Tuesday, 28 July 2015

Will miss you, Dr Kalam!

By Srinivasan

(Chairman, Prime Point Foundation, Editor in Chief, PreSense, & 
President, Sansad Ratna Awards Committee)

Dr APJ Abdul Kalam was the inspiration behind many of our groups like India Vision, Action 2020, Education Loan Task Force, etc.  When he was promoting positive journalism, we started our emagzine 'PreSense', which has recently released the prestigious 100th Edition.  We got the great honour of getting his Foreword.  PreSense is fully dedicated to positive journalism.

His motivation to 'Celebrate Success' got converted into 'Sansad Ratna Awards', to honour the top peforming Lok Sabha Members.  Recently, we completed the 6th Edition of Sansad Ratna Awards.  In his recent book titled ' A Manifesto for change', he devoted a full chapter on the Sansad Ratna Awards.
Always friendly, Dr Kalam with the then PM Vajpayee

I had opportunity to interact with him several times personally or over phone.  Every minute of the conversation used to be a great source of energy and inspiration.  Whenever, I introduced youngsters, he used to converse with child like enthusiasm.  In every issue of our ezine PreSense, we used to carry his inspiring quotes and speeches.

 On several occasions, I had recorded his podcast interview over telephone.  When I wanted to record his podcast interview in 2007 after his leaving Rashtrapathi Bhavan, he called me and interviewed me for nearly 20 minutes on the techniques of podcast, softwares used, upload format, etc.

Though he was the Celebrated Scientist and Missile Man of India, his enthusiasm to learn new things, which he did not know, was enormous.  His conversations used to be more friendly like a dialogue with a classmate.

I have interacted with him before his becoming the President, when holding the Office of President of India and after retiring from the office.  His simplicity remained the same.

In the earlier century Swami Vivekananda (1863-1902) and Mahatma Gandhi (1869-1948) galvanised the youth of those times.  In the current century Dr Abdul Kalam (1931-2015) energised the youth and students.  Though we will be missing Dr Kalam, we will continue to follow him to make India as a 'Developed Nation' by 2020.
'I met Dr Kalam to seek his blessings as I completed 60'

As a mark of respect to our mentor and leader Dr Abdul Kalam, we propose to organise a condolence meeting to pay homage to him on Saturday the 1st August 2015 at Dr MGR-Janaki Arts an Science College (Formerly known as Sathya Studio), RA Puram, Chennai at 3.30 PM.

Those who are living in and around Chennai may kindly participate.  This is being organised under the banner 'Admirers of Dr Abdul Kalam'.


Salam, Kalam!


PRCI salutes the People's President, Missile Man and above all the Gentleman President who inspired all Indians with his communication with passion to make India world's Number 1 with his Vision 20:20 programme.

Do check the above video for a truly inspiring and moving speech - its just a couple minutes' clip.

Here is the profile of the 11th President of India that sums up his life and works and his dream:

Born on 15th October 1931 at Rameswaram in Tamil Nadu, Dr. Avul Pakir Jainulabdeen Abdul Kalam, specialized in Aeronautical Engineering from Madras Institute of Technology.

Dr. Kalam made significant contribution as Project Director to develop India's first indigenous Satellite Launch Vehicle (SLV-III) which successfully injected the Rohini satellite in the near earth orbit in July 1980 and made India an exclusive member of Space Club. He was responsible for the evolution of ISRO's launch vehicle programme, particularly the PSLV configuration. After working for two decades in ISRO and mastering launch vehicle technologies,

Dr. Kalam took up the responsibility of developing Indigenous Guided Missiles at Defence Research and Development Organisation as the Chief Executive of Integrated Guided Missile Development Programme (IGMDP). He was responsible for the development and operationalisation of AGNI and PRITHVI Missiles and for building indigenous capability in critical technologies through networking of multiple institutions. He was the Scientific Adviser to Defence Minister and Secretary, Department of Defence Research & Development from July 1992 to December 1999. During this period he led to the weaponisation of strategic missile systems and the Pokhran-II nuclear tests in collaboration with Department of Atomic Energy, which made India a nuclear weapon State. He also gave thrust to self-reliance in defence systems by progressing multiple development tasks and mission projects such as Light Combat Aircraft.

As Chairman of Technology Information, Forecasting and Assessment Council (TIFAC) and as an eminent scientist, he led the country with the help of 500 experts to arrive at Technology Vision 2020 giving a road map for transforming India from the present developing status to a developed nation. Dr. Kalam has served as the Principal Scientific Advisor to the Government of India, in the rank of Cabinet Minister, from November 1999 to November 2001 and was responsible for evolving policies, strategies and missions for many development applications. Dr. Kalam was also the Chairman, Ex-officio, of the Scientific Advisory Committee to the Cabinet (SAC-C) and piloted India Millennium Mission 2020.

Dr. Kalam took up academic pursuit as Professor, Technology & Societal Transformation at Anna University, Chennai from November 2001 and was involved in teaching and research tasks. Above all he took up a mission to ignite the young minds for national development by meeting high school students across the country.

In his literary pursuit four of Dr. Kalam's books - "Wings of Fire", "India 2020 - A Vision for the New Millennium", "My journey" and "Ignited Minds - Unleashing the power within India" have become household names in India and among the Indian nationals abroad. These books have been translated in many Indian languages.

Dr. Kalam is one of the most distinguished scientists of India with the unique honour of receiving honorary doctorates from 30 universities and institutions. He has been awarded the coveted civilian awards - Padma Bhushan (1981) and Padma Vibhushan (1990) and the highest civilian award Bharat Ratna (1997). He is a recipient of several other awards and Fellow of many professional institutions.

Dr. Kalam became the 11th President of India on 25th July 2002.

