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Wednesday, 6 May 2015
Tuesday, 5 May 2015
Social Connect - beyond routine PR or CSR
By Tamanna Khanna,
Head - Marketing, IndiaFirst Life Insurance
A PRapport Special
Every brand has a philosophy. Some purpose
and some values that it lives by. This
philosophy of a brand goes way beyond its product or service alone. It goes
beyond to reach out to the society it works in and connect with it.
At IndiaFirst, we believe in the philosophy
of making life easier and spreading smiles. Our products, services, processes -
are built on the same foundation, where we strive to simplify insurance (our
business) as much as we can, securing numerous lives in the process. However,
we do realize, we cannot at the same time ignore the core in which we exist –
the society that impacts all our lives.
Whether a consumer is an existing customer or
a potential one who may or may not drive our business, but reaching out to him
and developing a relationship, or at least some sort of a connect with him
becomes essential for every brand. And
this is where social issues/ causes help in building bridges.
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| Tamanna |
Possibly, social causes are just a way for
the brand to ensure that it’s living up to its core philosophy, its belief and
its ethos. Experience is that taking up
social responsibilities or causes provides tangible benefits along with lasting
competitive advantages to organizations. For instance, when Tata Tea talks to
its consumers through a Jaago Re campaign, it attempts to make a difference in
its consumer’s day-to-day life. It wants to imprint the brand’s standout image
in the consumer’s mindset and stay on the top of their recall when any similar
social, civilian issues rise up. Does this mean that every person who connects
with the brand and its philosophy buys Tata Tea? Not necessarily. But the cause that the brand
supports, adds up to the brand recall value and you cannot miss Tata Tea on the
shelves. And this, in turn, also increases a possibility of you eventually
turning into a Tata Tea consumer.
A social cause is not meant to be looked at
as just a Corporate Social Responsibility initiative driven by the company. It
is rather marketing and customer engagement at its very best – which needs the
entire organization to get involved in. As a business model, it forms a base
for the company’s market value, operational efficiency, as well as a boost to
brand value.
Contributing to the society that we live in
may not have a direct relation to the business graphs but they strategically drive
consumer minds towards the brands as they build a compelling story that binds
the brand to the consumer – building a unique relationship and rapport.
It obviously makes sense to create a business
model that weaves explicit goals for profit, environmental performance, and
social efforts along with meeting the brand’s core philosophy. At the same
time, all of this needs to yield long-term business goals rather than focusing
on the short-term business benefits.
One such attempt was IndiaFirst Life Insurance
‘Happy India’ initiative that aims to nurture the
attitude of working towards constructive change and creating change among the
school going children in the age bracket of 11-16 years. Happy
India is an effort to provide children a chance to not just demand
change but actually ‘create’ it, by supporting them in implementing their ‘Ideas for Change’.
| School children in an education exercise - part of Happy India project |
Irrespective of the 2% provision for CSR as
per the new Companies Act, our firm belief is that brands need to remember that building a sustainable
business requires connecting with the society it lives in (and making profits)
to go hand in hand. It is essential for
them to study and chalk out social and environmental strategies that will be
driven by the brand purpose while keeping the motive genuine. More than being a
marketing activity or any sort of publicity buff, the initiative fundamentally
needs to be embedded in the company’s core values and purpose and make a
difference.
Any initiative to be successful needs to add
value not only to its stakeholders which include its customers, employees, the
business community, but also bring in some economic, social, environmental
value to its core business functions.
Crack this model, and you can have loyal
customers for life!
Monday, 4 May 2015
PrezSpeak-4: J&K, here we come!
Friends,
As we move towards realizing our dreams of going global
and strengthening our pan-India presence, we have something to show to the
world – Our website and our e-mag PRapport.
You will be happy to know that as you will read this
piece, PRapport would have clocked close to 3,000 page views. What is
heartening to note is that PRapport has been increasingly attracting global
attention! Germany seems to be in a hurry to catch up with the US, going by the
stats thrown by the Internet.
Thanks to a reference given by Mr Chander Sardana, we now
have a chance of opening our J&K Chapter. Dr. K. John Babu, Assistant
Professor, Department of Convergent Journalism, Central University of Kashmir,
Srinagar, has agreed to our suggestion to start a PRCI Chapter by roping in
like-minded communication professionals.
