Saturday, 9 April 2011

Logo Quiz by leading Advertising Company in Pune - BrandWagon

BrandWagon is a leading Advertising and Branding company based at Pune. Being Creatively Wild is our passion and we do all that it takes to work towards providing better and newer options to help your brand reach great heights.
"All work and no play makes Jack a sleepy product!" We at BrandWagon work and make our work a fun time so that we deliver only the best. Here, we wish to present a quiz about famous brand logos. Let's see you racking your brains to figure out the answers.

Who's logo is this -


















Visit us at www.brandwagonindia.in

Wednesday, 6 April 2011

Leading Branding Company in Pune brings you famous brand slogans- BrandWagon

As one of the most leading and topmost Advertising and Branding companies in Pune, BrandWagon scans the market thoroughly to find opportunities to make you brand a royal success. Right from the conception of an idea to its delivery, we work tremendously hard to make the impossible happen. Paying attention to small details till it meets perfection is our style of working.  In this blog, BrandWagon wishes to bring to you famous and unforgettable slogans made by famous brands for their promotion. Witty, Crisp and attention stealing one-liners -


Reach out and touch someone. - AT&T

Please don't squeeze the Charmin - Charmin

Where do you want to go today? - Microsoft

Life's Good - LG

Neighbor's envy, owner's pride - Onida TV in India

Snap, Crackle, Pop - Rice Krispies

The Real Thing - Coca-Cola

Where's the beef? - Wendy's

Plop, plop; fizz, fizz; oh, what a relief it is. - Alka Seltzer

Sharp Minds, Sharp Products - Sharp

Finger lickin' good. - Kentucky Fried Chicken

Connecting people. - Nokia

He keeps going and going and going. - Energizer Batteries

Do you... Yahoo!? - Yahoo!

Wikipedia, the Free Encyclopedia – Wikipedia

Because you’re worth it. - L'Oreal

Inspired Living - Haier

Let's Make Things Better - Philips

Hello Moto - Motorola

Nicorette, Nicorette, you can beat the cigarette - Nicorette

It's everywhere you want to be - VISA

We make money the old-fashioned way....We earn it - Smith Barney

Everything is easier on a Mac - Apple Computer

Welcome to the World Wide Wow - AOL (play on World Wide Web)

Nothing Runs Like A Deere - Deere&Company

Live unböring - Ikea

The ultimate driving machine. - BMW

Live in your world, play in ours. - Sony Playstation and Playstation 2 gaming consoles

When it absolutely, positively has to be there overnight. - Federal Express

Get N or get out. - Nintendo 64

See what the future has in store. - Future Shop

Easy as Dell - Dell Computer

Go further with Shell - Shell Oil

Once you pop, you can't stop. - Pringles

Push Button Publishing - Blogger.com

How do you spell relief? - Rolaids

We're number two; we try harder. - Avis Rental Cars

Is it live, or is it Memorex? - Memorex

The World's Online Market Place - eBay

Wherever you go, our network follows - Hutch Cellular India

Consider IT Done - Syntel

Nothin' says lovin' like something from the oven. - Pillsbury

No battery is stronger longer. - Duracell Batteries

High Performance, Delivered - Accenture

Intel inside - Intel

Making Tomorrow Better - ONGC (Oil & Natural Gas Commission, India)

Let your fingers do the walking. - Yellow Pages



Lastly let;s not forget - Creatively Wild - BrandWagon



Visit us at www.brandwagonindia.in

Tuesday, 5 April 2011

Leading Advertising and Branding Company in Pune - BrandWagon

The world of Advertising and Branding is on a wild growth from the past few decades. Amazingly new ideas and concepts are being invented and used to promote and advertise a brand. As the competition of the brands increase each passing day, so does the competition between Advertising and Branding companies and firms. The battle rages on every minute and the one who survives in the end, is always the one who dares to dream different, wild and like a warrior.

BrandWagon is a company that does not provide simply advertising and branding solutions. It is a company that works like a single heartbeat to make your product and you live the much deserved and desired halo and glory. We at BrandWagon always see ourselves as the 300 Spartans who fought fearlessly for something that they believed in. We believe in our dedication. We believe in our creative skills. We believe in our teamwork. And most important, we believe that we can make it happen for you.

