working. We intend to be the most sought after agency for solutions across the non-traditional media spectrum – direct response, digital, retail design and promotional marketing. The good thing is, clients have begun to set aside major portions of their budgets for these areas. This means we have good reason to be in the business. We had a wonderful 2007 and look forward to a fantastic 2008. Growth and expansion for us and better RoI for our clients is what we aim to deliver in 2008.
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Scrolling up or down: Where is India's digital news business headed?
As advertisers tightened their purse strings, media players faced a muted growth on their digital platforms in Q1 FY24. Veterans from the industry share the cause & effect of the situation
As the first two quarters for the fiscal year 2023-24 come to a wrap, news publishers are not only experiencing tectonic shifts in their print and broadcast media business, but their digital arm too is facing dynamic consumer shifts.
In an increasingly converged world, besides making sense on ROI matrices, digital offers extended reach at a very low cost, an ability to engage with the viewers in a two-way conversation, co-opt them into the content creation process, empower them by giving them a voice and retain them. The cost and business efficiencies clearly operate at many levels, says Sanjay Trehan, a digital and new media advisor.
According to a study by Reuters Institute, India is a strongly mobile-focused market where 72 percent readers access news through smartphones and just 35 percent via computers. However, despite the glittery user penetration numbers, advertisers, it seems, are not finding it worth investing their money in digital news publisher platforms.
For NDTV, the revenue was down by 35 percent in Q1 of 2023-24 due to lower advertising spends both on broadcasting and digital. Nevertheless, despite low advertisement spends, digital business remained profitable. For Network18 as well, revenue was flattish during the quarter as a weak advertising environment had an impact on the digital segment.
Jagran Prakashan Media’s Q1 FY24 digital revenue stood at Rs 14.43 crores as against Rs 16.78 crores in Q1-23. Mahendra Mohan Gupta, Chairman and Managing Director, Jagran Prakashan Limited, stated in the financial results that “Digital business had nearly the same revenue as in Q1 of the previous year partly because of unfavourable market conditions and partly because of inability to monetise the consumer base to the expected level.”
The Indian Express experienced a slowdown in ad revenue in the last two quarters but subscribers and events business performed well, according CEO Sanjay Sindhwani.
Focussing on sector-wise advertisers, Sindhwani underlined that the IT sector, which spends majorly on digital, has been severely impacted in the economic slowdown. The auto sector has supply chain issues where their order books are full but delivery is an issue. Now, because they are overbooked, advertising is not required for them, he said. Edtech is somewhat tumbling now, which has also resulted in layoffs and cost-cuts. In fact, the whole startup sector has been cost cutting heavily. Gaming was still big but has not seen much growth in the recent past due to regulatory issues and their restrictions on advertising.
For Republic, over the past year or so, there has been a significant shift in direct advertising towards digital publishers along with the always-growing network demand, shared Tapan Sharma, Head of Digital, Republic. The network’s revenue has also grown alongside the continuous growth of revenue in the industry.
Sharma believes the drop in advertisers is happening because advertisers and agencies have now become more aware, vigilant, and methodical with digital ad spending and campaign management. They are looking for better Return on Ad Spend (ROAS) and improving campaign efficiency.
“As a result, publishers who have not prepared themselves well to address the ever-evolving media planning and buying environment may be facing the challenges of monetising via advertising,” added Sharma.
Digital business sustains on two factors - Advertisers and subscribers. On one hand, where the advertisers are declining, publishers are generating quality content to increase their subscriber base who are ready to pay for paywalled content.
Trehan added, “For content behind paywalls to work, it has to be exclusive, differentiated, value-added and premium in nature viz. data and research. The more one has this kind of content, the better will be their subscription traction. Based on this Karmic principle, NYT today has about ten million subscribers, perhaps the most of any publisher in the world.”
The advertising revenue is further split into two - direct and programmatic. Publishers who have been heavily dependent on the latter have faced declining revenues because they have lost the traffic due to certain changes in Google and Facebook’s policies.
Pradeep Gairola, Business Head- Digital, The Hindu, has seen a positive growth in subscription revenue but not a large one. Fifty percent of their revenue comes via subscriptions and paywall content. The direct to programmatic advertising ratio for Hindu currently is at 70:30 split.