You will all agree with me that this will be simply
superb since we will be flying PRCI flag in J&K.
Emotionally speaking, I have a personal attachment to J&K
which is my state of birth. I was born in Udhampur.
We shall be in constant tough with Dr Babu and move
swiftly towards setting up the J&K Chapter.
We will soon see Delhi chapter back in action as we
finalise the names of the new committee in the NCR-Capital region.
Glad to hear that Vinay Kumar is tapping his contacts to
strengthen the Goa Chapter.
Friends, thanks a million for all your fan mails that
keep me moving ahead. But please just don’t stop after praising the
initiatives. I request all of you to participate in the new endeavour and that
is where our Inclusive Communication will have some meaning.
I am sure we are all planning some activity for the
Communication Day on the theme – Communicators as Whistle Blowers. Please refer
to - http://prapport.blogspot.in/2015/04/from-presidents-desk-3-well-begun-half.html
- for details and plan activities.
I hear Bangalore and Mumbai are already
planning something and I am sure Pune, Kochi and Solapur will too do their bit.
While on PRrapport, let me convey my gratitude to Mr S
Narendra by churning his weekly column – Narendra None – that has become highly
popular. I have already received several messages praising this week’s column -
Unshackling the Elephant.
You may have noticed the teaser about upcoming columns
which I am sure will be eagerly awaited.
For Daughters’ Day, we shall plan something unique this
year. I will share some dieas after discussing with GC and NE members shortly.
As Business India commented last week, we have a Big Task
Ahead and I am sure as a team we shall succeed.
Hum
Hongay Kaamyab!
Sunday, 3 May 2015
Should Your Business Be On Instagram? - A PRapport special
By Julia Spence-McCoy *
Social media is a great tool when it comes to marketing online, and there are many excellent platforms out there. One of these, Instagram, is something many people consider but aren’t sure if it will work for their company. Some might not know just what the social channel is for and others might not know if it will have the same sort of positive impact like Facebook or Twitter. I am going to take a look at Instagram, if you should use it, and give a few great tips for those who decide to!
How Does Instagram Really Work?
Instagram has long been a social media channel that is popular with Millennials and younger individuals. It is a great platform to share your favorite photos from your day, whether the photos are of cats, books, selfies or a beautiful sunset. Instagram is a great place for people to share visual aspects from their lives for their friends to interact with. It is an awesome visual tool, and many businesses are starting to notice its importance. It provides a unique ability to market to a younger crowd, and can give businesses an incredible competitive edge if Instagram is used correctly. There are currently several brands that have an incredible Instagram presence, which can give you inspiration if you decide your business needs an account, as well.
Should Your Company Be On It?
Since Instagram markets to a younger crowd and is so visually driven, many people wonder just what type of companies should use it. In fact, the reason you’re reading this is to learn if your business needs it or not, right? I am going to look at a few things a business needs to consider before setting up an Instagram account.
Do You Have Visual Marketing?
One of the first things you need to look at is if you utilize or need visual marketing. Instagram gives you the chance to utilize visual marketing to your advantage, and there are multiple things you can do to maximize the impact. However, you first need to make sure that you have products that are great for visual marketing, as well as creating and sharing photos that promote engagement with your followers. You don’t want to share bland photos, as those are likely not to get engagement.
Are Your Clients on It?
This is a pretty obvious question that some tend to overlook. If your clients aren’t on Instagram, it is likely that you won’t be able to reach as many people as you’d like to. Sure, you might get a few, but you need to be where your clients are because the audience you want to reach will be there, too. If your clients aren’t on Instagram, you might want to reconsider using it or you can ask your clients if they’d be willing to join Instagram if your company sets up a page. In fact, you can hold a contest and giveaway to encourage people to get on and follow your account.
Are Your Competitors on It?
Now, you might not have many clients on Instagram, but you need to look to see if your competitors are. You should also check to see if they have any engagement and how well it is helping them. If you see engagement on their photos, chances are you will have engagement on your photos, as well. You don’t want to be left in the dust by your competitors, and if they have a successful Instagram campaign, it is time to set one up and get to work.
How Can You Use Instagram for Your Business?
