Sanjeev Goyle, Chief of Marketing - FES & Business Head – AppliTrac, Mahindra & Mahindra
The outdoor industry needs to be more organised with structured operations and feedback mechanism; campaign measurability and execution excellence can be the hallmark for OOH media. Innovation would sustain the outdoor medium for a long time. Trust is built by the way you see and perceive a medium and the results it gives.

The outdoor industry needs to be more organised with structured operations and feedback mechanism; campaign measurability and execution excellence can be the hallmark for OOH media. Innovation would sustain the outdoor medium for a long time. Trust is built by the way you see and perceive a medium and the results it gives.Sanjeev Goyle, Chief of Marketing (FES) and Business Head of AppliTrac, Mahindra & Mahindra, has over 27 years of experience in rural marketing, with 11 of them spent in Mahindra & Mahindra. He has handled large rural brands such as Mahindra & Swaraj tractors, Panama Cigarettes, Forhans toothpowder & brushes, Anacin, etc. In his prior position at Luxor Writing Instruments, he was responsible for roping in Amitabh Bachchan as brand ambassador for Parker Pens.
One of the key focus areas for Mahindra & Mahindra is the rural belt. To drive promotions and audience visibility in these regions, the company makes a large-scale use of OOH. In conversation with exchange4media’s Abhinn Shreshtha, Goyle speaks about the challenges of marketing in rural areas and the importance of planning. Q. Your main focus is on rural areas. What is the difference in OOH campaigns run in rural areas as opposed to urban areas? There are some important aspects which differentiate rural outdoor campaigns from urban. Firstly, community engagement in rural areas is extremely critical and helps seek social approval on a product/ service being considered for purchase. The customer engagement is primarily one to many.
Product demonstrations are a must in rural areas. While most consumers are value conscious, rural consumers tend to be more value conscious than their urban counterparts. Hence rural customers expect a touch and try experience to understand the benefits and economic impact of the product, which enables them to arrive at a buying decision.
Q. Last year saw an increasing shift among advertisers towards ROI-based advertising, especially when it came to rural areas. Do you see this as a new trend in OOH? ROI based advertising is critical for all brands using outdoor media. It’s important to be able to measure the impact of this medium. All our initiatives are linked with ROI and we measure the impact of our BTL activations on a regular basis. We have a robust IT-enabled sales system which tracks enquiries, conversions and analyzes sales in order to measure impact on bottom-line.
Q. How important is innovation in OOH advertising? Could you give some examples that you have incorporated? Due to proliferation of media, there is a massive clutter of advertising messages in the market. Innovation helps break this clutter and makes the messages noticeable.
Innovation drives the brand values in a simple, relatable and memorable manner. For example, one of our campaigns called ’Puddling Ka Maharaja’, explains the concept of mixing mud with water for preparing the rice field and this is demonstrated through wrestling. This concept was integrated with TV channels by associating it with games related to wrestling. The second campaign is the ‘Arjun Simulation’ where driving a tractor was actually simulated to create a real life experience for the farmer.
In rural India, seeing is believing, hence, its essential to create brand visibility. The brand is built by an experience a customer has with our dealers and products. We create an experience prior to purchase through Showroom on Wheels. We go to the customer’s doorstep and extend the touch & try experience with demonstrations and test drives. Brand Mahindra tractors has been innovative in engaging with the rural customers through ‘Mahindra Mahotsava’, ‘Technology Mahotsava’ and ‘Aerial Branding’.
Q. What percentage of your marketing spends is allocated to OOH? There are limitations faced in terms of creating a product experience or understanding the consumer’s psyche with use of media other than outdoor. These two perspectives enable us to spend equally on on-ground marketing campaigns. We allocate broadly around 30-40 per cent of our advertising spends to below the line activities.
Q. What are the key elements that you would want to see incorporated in an outdoor campaign? The outdoor campaign should be aligned with a well defined objective and should ensure customer engagement. The communication should carry the brand values in a simple, relatable and memorable manner and should be innovative and clutter breaking.
Q. Technological advancement is making it possible to conduct cross-platform advertising, for example, use of QR codes to connect mobile phones and OOH hoardings. Have you considered experimenting in this area? We have not used this medium for reaching out to our customers in rural India. But yes, it is an important tool and can be considered going forward.