Brand Wagon is an Adverting agency committed to Branding Solutions and Advertising. With branches across the country and now at Pune, we focus largely on being Creatively Wild. Our obsession with bringing perfect options to better Advertising and Branding is itself our mission statement. We take up all forms of Advertising and Branding projects and we make sure that we do not just do our best but more than that.

Ride on our wagon and be assured of an adventurous trip to the heights where you and your brand deserves to be...


Visit us at www.brandwagonindia.in

Monday, 4 April 2011

Great Advertising campaign - by BrandWagon

BrandWagon brings to you great advertising campaigns by creative minds who made a huge difference in their product sale just by wild, creative Advertising ideas.


Visit us at www.brandwagonindia.in




Tuesday, 29 March 2011

Qualification needed for Advertising - by BrandWagon

Advertising is the means of informing as well as influencing the general public to buy products or services through visual or oral messages. A product or service is advertised to create awareness in the minds of potential buyers. Some of the commonly used media for advertising are T.V., radio, websites, newspapers, magazines, bill-boards, hoardings etc. As a result of economic liberalization and the changing social trends, advertising industry has shown rapid growth in the last decade.
Most advertising agencies recruit candidates with a formal management or advertising/mass communication qualification. Preference is given for MBA's for posts in the market research, client servicing and media planning departments.
In the creative department, on the other hand, a general BA with a command of the language of communication plus knowledge of designing packages like Photoshop, coral draw or fine arts is the requirement.
There are also specialized courses in advertising/mass communication at diploma level and post graduate level for which basic qualification is graduation. However, advertising is also offered as a subject for the graduate degree course in mass communication studies at certain institutions for which minimum qualification is 10+2. In addition there are also certificate courses for which 10+2 is enough.
Basic qualities like creativity and flair for writing or ability to translate ideas into a visual format are required for making a successful career in this field. They should have insight into the interests of people from all walks of life, ability to work as part of a team, mental and physical toughness to be able to withstand high pressure and criticism, must be sociable and have calm temperament. Market and media researchers should have an analytical and logical brain. Those in creative field should possess artistic abilities to make the ad appealing to the masses.
Advertising field offers a range of lucrative, interesting careers. The job in this field is categorized into two, executive and creative. Executive side includes Client Servicing, Market Research and Media Research. Creative side consists of copywriters, scriptwriters, visualisers, photographers and typographers. The executive department understands client needs, finds new business and retains existing business, selects the appropriate media, analyses timing and placement of advertisements and negotiates the financial aspects of the deal. Creative department creates the advertisement copy. They verbalize and visualize the specific need of the client.
As ad films are also a part of film making career options of film are related to this field.


Visit us at www.brandwagonindia.in

Monday, 28 March 2011

Origin of Languages - by Brand Wagon

When we talk About advertising and Branding and Marketing and whatever else in our field, the first and the most basic form is that of the use of a language. What we speak is the most common, widely used and important way of Advertising. Brand Wagon wishes to flip you back to the oldest pages of history, when a Language was newly born.

HEBREW BIBLE:

The Hebrew Bible attributes the origin of language per se to humans, with Adam being asked to name the creatures that God had created.
One of the most well known examples in the West is the Tower of Babel passage from Genesis in the Bible or Torah. The passage, common to the Abrahamic faiths with the exception of Islam, tells of God punishing humanity for arrogance and disobedience by means of the confusion of tongues.

HINDU MYTHOLOGY
A Hindu myth tells of how not only differences in language, but also diversity in culture, or customs came into being, by the punishment of a proud tree, by the creator-god Brahma.

AMERICAS
In common with the mythology of many other civilizations and cultures which tell of a Great Flood, certain Native American tribes tell of a deluge which came over the Earth. After the water subsides, various explanations are given for the new diversity in speech.

MESOAMERICA
The Aztecs' story maintains that only a man, Coxcox, and a woman, Xochiquetzal, survive, having floated on a piece of bark. They found themselves on land and begot many children who were at first born unable to speak, but subsequently, upon the arrival of a dove were endowed with language, although each one was given a different speech such that they could not understand one another.