Now that you know a few questions to ask yourself, you’ll need tips on how to use Instagram for your business. I gathered a few great points to help you get started!
Utilize Hashtags on Your Photographs. Hashtags are an important aspect of social media, especially when it comes to Instagram. This will help you combine your photos with other trendy hashtags, which will give you the chance to be found by new readers and customers. Don’t shy away from using a few hashtags, either. Adding more can help broaden your reach significantly.
Fill Out Your Profile to Make it Powerful.
Just like with any other social media channel, you need to fill out your profile to optimize it and make it powerful. This will help people know your Instagram is an official one and not spam, convincing them that your account is safe to follow. Instilling trust is an important aspect for every business.
Know Your Age Demographic.
When you start your Instagram account and create a campaign, you need to know what your demographic is. Are they young or old? What things do they like? Are there any memes that they’ll appreciate more? All of this can help you create a great Instagram presence. In fact, knowing your age demographic is vital for any social media campaign.
Know How to Work Instagram For Business.
Instagram is much like Facebook and Twitter in the fact that it does try to help businesses out. Before you get started with Instagram for your business, make sure you get acquainted with Instagram for Business to get the best results possible! You can also find other businesses on Instagram to gain inspiration from them and see just how they approach using the social site.
A Picture is Worth a Thousand Words
Instagram can be a powerful tool for some companies, providing more access to clients and sharing excellent photos with them. While not all companies, like small, local businesses, might benefit, there are several things people can do with social media to get the most out of it. If you are looking for a way to maximize your social media content for the best impact, contact Express Writers, today! We have excellent social media services, providing you with excellent content to share with your followers. Will you be trying Instagram for your business or have you already? What are some things you’ve learned from using it?
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*Julia Spence-McCoy is the CEO of Express Writers, an online copywriting agency that began in 2011 with thousands of web content pages written to date and more than 50 talented writers on the team. Her passion is copywriting and all that pertains, including the ever-changing game of Google algorithm updates.
http://www.sitepronews.com/2015/05/01/should-your-business-be-on-instagram/
Friday, 1 May 2015
Narendra None-3: Unshakling An Elephant (Indian)!
By S.Narendra
(S Narendra, former Director General, DAVP & ex- Executive Director, R.K.Swamy-BBDO and
later Spokesperson, Government of India)
India’s impressive economic growth rate since the 1991
economic liberalization has attracted world -wide attention. Now most economic
commentators while referring to this development, compare India to an elephant
and the Indian establishment has come to relish this. But this was not so
initially and it required quite a push to persuade the political establishment
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| The author |
The political instability prevailing
from October 1989 to 1991 in New Delhi had sent the national growth rate and
nation’s morale to southwards as never before. Reportedly, there was a considerable
flight of capital from India fearing a financial collapse. I was privileged to
have access to the internal confidential briefings given to PM and select top
leaders of the previous two governments bringing home the dire situation and
steps to save the economy. Both the governments ignored such warnings,
resulting in India having to pledge abroad its gold reserves to save its
reputation.
A
Caged Tiger: The London based Economist
weekly in its April 1991, in a special section on India, depicted it as a caged
Tiger. The Ambassador car that was ubiquitous on Indian roads in many ways
symbolized the controlled economy in which quality and competition mattered
little. It recounted the many lost economic opportunities due to inward looking
Indian policies and contrasted this with the spectacular growth rates
registered by East Asian economies like, Malaysia, Thailand, Singapore and Hong
Kong, (as South East Asia Correspondent for five years, I had reported their progress) and even China which had opted for open
trading and investment policies. They
came to be known as ‘Tiger Economies’.
Indian policy makers wanted the Tiger branding, even while wedded to
policies of a bygone era.
New Congress Government: P.V. Narasimha Rao became prime
minister in late June 1991 and his first few statements clearly indicated that
the government had no option but to initiate drastic steps for saving the
economy. Taking such statements and the hints in the poll manifesto, I prepared
a note on a communication strategy outlining the tasks to be undertaken by
Doordarshan, AIR, DAVP, PIB and other media units of the Information and
Broadcasting ministry, in the wake of any bold policy changes and sent it to
the Secretary of the ministry. In response, I received it back with a mild
rebuff!
