Arijit Sengupta, Vice President, Weber Shandwick

As far as opportunities are concerned, there are plenty of them. PR consultants are better informed of the trends and are more experienced to sell stories. MNCs and a few Indian corporates have recognised the role of PR and its relevance to the core scheme of company strategies. There is a greater demand for specialisation. Also, viral marketing, blogging, and video conferencing are the new trends in the Indian market.

e4m by exchange4media Staff
Published: Aug 28, 2006 12:00 AM  | 5 min read
Arijit Sengupta, Vice President, Weber Shandwick

As far as opportunities are concerned, there are plenty of them. PR consultants are better informed of the trends and are more experienced to sell stories. MNCs and a few Indian corporates have recognised the role of PR and its relevance to the core scheme of company strategies. There is a greater demand for specialisation. Also, viral marketing, blogging, and video conferencing are the new trends in the Indian market.

Weber Shandwick, a unit of Interpublic Group of Companies, is one of the world’s leading public relations agencies with offices in major media, business and government capitals around the world. Weber Shandwick, is a leader in marketing public relations, public affairs and corporate communications counseling, and also provides services in advocacy advertising, market research and visual communications.

Arijit Sengupta has been with Weber Shandwick for over six years and his current portfolio includes Tourism Australia, Mittal Steel, Walt Disney, Jet Airways and General Mills, among others.

Sengupta, who has over 14 years’ experience in marketing and communications, has a Post Graduate degree in Financial Management and Mass Communications.

In conversation with Pritie S Jadhav, Sengupta talks about the PR industry in India and the major changes taking place in the sector. Excerpts:

Q. You have been in the PR industry for more than six years. What are the upside and downside of the changes that have taken place in these years in the industry?

It is believed that public relations’ ultimate aim is communicating the image of the organisation. Moving from a mindset of relationship-building to ‘confidence-building’, we alone have the experience and expertise to help unravel the tangled web of messages and misperceptions, dissolve confusion and mistrust, and build mutual confidence among groups so that globalisation can reach its full potential.

The public relations industry is the fastest growing industry in India and is estimated to be around Rs 128 crore. It constitutes around 0.7 per cent of the global market. While the average annual growth rate of the global public relations is said to be around 8 per cent the Indian public relations sector is growing at the rate of over 20 per cent.

The upside of the changes include:

Globalisation of PR in India: Asia is one great melting pot of people, culture and business, with a tremendous potential for PR professionals. As a result of this, a host of MNCs are setting up operations in Asian countries. In Southeast Asia, in countries like Singapore, Malaysia and Indonesia, among others, this trend is now more or less established. But in countries like India and Sri Lanka, where the economies are being liberalised and reforms being introduced, the action is just beginning to take place. MNCs are setting up operations, investing in joint ventures and sourcing for products in a large number of industries and fields. Asia is the emerging leader poised to lead in global affairs, which will increasingly be dominated by economic rather than political considerations.

As world trade, free market systems, trading blocks, and industrialised, industrialising, and subsistence economies attempt to reposition themselves regionally and internationally, a new energetic and vibrant ethos permeates world order. Simultaneously, reflections at the onset of the third millennium of most nations have created new visions, directions, and challenges. With this has come an overwhelming responsibility on public relations as part of strategic communication in accomplishing the goals and dreams of nations and its people.

PR Tangibility: The measurement parameters have become more tangible and now and we are not asked to show numbers, but we always have to show value. It’s sort of ‘What have you done for me lately?’ The economic value of public relations can be measured by testing two relationships – The impact of public relations expense on reputation as a goal of PR and the economic impact of reputation on companies’ bottom lines. Outcome management is also an interdisciplinary approach to improving outcomes.

Measuring the value of PR services isn’t easy. But it can be done. Although counting articles and clippings demonstrate that a client is appearing appropriately, frequently, and in a targeted fashion, they don’t show changes in attitude relevant to the client’s brand and reputation. What clients really want is to be shown the money. When their most important customers are influenced and their behaviour change in a way that directly affects the company’s ledger, that’s great PR. Increased sales, increased share price, increased membership, increased sponsorship, funding, or other financial criteria are measurable and depend on strategic business planning and implementation best handled by senior public relation strategists. That’s how it really works.

