Press Release

Star India gets AdSharp; targets regional advertisers

4 July 2014

The Modisarkarpromisedacche din aane wale hai. If one saw the full length advertisement by India's leading TV network Star India in The Economic Times on 3 July then it looks like they could be coming the way of regional, small and medium advertisers which have been looking at advertising on the mainline GEC but have found the sticker price too high.

The who’s who of the advertising industry took notice of the path-breaking step initiated by Star network CEO Uday Shankar.
The network’s advertisement says, “Grow your business with the power of Star!” The 45-minute free seminar for marketers, planners and advertisers claims to teach the various stakeholders the art of targeting their customers in a cost-effective manner to stay ahead of the competition.
The target here being those businesses which are still not advertising on television. Media observers believe that India is a land of opportunity and various small and medium sized businesses have an opportunity to grow by advertising their products on TV, but have been loath to do so because they don't have agencies, TVCs and also find the cost exorbitant. They cite the example of CavinKare's Chik shampoo which began as a small regional player, but went on to challenge even the MNCs successfully. 
The Star India seminars are likely to give more details for its, soon-to-be launched offering, AdSharp, which marks the network’s plunge into geo-targeted advertising in an organised manner. Through it, advertisers can target customers region specifically, as the ads will be local.
The network which has advertising revenues of around Rs 5,000 crore annually is hoping to increase those top line numbers by luring the small and medium advertiser.
The first of such seminars will start from Mumbai (15-19 July), followed by Pune (24-26 July), Delhi (5-9 August) and the last will be in Ahmedabad (21-23 August). Registration began almost a month back.
The invitees can choose from the seven sessions offered in each day-long seminar. The day will not be just about selling and buying of geo-targeted air time by its ad sales team; attending advertisers will also get a chance to get a TV commercial produced free for them by Star India on taking up a package.
HDFC Life senior executive vice president - head marketing, product, digital & e-commerce Sanjay Tripathy believes that Star India's first of its kind initiative is laudatory and "will help the network increase its client base."
Rivals also expressed appreciation.  Zee’s chief sales officer Ashish Sehgal believes that it will educate advertisers who have been sitting on the periphery on how to market locally and eventually help expand the overall TV ad market.
 “We have been offering geo-targeted advertising for more than a year now with Amagi. We are part of almost every geo-targeted advertising plan that Amagi does for smaller regional advertisers, and this has worked well for us,” says Sehgal while highlighting that technology plays an important role here. "Broadcasters can choose to outsource geo-targeting to a third party or do it in-house; we have chosen the former so far."
Similarly, Amagi’s co-founder KA Srinivasan says that if the largest Indian broadcast network starts pushing geo-targeted advertising then it validates what he and some others have been doing for years now. “It is a good move for the industry and geo-targeting will only pick up in the coming years.”
Star’s Adsharp which was scheduled to launch by June end, will now be launched by next week or so. It has opted for Cisco as its technical partner for the geo-targeting service.
Source: Exchange4media.com
Show me everything from anytime

High hopes for ‘Satyamev Jayate 2’

With a tagline that reads: ‘Jinhe Desh Ki Fikar Hai’, season two promises hard-hitting content like before but the format will be different.

Star Plus' rejigged programming pays off

Gaurav Bannerjee, Head, Star Plus explains, “While it is true that the increase in ratings is a result of extendng the weekday strategy to Saturday, I also believe it is because of the stickiness of our content. Our weekday prime time has 11 shows out of which almost 5 to 6 are in the top ten every week. So our content, which we have worked very hard to suit the contemporary Indian woman across geographies, has found a hook with our audience."

The tussle over live cricket scores

Ajit Mohan, Head, New Media, Star India said, “Digital should be an incremental leap in the way people consume sports. But if you look at the current crop of digital sports service companies, it has been a huge regressive step backwards, because essentially you’re trying to describe a match through text commentary."

Imagine more
Id: 6633