His focus was on transforming India into a developed nation by 2020.
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Here are some tributes from PR professionals:

Dr. K. P. J. Abdul Kalam was an uncommon President, who came closest to the. common man,. A scientist - philosopher, but not pedantic. As a scientist, he was in search of solutions useful to the common man. He was not just a grey eminence but had the zest of youth, inspired by the young, at the same time inspirational to the young people. He reminded me of the story of a person who prospered in life but always preserved the torn clothes that kept him covered when he was far away from prosperity. A Plain living and high thinking person like him adorned the highest office India can offer to her sons and daughters . really speaking an accidental president, who went on to elevate the office to another level. Rastrapati Bhavan may have to wait for a long time to host another Indian like him.
He passed away in a manner, perhaps, he liked most, spreading the wisdom of common sense, speaking to the young people. RIP-
- S Narendra, former spokesperson, Govt of India 

Dr APJ Kalam was a great visionary and  a Role model to the Youth  of India.
He always used to strive for excellence and preached his philosophy Unity is strength . I don't thing we had such an illustrious and colourful  President after independence. He always dreamt a  prosperous and resourceful India.
He made all Indians Proud.  Our humble Pranams and Prayers.

- T Vinay Kumar, Secretary, PRCI Kerala Chapter

"Let difficulties know that you too are difficult" - APJ Abdul Kalam....................R.I.P.​
- Natesh Nair

We have lost greatest noble soul  of india.
Dr Kalam was a visionary to the youth with ignited mind to see country  in progressive way. May the departed soul rest in heaven.
- Sk Kaul, Consultant and Director PR council of India national executive team.

Salute you Dr A P J ABDUL KALAM
" You have taught the younger generation of India to have hope. Your humility and clear conscience has evoked millions to mark you as their torch bearer. You have blazed the trail."
- Sushanta Dhar, HPCL, Mumbai

Dr. APJ Kalam, you were guide, teacher and inspiration to the common man before you will be remembered as President of India. So dream big to achieve something. - Rama Vijay.

Dr Kalam  - The first President who was a People's President and  lucid communicator - died while communicating in Assam. May his soul rest in peace.
- JP Dhaundiyal, Director Solar Energy Society of India. Delhi.



Monday, 27 July 2015

Mule In A Turf Club: The birth and death of India Update mag

  • How I dealt with IAS 'Media Experts'
  • One wanted to charge media for PIB pictures!
  • Another couldn't differentiate between TVCs and TV Programmes!


By S. Narendra

(Former Information adviser to PM, Principal Information Officer to Govt.of India,
and Govt Spokesperson)

 The narration in part one of this series dealt with a summary of the hurdles to be crossed for initiating a comprehensive public affairs campaign. An agency can conceive and recommend but the client has to totally buy into the philosophy, goals and objectives and the plan of action of the campaign. In the case of DAVP, it had to think both as the client and the agency. In addition, the client -the government- was not one but multiple entities each guarding its own turf zealously. The Steering committee, headed by the principal secretary, on paper was supposed to be an overarching body for overseeing reforms roll out but it also had to work through various departments and ministers that was a very slow process.

An added difficulty in planning and implementing  a  public affairs campaign for economic reforms was that  I&B ministry, filled exclusively with IAS and central secretariat officers, was oriented towards regulatory functions and prone to ‘control’ media units under it. There was no media and communication expertise within the ministry and it had to come from its media units that were looked upon as subordinate wings and rarely involved in policy making. Some IAS officers who came as I&B ministry secretaries, understood their limitations and attempted to seek professional  inputs from media units and  made other officials  in the  ministry to allow relative  functional  freedom  to media units. But more often than not, such functional freedom depended upon the individual traits of the secretary and other officials. In any case, the ministry was always preoccupied with Doordarshan, not only it bristles with problems but also because it offered more visibility, preferred by the political leadership for which all  that mattered was how much time - not to  what and for which purpose - was devoted to PM and  the government.
Speaking about individual styles of ministry’s leadership and its impact on media units functioning, here are a few instances:

There was an additional secretary-cum- financial adviser. On a financial proposal relating to the Press Information Bureau (PIB) he sagaciously recorded that since UNI and PTI were dishing out  official news widely, there appeared to be no need for the  government to have its own  PR and information disseminating unit. A secretary who came suddenly from urban development ministry to I&B, issued instructions that the government media units such as PIB, Photo Division should not make freely available photographs of  government functions to the media and should charge a fee. I had a hard time in explaining to this official that media give their  space free of cost when such photographs gets published even on the front pages. For love or money,   that space will not be available for government. He did not know how much PR effort was spent to get such media space. During his tenure in Urban Development ministry, he was overseeing renovation of Vigyan Bhavan, the principal venue for organising  important  officials functions. Ignoring my advice that the visual media must be accorded a special enclosure facing the stage, he arranged for their enclosure to be located far away from the stage, that too in small balconies in some corners of the main hall. 
Another I & B secretary, recorded his precious opinion that after the official TV-Doordarshan and AIR expanded their reach, they were capable of fully taking care of government ‘publicity’ and funding and staffing of other media units could be drastically cut. He did not realise that he was officially acknowledging a commonly known fact that Doordarshan and AIR were being used as government mouth pieces, and in the process losing their credibility and audiences.
There were several honourable exceptions to the rule of such bureaucrats and it was a pleasure to work with such officers.
Generally, there was little understanding within the ministry of the significant and subtle changes taking place in the media scene and people’s media consumption habits. Amidst such difficulty, I tried to push a series of TV spots addressing  complex economic reform themes like ‘value added exports against bulk goods’, ‘benefits of devaluation’ and so on. The ministry frowned upon such TV spot production as ‘infructuous expenditure’.
In the view of one of the financial advisers, production of TV   programmes was the exclusive function of Doordarshan and, therefore, DAVP should not stray into this area. DAVP was not expected to pay Doordarshan and AIR for their spots on reforms themes, as a consequence the slots they got depended upon their whims and therefore, there could be no media plan. The sad part of the story was that he could not distinguish between Spots and Programmes!
I had also introduced on a modest scale monitoring and evaluation (M&E) of DAVP outputs. Later, I tried to introduce similar M&E into PIB’s functions and wanted an outside research agency for evaluation of its reach and effectiveness. I was cautioned that such an exercise could expose the inadequacy of our efforts and hence, should be avoided.  