PR has become a core management function: PR has become a management function and has become an integral part of the marketing mix. It is today identified as a unique capability in the corporate management mix.

PR practitioners have become strategic media counselors: Till date, PR professionals were more of ‘technicians’ who were concerned with the job of communication. The new role will call for a ‘strategist’ who can think business. The move will gradually be towards more strategic thinking, rather than technical issues like what to say and how to say. The role of research and counsel will become more important. PR professionals are earning a special place at the elbows of corporate executives by providing much needed strategic counsel. PP practitioners are becoming strategic counselors who are less pre-occupied with publicity in the mass media than their predecessors.

In the last 25 years, a small group of public relations scholars, first in the US, and now throughout the world, have made remarkable progress in developing a comprehensive theory of public relations that puts it at a par with recognised professions such as law, medicine, or education. At first, PR researchers borrowed heavily from other disciplines such as communication and other social and behavioural sciences. However, now they have developed their own body of research and theory.

The downside of the changes include:

Gin-and-Tonic Brigade: A spin doctor… that’s what a PR professional was termed as earlier. Then PR meant merely getting information into media without actually paying for it… except maybe a gin-and-tonic for the journalist. PR professionals were merely known as the Gin-and-tonic Brigade. However, over the past decade, the PR industry’s pedestal has been cracked by less than benchmark standards due to old school practices and it was synonymous only to press relations in earlier days. Since the target audiences of an organisation today cover a very wide spectrum, the conventional from of PR is not enough. We need a variety of activities and integrated communications to support them, all working in synergy. The current decade is a period that will spell change for the PR profession, and this is now being witnessed in India. It is no longer just the sweet-talking ‘spin doctors’ who can achieve results.

Yellow / Tabloid Journalism: Individuals / organisations with half baked knowledge enter the industry and encourage yellow journalism, which in the long run can damage the reputation of the organisation.

Q. Today, PR firms are dime a dozen. How does Weber Shandwick ensure that there is differentiation from other PR outfits?

We are an institutional organisation and maintain continuity in serving our brands consistently. Secondly, 90 per cent of Weber Shandwick brands are global, which implies that we have in place systems and processes that are at par with global standards. We are the only agency to have a performance based fee structure. Weber Shandwick ensures that the work that we do for all our clients is tangible and we also place equal importance on initiating non-media initiatives like identifying speaker forums, thought leadership platforms, etc.

Q. Do you think PR plays a secondary role in the entire communication process of a client or brand?

PR today is a complex profession practiced by hundreds of thousands of people around the world. Some PR professionals are employed by a single organisation. Others work for PR firms that have many organisations as clients. PR people work for businesses, government agencies, professional and trade associations, non-profit charities, schools and universities, hospitals, hotels, and many more. They work for large and small organisations. Many PR people work entirely within their own country; others practice their profession on a global basis.

PR is but another management discipline. With an average annual growth of 8 per cent, the PR industry worldwide not only seems to be one of the most promising industries, but has also become an indispensable facet for brand management. In a report commissioned by the Council of PR Firms, economist Jaime de Pinies noted, “Despite the budget cuts, it appears that public relations as a discipline is increasingly valued by the firms in this server.” By contrast, advertising revenues have declined in the past decade.

Public relations is the management function that establishes and maintains a mutually beneficial relationship between an organisation and the stakeholders on whom its success or failure depends. The role of PR today is like that of radar on impending problems and opportunities. An interpreter of change and environment and that of a motivator and catalyst to make others better communicators.

PR can help a brand cut through the ‘message clutter’ of today’s advertising and establish a priority position in the consumer’s mind. It helps create a positive selling environment by shaping a brand image, creating awareness, and establishing credibility, while advertising has its own merits. In pure marketing terms, we say PR helps build market share and categories, while advertising works to retain market share. PR surely plays a primary role in the entire communication process.

