Christopher Graves, President and CEO, Asia Pacific, Ogilvy Public Relations Worldwide
Ogilvy’s trademark is insight, ideas and influence. What we mean is that you develop an insight which is difficult to arrive at. It’s kind of an ‘Eureka!’ sort of moment… Second is to develop new ways of story telling, which has moved dramatically away from traditional formats, yet a great story is a great story. Because of lack of attention span and fragmentation in media, it is imperative to understand the tools of modern story telling. It means education, both internally and externally, in terms of new media, which we do.

Ogilvy’s trademark is insight, ideas and influence. What we mean is that you develop an insight which is difficult to arrive at. It’s kind of an ‘Eureka!’ sort of moment… Second is to develop new ways of story telling, which has moved dramatically away from traditional formats, yet a great story is a great story. Because of lack of attention span and fragmentation in media, it is imperative to understand the tools of modern story telling. It means education, both internally and externally, in terms of new media, which we do.
Christopher Graves, President and CEO, Asia Pacific, Ogilvy Public Relations Worldwide had been a business journalist for 23 years before he decided to switch over to PR. He brings to board a balanced perspective on the changes, trends and challenges that pubic relations is facing and adopting across Europe, Asia and India.
Graves joined Ogilvy in January 2005. He had spent the last 18 years of his life as journalist with Dow Jones on both the editorial and business sides. He was one of the founders of Wall Street Journal Television, Managing Editor of Asia Business News (ABN), Vice-president of News and Programming for CNBC Asia, Vice-president of News and Programming for CNBC Europe, Managing Director of Business Development (EMEA and Asia) for Dow Jones Consumer Electronic Publishing (WSJ.com), and Managing Director of Far Eastern Economic Review.
In this interview with exchange4media’s Tuhina Anand, Graves shares his views on the various issues faced by the PR industry today, the challenges ahead. He also discusses in detail about the manpower crunch and the steps Ogilvy PR is taking to overcome it. Q. How do you propose to reach these goals?
We do this throughout the world in two ways. The first is through organic growth, which means we bring in people who know what they are talking about into the company. You can’t just re-label people as experts, particularly in healthcare and financial PR. It’s a specialised area, we bring in people, hire people, find people and transfer people. Secondly, we acquire. In the Asia Pacific, where we are the fastest growing, we will be doing both organic growth and acquisitions in order to beef up those areas. India today fits in not as one of the top 3-4 among our network in terms of revenues, our top ones are Mainland China, Australia and then you get into a whole tier below that. They are way above in terms of magnitude; growth rate wise India comes up close to China.
Potential? I think in a five-year period, India will grow four to five times. It’s quite a substantial growth. If you look at incremental growth, let’s be very realistic and say we will certainly double that in five years and not just through organic but also through acquisition, probably grow four times in five years. We are always looking for acquisition in every market; we have done five in Australia, a couple in Japan. In India there are a small number of them I would love to be with and there are a large number of options and certainly I am looking at those. I wouldn’t be doing my job if I weren’t looking at those.
Q. Do you think for a smaller agency to survive, the only way ahead is to morph into a bigger network?
No, I don’t think so. Morphing into a network gives certain advantages for certain kinds of clients, to be specific, we have clients such as Nokia, Microsoft, IBM or UPS who are big multi-market clients that demand huge coverage and whole range of expertise. However, if you have a niche specialist you could survive and thrive without being with any giant company. I think what is happening now is the notion that you can be broadly based and serve everybody under the same banner would be difficult.
I think differentiation in mature markets becomes important. So, you either have to sub-divide if you are very big – as we have done – so, we have an Ogilvy Financial or Ogilvy Health rather than just Ogilvy. You need to do that if you are big and broad, if you are small and boutique and that’s all you do then you have already differentiated. You may have many suitors, but you don’t necessarily have to accept them.
Q. You had said earlier that you would be looking at having on board experts, but it’s a fact that there is a talent crunch and not just in India. So how do you think PR agencies can attract the best of talent?
I think one of the things PR agencies are doing more and more is to get people from outside the PR world and they are doing it quite successfully, I am one. How to get them? Well, you pay them well. You have to treat them well and this is where network does have an advantage. We do something like a global work dissertation where we take our best and the brightest even if it’s for few weeks at a time as a way of retention and upgrading skills. We also have training programmes, which are kind of career development that you would not have in a smaller organisation. What we don’t want to offer is bureaucracy and we don’t want to be slow and painful, but need to be fast moving and nimble. That means we offer huge amount of autonomy to our country heads to run their local businesses in a local fashion wherever they need to.
Q. What would be the focus of Ogilvy PR for the next five years specifically in India?
Since India does not sit completely on its own and is part of our network, we can’t talk of India by alienating our other network countries. Having said that let me elaborate that every single country is in different stage of growth, development and re-investment and this will fit back into India. But over arching the entire network, our goals are to continue to raise the quality of people, which we do through massive internal training, teaching and other development activities. We have our in-house talent development team.