sunarendra@gmail.com
blog:https//spokesperson.blogspot
Kannadiga Becomes A Telugu Bidda: The presentation that made to PM Narasimha Rao in January was a turning point in the campaign. I did not know Rao personally. Even this presentation had come about in strange circumstances. I was due to be elevated to the next level in my career and certain forces were working to edge me out and carried tales to PMO that my performance as Director General of DAVP was not up to the mark. As narrated in part one of this piece, I had made a candid presentation that almost told the story of the emperor who wore no clothes. Surprisingly, I survived and the PM’s appreciation of the negative feedback. I was already a member of the Principal Secretary’s Steering Committee overseeing the reforms. Soon, I was appointed the Principal Information Officer to government, and concurrently Information Adviser to PM, and Spokesperson. The India Today announced my appointment thus: Mr xxxxx , a person hailing from the PM’s home state, Andhra Pradesh, has been appointed as xxxx’.
Workshop for Government Media: On my suggestion, the PM directed that a 3-day workshop for senior officials of I & B ministry media units should be conducted to brief them about the reform agenda. He personally addressed this Workshop, which was followed by discussions with the finance and other ministers and senior officials. The cabinet secretary and the Principal Secretary to PM also participated in it.
In the first interaction with PM after my appointment I had informed him that when I was working inside the government councils, I would be representing the media. And when I am with the media, I would be representing the government. Also, I requested him that as the Spokesperson of government, I must be allowed to keep my credibility with the media intact. That would mean that I should have full access to all official information and be part of the decision making process. Further, putting media under undue pressure would be counter-productive in the long run.   Rao was very gracious in appreciating these points. Never in my tenure I was asked to ‘kill’ a negative media story that had some substance in it.
AICC Session at Tirupati: The PM had taken seriously the point I had raised in my presentation that the government and Congress party were deficient in their political communication. The All India Congress Committee (AICC) and the Congress party session were to be held in April at Tirupati. He told me that he would use this session to initiate political communication for removing the apprehensions of the party rank and file about the reforms. Several people were working on the speech that  Rao was to deliver as the party president at this session. Almost all drafts of the speech received from different sources were sent to me for arriving at central   unifying messages. In the final speech he included my suggestion that it should focus on Gandhiji’s reference to the poor as ‘Daridranarayan’. The ‘Talisman’ test (reforms measures) should  be invoked to see whether  they go to wipe the tears off the eyes of the poor or not. In his address, Rao explained that he had not changed the Nehruvian economic model of private and public sector mixed economy. The Reforms were meant for expanding the role of the private sector in critical sectors like infrastructure and manufacturing that would free the government resources which would be increasingly used for improving health, education and for anti-poverty programmes. He was at pains to stress that the role of the government   under the reforms would only change but it would not lessen the government’s importance.
During the  run up to the AICC session, perhaps,  I had gone out of the way in suggesting to PM  that he should  consider appointing  a trusted person as  his chosen deputy, who could  regularly  interact  on PM’s behalf, with the  party rank and file and travel to states for party communication work. I had made this suggestion because I learnt from a modest study that the district and state Congress leaders had expressed their dissatisfaction with the party’s political communication. The PM was very busy with official work  and even in Delhi  he was unable to spend time in the party office. The PM seemed to be inclined to consider this suggestion but certain manoeuvres by Arjun Singh, Sharad Pawar and other AICC members, especially their efforts to manipulate the party poll at Tirupati, made him abandon the idea. 
Investors’ Conferences: The PM was called upon to address a number of foreign and Indian investors meets   organised by various sponsors, such as the London Times, and The Economist. He used such occasions to seek to correct the impression that   India was favouring FDI at the cost of India’s sovereignty. The finance and commerce ministers were expected to say whatever appealed most to investors. For example, they would highlight the attraction of India as a huge middle class market (of about 100-150 million people), and they would assure that the government  in the course of time could  fully open up for FDI sectors that had been partially opened.

Rao was to address one such important conference. It began with the familiar mention of India as a great middle class market. When his turn came to speak, Rao   ignored his prepared text (prepared by the finance ministry) and spoke extempore. He told the investors that if they came only to exploit the small Indian middle class market of 100 -150 million, that would make the market shrink and unsettle the reforms. He said that he would welcome FDI that   aimed to make India a market of 850 million (that was the total population) by creating jobs and give a stake to them in the economic reforms. He asked them to look at India’s infrastructure deficiency as an opportunity, not as an obstacle. He even promised to remove any difficulties they faced in investing in sectors like infrastructure and food processing which the government had listed as priority areas for investment. 
While leaving the venue, Rao asked me to join him in his vehicle and during the ride explained to me   his thinking behind his speech. From whichever platform he spoke later, the prime minister would make it a point to explain to me, after the speech delivery, as to why he had stressed certain points. This was to give me background that I could use in my briefings to media commentators. This also helped me in editing PM’s speeches that were printed in several languages and distributed to a select mailing list, running into hundreds of thousands!
India Update: As mentioned earlier, economic reforms and globalisation were viewed with apprehension in many quarters. Only the pink newspapers were their supporters. I had mooted the idea of the government acquiring a voice for advocating reforms and the road ahead. The suggestion was unprecedented in the sense that it should not be identified with the government, but out of its control, could criticise government and its policies and reach out to businesses and other opinion makers.
Thus was born a fortnightly INDIA UPDATE published by a private firm but funded by the government, indirectly. The PM and his Principal Secretary A.N.Verma approved my proposal to support a fortnightly magazine focused on economic reforms. Competitive bids were invited and they were screened by a committee that included the finance ministry representative. The firm that fielded the best editorial team, content and design was to be selected. The team that won the contract for publishing the fortnightly included Siddharth Ray (later, of Star TV), Raghav Behl (later, TV 18), Vivek Sen-Gupta (who later headed IPAN) Gopalakrishnan (later editor  of Mathrubhoomi) among others. The scheme was that DAVP would contract to buy at   cover price (inclusive of distribution cost) ten thousand copies. The publishing firm was to distribute   the copies to business chambers, place the fortnightly at leading hotels, on flights and send to select opinion makers in different fields. A targeted mailing list was prepared for this purpose. In addition the magazine was sold through newspaper vendors.
The magazine, besides highlighting reforms, would espouse the cause of further reforms. Each issue would take up a sector as a special section in the 8-10 page fortnightly. The government had no editorial control over, including the views and commentaries. INDIA UPDATE acquired traction, judging from the fact that its sales went up.