AFRICA
The Wa-Sania, a Bantu people of East African origin have a tale that in the beginning, the peoples of the earth knew only one language, but during a severe famine, a madness struck the people, causing them to wander in all directions, jabbering strange words, and this is how different languages came about.

AUSTRALIA
In South Australia, a people of Encounter Bay tell a story of how diversity in language came about from cannibalism:In remote time an old woman, named Wurruri lived towards the east and generally walked with a large stick in her hand, to scatter the fires around which others were sleeping, Wurruri at length died. Greatly delighted at this circumstance, they sent messengers in all directions to give notice of her death; men, women and children came, not to lament, but to show their joy. The Raminjerar were the first who fell upon the corpse and began eating the flesh, and immediately began to speak intelligibly. The other tribes to the eastward arriving later, ate the contents of the intestines, which caused them to speak a language slightly different. The northern tribes came last and devoured the intestines and all that remained, and immediately spoke a language differing still more from that of the Raminjerar.

EUROPE
In Ancient Greece there was a myth which told that for ages men had lived without law under the rule of Zeus and speaking one language. The god Hermes brought diversity in speech and along with it separation into nations and discord ensued. Zeus then resigned his position, yielding it to the first king of men,Phoroneus.


Visit us at www.brandwagonindia.in

Clever Advertisements - by BrandWagon

Brand Wagon brings to you a series of some brilliantly made advertisements. 
It’s all about being
 Creatively Wild!!!



Nescafe:





Nerolac Quick Dry Paint




Monster.com – Wrong Jobs




Pantene




Duracell



Ponds



Livon



Gain




Lost – Season 3 



Don’t drink and drive…



Pantene



Moserbaer





For more amazing advertisements and info visit us at –

www.brandwagonindia.in

Friday, 25 March 2011

BrandWagon reaches Pune


A brief presentation about the launch of Brand Wagon - An advertising and branding agency at Pune.

Visit us at www.brandwagonindia.in

Thursday, 24 March 2011

Use of Colors in Branding - by Brand Wagon

As we walk down the busy streets of a warm Monday morning, every person is either engrossed re-living the beautiful weekend at a farm house or is cursing the long week to be spent at the office. So caught up in our own little funky world that we fail to notice things around us. Not all of us are blessed with the joy of getting up in a bed laid in green fields with fresh air and birds chirping all the day long. Waking up to the sounds of horns and the fresh smell of smoke marks our dawn. Yet, there is something very interesting that we fail to grasp in our hurry-burry rush. A peaceful stare at what’s around us. Huge hoardings, boards and banners of famous and the very famous brands. One thing that strikes the curious chord in me is the color used by these brands. A mystery and a history hidden behind them. So, BrandWagon wishes to thread all these beads of different colors into one blog and explain why some companies adopt the colors that they use… 
[As the blog is being written, an employee walks in singing a very apt song – Colorblind by Darius!] 

Blue: Cool blue is perceived as trustworthy, dependable, fiscally responsible and secure. Strongly associated with the sky and sea, blue is serene and universally well-liked. Blue is an especially popular color with financial institutions, as its message of stability inspires trust. 

Red: Red activates your pituitary gland, increasing your heart rate and causing you to breathe more rapidly. This visceral response makes red aggressive, energetic, provocative and attention-grabbing. Count on red to evoke a passionate response, albeit not always a favorable one. For example, red can represent danger or indebtedness. 

Green: In general, green connotes health, freshness and serenity. However, green's meaning varies with its many shades. Deeper greens are associated with wealth or prestige, while light greens are calming. 

Yellow: In every society, yellow is associated with the sun. Thus, it communicates optimism, positivism, light and warmth. Certain shades seem to motivate and stimulate creative thought and energy. The eye sees bright yellows before any other color, making them great for point-of-purchase displays. 

Purple: Purple is a color favored by creative types. With its blend of passionate red and tranquil blue, it evokes mystery, sophistication, spirituality and royalty. Lavender evokes nostalgia and sentimentality. 

Orange: Cheerful orange evokes exuberance, fun and vitality. With the drama of red plus the cheer of yellow, orange is viewed as gregarious and often childlike. Research indicates its lighter shades appeal to an upscale market. Peach tones work well with health care, restaurants and beauty salons. 

