A vibrant man, full of life and a twinkle that never leaves his eyes, Leo Burnett chairman and chief executive officer Arvind Sharma exudes charm. His laugh is contagious and one can't help but join in.
A management graduate from IIM (A), Sharma started his career in the marketing arena with Voltas. Advertising happened to him in 1979... and of course... the rest as they say is history.
Indiantelevision.com's Hetal Adesara caught up him just after his return from Cannes where Leo Burnett India won a Bronze for it's ad for Senso Restaurant.
Excerpts from the chat:
What do you have to say about the way India performed at Cannes recently? There was wider participation and the contingent was about 110 strong. I feel particularly good that a lot of youngsters from the creative and also other departments were there. Also feel great about the fact that clients are now beginning to actively participate in Cannes and that can only be good news for advertising in general across the world. |
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Leo Burnett India won the 'Worldwide Agency of the Year' award last year. Having set such lofty standards, how do you propose to better that? Cannes Agency of the Year also becomes a good rallying call for us to take our clients there and make them participate. In today's world you can't be Cannes Agency of the Year doing just television and print. That is simply not possible. |
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What is Leo Burnett India's contribution to your international counterpart worldwide and the APAC region? My dream would be to make India a major source of creativity. And that is beginning to happen. We participated in a couple of global pitches and in the creation of a couple of global campaigns for multinational brands. So my dream would be to make India a major centre for the creation of global campaigns and all forms of global innovations. Why should India not be the centre for figuring out what we should be doing in branded content or what the future of interactivity should be or figuring out new smarter multimedia, one-on-one relationship management campaigns? We have the software and creative capability and we have the marketing understanding and knowledge and being able to bring all of it together consistently to lead the world is a challenge and that's what we are aiming at. |
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What per cent of globally aligned business does Leo Burnett India get? This in turn means that the ideas are fresh and have an impact and are well executed so when anybody in the world sees them, they would know that it is an Indian piece of work and at the same time also say that "I wish I had done that" and not "Well, that works in India but I don't think it is very relevant to Argentina." Because the best advertising, while it is culture specific, also evokes a human response. |
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Do you see that happening in India? |
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What is your medium and long term strategy for Leo Burnett's growth in India? |
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How many profit centers come under the Leo Burnett India umbrella, which are they and how do they stack up as far as contribution to the overall revenue kitty is concerned? The game we have learnt in Leo Entertainment is branded content. The low end of it is marketing current products and services. So celebrity management is the low end of it - generating endorsements for celebrities. The high end of it is bringing things together creatively to produce excellent value. Now exactly the same principle can be applied in telecommunications, radio sports and music. Leo Entertainment will to extend itself beyond feature films into many more vehicles. |
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Leo Burnett has just created a new legal entity for its existing below the line divisions - Black Pencil Advertising. What was the reason behind this? So basically with the agreement of the clients, it was our way of finding a new way of managing the conflict issue. So Leo Entertainment is free to do work for two competing whiskeys since it does not follow the exclusivity contract. |
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Who are Black Pencil's clientele? |
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How do you see the advertising scenario panning out in the coming year? What are your industry growth expectations? |
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And what of for Leo Burnett? |
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What are the total gross billings that Leo Burnett achieved in 2003-04? What are the growth expectations this year? |
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But there are many who believe that with the reversal of fortunes that this election result threw up, it will negatively impact business and by extension advertising. Your comment. |
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What are the most valuable learnings/ experiences that you have had in your stint with advertising? What else can I say? The Congress election results are a case in point. To be able to communicate with the whole country with the end result of having an impact on the outcome of the elections of the largest democracy in the world is wonderful. It makes you feel good about the power of communication. It has made me believe in the value of team work because a part of the advertising business requires analytical mindsets, part of it requires sympathetic mindsets and part of it requires people with what is called creative ego. A bunch of people respect their hunches and are willing to do a lot to go out of their way to insure that their hunches translate into ideas and campaigns. So it is really wonderful. We have to deal with people from all over the country and also over the world. We have to appreciate what is beautiful about their background, their culture and learning and make it all work together for a bigger cause. |