Q. The OOH industry is largely labelled as unstructured. What challenges does this throw up for you? The OOH industry is unstructured. Reach due to geographical spread, scalability of the concept and measuring the impact created by the campaign are some challenges we face with the medium. But we manage them with a well defined plan and measurement parameters like enquiries generated, test rides, number of deliveries. We also take qualitative feedback for new campaigns to gauge the impact of the campaign.
Q. Beyond innovation, do you think smart planning should be the ground rule while designing an outdoor campaign? We do extensive planning well in advance of the campaign break. Better planning ensures efficient execution of campaign and its effectiveness. While designing our campaign, we need to keep in mind the crop seasons, festivals etc. as these are key months for tractor purchase. The buying time and the campaign should be timed accordingly. A route plan, which tracks daily campaign movement, is made in coordination with the on ground sales team. A campaign SOP (Standard Operating Procedure) with details like time of reporting to the dealership, pre-publicity, event time, and availability of tractor for test drive are planned in advance.
Q. The outdoor industry doesn’t have a common currency. As a marketer, how much does this worry you? Yes, common currency is a challenge in this unstructured industry. But it does not worry us, as already mentioned we have a robust structure in place in terms of planning, execution and measuring the campaign. Also, there is a learning curve for clients and agencies alike and hence, typically we work with the same partner so that the learning can be leveraged.
Q. What are the changes that you would want to see in the outdoor industry that will lead to retain brands’ trust towards this medium of communication? The outdoor industry needs to be more organised with structured operations and feedback mechanism; campaign measurability and execution excellence can be the hallmark for OOH media. Innovation would sustain the outdoor medium for a long time. Trust is built by the way you see and perceive a medium and the results it gives.
Q. How does Mahindra & Mahindra try to tie-in its advertising across platforms and what are the challenges in this? We undertake a 360-degree campaign to surround the consumers and keep them engaged with our brand. In rural India – ‘Seeing is believing’, hence it is essential to create brand visibility through various platforms. Rural communications has its inherent challenges like market access (reach), innovation in communication, measuring the effectiveness of initiatives, media dark areas and a very diverse segment.
Q. Do you think going digital is the next big thing in OOH? Yes, digital is the next big thing in the OOH industry. The extensive use of digital media can be witnessed in malls and airports with the digital conversion of posters, billboards. The digital medium has huge potential to help create live experiences and seek instant feedback. With clear measurability one will start seeing clear results, which will make the medium more trusted and will add to its effectiveness. We realise that traditional media will have to integrate with mobile platforms as it is imperative for rural audience.
Q. With digital advertising becoming increasingly popular, many feel that brands will divert their funds from traditional media like OOH and radio to the digital space. What are your thoughts on this? Yes, despite being a rural brand, we too believe digital has become an integral part of the media mix and have set aside a certain budget for our digital initiatives. Integrating with the digital space is critical to make our communication more dynamic and interactive. Digital and mobile integration is in full swing across categories.
Q. Could you highlight on the most effective OOH campaigns that you have rolled out recently? We have recently rolled out the door step delivery and door step demonstrations for our luxury tractor – ‘Arjun International’ in Punjab. Through this campaign we take the product to our customer’s door step and offer a delightful product experience.
In the past we have engaged farmers in Punjab through aerial branding to promote and create a buzz about our tractor brand Arjun Ultra -1 DLX. An aircraft was flown over towns and villages of Punjab carrying the brand message on a 19x100 foot banner. The objective was to generate a high brand recall value.
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Laqshya Media Group introduces technology to measure OOH ad reach in India
SHARP, an AI empowered tool from Laqshya Media Group will help measure the effectiveness and media value of outdoor ad campaigns with supportive numeric data
Just when advertisers were shying away from the medium, the Out of Home (OOH) industry outdid itself in terms of creative, innovations and reach. With a fair dosage of digitizing itself, OOH is now ready with its next big disruption. Addressing the only possible drawback of the industry which is measurability, OOH is all set to put numbers to its reach.
Laqshya Media Group (LMG) has introduced the disruption in the Indian market. The Delhi-based OOH brand has launched ‘SHARP’ (Strategic Hyperlocal AI-powered Reach Planner), a first-of-its kind planning tool for measuring the effectiveness and media value of outdoor campaigns.
What is SHARP and how does it measure the reach of OOH ads?