Scandal Avoided: When the magazine was opened for bidding, there was a  hint from the prime minister Rao that I may consider giving it to a senior lady journalist who was known to be close to him. I met the principal secretary and submitted to him that if the contract were to go to this lady journalist, the magazine would loose its credibility and its birth would be preceded by a scandal. Myself and Verma met the PM and as politely as possible explained the likely fallout. The matter ended then and there.
One of the conditions I had put on the publishers was that the magazine should be brought out issue after issue regularly and there should be no break. Further, after one year of government support, it would be phased out so that India Update learns to stand on its own. Unfortunately, the  professional team chosen by us, after six months of continuously publishing the magazine, began to  break-up and it was not able to bring out the issue on time. As a result, I had  to change the publishers. The new outfit that took over the magazine, was not as competent. The firm wanted to curry favour with the government as a result of which the magazine lost its credibility. With the government’s permission, I withdrew the funding.

Technology Advances: Those were early days for India’s IT. Our organisation PIB, was one of the earliest ones to embrace the state of the art IT available then. As the language media was slow to adopt It, we threw open our facilities to media and offered free of cost computer training to journalists in Delhi as well as the state capitals. We introduced   an electronic bulletin board with the latest official information that could be accessed by media from anywhere. Video conferencing was a novelty then, and this facility was deployed to hold periodic briefings for the regional media. The representative of the latter were required to assemble at a regional video conferencing facility, set up at PIB’s regional centres, for interacting with me and others at Delhi.

I traveled to state capitals to meet owners of regional media for pleading with   them to station staff in Delhi who could cover economic and business subjects. With the   help of Reuters and Thomson Foundation, we organised free training in economic reporting for journalists.(To be Continued)

Sunday, 26 July 2015

Skill upgrading: NTPC sets the road map

  • PRCI Chairman Emeritus and Chief Mentor Jayaram 
       among speakers
  • Media veterans guide sessions


KABINI, Karnataka: It was a PR meet with a difference. Tucked away from the urban concrete jungles,  NTPC executives had their annual PR conference on 18-19th July at Kabini, 80 kms from Mysore. The place known for its evergreen landscape, lush green and thick forest,  had the perfect setting for thought-provoking discussions.
 
Jayaram explaining nuisances of crisis communication
The 2-day event with the theme “Bridging the Communication Gap” had the best brains from the media fraternity discussing with PR luminaries and top executives of the company.

 Anant Rangaswami,of CNBC, Shri Himangshu Watts (The Economic Times), Jayanta Roy Choudhury (The Telegrap), Durbar Ganguly (Millennium Post,  M.B.Jayaram, (PR Consultant and Chairman Emeritus of PRCI) Dominique Savio (Creative Director – Mudra) and Joe Scaria (ex-ET and Media Consultant)  formed the faculty that steered the sessions.

Dr Arup Roy Choudhury, CMD of NTPC,  in his opening remarks mentioned that PR persons must be pro –active and good communicators. He later presented the Annual PR awards for the Best House Journal, e-Magazine and MoU Excellence.

 Western Region – I Headquarters of  NTPC, Mumbai bagged the internal PR  MoU Excellence award as the best performing region for Public Relations.
G.J Deshpande, Regional Executive Director, WR-I , K Ravindran, AGM (PR) and Ms Kriti Dutta, Dy.Manager (PR) received the award.

S.N Ganguly,ED - Corporate Communication, Saptarshi Roy, RED –NRHQ,  Arvind Kumar, RED,East,II,HQ, R.Venkateswaran,RED (SR) P K Sinha, GM (Corporate Communications) were also participated.
Glimpses of the NTPC PR workshop

The annual event is a confluence of all PR professionals in the company to set targets and discuss the achievements of the previous Financial Year and recognizing the good work done by the professionals in the year gone by, part from learn from the experiences of veteran media professionals on handling various aspects of PR such as media relations, crisis communications and new trends in media.


Tuesday, 21 July 2015

Mule In A Turf Club: The journey from License Raj to Reforms Raj

By S.Narendra
(Former Information Adviser to PM, Principal Information Officer to the Government, and Spokesperson)

Attempting to educate the government on its need of a campaign on public affairs or behaviour change communication is like expecting to train a mule to compete with race horses. When P.V.Narasimha Rao government swept away the Licence-Raj, it baffled the political system, the Congress party, business and industry, bureaucrats and ordinary people. In the face of growing opposition to the new policies, the government continued its routine, Delhi-centric English language ‘publicity. My efforts to change this into public affairs mode was a trying experience. Read on…

When India   began opening up its economy in July 1991 for competition and globalisation, there was joy in small circles and bewilderment in and apprehensions in large sections, including the media. The bold economic reforms drive by Prime Minister P.V.Narasimha Rao were   totally unexpected,  was direly needed for saving the nation but   politically heretical. Even as the official decisions like scrapping of ‘licence Raj’ governed by the Industrial Development Regulations Act,  Directorate General of Technology Development (that controlled import of foreign machinery and technology) and other such measures, the government was not even aware that it needed strategic communication support  for persuading the people, including  businesses  and industry.  There were unbearable short term pains, especially on   the large sections of people already disadvantaged and this section needed to be assured that the government under foreign pressure  was not going to abandon them to market forces.

