| Interview with Lodestar
media director Arpita Menon |
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"In
some ways the 15 per cent agency commission model has some
advantages over the AOR model"
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| Posted
on 18 March 2003 |
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Her
scholarly look and flair for demographics/psychographics clearly
indicate her passion for the art-cum-science of media planning.
More importantly, her soft-spoken friendly demeanour has endeared
her to many a space-time seller who consider her to be a "guru"!
Meet Lodestar's media director Arpita Menon.
Menon
has worked in several top agencies such as Hindustan Thompson Associates
(HTA), FCB Ulka and Chaitra Leo Burnett. After a brief stint in
HTA's media planning arm, Menon was invited to head FCB Ulka's newly
formed Labcentre. Perhaps this was one of the rare cases when a
senior executive with more than a decade of experience in frontline
media planning and buying was called to spearhead "backroom"
(actually it's rightful place is at the forefront of operations)
media research operations. Currently, budding media planners see
Menon as a living embodiment of the maxim "Research unused
is research wasted!" and try to emulate her understanding of
the subject.
Under
the able leadership of Menon, the Labcentre started off with two
people in Mumbai and one person in Delhi. Menon ardently strives
to get a fix on how consumers interact with media and individual
programmes. She has played a pivotal lead role in the creation of
MEDIAGRAPHICS (billed as a study on "man and mankind"
based on media consumption patterns), ImPress, Media Perfedia Involvement
Index, Journeyman and Lodestar Matrix amongst others.
Menon
watches television to keep abreast of the latest happenings in the
leading programmes on various channels. A "travel freak",
she enjoys exploring new lands with her family members and loves
to experiment with diverse cuisine from different parts of the country.
In
a tête-à-tête with indiantelevision.com's Ashwin
Kotian, Menon spoke about the importance of "lab-centric"
research in media planning and buying in the contemporary age.
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Why
has media planning research gained increased prominence over the
years?
Nearly
a decade back, a lot of media related research was minimalist (syndicated
annual diaries) and similar to things like the broad-based national
census studies. Media planners used to have access to a huge quantum
of data but never realised that they needed to move beyond TRPs,
channel shares and CPRPs.
However,
there were some savvy planners who realised the need for going beyond
the routine; clamoured for techniques which would result in better
utilization of existing data. Realising the complexity of TV/print
data these planners demanded better specific research - awareness
tracking data, media weights, scheduling patterns.
The
best part was that most of this data was already existing in some
form or the other but the planners never looked at it seriously.
Currently things have changed and a lot of media specialist agencies/
divisions have seen the merit of undertaking huge investments in
media - for instance WPP Media's ATG and Lodestar's Labcentre.
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How
has Lodestar geared up to align itself to the changed media scenario?
Lodestar's
structure is unique because it is a considered to be a part of the
parent organization (FCB Ulka) and still given a lot of independence.
In some ways, the 15 per cent commission model still has some advantages
over the AOR model.
Lodestar
was one of the few media specialist agencies which started the Labcentre
three years back. It was a great decision to undertake such a project
at a time when there was tremendous pressure due to general recession
and loss of business due to international alignments.
Also,
the organization had the foresight and guts to take senior mainstream
media professionals (such as myself) and put them in charge of research
- something which would have been considered to be backroom operations.
Actually, these are the forerunners of the entire planning and buying
operations. Lodestar recognised this aspect of media research.
At
Lodestar, media executives are trained to be a part of the client
servicing teams in terms of sharing a responsibility of ensuring
client profitability and sales. A unique model has been constituted
in wherein there are no clear-cut demarcations between media planners
and buyers.
Whenever
there are separate people looking after the functions, it is possible
that planners will get distanced from the market realities. Also,
the buyers, despite having good media knowledge, don't necessarily
have the requisite client focus or brand knowledge which the planners
have. There is clearly a mismatch whenever the two functions of
media planning and buying are treated separately. Also, the relationships
between buyers and space-time sellers had more of a personal touch
or personality driven equations.
At
Lodestar media, we realised this ambiguity nearly three years back
and took remedial measures.
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| "
Sometimes, the constant pressure of media planning/buying takes
away the intellectual capacities and questioning abilities of
media executives and relegates it to the background" |
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How
do you bridge the gap between media planning research and its actual
implementation at the ground level?
The very existence of the Labcentre ensures that planning never
takes a backseat. The Labcentre merely develops the systems, processes
and tools without getting into the nitty-gritty of strategic planning.
Sometimes,
the constant pressure of media planning/buying takes away the intellectual
capacities and questioning abilities of the media executives and
relegates it to the background. However, life is not black or white.