The OOH tool uses machine learning to deliver AI-optimized metrics and recommendations. The system is fed with data received from more than 50,000 geo-tagged sites comprising of Billboards, BQS sites, mall facades, pillars and poles across 26 cities. SHARP combines diverse data points including geotagged OOH locations across formats, traffic measurement studies by global research agencies, multiple databases to map and measure the current profiles of resident and transit population and panel rating points, and various other site factors with the data on thousands of sites across multiple OOH formats.
Each site is geo-tagged and cross-linked with google-map APIs to indicate various relevant points of interest like banks, auto showrooms etc. from the site. SHARP is also coded to differentiate between multiple (stacked) billboards at the same location with indicative pricing per site.
Though new in India, OOH measurability has been a global topic of discussion and markets like Paris, South Africa, US and Australia already use AI driven tools to measure the reach of ads on the platform.
This move comes in at the right time for the Indian market. “Since the industry is facing an evident slowdown, we want to work in consolidation with the industry to help it grow. We will focus on technology as it plays an important role for any OOH firm,” said Atul Shrivastava, Group CEO, Laqshya Media Group (LMG).
Speaking about the advantages of measurability, Shrivastava said, “This is India’s first ever measuring tool, developed in-house by LMG that allows brands to target the right audiences with reach or a budget as an objective for an OOH campaign.”
“Brands are inclined towards measurement as it gives them better ROI’s. They know the engagement level and plan their investments accordingly,” he added.
LMG is best known for their iconic advertisements with clients such as Maruti, LG, Quikr, Myntra, Shopper Stop, Platinum Guuild, a Tanishq, Flipkart.
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Vivo and Eyetalk Media Ventures leverage programmatic DOOH for V17 Pro campaign
The campaign has been executed across pubs and cafes with TagTalk and in premium tech and business hubs with the newly launched real-time business DOOH network – Biztalk
Vivo Smartphone rolled out an extensive two-month-long national campaign for the new V17 Pro handset with Eyetalk Media Ventures. Using the power of technology and content to connect with the digitally driven audience the programmatic campaign has been executed across pubs and cafes with TagTalk and in premium tech and business hubs with the newly launched real-time business DOOH network – Biztalk, a joint venture between Eyetalk Media Ventures and Drsti Communications.
The V17 Pro campaign reached young millennials and over 1.5 million employees daily from some of the biggest global companies like IBM, Cisco, KPMG, EY, Accenture, Amazon, Google, HCL etc with over 7.5 million optimized ad impressions delivered during peak hours paired with audience - environment centric content like location-based live photo sharing on TagTalk and live technology news on Biztalk for higher brand recall and engagement.
The DOOH campaign executed in 3 phases – #ClearAsReal photography prelaunch campaign in collaboration with National Geographic, launch and Diwali campaign is currently live across 600 displays across both TagTalk and Biztalk Networks in Delhi, Gurugram, Mumbai, Pune, Bengaluru and Hyderabad.
Speaking on the development, Prince Gaur, Senior Manager of Marketing, Vivo Smartphone said, “Consumer & Innovation are 2 core pillars of Vivo and DOOH has played a significant role to further strengthen them. We have been able to capture the right TG, who are affluent and digitally driven at right time and at right place. Through the mix of Tagtalk & Biztalk, we have been able to capture our TG at 2 most critical touchpoints, multiple times throughout the week. Programmatic planning on both the networks has helped us drive best efficiency out of this campaign.
Adding to this, Gautam Bhirani, Managing Director, Eyetalk Media Ventures said, “With over 600 live displays reaching over 1.7 million urban Indians daily at a click of a button across 2 key urban ecosystems the V17 Pro campaign is probably one of the biggest DOOH campaigns to be executed in India. Both our networks reach digitally-driven, affluent urban audience in a captive environment, the high dwell time gives us the opportunity to communicate and connect better which enabled us to build an effective storyline using our content assets on our audience engagement platforms.”
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Johnnie Walker sets off on exploration and discovery with #TheTravellingBillboard
This OOH and digital media campaign will capture the live journey undertaken by a life-size billboard with the brand’s striding man logo exploring unchartered terrains and exotic locations in India
Johnnie Walker The Journey is proud to unveil #TheTravellingBillboard, a first-of-its-kind campaign that brings together India’s most influential travel photographers.
The striding man as a Johnnie Walker icon has always symbolized the idea of progress and moving forward. As a brand that has been passionate about exploring the world for nearly 200 years, Johnnie Walker’s #TheTravellingBillboard pays tribute to this exploratory spirit that challenges people to taste more out of life by pushing boundaries.