Meanwhile, I was summoned to attend a
meeting in Prime Minister’s Office convened by his special secretary, Surinder Singh, and attended by
officials of the finance ministry including N.K.Singh. I was asked to be ready
to launch a campaign for educating the people about the economic crisis and the
likely unpopular measures the government will take. But no one knew what those
steps were at that stage.
Having attended such meetings held
during previous governments, I was not sure that this government would bite the
bullet and, therefore, asked: “Are you sure the government would act? How much
bad news can we give the people?”
N.K. Singh shot back: “What other
alternative the government has? Work
on a publicity plan, don’t
ask questions”.
“Elephant
Unshackled”: Few persons expected Rao
and his minority government to unleash
politically heretical measures such as
drastic devaluation of the Indian rupee
by a whopping 27%, and scrapping of the Industrial
Development Regulation Act.
The 26th
of July 1991 was a red letter day, when the Indian entrepreneurial spirit won
its freedom. The announcement of abolition of IDRA by the Industry ministry
headed by prime minister Rao, came in the afternoon, taking everyone by
surprise, as it meant reversal of
Nehruvian model of economic development.
The officials in the finance and
industry ministry were very busy and did not have time for us in DAVP for
offering a brief for a communication campaign. Often in DAVP we were both an
agency as well as a client and cannot wait for the client ministry to give us a
brief. In fact, we had to wake them up to their communication needs. More often
than not, we had to scramble up a campaign overnight.
|
Coming up:
And much more....
Watch this space!
|
As
I was used to this
situation, I prepared a brief for guiding my creative team and
asked them to come up with their ideas within the next few hours for releasing
advertisements and outdoor campaign as well as a folder for explaining the
significance of the government’s historic decision. When I returned to office
after dinner to look at my team’s ideas, they presented me a tiger and even a
peacock as the mascot for the campaign
that had no precedent.
I suggested that they come out with a
visual matching the tag line ‘Elepahnt
Unshackled’. We toyed with the idea of two elephants, one in chains and the
other breaking out of them, but settled for an unshackled elephant, with its
trumpeting trunk. I took a great risk by not putting the creative ideas through
the political and bureaucratic channels for approvals that would have delayed the campaign by several weeks. I
tasked my outdoor team to get to work with the creatives and put up hoardings
in New Delhi before the next evening, i.e.27th of July. This was
followed up with newspaper Ads and cinema slides. I was happy to note that
newspapers noticed the message in the hoardings, reproduced the “Unshackled Elephant” and even favourably
commented on it. I & B minister Ajit Panja complemented me for the
promptness with which DAVP had moved
the campaign.
The PMO had set up a high level
steering committee under the prime minister’s principal secretary for overseeing the roll –out of economic
reforms. The Secretary of I&B ministry was a member of this committee and
he had been asked to attend its first meeting. He suddenly remembered my note
on communication strategy for economic reforms telephoned me with a request
that I should meet him with that note. We met and prepared for the steering
committee meeting. I was co-opted as an invitee. I took the opportunity to get
the stamp of approval (post facto, of course!) of this committee for using the
elephant as the mascot and the tagline
for our communication campaign. No one paid any attention to the ad design and
passed it quietly though!
I didn’t realize then that the issue
of the mascot and the tag line was still an open issue. A few months later I
was summoned by PMO to make a presentation to the PM himself about the work we
had done and about the campaign plan for reforms agenda. (There is a separate
story about this first encounter with the PM). During the presentation, I had
showed the Ads with unshackled elephant released to media and no one offered
any comments, making me assume that the mascot and tagline had been approved.
A few days later, the PM was taking
another meeting in which several cabinet ministers were present, Out of
nowhere, the Human Resource Development minister Arjun Singh (who was expressing his opposition to PM’s economic
reforms) pointed towards me and told Narasimha Rao that I was not projecting
the reforms properly and had used the
elephant, not the tiger, as the mascot.
He further said that I should be asked to change the mascot. A major private Ad
agency working for the Education ministry , I later learnt, appears to
have brought up this idea to the
minister.
PV, without showing much reaction, asked
me to explain my position. I clarified that tiger as symbol of fast economic progress had been
over used by south east Asian nations,
As they were small compared to India and were oligarchic not democratic
like India, where processes were long.
