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OOH to reach 50-60% of last year’s billing by festive season: Laqshya Media Group’s Atul Shrivastava

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NEW DELHI: Remember those hoardings from a few days ago, which led to much curiosity and speculation across Delhi and Mumbai?  FMCG brands including Maggi, Cadbury Dairy Milk, Red Label Tea and Amul Lassi put up hoardings that read: “#13thKiTayyari Kijiye. __ Stock Kar Lijiye” with each brand telling people to stock its product. It was Laqshya Media that executed the campaign for Zee TV's upcoming shows. 

Laqshya Media Group is one of the largest comprehensive marketing communications group In India functioning primarily in outdoor, events and digital ecosystem. The group was praised on social media for its latest campaign with Zee TV.

While there is no denying that the whole world is reeling from the major upheaval caused by the Covid2019 pandemic, the OOH industry has taken the maximum hit. In a candid conversation with Laqshya Media Group CEO Atul Shrivastava shared about the company's revival plan and more.

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Edited excerpts:

With unlock 2.0, have you witnessed an uptick in the OOH industry? 

We have already received queries from brands waiting to resume advertising – particularly those who had long-term contracts with us and had put their campaigns on hold. We are also seeing demand from regional brands who rely heavily on OOH for advertising.

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We are anticipating a healthy rebound during the festive season, extending to the end of the calendar year. Since several brands have a huge inventory pile-up, they will be looking at liquidating that inventory during the festive season. And sales are very much dependent on visibility and marketing.

What has been the impact on the out-of-home media industry?

As the easing phase has begun, we have regained our sites (from the government’s Covid2019 awareness campaigns) and advertising has started.

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The March-June 2020 quarter saw an estimated 20 per cent of the previous year’s billings. If there are no further restrictions from the government, the sector will see a revival during the festive season. It is expected to reach 50-60 per cent of last year’s billing by that time.

What is your plan on revival? It seems the next 6 months will also be grim? 

Our plan on revival has been in the works since day one. Our team has been dedicatedly involved in deep market research. We have created research reports that were focused on OOH’s revival. We have analysed which sectors were going to invest in OOH advertising once the lockdown was over. In addition, we did a lot of consumer research. We studied aspects like – will people take public transport or private? Are people going to buy gold? Which products will people buy more? Are people only thinking about buying essentials? What was their food eating patterns and are they willing to eat out after lockdown?

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The aforementioned questions helped us to sketch a figure of our potential client base. Apart from rigorous research since the initial days of lockdown, we worked on brand building and PR activities.

This helped us in carving a niche and helped us in deepening our already existing niche in the market. We, as a team never paused during the lockdown.

It is understood that to overcome the current landscape some hardcore strategies are required. The next six months are crucial for us. We are working on connecting the dots, doing market research, reaching out to the potential clients who are working to start business immediately and keeping a track on people who are up for buying.

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How drastic is the impact on ad rates?

Advertising rates for OOH inventory have declined. Since fewer people were on the roads, advertisers were unwilling to pay the same rates as they were in January and February. Brands were certainly looking for discounts. Ad rates for the next quarter will continue to be challenged for a little longer.  However, we are not reducing the rates of super-premium displays that have exceedingly high visibility and demand, too.

How much uptake do you foresee for inventory at metro stations, suburban stations and shopping malls?

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Even though the government has initiated a phased opening of markets, people may be hesitant to visit them. For the next three months, demand for ambient media will continue to be muted.

Footfall in malls that have opened in cities like Bengaluru, Hyderabad and Noida has been about 10 per cent that of pre-Covid2019 numbers. Therefore, media owners are focusing on occupancy, rather than looking for better ad rates in places like malls.

Sites inside metro stations are still off since the services are not functional, but outside branding of stations is already making a difference. Since brands have begun showing interest in airports, even though airlines are not running at full capacity, we expect similar demand for inventory in metro and local train stations when operations resume.

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Which categories are going to be back on OOH? 

We expect all sectors to come back and embrace OOH now that the country has embarked on the unlock phase. Many brands like Apple, Vivo, Asian Paints, Kotak, etc., have already started and are gaining first-mover advantage. Our research study stated that more than 84 per cent of consumers across our metros will notice OOH as much or even more after the lockdown period and that they will reduce the consumption of conventional media, post lockdown.

