It has been a phenomenal journey for Nick in India. From being a channel that was residing at the bottom of the heap, the nine-year-old player has finally emerged as the leader on top in the Hindi speaking market, edging out long-standing market leader Cartoon Network.
And now, having captured the HSM space, the channel is readying to spread its wings across the southern-language market by 2009-end. The next in step is to challenge Cartoon Network which rules the all-India market.
Nick has also made its foray into local content for the Indian market with Little Krishna, acquiring the show's TV rights for two years for the South Asian territory.
In an interview with Indiantelevision.com's Anindita Sarkar, Nick India SVP and GM Nina Elavia Jaipuria reveals the strategies that have worked for the channel and how she plans to grow in a fiercely competitive marketplace.
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Nick has emerged as the number one kids channel in the Hindi speaking market. What contributed most towards this growth?
Secondly, we have managed to take Nick beyond television, thus making it more tangible. And I think we did that very successfully with our experimental 360 degree marketing philosophy - we wanted to be in every place where children are. So we were there promoting ourselves right from schools, cinema houses, malls, cable television to comic books, van activation and general entertainment channels.
We also increased our consumer products activities - be it in the form of storyboards, storybooks, activity books, toys with Mattel, clothes with Weekender, linen with Portico, etc. And now that schools are opening, we will be soon coming out with stationary and back-to-school items.
We also intensified our engagement and connection with children through constant promotions, polls, votes, contests and festivals including father's day, mother's day, Raksha Bandhan, Holi and so on. We celebrated every festival that was important to kids. |
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Why did you choose GECs as a promotional platform? |
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But don't you think that GECs today have actually emerged as contenders to the kids channels? |
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With Little Krishna you finally forayed into local animation. What took you so long to take this decision? |
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What was the need for localisation? |
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How has the co-viewing pattern helped the channel to grow? |
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Are advertisers taking advantage of this trend? |
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Are brands confined to the kids' category alone or is the base expanding? |
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With recession hitting hard, what kind of impact did it have on your advertising revenues? |
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How has the backing from Viacom and Network18 helped in Nick's growth in India? |
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How well are you distributed across the country? |
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So what are your plans going ahead?
However, the major challenge there is going to be distribution because unlike the HSM market, we are not distributed there at all. |
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Is there any change in the ratio between advertising and subscription revenues?
Advertising still remains the predominant one, contributing over 60 per cent to our revenues. Distribution, meanwhile, is a constant revenue stream that you get year after year, but it's the biggest payout as well. We have also taken baby steps in consumer products. When we started off with 2-3 products in the consumer product business, it was only a marketing tool. But now I think its time that it will start paying off. We are already available across 17 categories and will soon be launching in stationary, plush and home DVD with Excel. This year, therefore, we will see revenues flowing in from this stream as well. |
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Why do you think that even after witnessing a growth in viewership, the kids category has not grown in terms of revenue share?
But with a lot of co-viewing happening now along with integrated value addition to brands and the pester power of kids, I think we are ready to shed that baggage. |
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How has the interactive media contributed towards Nick's growth?
Our website has about 10 per cent penetration with kids today - and this is growing. But I have to say that at the end of the day, everything feeds into one another. Therefore, it's very essential for us to go multiplatform. |
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