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Since you mention Congress let's talk about the 'Aam Aadmi' ads that were made by Leo Burnett's subsidiary - Orchard Advertising, which in a sense overpowered the much hyped BJP's 'India Shining' campaign. |
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Considering that Leo Burnett has always tom tommed about its values in respect to political advertising (as in not doing such ads), isn't it ironical that Orchard was behind the Congress campaign? |
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So are you saying 'No comments'? (Grins) Ya! Absolutely no comments. |
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What do you think of the new talent coming into advertising? Is it good enough? Why I'm asking you is because for the last few years we have been hearing the same names in the advertising world. I think there is a lot of good talent on the ground. There are clients who are asking the wrong question as to - Who is your national creative director? - as if the NCD does all the work! We as an agency hired an NCD after a global hunt and we settled on KV Sridhar. After that we were also quick to get the next line of creative directors in place, so we got about a dozen creative directors across the country. They are young and have been in the business for about 12-13 years. They are hot and you'll be hearing their names in the next few years. |
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What is the pecking order in terms of advertising agencies in India today? There are a lot of good agencies in India. O&M one doesn't have to name, McCann is a good agency. I would say the current Brand Equity rankings are a true reflection of the true pecking order of agencies today, with the sole exception of JWT which has had enormous historical reputation. But I think in the last seven - eight years their work quality has continuously slipped. The fraternity's perceptions including clients' are not that far out of line with reality. |
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What is the value proposition that Leo Burnett brings to a particular client or brand? We handle Bajaj Eliminator and that has a completely value proposition than Rejoice shampoo. We are not in the business of imposing our beliefs on brands. We are in the business of spotting opportunities and maximising the future of brands and each brand's future is different. |
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Can you name some good work done in Indian Advertising in 2003-04. Also, some campaigns carried out by Leo Burnett that you are proud of? |
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And why do you say that? Apart from that I quite like our Hitachi, Indian Oil corporate campaign and McDonald's work. I also like the Thanda Matlab Coca Cola campaign and Waah Sunil babu ad for Asian Paints. |
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Ranjan Kapoor once said in an interview that "The word client servicing will disappear and domain specialists will emerge." What is your take on it? In reality what tends to happen is that you sink to the lowest common denominator. So client service people around the industry are neither very good project managers because that was for junior guys, nor were they very good client business partners because they are in an advertising agency and nor were they very good brand planners because they didn't have time for it. So in this agency over a period of time we restructured the client servicing department and completed it in April. We split client servicing into three functions: Project Management: Where people are responsible for money and time lines, efficient delivery and quality of art work, stage, productions of all kinds. Brand business partnership function: Where people think how to grow clients' businesses and they ideate on whether there should be new products or a variant of the products that are already there, and Brand Planning: This where people worry about should the brand move in the consumers' mind and how? So in a way I have always completely agreed with Ranjan and we are the first agency in town to actually carry out the structure and not just in town. We'll be the key facilitators in a regional workshop because this is a global issue where the intent is to replicate the Mumbai model across Leo Burnett Asia. |
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So at the end of the day who will the client coordinate with for his work, if there are three divisions? One asks the question - Who do I coordinate with, when the organisation is screwing up. So when things are going well, clients prefer to deal with teams rather than individuals. That's the structure we are trying to deliver to clients where they can deal with a four legged stool directly and each leg of the stool is playing its role and that is brand planning. Now if we are working well as a four legged stool, then the client won't ask the question that who I should coordinate with because each leg is playing its role and the stool is where it should be. And if one leg begins to let the side down then the question will arise. But to me if we are running our business well then this question should be an occasional question and not an everyday question. Now when there is a period of growth (but not of wild growth), we should be structuring an agency where people who are best inclined to and have the best competency to do a job and the client is experiencing a synergistic positive effect of all four. Can it be done? Absolutely. Bartle Bogle Hegarty (BBH) has done it for the last 10 years and clients feel delighted. Only when any of these four functions merely becomes a dumping ground for less competent people then the problem begins to occur. In the past given the shortage of people, the industry has been guilty of doing that a lot. |
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When is this structure likely to come in place worldwide? We are talking about it in October in the Asian context where Michele (president Asia Pacific) wants to talk, sit and work through the implementation plans for the rest of the region on this structure. |