Brown: This earthy color conveys simplicity, durability and stability. It can also elicit a negative response from consumers who relate to it as dirty. Certain shades of brown, like terracotta, can convey an upscale look. From a functional perspective, brown tends to hide dirt, making it a logical choice for some trucking and industrial companies. 

Black: Black is serious, bold, powerful and classic. It creates drama and connotes sophistication. Black works well for expensive products, but can also make a product look heavy. 

White: White connotes simplicity, cleanliness and purity. The human eye views white as a brilliant color, so it immediately catches the eye in signage. White is often used with infant and health-related products. 

All the colors above can be categorized into two basic categories: warm and cold. In general, warm colors, like red and yellow, send an outgoing, energetic message, while cool colors, like blue, are calmer and more reserved. However, brightening a cool color increases its vibrancy and reduces its reserve. 

Visit us at - www.brandwagonindia.in

6 Laws of Successful Advertising - by BrandWagon

Rules about advertising that is created by breaking the rules of Advertising! Breaking rigid, traditional, strict rules and thinking out of the box is the key to a successful advertising campaign. BrandWagon brings to you the important rules governing the universe of Advertising. We follow the rules and yet we are not obsessed by them. It is all about being Creatively Wild, as BrandWagon teaches… 

1. Use One Message: A high response rate ad usually conveys a single message. Our small business advertising needs to quickly communicate its core message in 3 seconds or less. If you are fearful and overwhelmed by technology, which computer book do you buy? "DOS for Dummies" began a best-selling phenomena because its message was easily understood and to the point. 

2. Add Credibility: It has become human nature to distrust advertising. Claims need to be real and credible. Roy H. Williams, best-selling author of the "Wizard of Ads" says, "Any claim made in your advertising which your customer does not perceive as the truth is a horrible waste of ad dollars." 

3. Test Everything: Large businesses have a greater margin to waste capital and resources without testing advertising. Small businesses do not have the luxury. Use coupons, codes, and specials to measure the headline, timing, and placement of your Ad. Test only one item at a time and one medium. Testing can be as simple as asking every customer for several weeks how they heard of your business. 

4. Be Easy to Contact: Every single brochure, box, email and all company literature should have full contact information including: website and email address, phone and fax numbers, and company address. It seems simple but is forgotten by most companies. Be everywhere. 

5. Match Ads to Target: Successful business advertising speaks to one target market only. An ad in a medical publication preached the cardio-vascular benefits of cross-country skiing to heart patients. Ads in women's magazines discussed the weight-loss and calorie burn from cross-country skiing. Focus the message to the target group. 

6. Create Curiosity: Successful business advertising does not sell a product or service. Suppose you make a video of your product and give it free. Once a potential customer watches the video, they contact the company for more information. The end result - millions of dollars of sales. Create ads that generate interest and make the customer want more information. 

Visit us at http://brandwagonindia.in/

Wednesday, 23 March 2011

From Boxing to Marketing - by BrandWagon

A hard punch in the breadbasket. The opponent clinches trying to save from the pouring blows. A brief pause. And then comes the storm again. A left jab followed by a straight right and finally the left hook. The opponent seems like one born with the good chin. Sweat dripping on the canvas where he stands even after seeing the blinking blackouts and blurred images. And then out of nowhere comes the Sunday punch. A final knockout blow. It’s over. The winner remains inspite of all the swellings and bleedings. Just one single rule on the canvas, ‘Survival of the fittest’. 

The great recession began its shower of punches and blows on the market. Companies desperately tried to search for Noah’s Ark. The fight did not end. Left jabs, straight right, left hook. Companies began getting knocked out. Some were thrown over the rope. And still others surrendered. But amidst all this drama, there were still a few strong hearted, deep rooted companies that withstood the cruel blows inspite of all the bleeding and swellings. They were the ones who believed in the “Survival of the fittest” formula. They were the real boxers standing as winners on the global canvas. 

The secret - Great companies grow greater and stronger by firstly making great marketing strategies. This roots them deep in the market. They each do it in a different way, and that way is often ill-defined, partly unconscious and variable. Their strategy is tested, prior to implementation, against the standards of a strong strategy. When companies have a thorough and effective marketing plan, they drastically increase their chances for success. Next, if a company is going to last a lifetime, it needs to have a strong management team. Creating a great management team can be a time-consuming and challenging process. To make a strong management team, you must – 

· Hire people smarter than you. 

