Sir John Hegarty stands tall in whatever he does. Starting Bartle Bogle Hegarty (BBH), of which he is chairman & worldwide creative director, four years into the run the agency was voted Campaign magazine's Agency of the Year in 1986. Awards galore have seen been following the man who launched the famous Levis "Live Unbuttoned" campaign. In 2007, Hegarty received a knighthood in the Queen’s birthday honours for services to advertising.
At Goafest 2009, Hegarty explained why recession is the best time to be in advertising as it induces innovation and makes change acceptable.
In an interview with Indiantelevision.com's Tarachand Wanvari, Hegarty talks about the current status of the advertising industry, the need to address the digital medium and the fantastic future of television as people can now watch it from anywhere.
Excerpts: |
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How different are the agencies and clients in India as opposed to those in the Western world? |
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Everyone’s speaking about the new media. But is the industry, the client ready for it? |
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Are the agencies ready for the new media - technologically and with manpower skills? |
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Audio visual is one of the best forms of communication. What do you think is going to happen next - television episodes, internet access, voice communications on the mobile or a hand held device? Are we ready with the content? |
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But are we ready with the content? |
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People are talking of mobisodes for TV consumption on mobile devices, because one can’t capture facial expressions and fine details on the small screen. Do you think that there is an opportunity to create more mobile-centric television content with which agencies could weave in their ad strategies? |
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Where do you think the industry is headed here in India? I mean during one of panel discussions we had people saying that there is no recession in the industry, despite the fall in ad agencies revenue. Do you think that the industry needs a bigger shock to awaken and realise that they are going down economically? |
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Digital has one of the best ways to measure the success of any campaign. For television advertisements, even today people depend on Tam's peoplemeters which can never give a true reach picture. Yet, marketers are allocating a major chunk of their budgets for conventional media, rather than digital media. |
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