Conceptualized by brand solution partner What’s Your Problem, #TheTravellingBillboard shall travel to places which only a few people have visited, and also where no billboard has been before. All this, to inspire people to explore the world and seek out unique stories.
The billboard’s travel includes unexplored destinations from all corners of India that include the Basgo Plains, one of the best locations in the world to stargaze. The abandoned Kuldhara village, which is ripe with its own fantastic lore and even the underwater terrain of Andamans. #TheTravellingBillboard will be accompanied by some of India’s most influential travel photographers who will capture the final destination in their own style.
The final photographs will become the lead creatives across OOH at some of the most prominent outdoor sites in the country. The untold stories of these unchartered locations and the journey of photographers along with the billboard will also be captured through a digital content series.
Further, the campaign will be amplified with the help of 150 social media influencers who, through a miniature version of #TheTravellingBillboard of their own, will capture their own unique experiences and journeys. The brand will also deploy an Instagram filter for the entire country to join the campaign and capture India’s beauty in their own ways.
Speaking about this campaign, Abhishek Shahabadi, VP and Portfolio Head: Premium & Luxury brands at Diageo India said, “Exploration has been at the heart of Johnnie Walker, over its 200 years of being. The brand instigates exploration of the rich possibilities of our world to discover experiences that satisfy a thirst for life. Keep Walking is all about pushing boundaries to taste more out of life. This campaign celebrates this philosophy and is aimed at bringing to life the rich character of unchartered India through this exploration.”
“Today people love to engage with brands that are making them a part of the creative journey and so at the heart of this campaign is the desire to fuel exploration and to democratize the content creation across multimedia touchpoints and let everyone participate.”
#TheTravellingBillboard is designed to be a collaboration of explorers and photographers (everyone with a phone camera qualifies) who can tell the story of these uncharted locations through the Johnnie Walker lens in their unique styles. Hence, we not just have some of the country's most loved photographers travelling with billboard, but also have mini versions of the billboard travelling to all aspiring shutterbugs making it also a digitally travelling campaign” adds Khushboo Benani, Content and Influencer Marketing Head at Diageo India.
Speaking about the campaign, Ruchita Zambre, Group Creative Director, WYP, & Tejas Mehta, Strategy & Business Head said, “The brief from the Diageo team came in to do an OOH led campaign. After studying the international work done by the brand, we all felt that a basic OOH campaign will never do. It had to do more, create conversations, engage consumers. This thinking led us to create #TheTravellingBillboard. An OOH that roams the country in search for unique vistas. Thus, pushing the boundaries of what a billboard campaign can be like. Completely in line with the brand’s philosophy of pushing boundaries. And WYP’s philosophy of coming up with solutions that go across media and are truly integrated. A campaign of this kind required collaborating with various partners – for fabrication, media plan, digital amplification, photography, innovation etc. The campaign hasn’t been easy to execute at all. But where’s the fun in easy, right?”
The campaign will be on till December end. You can follow the journey through #TheTravellingBillboard or https://www.socialgoat.in/thetravellingbillboard
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Economic slowdown hits OOH industry; spends drop 10-15%
Industry experts say that while the OOH industry has picked up pace during the festive season, spends on OOH have decreased over the past months
If you are driving on the expressways of Delhi and Mumbai, the hoardings on both sides of the road are hard to ignore. However, recently, the number of vacant outdoor sites seems to be increasing by the day. It’s an indication that the economic slowdown has had its effect on the OOH industry.
According to Indrajit Sen, an independent consultant, the spends on OOH have decreased by 10-15 per cent in the past months, and the overall occupancy has dropped by 25-30% per cent. “There are many campaigns which have been postponed or shelved. Besides, brand owners have also shortened the duration of existing campaigns", he said.
Thanks to festivities, the OOH industry has picked its pace a little. But the biggest spenders are the likes of Amazon and Flipkart’ who remain unaffected by the apparent slowdown which has hit the OOH industry.
In the past, the biggest spenders in the OOH segment have been real-estate players, automobile brands, OTT platforms, mobile handsets, airlines and broadcasters, but many of these sectors have been hit by the economic slowdown.
“We have witnessed it, but because of the festive season, it is looking a little better. Before the arrival of the festivities, things were not how it was last year. There is an evident difference, we have observed,” said Haresh Nayak, Group MD of Posterscope, South Asia, India.