The Prime Minister, without even batting
an eyelid, said “I agree’
I heaved a sigh of relief, as I had
taken the risk of running the campaign
for several weeks under the tagline Unshackled
Elephant, without subjecting it to the usual long-winding official
processes.
(For those interested in reading more
on how government advertising works under
severe handicaps should I recommend Pictures
in Our Mind that deals with Canadian government advertising agency, a model
adopted by India in setting up DAVP in 1950s).
Prannoy blasts ‘ghastly tsunami’ of tabloid journalism
·
NDTV
Co-founder says credibility of TV news channels is at stake
·
Equals
eye-ball chasers to ambulance chasers
·
Calls
for stricter anti-defamation laws and speedy legal process
·
Receives
Life Time Achievement Award @ Press Club-Mumbai’s national media awards
MUMBAI, May 1, 2015:
Blasting the trend of ‘tabloidisation’ of Indian news channels, veteran anchor
and NDTV co-founder Dr Prannoy Roy has called for stricter anti-defamation
laws.
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| Prannoy Roy receiving the Press Club Mumbai Lifetime Achievement Award from Railway Minister Suresh Prabhu. Star TV CEO Uday Shankar looks on. Pic from NDTV.Com |
Referring to the
increasing levels of sensationaliation of news among English and even Indian
language TV news channels, Dr Roy cautioned that the ‘ghastly tsunami’ of
tabloid journalism will spell death knell for the electronic medium and as it
impacts credibility of news reporting.
He was speaking at The
Press Club-Mumbai’s national media awards event last night acknowledging the
Lifetime Achievement Award bestowed on him.
Dr Roy stunned the
audience when he cited the example of a woman news anchor of a Hindi channel
who annolunced: ‘break ke baad, rape story’.
Interestingly, Dr Roy’s
critical comments come close on the heels of Prasar Bharati Chairman A Surya
Prakash’s statement at a Public Relations Council of India (PRCI) event at New
Delhi where the latter expressed concern at inadequate self-regulatory
mechanism among media houses and their race for TRPs. Mr Prakash suggested that
the Press Council must be empowered with strong legal provisions to deal with
all media, including TV news channels.
Dr Roy went a step
ahead and said there should be stricter anti-defamation laws than what they are
today. But he hastened to add that this
aspect should be dealt by legal machinery and judiciary. The government should
have no role at all, he emphasized.
“Indian media thrives
on punishment-free environment,” the veteran news anchor said and opined that
journalists are getting slack. It will be tough to recover once they lose
credibility and the recent political developments amply demonstrated this, he
said.
He felt that the
current legal framework is inadequate to deal with defamation cases which keep
piling up and prosecution taking years and years.
Pointing out that the
news channels are adopting the tabloid culture apparently to capture eyeballs,
he equaled eye-ball chasers to ambulance chasers – a term used for lawyers who
seek business at accident spots and hospitals.
Continuously harping on
tabloidisation of TV journalism, Dr Roy felt that the advertisers are also
equally to blame for encouraging sensationalism. Advertising planners must
build an element of ‘quality-with-credibility’ in their spends while they too
chase eyeballs to capture the viewers’ attention, he said.
In this context, he
pointed out that NDTV does not practice tabloid journalism and that the channel
won the coveted Most Trusted Media House award for the second year in
succession.
He cautioned the young
journalists against getting “too close to the sources”. This could also impact
credibility as there is a danger of the news story emanating from such
‘sources’ getting coloured.
Dr Roy strongly batted
for Net Neutrality, but said the culture of “unrestricted anonymity” of posting
on social media is a big threat to the society. Promoters of social media sites
should build in a technology structure to raise alarms when the anonymous
people post comments that could hurt religious or cast sentiments of the people
that could lead to violence and communal disturbances.
Railway Minister Suresh
Prabhu, who was the chief guest at the event, suggested that media houses
should work on ‘Making News’ while chasing ‘Breaking News’. A lot of positive
news left uncovered in this new trend, he said.
The union government,
he said, is committed to freedom of press and that at no stage does it want to
suppress dissent. In a vibrant democracy like India, media has to be
anti-establishment to ensure proper checks and balances, he said.