· Focus on hiring. 

· Lead strongly against all odds. 

Having a strong competitive presence in the market is a huge challenge. But the one who wins at the end is the one who believes in – The Survival of the fittest.

Tuesday, 22 March 2011

BrandWagon - What does your logo say???

BrandWagon brings to you a whole new ideology about brand adverting. Right from the moment the idea is conceived till the time it materializes, BrandWagon builds your idea in a uniquely creative, creatively wild and wildly different way. We believe in following the universal law that your brand fails if you fail in its advertising. Many companies follow a rigid and unbendable method of advertising. Here at BrandWagon, we do follow rules but as guidelines and then begins our challenge to soar beyond the horizon of mere rules and norms. ‘Follow the rules, Make it happen’ seems like a forced rule driving many advertising aspirants. ‘Do more than just rules, See it happen’ is a ruling force driving the engine of BrandWagon. 

Every Brand Advertising begins with the creation of its Logo. The brand’s logo is its entire story and history. Derived from a Greek word, logo [logotype] actually means a name or a symbol. In this blog, BrandWagon wishes to knit together a few famous logos and their interesting and unknown meanings: 


You might think the arrow does nothing here. But it says that amazon.com has everything from a to z and it also represents the smile brought to the customer's face. Creative! 




There is a hidden symbol in the Federal Express logo. 
Yeah, we are talking about the 'arrow' that you can see between the E and the x in this logo. The arrow was introduced to underscore speed and precision, which are part of the positioning of the company. 



The name Vaio logo also has a hidden meaning? Well, the first two letters represent the basic analogue signal. The last two letters look like a 1 and 0, representing the digital signal.


Toblerone is a chocolate-company from Bern , Switzerland . Bern is sometimes called The City of Bears. They have incorporated this idea in the Toblerone logo, because if you look closely, you’ll see the silhouette of a bear. 





The Benz logo is a simplistic three-pointed star that represents its domination of the land, the sea, and the air. The famous three-pointed star was designed by Gottlieb Daimler to show the ability of his motors for land, air and sea-usage. 



The pink parts of the BR form the number 31, a reference to the 31 flavors.


The SUN Microsystems logo is a wonderful example of symmetry and order. It was a brilliant observation that the letters u and n while arranged adjacent to each other look a lot like the letter S in a perpendicular direction.



In this logo, three ellipses depicting the heart of the customer, the heart of the product, and the ever-expanding technological advancements and boundless opportunities that lie ahead is depicted.


Most of you have already seen the peacock in this logo. The peacock has 6 different tail feathers, referring to the six divisions at the time that this logo was created. The peacocks head is flipped to the right to suggest it was looking forward, not back.


At first, this logo might not make much sense. But if you look closely, you’ll see the number 1 in the negative space between the F and the red stripes. This logo also communicates a feeling of speed.


Sunday, 20 March 2011

What was...

We are all drenched and soaked in the endless world of Advertising. Each new day dawns with a new concept, a new idea, a new way of pushing the advertising industry to the next level. We are so much engrossed and addicted with “What’s next?” that we have either forgotten or have failed to think about “What was?”

Our past is our teacher and in this blog, BrandWagon wishes to take you down the memory lane to some important and forgotten happenings of the past. Turning back the pages of history of the book called - “Advertising” till we reach the page titled, “What was…”

1704

The first newspaper advertisement, an announcement seeking a buyer for an Oyster Bay, Long Island, estate, is published in the Boston News-Letter.

18th Century


Ads appear for the first time in print in Hickey's Bengal Gazette. India's first newspaper (weekly).

5th June 1883

Horlicks becomes the first 'malted milk' to be patented.