"The ban on OOH signages has indeed spread like wildfire across the country. While this is still very much in action in Bengaluru, this is apparent across other cities as well. This is largely due to the fact that the government wants to regulate this medium which has been largely running on its own, and in many sections, by people having their own site/location without any legalities attached to it. This had to happen a long time ago but with the new rules and regulations coming in, the scenario is changing a lot and in many ways, I guess it is better for the industry in the coming months,” said VV Rajan, Co-founder, CMO, Urbaniq.
Explaining why there has been a shift in spending on the medium during the last quarter, Rajan said, “As per the Pitch Madison Advertising Outlook Report 2019, they have revised their forecast owing to a drop in the TV Adex during the first quarter of the year. And according to the original report that was released earlier this year during February 2019 Adex, it was forecasted to grow by 16.4% to touch ₹70,888 crores but the numbers seem to have come down to 13.4% to approximately ₹69,000 crores.”
He added, “A lot of this has to do with the macroeconomic slowdown leading to a fall in the domestic consumption. For example, we have seen that the auto industry has spent lower on this medium, unlike last year which is attributed to the fact the there has been lower demand in the last couple of months. The auto industry overall is the No.2 spender on the overall advertising pie. This will obviously have an impact on the OOH media as well. At the same time the rise of OTT has had a major role to play in this medium.”
However, according to experts, in the long term, this medium is more impactful than other mediums (TV, radio and Print) which require active participation; ambient media will continue to be effective. Other traditional media will continue to lose market share due to the changing media habits of the younger generation. “DOOH is transforming the medium so instead of more “faces” or locations, you will see fewer but more impactful options. This will be a “win” overall for advertisers,” Rajan opined.
Talking about if the industry will pick up its pace in the future, Sen said, “Outdoor will bounce back simply because of its cost efficiencies. To support an economy growth post slowdown, advertisers will have to look at outdoor because it continues to be cost-effective.”
“Yes, business is indeed affected by monies shifting to other media due to this but eventually it will come back once rules are set in place,” Rajan added.
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Digital conversion in Kerala OOH industry will take time: Experts
Industry experts believe cities in Kerala have not fully adapted to Digital OOH since there is still a strong preference for traditional OOH advertising
Out-of-Home Advertising or Outdoor Advertising remains one of the prime modes of advertisement in Kerala. According to industry experts, the OOH industry in the state is has a turnover of almost Rs 350-400 crore per year. Recently the state has banned flex materials made from polyvinyl chloride (PVC) citing health and environmental issues. As per the order from the Department of Local Self Government, PVC flex should not be printed or used for government functions, private or religious events, cinema promotion or advertising.
In the wake of this, is it high time that the OOH players in the state shifted to digital billboards? Unlike other South Indian cities such as Chennai, Bangalore and Hyderabad, the cities in Kerala have not adapted to DOOH.
We spoke to industry experts to get their take on the subject.
“It is probably a demand vs supply situation. The options for regular OOH formats are much more in demand and remain sold through the year so no one complains. A lot of advertisers today still believe in the traditional mediums like static OOH, unlike digital mediums. Also, many static OOH ads are large formats and hence lends visibility to the brands much easier. Digital OOH, on the other hand, may have deeper penetration and much better measurability and ROI but still, clients today in Kerala want OOH formats which are impactful and visible,” observes Venkata Varadarajan, Co-founder, CMO, Urban IQ.
“In many ways, the Kerala OOH business scenario is no different from those seen in non-Metro markets across the country. For one, the media ownership is highly fragmented, and as a result, their businesses are not scalable, whereas in the digital OOH (DOOH) environment the ROI will kick in only if the asset ownership is at scale,” said S Kumar, Managing Director, Srishti Communications.
Kumar continued, “It is also important to note that DOOH is a not a like-for-like replacement of the traditional OOH formats. The display part is only one aspect, which of course, meets the eye of the advertisers and consumers alike. Instead, DOOH calls for investments in software solutions, IT networking, hardware investments including their AMC, among others. Media owners who have been accustomed to investing in a few traditional units like hoardings and billboards will be hard placed to garner funds for investing in the tech-driven media for the longer term.”
So what stops the OOH players from shifting to digital formats?
“The existing OOH regulatory environment in Kerala is also not a great enabler of DOOH business. True, the state government has placed a ban on the use of PVC flex for advertising and publicity purposes, while mandating that the industry should switch to green options. But, there has been no policy measure to promote the use of DOOH in any of the markets in the state. Given that the norms governing digital OOH across the country are archaic, the media owners in Kerala will not have the confidence to even invest in DOOH assets in the fear that the authorities may come down heavily on the DOOH formats for some unforeseen reason in the future,” said Kumar.