Q. How much time do you think PR will take to be seen and recognised in terms of its true power by clients and the industry as a whole?

With India getting globally integrated and brands / clients having single PR agencies across various markets, I think it is already being recognised in a big way. One can confidently say that outstanding PR campaigns have all had creative thinking contribute substantially to the overall delivery.

Q. Where does Weber Shandwick go from here? What kind of plans have you sketched for yourself?

Weber Shandwick will continuously add value to its clients with additional scope of consultancy such as brand mapping / consultancy. We will also provide research findings / reports to enable clients to perform better and also identify and initiate more and more non-media initiatives. Weber Shandwick will strive to scale higher standards of PR practices and will continue to maintain leadership position in the industry.

Q. You have had handled clients from various sectors, which have been your most satisfying projects?

It is extremely important to be heard and written as a ‘brand custodian’. The primary job of a PR professional is to creatively cut the clutter in media reporting and have a maximum share of visibility. However, to state a few strong PR campaigns… As far as lifestyle and tourism sector is concerned, I think Tourism Australia has been one the most satisfying projects. The brand was completely built through effective public relations and there was no support of advertising at all. The growth has been phenomenal, that is, 25 per cent y-o-y (68,000 year ending December 2005).

We also handle Jet Airways, which has been a great experience. We had handled the crisis (non-factual / misrepresentation in media) for Alliance Capital when the CIO departed / left the company. And Mittal Steel, where we are handling acquisition communications.

Q. What, according to you, are the important components of a good PR brief?

The better the brief, the better and more accurate the results. A properly written brief makes the process more efficient – that’s good for the client as well as the agency.

The requisites for a good brief are:

Written briefs: A combination of written and verbal briefing is ideal. Both the parties see enormous benefits in starting with a written document, which is then analysed by the agency and debated between the two teams.

Clarity of thinking: A good brief is not the longest or most detailed. It’s the one whose clarity and focus creates the platform for a strategic leap, a blinding customer insight and an effective solution. Briefs are call ‘briefs’ because they are meant to be brief. They are a summation of your thinking.

Clearly defined objectives: Ultimately the point of communication is to get people to do things. Which people? What things? You have got the basis of the brief right there, everything else is detail. It is the most fundamental part of a well written brief. The key to effective briefing is to provide a simple insight that can be dramatised memorably. Briefing is a joint and dynamic process. The main difference between good briefs and bad briefs is that good briefs leave you with a clear understanding of what you are trying to do. Bad briefs drown you in contradictory information and objectives.

Q. Could you compare the condition Indian PR industry is in today vis-à-vis what it is internationally?

In the US, the brands’ spend / fee is almost three times of what it is in India. But Indian PR campaigns have already started getting recognition (For example, brands like Tourism Australia and WHO ORS). Time is the commodity we are selling, and the international markets go strictly on an hourly basis, with agencies / individuals getting compensated on the basis of that. However, in India, the fee that we get is largely job related (For example, press conferences / press releases, etc).

Q. What are the challenges and opportunities facing PR agencies today?

One of the major challenges that the industry is facing today is that of inaccurate reporting. For example, the market crash that took place on May 18, 2006, was arguably quoted in a few sectors as that of half baked reporting. It really affects the respective companies and a lot of other entities. For the fall in the market, Finance Minister P Chidambaram had blamed the media for a “manufactured crisis based on uninformed reporting”.

There is also the absence of a strong body / association to protect the clients / journalists community from allegations / misrepresentation of facts. Also, there should be a Code of Conduct for PR operations.

As far as opportunities are concerned, there are plenty of them. PR consultants are better informed of the trends and are more experienced to sell stories. Multinationals and a few Indian corporates have recognised the role of PR and its relevance to the core scheme of company strategies. There is a greater demand for specialisation and increasing need for modules such as crisis communication, media training, public affairs and broadcast services, which has resulted in the expansion of the scope of work of the PR agencies.