No one in government  thought it necessary to brief the government information and media system (DAVP,PIB, AIR, Doordarshan, Field Publicity and others )   and make them part of the critical decision making process, thus enabling them to lead a supportive communication campaign. I used to joke that the government media are  hyenas of  Lutyen’s jungle (North –South Block, the Government of India buildings designed by Lutyen). In the jungle, after the big cats have  planned and hunted  the prey and eaten their meal, hyenas  and jackals are allowed to clean up the  carcass.  In Lutyen’s jungle as well, the last act in the decision making process was (and is, I hope not!) the pushing out of a half-baked   press release through the official media system. Breaking into the company of cats and building communication process into the decision making process was a big task. 
Hilarious! The Government of V.P.Singh (1989-90) was somewhat better in this respect. Thanks to the presence of pragmatic P.Upendra as minister for Information & Broadcasting in the cabinet, he used to take me to top level secret briefings given to the prime minister and his Finance Minister Madhu Dandavate, Railway Minister George Fernandes  by  learned economist- turned bureaucrat  Dr.Bimal Jalan. The latter had been recalled from IMF and was soon to take over as the Finance Secretary from Gopi Arora.  Jalan laid it bare before the PM the dire financial situation and some urgently needed   remedies. I was entrusted with the job of creating a communication plan   for preparing the country to receive the bad news and the desperate remedies that were to be expected be administered.
It is another story that this far sighted move to make communication as part of the official decision making process later turned   into hilarious joke. To complete this side of the story, I gathered a team of  economists, economic journalists and other commentators and without telling them the briefings I had received, I assigned them to provide brief, jargon-free, write ups on technical themes like Inflation,  BOP crisis, fiscal deficit,  implications of subsidies, Disinvestment, Exit policy or Labour Reforms,  and others that were to soon become media headlines, if and when the government were to approach IMF/World Bank for loans known as   structural adjustment  loans with inevitable  conditionalities (in today’s terms, ‘austerity measures’, much hated by Greeks and Italians). They were sure to become controversial media headlines, as before, when the Reforms were rolling out. One had just flip through the newspapers of 1980 to understand the political hackles that would be raised if India were to approach IMF/World Bank for a bail out. Mrs Gandhi’s government in 1980, facing a severe balance of payment crisis had negotiated a ‘structural adjustment loan’. The opposition and media (led by Ram of the Hindu) had erupted against the loan, and the consequential conditionalities imposed on India. This background was very useful in identifying likely controversies in the event of the government seeking IMF/World bank help.

Handy Apple! As I could not share the secret with any one, I had to take home the office Apple classic desk top computer for preparing the outline of  a public affairs campaign cutting across government and private media and other  political advocacy activities.  Another complexity was that  I had to approach  individually and brief each  person engaged to provide  the write ups, to maintain utmost secrecy of the mission . I served to them   a cock-and-bull story   to explain why   I needed such write ups.
The write ups received were useful as background material but were very raw and jargon-ridden. Selecting a few critical themes, I prepared sample briefs as FAQs to be used in media briefings, and briefs for Advertising and public affairs campaign. Along with such write ups, prepared a step-by-step note identifying tasks for each media unit and a political communication plan to be undertaken by the leadership.
This note of mine was duly to Upendra who, in turn, forwarded it to  Madhu Dandavate. Two months later, (after  Madhu Dandavate  had presented a routine budget ignoring the financial and economic rot)  I received a letter from a junior  under -secretary in the finance ministry that read : “please refer to your discussions with the finance ministry etc and the note submitted . It is decided that no further action need be taken. Please return all official papers supplied to you.’ The Minister Upendra later told me that the finance minister Madhu Dandavate had refused to bite the bullet, especially because   the coalition partners (including BJP) were not  supportive of the much needed reforms. I did not even imagine as to how useful this exercise of 1989 would be when the actual reforms began rolling out in 1991.
Transformative Steps: The mounting economic crisis, particularly the imminent financial bankruptcy, had forced the  Congress-supported Chandrashekkar government to send India’s gold reserves abroad for borrowing money for repaying interests on official debts.  The successor minority government in 1991  headed by Narasimha  Rao, assumed to be a weak politician, began its economic reforms with massive devaluation of the Indian Rupee, followed by the dismantling of the Licence Raj, scrapping of the Industrial Development and Regulation Act (IDRA ) and so on. The Congress party rank and file was baffled by the government’s policies, as they were seen as a sudden reversal of Nehru-Gandhi socialist policies of government’s control over the economy. The Left parties, as expected, were campaigning against it. BJP was sitting on the fence, selectively supporting and opposing reforms. BJP was also spreading fears about globalisation of   the Indian economy (Swadeshi Jagran Manch was active then), as   anti-Swadeshi.  There was the prospect of India having to sign the global trade agreement   creating the World Trade Organisation (WTO), and a campaign  was on to scuttle it. And in   Mumbai,   Rahul Bajaj was leading the Bombay club that was opposed to globalisation   but in favour of market orientation of only the domestic economy.
The union Cabinet itself was   a divided house, yet the finance and commerce ministries were wanting to hurtle India into open, globalised  economy during the time when similar attempt in the Soviet Union was  failing. The changing economy was badly in need of a mindset change   through political communication and dialogue but the government leadership did not seem to have the time or inclination for it. What one noticed was the routine Delhi -centric communication, that too mostly in English. No one cared to find out  how such English language, especially technical  expressions like ‘liberalisation’, economic reforms’, structural  adjustment’ were getting across in the Indian  language media.
Anti-Reform Language Media: The most vocal opponents of the reforms were the Indian language newspapers as well as some of the English newspapers (especially outside of Delhi). Only the pink or business newspapers were giving play to the reforms and supporting them but their influence was limited. An analysis of the newspapers of   late 1980s and early 1990s showed that dailies were heavy with political news. Business stories rarely made it to the front pages. An economic story gaining prominence related primarily to official development plans, government announcements and public sector news. The stock market news was tucked away in a separate section in the middle pages and mostly it was the bare listing of stock prices, without any market analysis.
Yeh share-bazaarse Kya matlab hai?:  The government broadcasters were not expected to give space to private sector news, (private firms were not even named), and stock market news was taboo. Even the news agencies had unwritten laws not to name private sector companies. When  Doordarshan  noted in its news broadcast  the steep plunge   of stock market  on account of news of militants seizing Lal Chowk in Srinagar in 1991, the prime minister Chandrashekhar  issued a stern warning to Doordarshan  to avoid  broadcast  of such news. He angrily said ‘ Yeh share bazaar kya hota hai? Issse desh ka kya matlab hai’ (What’s this share market all about? How is it relevant to the country). Neither AIR nor Doordarshan had an economic desk, nor a foreign news desk.
Advertising guidelines for official media forbid them to accept sponsorships of items of conspicuous consumption and luxury goods. The official TV and Radio were stipulated to avoid mention of the names of private companies in their newscasts. If at all they took their names, it was only in commercials.
Only the Press trust of India had a so-called economic news desk and dealt mostly with government economic policies and reports but was not known for insightful analysis. Business beat   was unknown to language newspapers published outside of Mumbai.  Gujarati language had the distinction of having one and only business daily, Vyapar. The Indian private sector that wanted less government control on economic activities was not making any effort to educate the media and   people about the benefits of the new policies.  NESTLE was one company known to engage in public affairs and bringing out publications highlighting its contribution to  the economic development of host country  through its operations but in India it was lazy.
No free Flow of Financial News: International wire agencies had to route their output through their Indian counter-parts. Even brokers who trade on the quick flow of global financial information did not have free access to such information. They had to get such information provided by agencies specialised in financial news, like   Reuters, AP-Dowjones and others, after filtering by PTI. Whatever Indian news that was getting across to world media was mostly negative. Ill-conceived government attempts to offer a positive picture were drowned   in more adverse news.