“In order to shift to digital billboards, the government should be able to provide support and confidence to OOH players in Kerala. A few years ago, neon boards which were hosted in some part of Cochi city were removed citing that the public is getting distracted by the boards while driving. The hosting of digital billboards requires huge initial investments and if the aforementioned situation arises, then it will be a problem for the players,” said Biju Babu, a veteran in the OOH industry.
Talking about the challenges Krishna Kumar of Whisper Media said, “The initial investment required for digital billboards and its maintenance is a huge issue among the OOH players. Lack of awareness and proper professional guidance and maintenance is also a concern, and in terms of ROI, this might be another challenge. But we should be optimistic, the whole scenario will improve and gather a positive momentum very soon.”
According to Kumar, DOOH is growing in the transit media space, such as at the airports, Kochi Metro network, railway stations and the like.
“That is where DOOH will gain ground increasingly, and in time, as the city authorities deem fit to bring DOOH into the scheme of city beautification, we will hopefully see DOOH replacing the traditionally large and short formats in the outdoor space, unit by unit. DOOH adoption is also contingent on the cost of hardware and software solutions coming down,” added Kumar.
Talking about the digital conversion in the state Varadarajan said, “The digital conversion will take some more time in Kerala since traditional OOH has a very strong presence to the point of becoming a habit with advertisers to use them in their campaign strategies. And while the affluence and development are still on the rise, the market is largely traditional in the way media is consumed.”
He added, “OOH growth is very limited in Kerala and the chance to transition to Digital for upcoming locations is also limited. Only when the OOH media gets more regulated will there be a change in the way digital formats will find its way into the media spaces. And that will also happen with the overall cities and towns becoming smarter with their solutions for the general public.”.
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Ahmedabad, Indore, Chandigarh, Pune are emerging markets in OOH: Haresh Nayak, Posterscope
Nayak, Group MD of Posterscope, South Asia, India, talks about the different kinds of avenues brands tap into while leveraging OOH during the festive season
The industry is currently is reportedly going through a major slowdown and brands are cutting costs to stay afloat in the segment but not during festivities. Yes, here comes the festive season and happy times for brands and the media industry arrives too.
We spoke to Haresh Nayak, Group MD - Posterscope- South Asia, India to understand what are the different kinds of avenues brands tap into while resorting to OOH during festivities; the emerging markets and what kind of brands are investing heavily during this time of the year and more.
Edited excerpts:
What are the different kinds of avenues brands can tap into while leveraging OOH?
There are a lot of avenues, from different markets to different types of formats. In the coming 2-3 months, there will be a lot of activities in the OOH space but a client can also look at DOOH where a lot of engagement activity can be done along with the traditional media and digital media. At places like malls and beauty parlours, there are a lot of captive audiences present. So, within these spaces, there are many options today. We have been doing initiatives in malls and colleges. We are looking at beauty parlours as a big segment because a lot of engagement is there during the festive season.
Also, we're trying to do something where potentially a lot of talking is going to happen in a mall. We are not only looking at digital and traditional media options within the mall but also doing geofencing and connecting them with digital. For example, we did a combination of social media along with the traditional OOH or DOOH in the mall and if someone is surfing something on the net, he/she will get to see a similar notification on their handsets.
Which brands are investing more in OOH during festival season?
Automobile brands such as Maruti Suzuki, Honda, and mobile handset as a category with brands such as Oppo, One plus, Redmi etc, are active right now. All the FMCG brands and e-Commerce brands opt to invest heavily during this time of the year with their discounts/offers. Banks namely Standard Chartered and HDFC are active too with their offers of debit/credit cards.
What kind of OOH is working? Is it the celebrity hoarding or is it the traditional billboards, what is it that's working in terms of creatives?
It is a combination of everything. In a world which is so cluttered and complex, every customer is different. Ultimately we need to have a communication which is reaching one-on-one and not going to many. So, in this scenario, you cannot say that one activity will work or two activities will. It needs to be a holistic 360-degree view and a combination of everything.
What are the emerging markets in the OOH space?