The Labcentre ensures that media planners/buyers undertake implementation
of the media tools created by it.
During
the annual reviews and KRAs, an effort is made to study whether
the planner/buyer has managed to utilize the tools developed by
the Lab Centre - for instance a TELCO or a Whirlpool planner will
have to use the Labcentre media tools at least for a minimum number
of times within a stipulated period. The client is also kept in
the loop and they too ensure that the implementation process takes
place.
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| "
However, we believed that MEDIAGRAPHICS is different from the
existing models such as 3-D which have been derived from TGI.
TGI has more of a psychographic orientation whereas MEDIAGRAPHICS
goes beyond that. " |
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How
is MEDIAGRAPHICS different from its peers (3D amongst others)?
The entire philosophy of MEDIAGRAPHICS revolved around identifying
the data gaps. MEDIAGRAPHICS is all about peeling the onion one
level deeper and going beyond the broad demographic definition of
a TG, to isolate segments within any particular broad group with
distinct media consumption patterns.
The
starting point is NRS (National Readership Survey) data as it is
able to offer multimedia usage/ownership. We differentiated the
segments based on media habits and each segment would have different
and distinct media preferences. Consider for instance segments within
the males 25 years+ SEC AB eight metros target audience: Media Mad
Fast Tracker; Settled Corpo; Couch Potato; Sarkari Babu; Aiyappan
Saar; Common Man; Retail Patel and Traditionalist. Media vehicles
are then fine-tuned only to this segment. We ensured that the Media
Graphics study was part of the Sesame media planning software and
optimizers.
We
used the NRS raw data and studied clustering, segmentation issues.
However, we believe that MEDIAGRAPHICS is different from the existing
models such as 3-D which has been derived from TGI. TGI has more
of a psychographic orientation whereas MEDIAGRAPHICS goes beyond
that.
What
we discovered was that the male SEC AB target audience also had
different clusters or segmentation. There were some people within
this target audience who would watch Discovery, others who would
watch sports so on and so forth. There were several media types
hiding within the mass of each particular target group.
MEDIAGRAPHICS
fine-tunes the media process by acknowledging the various distinct
segments in each target group and then links it to the brands. The
unique selling proposition of the study is that it is not just about
segments but about media segments.
The
best part was the availability of huge samples - for instance in
the male SEC AB six metros target audience, we had a sample size
of 50,000 individuals. Our study on precision targeting won the
gold at the EMVIES.
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Tell
us about the print media planning tool ImPress?
Lodestar Labcentre kicked off its first major research initiative
with the launch of ImPress - a study on generating impact in print
medium. ImPress goes beyond the readership estimates of the vehicle
to the reach of the advertising communication. ImPress calls for
a paradigm shift from CPT (cost per thousand) to CPNP (cost per
noticeability point) thereby creating a new currency for press planning
and buying.
We
created ImPress which revolves around the ad noticeability related
issues in print. Most of the existing readership and circulation
data was about vehicle reach rather than about ad noticeability.
It related to important issues such as "where should I place
the ad in order to ensure that my TG (target audience) sees it?"
or "when should I place the second ad in the campaign to obtain
the requisite response?". The primary research involved 5000
advertisements across five cities and 34 publications.
We
finally prepared a three way grid - colour, position and size -
in an easy to use format which would be convenient for media planners
and buyers.
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| "There
is a lot of existing data on television which is not being used.
We at Lodestar believe that the role of media buying today has
evolved from commodity trading to getting a better fix on how
consumers interact with media and with individual programmes!" |
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How
does the Media Perfedia Loyalty Index help TV planners?
There is a lot of existing data on television which is not being
used. We at Lodestar believe that the role of media buying today
has evolved from commodity trading to getting a better fix on how
consumers interact with media and with individual programmes.
Media
Perfedia Involvement Index measures loyalty and is a unique tool
that incorporates programme loyalty and enables a better selection
of vehicles. A tool that now enables the advertiser with a 360 degrees
holistic picture of programme involvement. It measures the loyalty
aspect by assigning weights to the following key variables: Audience
appeal; Audience engrossment and Audience Addiction.
Audience
Appeal is a measure of the programme's popularity and its ability
to attract an audience. Audience Engrossment assesses that quintessential
quality that hooks viewers to the small screen in the form of time
spent on a programme. Audience Addiction measures audience obsession
and gauges episodic repeat viewing or appointment viewing.
Having
identified the sturdiest programmes on a loyalty index is not sufficient
but there is a need to incorporate costs efficiencies. The next
step is to plot cost versus the Perfedia Index in order to arrive
at the Lodestar Perfedia Grid. Based on these, the following have
been identified - Brutus (Low loyalty, high costs); Mark Anthony
(High loyalty, high cost); Cassius (Low Loyalty, low costs) and
Calpurnia (High loyalty, low costs).