But there are obstacles for publishers who are more dependent on subscribers than advertisers too. Major one being, the subscriber revenue is not about acquisition but retention. And, Indian publishers have retention rates much lower than international publishers.
Gairola highlighted, “When we approached the business ages ago, we lacked the wisdom that this is not an acquisition business but a retention business. Retention depends a lot on what kind of audience you have been able to acquire. Secondly, what have you done to ensure that the audience builds a relationship with you and builds a habit around you.”
It is a pertinent industry problem because Indians are accustomed to free content. Unlike other countries, news in India has always been fragmented as an industry and has never charged a penny to its readers. This is also why The New York Times, The Guardian, and other international publishers have higher retention rates.
According to Sharma, the newspaper industry has not really made any significant increment in the subscription fee for the past many years. Whereas a digital news consumer was never asked to pay anything to read or watch news by Indian digital news publishers at large.
“Additionally, the sheer amount of content we are generating, we are not able to communicate or showcase the same to the reader. We haven't been able to establish to the reader how we add value,” shared The Hindu executive.
Further Sindhwani added, as a news publication, if one has to do credible content then it costs money. Customers need to appreciate and value good content in order to be able to pay money for it. The sooner the audience will understand that, the sooner they will be able to differentiate between free content and paid quality content.
Trehan also observed a trend of upward revision of subscription rates for digital when bundled with other value offerings. As more and more products are being bundled along with the main offering, rates are being hiked. Games, puzzles, premium content, exclusive videos are now becoming a part of the 'All Access' subscription.
Sharma believes news subscriptions in India will see significant growth over the next two to four years and publishers will certainly need to focus on offering discrete quality content consistently for paid users.
“The Indian digital news readers are now much more evolved and so is the industry. Within the next few years, the industry will experience habit creation amongst the users of paying for a digital news subscription. This has already started happening in the metros and will further grow in the rest of the markets,” he added.
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Twitter suffers massive outage for 2 hours
The problem reportedly started around 6.30 am on Thursday
Thousands of Twitter users were not able to login to their accounts on Thursday morning as the social media site experienced a massive outage for nearly two hours. The problem, which started around 6.30 am, lasted till round 8.30 am.
Users were unable to log in on Twitter website. However, the microblogging site was working fine on mobile phones.
According to outage tracking website Downdetector.com., User reports indicate Twitter is having problems since 7:13 EST" . Some users also reportedly complained that their Twitter notifications were not working.
In India, Twitter users are getting this message while trying to access the website: “Something went wrong, but don’t fret — it’s not your fault. Let’s try again," with options to refresh or log out.
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How 5G is set to draw more advertisers to emerging tech & gaming
The gaming industry, the fastest-growing space in digital advertising, has the most to gain from introduction of 5G, given that India is a mobile-first country in every segment, say industry players
The 5G spectrum auctions, set to begin on July 26, will see a total of 72,097.85 MHz of spectrum worth at least Rs 4.3 lakh crore put under the hammer. With Adani Data Networks now also staking its claim, in what was already a heated contest between Bharti Airtel, Reliance Jio, and VI (formerly Vodafone Idea), the amount is expected to exceed Rs 1 trillion, according to various industry experts.
The impact on the telecom industry aside, India’s subsequent adoption of 5G is expected to have huge implications on India’s growing digital economy, as well as its booming advertising and entertainment industry, which is expected to reach Rs 4,30,401 crore by 2026 at 8.8% CAGR, as recently reported by PwC's Global Entertainment & Media Outlook 2022-2026.
Mitesh Kothari, Co-founder and CCO, White Rivers Media, believes that consumers now understand internet technologies better than ever before. People who were cost-driven are becoming experience-driven and are actually willing to pay more for a better experience.
“5G is set to bring an immersive AR/VR, 4K video and mobile gaming experience to entice consumers. Plans clubbed with digital services are more likely to penetrate as people are more willing to pay for an ‘all-included’ experience. And, of course, 4G is going to be around anyway, so the ones who cannot afford 5G will always have an option,” he says.
On the impact of raised prices on the Indians who are about to come online, Ashwarya Garg, Co-founder, HYPD Marketing Technologies, said, “We have grown from 250M internet users to 900M internet users today. While the country today has 4G, there are still areas and localities where only 3G prevails. And in a few places, there is only 2G. It is roti, kapda, makaan and the internet today. So, there is no question about a dip in internet adoption,” he says.