Also, viral marketing, blogging, and video conferencing are the new trends in the Indian market.

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Surabhi Patodia of Ola joins Practo as Head of Communications

Patodia served over three years at Ola as Senior Manager, Corporate Communications & PR

e4m by Ruhail Amin
Published: Feb 8, 2019 8:20 AM  | 1 min read
Patodia

Surabhi Patodia, former Senior Manager, Corporate Communications & PR at Ola has joined healthcare platform Practo as Head of Communications.

Patodia started her career in Communications with Adfactors PR, where she helped companies going to IPO with their communication plans. She then went on to be a part of Text100, India's premier Technology PR agency, where she worked with brands like Lenovo, Tata Power Solar, to name a few. She joined Ola in 2016, and was instrumental in building a strong narrative for the brand, across India and International markets.

Patodia holds PG Diploma in Public Relations & Corporate Communications from the Xavier’s Institute of Mass Communications, Mumbai and Bachelors in Business Administration from BIT, Mesra.

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IndiGo appoints Chhavi Leekha as Director, Corporate Communications & Brand Reputation

Prior to this role, Leekha worked with Nokia India as Head of Marketing and Communications

e4m by Ruhail Amin
Published: Jan 29, 2019 8:08 AM  | 1 min read
Leekha

IndiGo airlines, part of InterGlobe Aviation Ltd, has appointed Chhavi Leekha as Director Corporate Communications and Brand Reputation. Prior to this role, she worked with Nokia India as Head of Marketing and Communications. Her role included setting the direction and leading Nokia's marketing strategy, demand generations, brand strategy, event management, advertising, external/internal communications, corporate affairs &CSR.

Leekha has also worked with Uber India as Consulting Director of Communications and also served a stint at Spice Global as Group President, Brand and Corporate Communications.

Leekha has completed her MBA from the prestigious Narsee Monjee Institue of Management Studies and BA from Shri Ram College of Commerce.

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Aditya Birla Group appoints Sandeep Gurumurthi as Head of Corporate Comm. and Brand

Gurumurthi who was part of the core team that launched ET NOW stepped down from his role as Managing Editor in August 2018

e4m by Ruhail Amin
Published: Jan 22, 2019 7:45 AM  | 1 min read
SandeepGurumurthi

Aditya Birla Group has appointed former ET Now Managing Editor Sandeep Gurumurthi as Head of Corporate Communications and Brand.

Gurumurthi who was part of the core team that launched ET Now stepped down from his role as Managing Editor in August 2018.

He was associated with the channel since inception and besides anchoring breaking news and other special shows, he hosted ET Now's flagship debate show India Development Debate weeknights at 9 pm. 

Gurumurthi began his career with national broadcaster DD News, and prior to joining ET Now, he was associated with CNBC TV18,

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Yaap appoints Deepak Singh as Chief Creative Officer

Singh is one of the most awarded creative talents in the country and has won over 1000 national and international awards

e4m by exchange4media Staff
Published: Nov 1, 2018 1:30 PM  | 2 min read
DeepakSinghYaap

Rainmaker Ventures-backed Yaap, the digital advertising agency has appointed Deepak Singh as their Chief Creative Officer. Deepak will be based in the Mumbai office and will oversee all creative functions across the Yaap network in Mumbai, Gurugram, Hyderabad, Shillong, Dubai, Singapore & Jakarta.  He will report directly to the Board of Directors at Yaap. 

Singh is one of the most awarded creative talents in the country and has won over 1000 national and international awards at Cannes, One Show, LIA, New York Festival, Goafest, Adfest, Spikes Asia, Young Guns and more. He has also been on the jury of some of these prestigious festivals and led creative teams across agencies including Leo Burnett, Grey Worldwide, McCann Erickson, DDB Mudra, TBWA, Dentsu and The Social Street. 

For the past 3 consecutive years, Singh has led a young team from The Social Street, which has gone on to give an exhilarating performance. He has been instrumental in securing the Creative Agency of the year title for the agency, several times during 2018. 