In the first flush of reforms, Rao approved a proposal for removing restrictions on the direct flow of financial news provided by Reuters, AP-Dow Jones to brokers and investment firms. This move had caused considerable resentment in Indian news agencies that had enjoyed a monopoly until then. And, they were making huge money by acting as middle agents.
In the political and bureaucratic circles, communication went by the word ‘publicity’ that was mostly practised as partisan political information push, bordering on duplicity. As a result, official media and communication had lost their credibility. While the political leaders wasted money on ‘publicity’, bureaucrats who controlled the purse and watched such waste, would allocate less and less funds for communication activates.
None in government viewed communication   as an aide to policy making and facilitating implementation. And preparing the ground for introducing new policy or for altering existing ones was out of question.
Political Communication Vacuum: The political communication from the government party leadership was conspicuous by its absence. The finance minister Dr.Manmohan Singh and Commerce minister P.Chidambaram were in the fore front, speaking up for reforms but were busy in addressing foreign audiences. Often,their  road shows to showcase India’s early reforms and their future course for attracting FDI was causing problems back home. That was because what was sweet music to foreign audiences, who were impatient with   the pace of Indian reforms,   was played up in Indian media as the brain child of IMF/World Bank/American agenda – not in the national interest. At that stage of political economy, the ideas like ‘disinvestment’, ‘downsizing of government or firms’, ‘cuts in  subsidies’, ‘reduction of  fiscal deficit’, ‘ austerity’, ‘trade as against aid’, ‘exit policy’ or ‘labour laws reforms’ and many such expressions  suited for a market –orienting economy  were ‘foreign’ and anathema to Indian media audiences. The utterance of such expressions by these two   key ministers had made the government leadership to be perceived as two-faced and deceitful. Political opposition was using such utterances as surrender of India’s sovereignty.
Glasnost & Perestroika: The 1990s had begun with unexpected and unprecedented changes in international political and economic order, engineered by Gorbachev of Soviet Union. Unfamiliar words like ‘glasnost’ and ‘perestroika’ began to circulate around the globe. But such words had difficulty in penetrating the closed Indian media system and reaching the political leadership and senior administrators. I started gathering information about such changes sweeping hard –core communist countries from Albania to Indo-China countries by sourcing information from the Economist, International   Herald Tribune and Times- London that used to reach India late. I was on the mailing list of the US embassy that used to compile daily –‘World Press Review’, an excellent digest of happenings around the world. Another invaluable source was the daily digest of broadcasts by radio stations around the world prepared by the monitoring division of AIR. By culling stories of political and economic changes in closed economies, I began preparing a digest titled ‘perestroika-here and there’ and this was sent to select political leaders and bureaucrats. In order to test readership of this digest, I used to cut a few names from the mailing list. This had the desired effect and my office would get calls from officials who had not received the digest. A few senior journalists who came across this digest and wanted the copies as well.
TV Spots out: In January 1992, I (in my capacity as DG, DAVP), was asked to make a presentation to the PM on the steps taken by  I&B ministry for explaining the reforms. Risking rebuff, during this presentation I submitted to Rao that communication only through the government media can never politically succeed without the party’s political communication. The great man readily appreciated the point and said: ‘I need the official media to work more because I don’t have political communicators’. The I & B minister, his deputy and the secretary had taken leave of absence and did not turn up for this meeting. K.Varadan, a new additional secretary in the ministry, represented the ministry and it was left to me to account for what I had done on behalf of DAVP but also chart out a course for what needs to be done by the government and the party.  I brought to the  prime minister’s attention that a detailed plan (A  Marketing Plan for Economic Reforms in India and Abroad)  submitted to the Steering committee headed by the principal secretary to PM,  A.N.Verma, was not getting financial and political support.
A series of spots for explaining the new policies and their effects on different sections of people, after going through the tortuous process of approval by the ministries of Industry and Finance (I had been assured that Dr. Manmohan Singh had seen and approved them) were not allowed  to be screened, because the communist parties  objected to their screening. Rao directed Verma then and there to clear the campaign.
I also brought to the PM’s notice that the speeches made abroad by  the Finance Minister and Commerce Minister and using expressions like ‘exit policy’ ‘disinvestment ‘ were causing disquiet in Indian media. I had prepared a list of such expressions that should not be used.
The newspapers run by the Left parties would carry advertisements on reforms and run commentaries criticising the reforms along side. I   struck them off our media list but I was not politically supported, although my stand as an advertiser was wholly in the government interest.
My friend and one of the doyens of Indian advertising, R.K.Swamy, and myself collaborated in putting together a paper on the necessity of the government engaging an international PR agency for communicating the new policies abroad. During a visit to Japan, in Apirl 1992, the founder chairman of Sony, Akio Morita,  met the PM and had  asked; “Mr Prime Minister, is it true that  foreign firms like us  can now invest in India?” This was ten months   after India had opened up its economy and government ministers were travelling abroad to canvass for FDI.  R.K.Swamy had tied up with the well-known PR form Hill and Knowlton and had offered their services for FDI-related PR. But this paper did not evoke any response.
Official Media Turf Wars: The biggest hurdle that I faced was to make the then powerful official media change gears from their conventional publicity mode towards a public affairs mode. Doordarshan and AIR in their news and programming were doing a great job statistically matching their record of the emergency between 1975-77. Inputs offered for making their programme impactful were rejected as interference. Their political masters were satisfied with statistical results and were not open to make their programmes candid and credible.
The year 1992-94 was also the period when some media houses like India Today and others were experimenting with Video News  Magazines  and some of them began to send to Hong Kong and Singapore  their video cassette for uplink from foreign satellites  and broadcast to India. But such Video News Magazines were heavy with political news and entertainment news. An attempt was made to penetrate such news magazines with economic reform news.