Garg further says, “With the release of any new technology, there is a race for faster and quicker adoption. We will surely see a lot of ATL/BTL and influencer-led activities, campaigns specifically designed to educate and adopt on the 5G networks. We should expect a lot of activation via gaming creators, YouTubers, and artists popular on OTT platforms, all of whom would educate them about the end use case.”
Juhi Hajela, VP of Global Marketing at now.gg, points out that despite its massive growth and future potential, with only 47 per cent internet penetration, India is still growing its connected base. “Over the years, we observed that mobile internet connections emerged as a driving force for internet access in India. As a mobile-first country, improved mobile data connectivity will bring a new wave of consumers to utilize the high-speed internet.”
New Ball Game
And the gaming industry, which is the fastest growing space in digital advertising, has the most to gain, given that India is a mobile-first country, across every segment. Experts like Rohit Agarwal, Founder and Director of marketing agency Alpha Zegus, point out that in a country where mobile gaming dominates over 80 per cent of the online gaming and esports segment, there is no doubt that data speeds and data charges hold tremendous value in the growth of this industry.
“The industry has already seen a CAGR of about 37% in the past couple of years, and telecom operators like Jio, VI, Airtel, etc. have accelerated the growth with the introduction of 4G at a highly competitive price point. In the next five years, the CAGR is expected to hit close to 40%, and in my opinion, over 20% of this would be driven by the introduction of 5G, as 5G will allow gamers from remote parts of India to play high-quality games with ease,” says Agarwal.
This would allow tournament organizers to organize more localized events with higher participation and will be able to reach a wider viewing audience. This, in turn, will give brands more sponsorship opportunities, not only to reach out to a bigger audience base but also to experiment with more complex advertising formats which would otherwise be very data dependent.
Gaming creators and streamers will benefit from this improved speed. That would also mean 3G, 4G connectivity will become highly affordable, allowing more consumers to access it.
“India is heading toward becoming the top gaming country in the world. We expect that with 5G auctions, the existing internet service that is already affordable will become faster, allowing Indians to follow their gaming passion. However, limiting device specifications is a real challenge for some players,” says Halja, concluding, “We believe that mobile cloud gaming solution is an excellent fit for the industry, allowing gamers to pursue their passion without being limited by low-end devices.”
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Razorpay row: Cause for concern for other digital payment brands?
Industry experts say while online payment firms have to be sensitive about user data, the controversy is unlikely to have a lasting impact on brand image
The recent controversy surrounding Razorpay sharing AltNews donor data with the police has once again raised concerns around user privacy in digital domains. The internet has been standing divided for the past few days discussing the legalities and the impact of Razorpay’s move but could it have a lasting impact on the brand image or digital payments at large in the country? Marketing experts disagree.
Speaking to e4m, an industry expert mentioned that the agitation was not certainly only against Razorpay as a brand but about privacy laws or the lack of it. “The brand image might not get impacted in the longer run. Social media controversies die out as soon as they blow up. But yes, they must be making an effort to ensure their existing users and partners that their personal data is safe,” they added.
Rashid Ahmed, Head of Digital, Infectious Advertising had a similar response. “If there's a legally valid request by relevant authorities in India, it would be required of a business or service systems provider to provide requested user information, in accordance with the law. Most large digital enablement service providers have fairly thought through and detailed usage and privacy policies, and a request for data would likely have required a sign-off in consultation with their legal teams. Since the payment gateway provides services to a large number of businesses, it is unlikely that a volume of users who chose not to use the gateway will make any significant impact on the overall base.”
Privacy concerns to grow
However, the concerns around user privacy will only mount with increased user awareness. In fact, it’s not the first time that Razorpay or digital payment gateways have gotten into such a situation. Just a few weeks ago, Razorpay had complained that the company was unable to reconcile receipt of Rs 7.38 crore against 831 transactions as hackers and fraudulent customers stole the amount. And in May 2018, Paytm had come under fire for a similar situation after Cobrapost reported that it had shared personal data of users in Jammu & Kashmir with the Indian government. Albeit, the platform had denied any such claims.
Samsika Marketing Consultants MD Jagdeep Kapoor pointed out, “Privacy is going to be a concern but the platforms, which will keep working ethically and protecting the user data will see no harm in the long run. Brands really have to be sensitive about user data.”