The showstopper of
sorts for the evening was interesting panel discussion – “Celebrating the Voice
of Dissent- participated by senior journalists Shekhar Gupta, former
Editor-in-Chief of the Indian Express and Srineevasan Jain of NDTV and Krishna
Prasad, Editor-in-Chief of Outlook. The discussion was moderated by Sachin
Kalbaug, the Editor of Mid-Day.
The media professionals
expressed concern at some politicians turning ‘mini dictators’ and trying to
threaten the freedom of speech.
During the awards
event, Dr Roy was felicitated with the Life Time Achievement Award by the
Railway Minister, along with CEO of Star TV Uday Shankar and Mumbai Press Club
President Prakash Akolkar.
Dr Roy was chosen for
the award for the yeomen service that he had done for TV journalism – and he
was selected from a shortlist of senior editors by a survey among 200
journalists all over India, and a final unanimous consideration by the Managing
Committee of the Mumbai Press Club. The previous recipients of Lifetime
Achievement award were late Vinod Mehta, Kuldip Nayar, N Ram, and Mrinal Pande.
The RedInk awards –
into its fifth edition - was held at the Jamshed Bhabha Auditorium of the
National Centre for Performing Awards at Nariman Point here, which among others
was attended by crème da la crème of Indian journalism. Top media practitioners
across the country were present at the glittering event, which this time around
was themed ‘Celebration of Dissent’.
The evening started
with two-minute silence to mourn the death of thousands of people in a
devastating earthquake in Nepal and parts of India including Bihar, Uttar
Pradesh and West Bengal.
“The journey of the
RedInk awards in the last five years has been thrilling. We started with two
categories and today we have close to a dozen categories. It has grown in size
and has been appreciated across the country. This year, we have received 800
plus entries and that speaks for itself,” Press Club Chairman Gurbir Singh
said.
The RedInk Award for
Journalist of the Year, instituted for the first time, has gone to Sreenivasan
Jain of NDTV for his consistent investigative work epitomized in his series ‘Truth versus Hype’ and
other programmes. Similarly, Arnab Goswami, Editor-in-Chief of Times Now, was
selected as the Impact Editor of the Year for his ability to capture eyeballs
and expand audience reach with his ‘News Hour’ show.
Scroll.in was be
awarded the ‘Best News Start-Up of the Year’ for scaling up its influence
rapidly as an alternative source of news and features.
Besides, nearly 20
journalists were given awards for their best stories in print and TV – which
was judged by an elite panel of judges for categories including Business,
Crime, Environment, Health & Wellness, Human Rights, Lifestyle &
Entertainment, Politics, Science and Innovation, Sports and The Big Picture.
Star India is the
Presenting Partner for Mumbai Press Club Redink Awards for Excellence in Journalism
2015. The awards partners are Aditya Birla Group, Indiabulls Housing, Glenmark
Pharmaceuticals, Zee Entertainment, Eros International, Seven Hills Hospitals,
Lunkad Investments and JSW Steel.
Winners of Mumbai Press
Club Redink Awards 2015 are:
BUSINESS:
Print Mr Dinesh Narayanan, The Caravan
Magazine
Television Mr Dibang,ABP News
CRIME
Print Ms Leena Reghunath, The Caravan
Magazine & Mr Vinod Kumar
Menon, Mid Day
Television Mr Tarun Nangia & Mr Dipu Rai,Zee
Business
ENVIRONMENT
Print Mr Sharad Vyas, Mid Day
Television Mr Umesh Kumavat, ABP News & Mr Rajat
Singh, Aaj Tak
HEALTH & WELLNESS
Print Mr Johnson Poovanthuruth, Deepika
& Ms Nikita Saxena, Caravan
Television Ms Vrushali Purandare, TV -9
HUMAN RIGHTS
Print Mr Salil Tripati, The Caravan
Magazine
Television Mr Shams Tahir Khan, Aaj Tak
LIFESTYLE &
ENTERTAINMENT
Print Mr Tanul Thakur, The Big Indian
Picture
Television Mr Jujhar Singh, NewX
POLITICS
Print Mr Dinesh Narayanan, The Caravan
Magazine
Television Mr Jitendra Dixit, ABP News
SCIENCE &
INNOVATION
Print Mr Shamsheer Yousaf, Fountain Ink Magazine
SPORTS
Print Mr Rahul Bhatia, The Caravan
Magazine
Television Ms Suprita Das, NDTV
THE BIG PICTURE
Winner Mr Hari Adivarekar,
Yahoo Originals
Runner-up Mr Hemant R Padalkar, DNA
IMPACT EDITOR OF THE
YEAR : Mr Arnab Goswami Times Now
NEWS START-UP OF THE
YEAR : scroll.in
JOURNALIST OF THE YEAR
: Mr Sreenivasan Jain, NDTV
LIFE-TIME ACHIEVEMENT
AWARD : Dr Prannoy Roy, NDTV
Thursday, 30 April 2015
YouTube Video Links to be watched!