A few categories that gained prominence during the lockdown are going to be bigger spenders on OOH. For example, e-commerce firms and digital payment gateways have greater demand now. We are also expecting a surge in advertising from manufacturers of two-wheelers and entry-level cars.

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While OTT video streaming platforms were booming in terms of consumption during the lockdown, we expect a slowdown in OOH advertising from this category over the next few months because they are out of fresh content. However, we are expecting them to return with a bang soon.

Mobile phone brands that used to be fixtures on hoardings in and around airports, continue to advertise even now. However, real estate brands, which were also keen on airport display, are hesitant. Since airport media is priced at a premium, brands may take longer to return.

With domestic air travel slowly picking up are you gearing up to resume advertising at airports?

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Air travel is seen as the safest mode of travel at the current times. With the opening up of domestic flights, brands are looking to quickly re-engage with their high-value customers. The time spent at airports has increased with not much to do once they reach the airports. So, advertising at strategic locations, like at the entry gate, waiting areas, etc. will ensure greater visibility and brand recall. Airports are an important medium, especially since the use of DOOH is more here. So, more investments at airports will garner greater benefits for the agencies.

What is the big shift you have witnessed during the lockdown? 

Our transformation from an OOH to a multi-media conglomerate has followed a carefully coordinated strategy of delivering the most optimised consumer-contact solution to our clients by combining digital, OOH and experiential. Another exciting transition has been the transformation of business models within the media verticals that we operate in. In order to make our OOH and experiential offerings more interactive, we added a digital marketing company to our network, which gives us the bandwidth to offer our clients an unbeatable offline-online combination. Though the current situation is challenging, our events teams have created and conducted large-scale online seminars and performance-arts events which have been well received by some of our blue-chip clients. It creates an opportunity for us to give a bundled offering to our clients, which is unique and distinct from what any other media company is offering in India.

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MAM

Netflix Q1 2026 earnings ad growth and content spending in focus

Streaming giant set to report results on Thursday after walking away from Warner Bros Discovery takeover.

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MUMBAI: Netflix is about to hit play on its latest quarterly numbers and investors are hoping the plot thickens in all the right ways. The streaming leader reports its first-quarter 2026 earnings on Thursday, marking its first set of results since it walked away from a proposed takeover of Warner Bros Discovery. That failed bid would have handed Netflix prized franchises such as Game of Thrones and Friends on a silver platter, sparing the costly effort of building its own library. Instead, the company now faces tougher competition from a potential $110 billion Warner Bros-Paramount Skydance combination, should that deal close.

Analysts polled by LSEG expect Netflix to post a 15.5 per cent rise in revenue to $12.18 billion, with advertising contributing $634 million. The company raised US prices in March, a move some believe could prompt an upward revision to its full-year revenue forecast and nudge more subscribers towards the faster-growing ad-supported tier.

Netflix shares have climbed 13 per cent so far this year and are up roughly 26 per cent since the company stepped back from the $72 billion Warner Bros deal. With the merger drama behind it, the spotlight now shifts to how aggressively Netflix can expand its advertising business and live programming.

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“We’re kind of entering another phase for the ad business, where they are becoming one of the largest scaled global advertising platforms,” said Gabelli Funds portfolio manager John Belton, which holds Netflix shares.

During the quarter, Netflix beefed up its live slate with a BTS concert streamed from Seoul that drew 18.4 million viewers worldwide and the 2026 World Baseball Classic, which became the most-streamed baseball game globally. Investors are watching for signals that the company will lean further into sports and other live events to fuel ad revenue growth.

The results come at a pivotal moment. Having dodged what could have been a debt-heavy acquisition, Netflix has the freedom and the cash to double down on its core strengths: original content spending and building a robust, scaled advertising platform. Whether the numbers deliver a binge-worthy performance or leave viewers wanting more, one thing is clear: the streaming wars are far from over, and Netflix is determined to keep its crown.

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Expect plenty of drama when the figures drop after all, in the world of streaming, every quarter is its own cliffhanger.

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