MAM
Effie Awards 2011 entries are now open
MUMBAI: The Ad Club Bombay has invited entries for the 2011 Effie India Awards. The last date for sending entries is 11 November, 2011.
The award acknowledges an agency for showcasing its power to build brands that lead to business, demonstrating the highest level of leadership in brand communication for the clients and most significantly celebrating effective advertising and marketing in India. While the International Effie Awards are hosted every year in New York, since 2001 The Ad Club Bombay has been the Asian partner that has helped to organise the Effies in India.
Incidentally Effies is the only award that is bestowed on both the client and agency to jointly share the celebration of their effective communication and perseverance.
Effie 2011 Committee chairperson Ajay Kakar said, “For over a decade, the Effies India has become the gold standard in measuring communication effectiveness for marketing excellence. This is reflected both in the quality and the number of entries which the awards have been attracting every year – a startling increase from 53 in 2001 to 276 in 2010. As integrated advertising and alternative media become important influences for most business categories, this year in addition to the existing categories some new ones have also been included, to give recognition to their importance and potential. This move, we believe, will further increase the popularity of these awards.”
The new categories included this year, in keeping with the international format are:
- Electronic Goods has been added as an additional sub category under Consumer Durables,
- Corporate Advertising is sub divided into Corporate Reputation & Social Cause,
- Internet & Mobile Advertising has been clubbed as Digital Advertising (Online / Mobile Communications)
- B2B Advertising, Rural Advertising & Regional Advertising have been introduced as three new categories.
Any company (client, creative agency, media agency, digital agency, etc.) can take the lead on entering Effie. But they should work with all relevant partner companies to submit the strongest case.
The award ceremony is scheduled for Wednesday, 14 December at 6.30 pm at the Royal Western India Turf Club, Mahalakshmi, Mumbai.
Brands
Hiili names Sanjay Hemady as country manager India
Media veteran to drive digital decarbonisation push
MUMBAI: Climate tech firm Hiili has announced its entry into India, appointing industry veteran Sanjay Hemady as India country manager to steer its growth in one of the world’s fastest-expanding digital markets.
Hemady, a familiar name across India’s media and consulting circles, will lead Hiili’s India operations from Mumbai. His mandate is clear: help Indian companies measure, manage and reduce the carbon emissions generated by their digital services.
Hiili offers a scientifically validated platform, certified by the UC3M-Santander Big Data Institute, that enables businesses to improve the efficiency of their digital infrastructure while cutting emissions. As organisations race to meet ESG targets, the company positions itself as a practical bridge between climate pledges and measurable action.
“I’m happy to share that I’m starting a new position as country manager, India at Hiili,” Hemady said in a LinkedIn post, adding that the company aims to move beyond broad sustainability promises towards precise, science-based decarbonisation.
Hemady brings more than three decades of experience spanning print, television, radio and digital media. He has previously served as chief executive officer at HIT 95 FM, assistant general manager at CNBC TV18, and held leadership roles at MTV India and The Indian Express, among others. Most recently, he worked as an independent business consultant advising firms across media and technology.
With India’s digital economy expanding at pace, the environmental cost of data, streaming and online services is climbing quietly in the background. Hiili’s bet is that carbon efficiency will soon sit alongside cost efficiency in boardroom conversations.
For Hemady, the move marks a shift from selling airtime and ad inventory to championing climate accountability. If successful, Hiili’s India play could make digital growth not just faster, but cleaner too.