Subscription-based news platforms safe
Asked if the whole controversy could bar people from subscribing to news outlets as data sharing with payment partners would be inevitable, the experts said that the decision would solely rely on the content that such publishers produce, and not on payment gateways.
Kapoor highlighted, “Any industry these days: be it the payment gateways or publishers, or hotels, are taking a lot of user data. You cannot avoid sharing your data and therefore the onus to safeguard it lies on these companies. If a publisher is not tampering with your personal data or sharing it outside, I don’t think users will not subscribe.”
However, Khan felt that the subscription-based model might take a hit. “Many transacting users also have their financial details such as cards, tokenized and set up with their preferred gateways. So, this may also propel businesses to opt for multiple payment gateway service providers.”
Additionally, publishers and any such service providers might look for multiple payment gateways to give users the choice of preference. “Businesses requiring digital payment gateway services will likely opt for multiple service providers, to mitigate against service unavailability, or user preference where gateways is concerned. Many transacting users also have their financial details such as cards, tokenized and set up with their preferred gateways. So, this may also propel businesses to opt for multiple payment gateway service providers,” Khan said.
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1 year of Google News Showcase in India: 130 publications part of the programme
Google News Showcase now supports 8 Indian languages.
Tech giant Google has signed deals with 80 media partners representing more than 130 publications for Google News Showcase, an online news experience programme. Launched last year in India with 30 publisher partners, Google News Showcase has completed one year in the country.
The tech giant's partners include Times Group, The Hindu Group, HT Digital Streams Ltd, Indian Express Group, ABP LIVE, India TV, NDTV, Zee News, Amar Ujala, Deccan Herald, Punjab Kesari, The Telegraph India, IANS, and ANI.
"This time last year, we announced a package of investments to support India’s news ecosystem, including launching Google News Showcase - our new product experience for readers and licensing program for news publishers," Google's Kate Beddoe, Director, News Partnerships, APAC, and Durga Raghunath, Head of India News Partnerships, said in an official blog.
"Since Google News Showcase launched in India last year, we’ve signed deals with more than 80 partners representing more than 130 publications, including national, regional, and local news organizations like Times Group, The Hindu Group, HT Digital Streams Ltd, Indian Express Group, ABP LIVE, India TV, NDTV, Zee News, Amar Ujala, Deccan Herald, Punjab Kesari, The Telegraph India, IANS and ANI. We continue to work towards adding more partners."
Google News Showcase has also expanded to more languages over the past year and now supports a total of 8 languages, including Kannada, Marathi, Tamil, Telugu, Malayalam, and Bengali - along with English and Hindi. "We’ve also continued our work providing training and resources for news businesses and journalists, for example, GNI Startups Lab, GNI Newsroom Leadership Program, and GNI Advertising Lab," the blog reads. Update
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Amazon miniTV to premiere short film 'Sorry Bhaisaab' on December 16.
Directed and written by Suman Adhikary and Sumit Ghildiyal, the film has Gauahar Khan and Sharib Hashmi in lead roles
Amazon miniTV announces a short film – Sorry Bhaisaab, produced by Arré Studio featuring popular actors Gauahar Khan and Sharib Hashmi in lead roles. Directed and written by Suman Adhikary and Sumit Ghildiyal, Sorry Bhaisaab will premiere on 16th December for free, exclusively on Amazon miniTV on Amazon’s shopping app. The film is a relatable humorous take on the desires, motivations and aspirations of the middle class and their eternal quest for things to make their lives better.
“At Amazon miniTV, we always try to bring fresh, engaging and relatable content for viewers. We are delighted to partner with Arré Studio once again to bring yet another heartwarming and entertaining short film. This is a great addition to our library of award-winning short films”, said Harsh Goyal, Head of Amazon Advertising.
“Sorry Bhaisaab showcases the desires and aspirations of a common middle-class family with a relatable plot. This short film is a very special project for us, as at Arré, we endeavour to narrate different and unique stories that touch audiences’ hearts and entertain them thoroughly. We are delighted to collaborate with Amazon miniTV on this since it will give the film a wide reach across see millions of Indians from all parts of the country.” said Niyati Merchant, Co-Founder and COO, Arré................
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