1905

B Dattaram & Co claims to be the oldest existing Indian agency in 
Girgaum in Bombay 

1912

ITC (then Imperial Tobacco Co. Ltd.) launches Gold Flake 

1920s

- Enter the first foreign owned ad agencies 

- Gujarat Advertising and Indian Advertising set up 

1931

- National Advertising Service Pr. Ltd. Bombay set up 

- Universal Publicity Co, Calcutta formed 

1934

Venkatrao Sista opens Sista Advertising and Publicity Services as first 
full service Indian agency 

1936


Indian Broadcasting Company becomes All India Radio (AIR) 

1939

Lever's advertising department launches Dalda - the first major 
example of a brand and a marketing campaign specifically developed 
for India 

1945


Tom & Bay (Advertising) Pr. Ltd., Poona begins operations in India 

1950s

Radio Ceylon and Radio Goa become the media option 

1962

India's television's first soap opera - Teesra Rasta enthralls 
viewers 

1967

First commercial appears on Vividh Bharati 

1978

First television commercial seen

1982

- The biggest milestone in television was the Asiad '82 when 
television turned to colour transmission 

- Bombay Dyeing becomes the first colour TV ad 

1990

- Marks the beginning of new medium Internet 

- Agencies open new media shops; go virtual with websites and 
Internet advertising 

1993

India's only advertising school, MICA (Mudra Institute of 
Communications Ahmedabad), is born

2000

Mudra launches magindia.com - India's first advertising and marketing 
Gallery

2001


Bharti's Rs 2.75-crore corporate TV commercial, where a baby 
girl is born in a football stadium, becomes the most expensive 
campaign of the year



Thursday, 17 March 2011

The world of Advertising and BrandWagon


The world of Advertising is on a boom since the time the first ever product was created. If you are left wondering what could be the oldest form of advertising, here is the answer. Advertising dates back to the time when papyrus was used for written communication by ancient Egyptians. If billboards are a little old ideas for advertising, guess where the oldest forms of the ‘billboards’ concept would take you. Back in time to the 4000 B.C.!
Advertising has grown with the evolution of the human race. Not only has it improved over the years but has also developed newer ways and strategies. Seen in the simplest form of the fruit and vegetable vendor on the streets screaming his lungs out to the most complex form of commercials on your television, the world of Advertising has attained the status of being omnipotent…Just everywhere. It is said that stopping the advertising of your brand to save money is as good a stopping the clock to save time!
The college of Advertising teaches us the rules and norms of Advertising but it’s quite an irony that people who think more than the rigid rules are the ones who hit the jackpot in terms of a mighty audience appreciation. The motto of BrandWagon reads, “Creatively Wild.” So who are we? We are surely not another advertising agency occupying a useless slot on the pages of a phone directory? We use rules and norms of Advertising as guidelines and then work wildly to give you and your brand the glory that it deserves. BrandWagon works on a simple principle of dedicated teamwork and limitless imagination and the end product of this combination is what turns your brand into an unstoppable success. Being creatively wild with an ace leadership and tireless dedication defines BrandWagon. 

Monday, 28 February 2011

Social Media Branding


A brand is a center stone for a company. Building a brand required a balance marketing efforts across various channels. As days are passing there are sign of new beginning of an era. In which opportunities are countless for businessman, companies, organization & etc to establish or mark their name & build a reputation of them.
Now a day's Social Media Branding become a very useful & great tool for the building of brand.Social Media branding help you get high quality traffic from social media websites. It's provides the opportunity to reach your target audience in a more effective and creative manner than ever before.
Role of Social Media's in Branding
Right from the early age we humans have an ability or I say (if u agree with me) a quality to get socialized through which we are able to solve our lot of problems. Still now a day if we have any problem we tries to socialized, by meeting with our family member, friends or other people, who in their life once have face or successfully tackle that problem. So the term of socializing is not new for us. So if I say branding through social media it doesn't seem something out of the world or new to us. To support my words I will take you back to the past.
"Few years back marketers just push their messages, what they want to say, about brand to consumers. (by just showing commercial adds etc) "
As people are getting more information & knowledge companies are more keen what consumers are discussing & saying about it. Social Media had a strong impact about public opinion & what they are expressing about the brand & products. So if I give thank to social media as they switch the control; as now consumers are driving the opinion about the brands not the marketers. I can support these words by giving you an example which my good friend (I will not tell u his/her name) uses to give me during our schools days;
"if u saw shaving trimmer add & its said that its easy to use, give good shave, having long lasting battery etc., you won't buy that product at first place just showing that add even its market price is very low. But if any of your family member or friends gives good comments about that product you just purchase it without any problem. That is called Social Branding."
For companies social media is important b/c it provides a way to get out there and get noticed. It's an opportunity to go where the consumers are and create a presence and through social branding marketers now engaging with the potential users and involved in the conversations which are taking place about their brand or products. Instead of forcing yourself to your consumer social media gives you opportunity to hang out with them.
Social media however allows you to brand yourself long before anyone becomes your customer. In social media branding you are not the ad on the wall you are the guy telling stories about your brand which your audience finds fascinating and distribute it in its social circle. So don't be afraid to participate in social media just because you don't see the result quickly. But as the time passes you build your social reputation which leads you to credibility. And over time that credibility and awareness will very likely lead to an increase in your customer base.
As a dawn of social media is begun and companies have lot of expectation to get good results form social branding! 1 Social Media eagerly expects the challenges of social branding and has a commitment to fulfill your expectation.