Commenting on his new role, he added, “Saying yes to Yaap was actually not a very tough decision to make for me. Right from the time we first met, Atul had a clear picture of why he wanted to hire me. I am glad he has chalked out a much bigger role for me. Being a young and vibrant company with expertise in Digital Content, Design and Influencer Marketing, Yaap I believe will be a great learning experience for me. I’m raring to go “

Atul Hegde, co-founder Rainmaker Ventures added “Deepak is a welcome addition to the array of Partners we have at Yaap, which has a unique non CEO model, our aim as investors, is to ensure that we are able to attract the best & brightest of talent into the senior management pool at Yap. Within a short span of fewer than 3 Years, Yaap has grown into 70+ people across 7 offices in South East Asia, India & the Middle East and it was the right time for us to bring in a Senior Creative talent. I wish Deepak all the very best and I’m sure he will be a great asset to Yaap. “

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Leo Burnett India promotes Rakesh Hinduja to COO, West

He has been leading the operations of Leo Burnett’s head office in Mumbai as the Executive Director and Branch Head

e4m by exchange4media Staff
Published: Nov 1, 2018 9:06 AM  | 3 min read
RakeshHinduja

Leo Burnett has announced the promotion of Rakesh Hinduja to Chief Operating Officer, West. He will continue to report to Dheeraj Sinha, Managing Director, India and Chief Strategy Officer, South Asia and Rajdeepak Das, Managing Director, India and Chief Creative Officer, South Asia.

Hinduja has been leading the operations of Leo Burnett’s head office in Mumbai as the Executive Director and Branch Head.

Speaking about the elevation, Dheeraj Sinha said, “Rakesh is the perfect role model for the new-age agency we are building. His leadership on all the three parameters of People, Product and Profit has been stellar. Under his watch, we have consistently seen spectacular work that has won our brands market-share, and glory at platforms such as Cannes Lions, Spikes and Effies. He has delivered high-quality growth for the Mumbai office, leading the teams to win a new business almost every two weeks. The momentum and buzz at Leo Burnett Mumbai are palpable. Rakesh has been an amazing team player, helping push the Publicis Groupe’s Power of One agenda. Leo Burnett Mumbai’s contribution to our services such as Prodigious has helped Prodigious to become the number one ‘agency production house’ in the country within a span of two years. More than anything else, Rakesh has a never-say-die attitude and he always plays the game with a sense of camaraderie that we really value at Leo Burnett.”

In his new role, Hinduja will drive the Power of One agenda for Leo Burnett in the West. He will help build cross-platform solutions for our clients using our services in Entertainment (Publicis Entertainment), Content (Content Factory), Experiential (Arc Worldwide), Production (Prodigious), Digital (Indigo Consulting and Digitas) and Media (Zenith Optimedia, Ecosys and Beehive). He will lead all the functions of Leo Burnett Mumbai to create world-class work, build a high growth business and create a culture where people come to do the best work of their lifetime.

Commenting on Rakesh’s promotion, Rajdeepak Das said, “Rakesh is always there, backing great creative work and making integrated thinking happen for our clients. He has been an essential part of the journey to get where we are today. This elevation is much-deserved and will take all of us to greater heights.”

Talking about his promotion, Rakesh Hinduja said, “I am happy with my journey at Leo Burnett – a new-age, solution-providing ‘Wave 3’ agency. I’m proud of the brave we have work done and I am hungry for more. Hereon, there are a lot of exciting things to do and in quick time. I want to take a critical pause here to thank all our clients and the Burnetters for their belief in me.”

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Publicis India appoints Neeraj Bassi as Managing Partner & Chief Strategy Officer

Along with Srija Chatterjee and Bobby Pawar, Bassi will help in fostering collaboration and delivering on the Power of One synergy across the Groupe

e4m by exchange4media Staff
Published: Nov 1, 2018 8:55 AM  | 3 min read
NeerajBassiPublicis

Publicis India has announced the appointment of Neeraj Bassi as Managing Partner & Chief Strategy Officer. Neeraj will work from the agency’s New Delhi office. Along with Srija Chatterjee and Bobby Pawar, Neeraj will help in fostering collaboration and delivering on the Power of One synergy across the Groupe.   