The Author
sunarendra@gmail.com
https//spokesperson blgospot.com

When the PM saw the conclusions of this 3-level ‘impressionistic study’,  he was much dismayed. For us, the Karnataka consultations had yielded valuable insights and inputs for dealing with this deficit at communication and political level.


The Campaign: The foregone discussions offer a summary of the hurdles to be crossed for initiating a comprehensive public affairs campaign. An agency can conceive and recommend but the client has to totally buy into the philosophy, goals and objectives and the plan of action of the campaign. In the case of DAVP, it had to think both as the client and the agency. In addition, the client, the government was not one but multiple entities each guarding its own turf zealously. The Steering committee, headed by the principal secretary, on paper was supposed to be an overarching body for overseeing reforms roll out but it also had to work through various departments and ministers that was a very slow process.(To be continued).

Monday, 13 July 2015

Daughter, Epitome of sacrifice & bravery

  • Educationist Dr. Sudha Pathak asks girls to develop self-confidence
  • Bhopal Chapter celebrates Daughters’ Day


BHOPAL: Daughter is the epitome of sacrifice and also bravery at every step and in every situation. God has endowed her with special attributes which enable her to perform her role well as a daughter, wife, mother, sister and so on and on. She spreads happiness through her grace, charm, understanding and caring attitude.
Stating this, Dr. Sudha Pathak, Principal, Sri Sathya Sai College for Women, exhorted all girls to continue to build self-confidence and to excel in life.
Speaking at the Daughters’ Day event organized by Bhopal Chapter of PRCI in association with Rotary Club of Bhopal Midtown, Dr. Pathak explained how girls have outsmarted in every field not only at national but at global level.
Hail Daughters!
Subhranshu Upadhyaya, Asstt. Governor, Rotary International District 3040 was the Chief Guest. Rajesh Namdev, President, Rotary Club and C K Sardana, Chairman, PRCI Bhopal Chapter graced the occasion.
Mahendra Joshi, eminent Motivational Speaker gave an inspiring speech asking the students to keep updating their knowledge and skills. Darwin's theory 'Survival of the fittest' is much more relevant today than at any other time, he added.
Dr. Asha Agarwal, Vice Prinicpal, and Dr. Neena Arora, HOD/Chemistry and Student Union Incharge also spoke. Ms Awasthi compered the programme.
The Other highlights of the programme were a poetry and collage and poster competitions.

Subhranshu Upadhyaya presented mementos to the College Principal for her outstanding contribution to academics. Mementos were also given to Dr. Asha Agarwal and Dr. Neena Arora. Trophies were presented to the winners in various competitions.

Saturday, 11 July 2015

From Snakes-and-Ladders to Snakes & Scorpions


By S. Narendra

(Former Information Adviser to PM, Principal Information Officer to
Government of India & Spokesperson)

“Narendra, the prime minister has said that he would wind up DAVP. There have been serious problems with the printing and distribution of PM’s speeches. Saving DAVP depends upon you,” said the affable secretary of I&B ministry P.Murari to me as I was sent to head DAVP as its first Director General. By upholding the official ad policy of political neutrality and non-discrimination, distancing from   media   political games and restoring DAVP’s professional credibility were few of the apparent challenges. These had to be accomplished in an election year, 1989, when official media system like DAVP come under maximum political stress. Read on for yet another interesting blast from the past.


Irrespective of the party is in power, they all misuse the official media machinery for perception management, and it tends to get worse in an election year. Luckily for The Rajiv Gandhi government, the Jawaharlal Nehru’s centenary that coincided with its penultimate year in office, offered a legitimate opportunity for opening the government media advertising. Other reasons were being invented every other week to saturate the media for trumpeting the achievements of the government.  By this time the ad revenues of Doordarshan & AIR  had swelled. The newspapers - the only private media available then - were making  lots of hay in this pre-poll sunshine. The influential sections among them were engaged in mutually destructive games for cornering bigger slices of government patronage. Openly claiming to be government-friendly, several of them – the likes of  Times of India, National Herald, Hindustan Times, Hindustan, Amrita Bazar Patrika, apart from scores of regional media businessmen -  were attempting to isolate competition in order to improve their share of the official patronage. On the other side, papers like the Indian Express, Statesman were feeding the opposition with complaints that they were being denied official Ads. Even while I was navigating this cross-fire, PMO had given me a select list of newspapers to be given priority in Ad space as well as in effecting payments. A senior PMO official was monitoring the implementation of this instruction.
Parliament to Rescue: Suddenly, Parliament took up this controversy in its questions hour. A very worried I&B minister, H.K.L.Bhagat, also the parliamentary affairs minister, called me for a briefing. He also enquired about the complaints against me. I seized this opportunity, and submitted that he can turn the tables on the opposition by   fully disclosing the share of government Ads going to different newspapers. Despite the pulls and pressures, we had struggled to maintain some balance in Ads allocation and this helped us to disprove the complaints by a section of the disgruntled media. The fear of Ad matters   coming before Parliament came in handy in resisting further government pressures to increasingly favour government-friendly media.
From April onwards I had scaled down DAVP activities like printing and storing of publicity material  and film production, as I did not want to mount inventories. This precaution was taken mainly because there were hints that the government could opt for early elections, and such inventories relating to outgoing regime would not go down well with any successor government, particularly if it happened to of a different political hue. By August , I had spent most of the funds allocated and I definitely had no intention of asking for more funds for new communication activities. I reckoned that not having funds would help me to ward off government pressure to launch new ‘achievement’ projecting campaigns close to elections.
The Rationale: Let me explain the rationale behind the government communication policy. It can be broadly divided into following  categories - all clubbed under public service advertising  (PSA).
  • The first category relates to awareness building and empowerment campaigns (especially in a poor, developing country) in support of development programmes (Like MNREGA, HIV/Aids prevention, Mother  & Child Development schemes like ICDS,  Janani Suraksha Yojana, Swasthya Bima Yojana). These have now acquired  the title BCC or behaviour change (desired behaviour)  communication.
  • The second category belongs to easing policy and programme implementation and compliance ( e.g.GST, IT, Ease of Doing Business).
  • Third, somewhat controversial field is the government’s legitimate duty and need to put information  in public space about its performance in relation to its poll commitments (e.g.100 days achievements, annual reviews, new schemes, rallying  calls). This is a grey area where performance accountability clashes with partisan   publicity using public funds for political gains.
  • Parties criticising this from opposition benches revel in exploiting this avenue when they are in power. Governments are prone to overload this function of PSA when their electoral mandate   nears the end.
  • Another category   is the public advocacy of certain policy options. For example, Rajiv Gandhi government was keen to push through legislation for giving constitutional status to Panchayat raj (local self governments)   institutions and making elections to them mandatory. Such communication again is controversial as there would be  no political consensus on their goals and benefits.   