Markets like Ahmedabad, Indore, Chandigarh, Pune are the new emerging markets. The reason being, we have good quality out-of-home media inventories in place and different infrastructure in place. If you look at beyond these four metro cities, I think these small cities are learning quickly and not repeating the mistakes done by the metros because the learning curve is much faster.
How are brands today investing their advertising budgets in emerging markets?
It depends a lot on their marketing; everything starts with it. There are a lot of factors including their goals, objectives, whether their product will penetrate in the market way better. Brands are available in metros because the population is larger, so the potential is more in terms of location. Brands like Mahindra and FMCG brands are also working in the rural markets, because the demand in the rural, as well as, the metro is equal.
Do different brands look for different positioning to target a specific audience base?
That’s our goal as an agency. Every agency has its own unique way of planning. We don't consider outdoor advertising companies; we push within ourselves as a location-based marketing company. The moment you chose a position, the data analytics, technology and insight which you are able to provide to your client to take the right decision is very difficult. And for us, the kind of investments we have done in various API’s and data points, we are able to make those decisions.
We are also looking at influencers who will work with us. We are also looking at the key markets and suggesting celebrities or influencers who are right for brands for hyper-local penetration and creating content. Various initiatives have been taken by brands to become more accountable and also more hyper-local.
For example, Flipkart investing their advertising budgets in emerging markets and Coolberg as an upcoming brand that does the same.
Is the OOH industry a victim of economic slowdown?
Yes, we have witnessed it, but because of the festive season, it is looking a little better. But before the arrival of the festivities, things were not how it was last year.
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Laqshya launches OOH campaign for Tanishq's Virasat collection
The outdoor duties were assigned to OMI, the outdoor agency arm of Laqshya Media Group
Tanishq has launched a new OOH campaign marking one of the most anticipated festivals of the year, Diwali! For this auspicious occasion, Tanishq is launching its new festive collection- Virasat.
The OOH campaign brings alive the essence of age-old traditions, cultures and rituals which have been followed through generations. The campaign aims to take forward this tradition of purchasing jewellery which makes Diwali auspicious and special for all of us.
The high decibel campaign was devised to announce the Virasat collection stridently with a striking effect. The outdoor duties were assigned to OMI (Outdoor Media Integrated), the outdoor agency arm of Laqshya Media Group.
OMI used its in-house proprietary tool ‘SHARP’ to give the campaign high visibility & create maximum impactful exposure. The deployments were done in a way as to cover all arterial routes and important touchpoints that were imperative as per the TG’s day in the life cycle. A mix of media vehicle ensured that we attain the objective of reaching the right audience multiple times building brand salience.
The campaign was executed by strongly developing the brand’s communication in multiple cities like Agra, Ahmedabad, Allahabad, Bangalore, Baroda, Bhubaneswar, Chandigarh, Chennai, Delhi NCR, Guwahati, Hyderabad, Indore, Jaipur, Jamshedpur, Kanpur, Kolkata, Kolkata Upcountry, Lucknow, Ludhiana, Meerut, Mumbai, Nagpur, Patna, Pune, Raipur, Ranchi, Surat, Varanasi and Vijayawada.
Tanishq’s extraordinarily stunning creative looked equally mesmerizing on the OOH canvas that was handpicked by OMI to ensure that it gets the 100% OTS it demanded from the campaign. Every media unit did complete justice to build the buzz for the campaign leading to conversations and finally considerations.
Speaking further on the campaign, Naresh Bhandari, COO, OMI, Laqshya Media Group said, “Diwali and Tanishq are essentially connected to each other. Buying gold in Diwali has been a big part of our tradition across the country. This Diwali offer by Tanishq needed a much fierce noticeability at the time when all the competitors are active on OOH and vying for consumers attention. The team took it as a challenge to ensure we are not just noticed but, we impact them too. The dual approach of attaining reach and frequency using our In-House tool cut corners and we were able to deliver a successful campaign.”
Commenting on the campaign, Deepika Tewari, Associate Vice President– Marketing, Jewellery Division at Titan Company Limited said, “Each Diwali is a testament of the tradition that has been passed down from one generation to another and has been followed each year with equal vigour. This collection is a tribute to the innumerable ‘Rivaaj’ or traditions that are followed by us, especially that of buying gold and hence the name ‘Virasat’. We sincerely hope our exclusive festive offers along with our grand new Virasat Collection will add a bit of sparkle to everyone’s life. At Tanishq we wish everyone to be a part of Rivaajon wali Diwali, Tanishq waali Diwali”.
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