With over two decades of professional experience, Neeraj has worked with some of the world’s most renowned brands including Coca-Cola, Asian Paints, Cadbury, BMW, KFC, Adidas, Samsung, British Airways, WeChat, Voltas, Audi, HSBC, Max Life and Tata Singapore Airlines – Vistara among others.

He joins Publicis after a brief stint as an independent Consultant where he provided strategic guidance and brand solutions for multiple clients across various categories. Neeraj has worked with some of the top market research networks such as TNS, IMRB, and NFO and led the Strategic Planning function in advertising agencies including Cheil, Ogilvy, JWT, McCann in India and abroad. Neeraj has also won multiple awards across reputed award festivals that recognise effectiveness such as Effies (India & APAC), AMES, WARC, etc.  

Announcing the new appointment and welcoming Neeraj aboard, Saurabh Varma, CEO, Publicis Communications, South Asia said: “In Neeraj, we found a partner with a shared vision of driving a deeper level of integration within the Groupe by leveraging the Power of One model. Neeraj’s vast experience and media neutral planning approach will help clients in building a holistic brand experience which will aim to create one-to-one consumer engagement, at scale. I look forward to working with Neeraj and wish him the best of luck.”  

Welcoming Neeraj to the Publicis family, Srija Chatterjee, Managing Director - Publicis Worldwide, India said: “Neeraj joins at a time when the Groupe is implementing a profound transformation which puts our clients front and centre of everything that we do. His wealth of experience of working across diverse sectors and with cross-functional teams will help build a narrative around our clients’ business and marketing transformation that connects data, content and technology in an omnichannel world. I’m excited to welcome Neeraj to the Publicis Groupe family, and we look forward to him riding the next strategic wave at the agency.”  

Bobby Pawar, MD & CCO - Publicis Worldwide, India added: “I’ve always believed great work is born out of a strong partnership between strategy, creative and clients. Neeraj Bassi has a history of creating strategic platforms that killer ideas can springboard from. His cross-platform approach to planning will also be a huge asset to our march towards the future of creativity. It also helps that he is fun to be around. I can chat with him for hours; the chemistry is very important when you are going to be more or less living out of each other’s metaphorical pockets.”  

Commenting on his appointment, and his plans for the agency, Neeraj Bassi said: “I am really excited to be part of Publicis India and looking forward to partnering Bobby and Srija to create stellar work that stands out in the market. Working with clients as an independent consultant has given me insight on the primary concerns of CXOs and how communication can help resolve them. Clients today need an omnichannel approach to planning that focuses on identifying and solving their business problems holistically, rather than getting trapped in a discipline-specific approach. I am fascinated by the way all Groupe companies have come together at Publicis to create Power of One, and I look forward to wielding this power to build successful campaigns for our clients.”  

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Airbnb appoints Google's Aristotle Balogh as Chief Technology Officer

Balogh formerly served as Vice President of Engineering, Application Storage, Indexing and Serving at Google

e4m by exchange4media Staff
Published: Oct 26, 2018 9:06 AM  | 1 min read
AristotleBaloghAirbnb

Airbnb has announced the appointment of Aristotle Balogh as Chief Technology Officer, according to media reports.

Balogh is expected to begin his tenure with Airbnb in November and will head the engineering and data science teams. He will also be in charge of infrastructure, information security and IT, as well as engineering for payments and community support.

Balogh formerly served as Vice President of Engineering, Application Storage, Indexing and Serving at Google, where he was instrumental in developing the infrastructure and data platforms of Google Search. He also worked as Chief Technology Officer at Yahoo and VeriSign.

According to reports, the company is expected to file for an Initial Public Offering (IPO) next year and Balogh's appointment comes at a time when Airbnb is still without a Chief Financial Officer after Laurence Tosi stepped down from the role earlier this year.

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