Early Christmas Turkey! The Rajiv Gandhi government was in the midst of a rough monsoon Parliament session, when there were hints that it could seek early poll, after announcing a slew of populist measures.
Around   this time, I was asked to be present as an observer during a close-door presentation  to be made to a group of ministers by select advertising agencies. Invitees to this ministerial group were Romi Chopra, an Ad guru of those days, Sam Pitroda, (and Jairam Ramesh who was assisting Rajiv him). Apparently, this ministerial group had been asked to come up with an election campaign. Presentations from top guns of first tier Ad and PR agencies continued for from mid-September Monday to Thursday. This was to be followed by a final presentation to be made the next Thursday before the PM by the selected one or two agencies. We were unclear over the kind of brief to be given to the agencies. It had been made clear that I was to be present only with a watching brief.  
By Thursday evening it became clear to the ministers that none of the agencies had come up with an acceptable campaign theme and there were no outlines of audio/video /print material scripts and there were no ‘scratch’ AV productions to be shown to PM in the following week.
The ministerial group was obviously in a panic as they had to face the PM next week and present an acceptable campaign kit.  I was summoned to a crisis management meeting  of this group. The senior minister expressed appreciation of the good work being done by DAVP (nice to hear such words once in a way), and requested me to produce a campaign kit. Until now, DAVP had been treated as a pariah and I had been told that the PM had no confidence in DAVP’s professional credentials. All professional talent was supposed to be outside the government domain! I had barely four days to prove our capacity.  Working day and night, with teams of empanelled producers and printers, we managed to put together a kit. It consisted of two 30 minute audio cassettes, four video clips, six posters, four scripts for booklets and four leaflets.  The ministerial team was much impressed by the kit and profusely thanked me. However, there was one sour note. I was informed that they would not attribute the kit to DAVP, as the PM was biased against it!,

Danger Lurks in Success: In this hour of some joy, I could not see a great danger lurking. K.Krishnakumar, the minister of state in the I&B ministry called me to inform that the PM had expressed his appreciation of  the campaign and I should attend a meeting the next morning.  At this meeting the minister’s private secretary Thomas   (IAS) handed over a paper containing the numbers of print and AV material   required to be produced. The numbers were mind boggling:  a million copies of each poster (6 versions), booklets (2 versions), leaflets (4) and some 10,000 copies of each audio and video cassettes. At 1989 prices, the cost of production was close to Rs 40 crore. All these items were to be produced in about two to three weeks, before the announcement of elections. Sam Pitroda in one of the earlier   meetings had announced that the polls could be held end-October. I had thought that once I handed over the campaign kit materials for presentation to PM, the production and distribution would be taken over by selected Ad agency and the Congress Party. But Krishnakumar said that it had been decided to entrust this work to DAVP.
Rules & Norms thrown to winds: I tried to duck for cover under several genuine reasons. DAVP had no budget for such a huge job. The minister said that PM had personally assured that such funds would be made available. I raised another problem - even if we commandeered the entire public and private production facilities in Delhi and elsewhere, such a mammoth job could not be accomplished in the given three weeks time-frame. The minister summoned a fellow Keralite businessman who was ready with a letter promising delivery of the entire lot within the schedule. I had posed one more problem: DAVP can undertake such huge job only on the basis of a requisition by a client department. Promptly, a letter making such a request to DAVP from the Directorate of Filed Publicity (DFP) was produced. This outfit had never in its existence placed a request  for print or AV material with us! The Director of DFP had not only agreed to place a request for such humongous quantity of supplies but had also promised to send bulk supplies to his over 250 field units. From the latter, the campaign material was to be lifted by the Congress party filed units.
I thought I had a last weapon to defend DAVP against this blatant misuse. I told the minister that under the official rules and procedures laid down, DAVP was mandated to go for open, pan-India tenders for procurement of services costing more than a crore of rupees. Also, a high value tender cannot be given to a single party and that too to a party without any track record. Soon, the joint secretary of the ministry was called into the meeting. This official informed the minister that he would give a letter to DAVP authorising it to make a one-time exception to the rules. The minister was very unhappy when I submitted to him that a joint secretary cannot issue such a letter without the concurrence of the ministry of finance. I was directed to meet the cabinet minister the next morning.
Another Sleepless Night: Myself and my colleagues in DAVP spent a sleepless night. The secretary of the ministry had conveniently stayed away from the ministerial meetings and refused to give me an audience for seeking his guidance. They would not even entertain my calls.
The author
blog: http://spokespersons.blogspot.in/

The next day’s meeting with H.K.L Bhagat was destined to be a tense one. He tried his best to persuade me to sign the single tender contract with the party recommended by Krishnakumar. Bhagat told me that the government was confident of getting re-elected and I need not have to worry about any kind of post–election problems like an enquiry into the matter. Further, I was promised that I would be elevated to the next level that was anyway long overdue due to me but had been denied thus far. In response, I submitted a letter to the minister, seeking immediate leave of absence preparatory to retirement (I had a decade of service left). I politely pleaded with the minister that the ministry should grant my request and appoint an immediate replacement, so that it can go ahead with its production plans. A surprised minister, refused to accept the letter.

Foot Note: The Congress party election campaign (1989) was entrusted to Rediffusion agency, and became a landmark, notable for its snakes and scorpions campaign. A little before the Dussera festival, there was one more Ad campaign …..Watch this space.