Watch some recent Global Communication Conclave snapshots
in a filmi format on YouTube – PRapport.
We processed these as we received pictures.
More soon as members send in their contributions.
Editor
Monday, 27 April 2015
Press Club awards for Prannoy, Arnab
Dr Prannoy Roy, Executive
Co-Chairman of NDTV Group, has been awarded the 2015 RedInk Award for Lifetime
Achievement for Excellence in Journalism for his consistent and pioneering
contribution to news television in India, a statement by The Press Club said
today.
Dr Roy will be honoured for
his service to journalism at a glittering ceremony on Thursday, 30th April in
Mumbai at the Jamshed Bhaba Auditorium, NCPA.
Dr Roy along with his wife
and journalist Radhika Roy in 1988, were the first to set up a television news
production company called New Delhi Television, now called NDTV. In later
years, Dr Roy made a mark for his incisive and pioneering coverage of election
news and changed the way people consumed TV news with his ground-breaking
programmes such as ‘The News Tonight’ and ‘The World This Week’.
After years of producing the
news for Star News, Dr Roy launched his own broadcasting network with NDTV
24X7, NDTV India and other channels in 2003. NDTV, one of the largest news
networks in the country today, has set up benchmarks for good, ethical and
no-frills news coverage.
The RedInk Award for
‘Journalist of the Year’, instituted for the first time, has gone to
Sreenivasan Jain of NDTV for his consistent investigative work epitomized in
his series ‘Truth versus Hype’ and other programmes. Arnab Goswami,
Editor-in-chief of Times Now, was selected as the ‘Impact Editor’ of the Year
for his ability to capture eyeballs and expand audience reach with his ‘News
Hour’ show. Scroll.in will be awarded the ‘News Start-up of the Year’ for
scaling up its influence rapidly as an alternative source of news and features.
Judging for the RedInk
Awards, which includes as many as 10 categories have just been completed, and
as many as 24 journalists who have produced outstanding and impactful stories
in calendar 2014 will also receive awards along with Dr Prannoy Roy,
Sreenivasan Jain, Arnab Goswami and Scoll.in on 30 April at the NCPA.
The judging process proved
to be a herculean task with over 800 entries in the print/online category and
nearly 250 stories from television journalists. Each of the categories –
politics, crime, environment, sports, human rights, etc – had a dedicated jury
of senior persons with domain knowledge assigned to judge the entries. A
special curator was also assigned to sift the large number of entries in each
section and guide the judges.
The judging process brought
in well known names such as Harsh Mariwala, chairman & MD of Marico, for
the Business category, Dr Kiran Shaw Mazumdar, head of Biocon, for the Health
& Wellness category, former Mumbai Police Commissioner M.N.Singh &
Justice Kode for the crime category and Sudanshu Vats, CEO of Viacom18, for the
‘Entertainment & Lifestyle’ stories.
Star India is the Presenting
Partner for the Mumbai Press Club RedInk Awards for Excellence in Journalism
2015. Other Award Partners include Aditya Birla Group, Indiabulls Housing,
Glenmark Pharmaceuticals, Zee Entertainment, Eros International, SevenHills
Hospitals, Lunkad Investment and JSW Steel.
Media and communication
partners for the RedInk Awards include exchange4media.com, MxM India,
Adfactors, MSL Group India, Integral PR and Concept PR.
The RedInk Awards, now in
their 5th year, has grown in stature over the years attracting entries from all
over the country. The Awards have been set up as peer and professional
recognition for path-breaking stories; and to encourage good, ethical
journalism that impacts people and society.
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