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How
does Journeyman increase efficiencies for TV planners?
Journeyman
- an audience mapping tool - essentially puts audience migration
under a magnifier in order to find some method in madness. Under
this tool, it is possible to track audience movement for a basket
of channels in a certain time-band or daypart.
The
Journeyman essentially analyses gain-loss behaviour: how many new
viewers switched on to a programme; how many people continued watching
a programme; and how many came on to the programme from other channels.
It makes it possible to go beyond TRPs and reach of a programme
(which are static in nature) and track audience flow and movement
and flow.
Journeyman
is all about scheduling data on a minute by minute micro level.
We developed a lot of target propensity maps through a data mining
process. Journeyman can be used as a scheduling tool; a programming
selection tool; a "finger-on-the-pulse tool"; programme
slotting tool; lower cost alternative determining tool; and an impact
scheduling tool.
For
instance, the migratory pattern of an audience is basically of two
types - christened by Lodestar as "Wanderlust days" and
"Armchair" days. On "Armchair" days, strong
programmes drive channel viewership and viewers tend to exhibit
the oh-so-elusive quality - channel loyalty. Star India's Kaun
Banega Crorepati (KBC) drove viewership into Kyunki
and Kahaani.. so strongly that these programmes overtook
KBC in certain markets.
During
the "Wanderlust" days, the audience doesn't exhibit any
fidelity and flits from channel to channel and programme to programme.
On "Armchair" days, the spots must be concentrated on
the later half of the programmes preceding the driver programme
and continue through to the driver programme owing to audience build-up.
During "Wanderlust" days, one should be doing programme
buys.
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Give
us an example of how these research tools helped a client?
For
one of our clients Tata Consultancy Services, we used MEDIAGRAPHICS
to conduct a cluster analysis. They wanted to target the mid-junior
level executives. The traditional readership surveys don't go beyond
the officer/executive levels and this was a challenge for us.
Using
MEDIAGRAPHICS, we observed that some of the sub-groups - for instance
the settled corporate executive - was high on press, Internet with
minimal TV - a distinct focus on news, infotainment and niche English
channels. The "Settled Corpo" is a middle-aged, middle/senior
executive or officer in a private firm who lives in a metro and
who has arrived in life. He travels to work in his own car while
he listens to radio FM or reads The Economic Times. He has
his own mobile phone, PC/laptop and owns most household durables.
By using these sub-gradations, we ensured that the specific media
plan targeting these executives over-delivered at half the cost.
Tata
Indica was advertised on TV for the first time in 1999 and its strongest
competitor Santro was miles ahead at that time. The task at hand
was to break through the clutter as Santro's budget was four times
that of Indica. The normal approach would have been to run the TVC
on top programmes across channels.
We
used Journeyman to identify "Armchair" days on each of
the main channels. We concentrated on the "Armchair" days
and the programmes selected on these days were selected as the driver
programmes as well as the halo effect programmes (those preceding
or following the driver programmes). The campaign concentrated on
those days when the audiences loyalty was high. This resulted in
high visibility significant for the launch.
Using
Journeyman wherein we did something different for our client TELCO
Normally, media execs used to bargain hard for the first spot in
a break during events. Our studies showed that during event programmes
breaks, viewers switched channels and came back as closer towards
the end of the break. The last spot was important and had higher
viewership density.
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| "Clients
have realised and accepted the fact that the future belongs
to 'media AORs' and not 'buying AORs'!" |
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Do
you make the proprietary research available to others?
Studies
such as MEDIAGRAPHICS and ImPress are expensive studies. We haven't
sold them despite the fact that several media houses and broadcasters
approached us for the same.
Such
expensive studies (in terms of monetary and personnel resources
invested) add to the equity and image of media specialist agencies.
It shows clients that we are thinking; not blindly doing what others
are doing. In fact, we have had cases where we have shown 40-50
per cent savings before even reaching the negotiation table. This
proves the value of such planning software packages.
However,
we have presented excerpts and synopsis of these studies at various
media/ad fora. There were instances when we had special presentations
conducted for TV airtime or publication groups space sellers. We
have shared general learnings.
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What
are the personal challenges that you would look forward to?
The
acceptance varies from client to client. The smarter ones have gone
up the ladder and realised that accurate research-backed media buying
and planning can add tremendous value to them. The old "bania
mentality" is a thing of the past. Clients have realised and
accepted that the future belongs to "media AORs" and not
"buying AORs". Clients have realised that media research
is one of the key elements of getting closer to the customer.
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