We conduct workshops every year where we focus on growth specialisation by doing forward analysis of 10 years. We look at country wise growth chart and project where they are headed and try to reach there now. Last year, we brought all our country heads together where we zeroed upon areas that need focus – financial PR, healthcare and digital influence, which includes blogs, pod casting and social media. Third is to leverage our geographical network in a 360-degree angle because we have an advertising agency and presence on the Internet. If you look at healthcare and financial PR, those are the two real goals for us to beef up in India.
Q. You’ve spent close to 23 years in journalism, how does it feel to be on the other side of the table?
Yes, I have been in journalism for 23 years, in three media fields and in three different continents. I came to a point where being in the same company for 18 years and same industry for 23 years, I didn’t know what to do. I couldn’t compare the offers as none of them were in the traditional industry that I was in. Miles Young, Chairman, Asia Pacific of Ogilvy & Mather, asked me if I would consider joining them. In 48 hours I was up in Shanghai and the decision was made. While it sounds impulsive, it was perfectly right, the timing was fantastic, where I was looking for a change and get into something which would stretch me where I wouldn’t feel so comfortable.
Having been part of the TV network, published a magazine and Wall Street Journal online, all this while I never felt scared. You could throw me in journalism and I was confident to the point of arrogance, I had been there, done that. But how do you run Asia’s largest communications network with no prior experience? That gives you a bit of an adrenalin rush and makes you feel alive all over again. It has been great because it’s not about arrogance or machismo, but Ogilvy is like a cult of David Ogilvy and in that I found that it is one of the few places with deep corporate culture. Everybody at Ogilvy asks his or her peer for help, which is completely different from what we are used to. Also you get to deal with an array of issues, which is phenomenal.
You think PR people try to sell you stories where there aren’t any and block your access when you need something. Now that I have lived and seen the dynamics, I owe the entire industry an apology for arrogance in the past for being a journalist and a huge respect for what PR professionals are faced with and how they deal with that.
Q. So how do you attract talent?
You lure talent and lure them in a fashion you would anyone in this world, they got to feel great, pay them well and offer opportunities, offer scenery change and things they can’t get from the present one. Part of it is whether they view what we do as interesting, it’s a matter of how we portray we are. That is the problem, in many markets PR is viewed as press relations only, cheap arms and legs, dumping ground. Quite frankly, in some markets it’s not a well thought of occupation.
Q. PR is usually thought to be press releases, what are the other tools to be brought to leverage the standard of PR?
Ogilvy’s trademark is insight, ideas and influence. What we mean is that you develop an insight which is difficult to arrive at. It’s kind of an ‘Eureka!’ sort of moment. What we do is that WPP also owns research firms like Research International. I worked very closely with them on a project for the Dove campaign for real beauty, real women. Instead of beginning with a campaign, we started with research on women’s self esteem what they felt towards their own bodies, daughters, media, and cosmetic surgery. PR can use research to develop insight.
Second is to develop new ways of story telling, which has moved dramatically away from traditional formats, yet a great story is a great story. I hold workshops with my staff on mastering storytelling. Because of lack of attention span and fragmentation in media, it is imperative to understand the tools of modern story telling. It means education, both internally and externally, in terms of new media, which we do.
Q. What ails the PR industry in India today?
The same that ails the PR industry in many markets in most countries around the world. I do a monthly finger on the pulse for every country in the Asia Pacific and I ask them what’s tough, what are you guys worried about? The reply is talent, finding them and retaining them. The fact is, in a fast growing economy – be it India or China or the years when the US was coming out of recession – it’s tough to retain people who have a pent up desire to advance and make a whole lot of money. Couple that with the fact that in emerging markets if you work with Ogilvy and it’s like going to Harvard or the greatest of Indian institutes, it’s like getting an approval and also a way to double their pay somewhere else. Then we have boomerangs, people do that and then people who come back to us. Also another issue is to convince clients of true value of strategic PR.
Q. How does Ogilvy PR differentiate itself in terms of its offering and leveraging the standard of PR?
We have a group called 360 Digital Influence specialising in social media. We also offer very high-level counseling. You have to earn the right to do that, you can’t just say I will do very high level counseling, introduce me to your CEO. They will not trust you. They have to come and see case by case what you have done for others and then it does work. It’s really across the board, it’s helping them differentiate, helping them in crisis management, every company has a crisis no matter how well run they are. It’s not about covering up but about preempting crisis, handling one that you have got and mitigating them. Crisis management is a big part of PR before there is a crisis. We have something called Brand Shield, which is a process we go through with our clients way before we have a crisis. It includes all around crisis preparedness, crisis communication and crisis management.
Then there is the internal communications about which people don’t think about ever. Before you go and convince the entire world you have a great brand, if your employees don’t believe it, it will never work. We are finding a huge opportunity and have acquired a company that specialises in that; we just can’t do it on our own. There is a set of tools and communications that is required for this. There are a bunch of ways where PR can go beyond just press relations. In some ways it’s also anti-press relations, if you are doing crisis management you don’t want too much coverage for it.
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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
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
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
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
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
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
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
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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