www.brandwagonindia.in

Friday, 25 February 2011

90 Days NoN Stop Cricket Madness!!!


Steaming in from the Pavilion End is Sri Lanka’s Lasith Malinga. With four needed off one ball, a billion hearts can’t but stop pounding… It would be unreasonable, dicey and, perhaps, blasphemous to predict the sequence of events on that (prospective) fateful day — April 2 — but no matter what, the two players in question will be hand-in-glove only six days later. Long live Mumbai Indians! Welcome to the ‘real’ world of cricket…
The entire cricket-loving world is all set for 90 days of non-stop ‘madness’. If the first half is about patriotism and national fervour, the second is about providing value for every dollar earned (read Indian Premier League). Even as the Country vs Club debate continues, everyone — from advertisers to marketers, cable operators to viewers, journalists to players — is hungry for a piece of the pie.
How then do all ‘parties’ plan to milk the proverbial cow? All of these issues and more were discussed threadbare at the Sportz Power India Cricket Forum 2011 in Mumbai on Wednesday. The pros (and cons) of ‘Cricket’s Big Bang’ threw up quite a few interesting facts.
First of all, no broadcaster says, “Oh! Spare a thought for the poor viewer,” anymore. The viewer isn’t poor by any stretch of imagination. He has 400 channels to choose from. And he’s got the remote control. It’s the broadcaster’s prerogative to ensure he doesn’t end up becoming poor! So don’t be surprised if the Ekta Kapoors and Indrani Mukerjeas come up with something out of the ordinary to keep the housewives happy. Secondly, the average Indian is so fatigued after work that cricket will provide for a soothing balm. Ninety days of non-stop cricket? Bring it on! In India, there is nothing like ‘excess’ as far as cricket is concerned.
In fact, we suffer from withdrawal symptoms when denied action. Thirdly, and most importantly, the players don’t mind getting sold like stallions at the auction and then working like horses for their franchises.
One of the panellists stated the obvious when he said how channels ‘create’ 6,500 seconds of ad slots instead of the ‘ideal’ 4,200 during an ODI. The trick is simple. You don’t have to wait for Ravi Shastri to complete, “Thirty-two gone, it’s 141 for three.” Did someone say consumer is king?
India is still a ‘single-TV household’ market but with 12 million TV sets sold by the year, a paradigm shift will take place by the time the 2015 World Cup is here. We could be watching India vs Australia at the MCG and saas-bahu soaps under the same roof.
The fact that we are still in the ‘Stone Age’ as far as TV coverage is concerned was proven when it came to light that British broadcasters actually have two feeds for every football match — one for pubs and clubs (with ads) and the other for households (subscription-based).
The concluding session was about the men who eventually matter — the players. So how exactly do players plan to go through the ‘trauma’ of playing non-stop cricket? Where should they draw the line? Or are they empowered to? Panellists touched upon the issue of the non-existence of players’ associations in India, the ‘Injured Premier League’, and the absence of a well-defined cricket ‘season’. Players choose to carry niggles and play on because of insecurity and paranoia. The soul is spiritual, the mind is infinite, but the body has limitations and restrictions.
It is, however, imperative to usher in a ‘method’ in all this madness. Does anyone care? Long live cricket! Long live Mumbai Indians!