March 11,2010 | Last update 11 hours ago


Most Recent Additions



Commentary

New Banks: Will RBI Relent?


The RBI has barely suppressed its dismay over the finance minister’s announcement that the apex bank is considering Read more...

RSS Feeds
Subscribe for Updates
Register Now!
Login
For Advanced Access
Newsletters
Free Daily Updates
Kensource Stockletters
Subscribe Now!



What's HOT?
Knowledge Series Books
Pathbreaker Series
Gift Subscription


Shopping
Moneylife Events

Sanjay Nirupam, Member of Parliament, inaugurating the Moneylife Knowledge Centre on 6 February 2010.

Moneylife, in association with Reliance Mutual Fund, organised the Big Ideas Essay Contest on “Taking Financial Markets to the Masses,” on 5 December 2009.

Moneylife Foundation organised an open discussion on .Budget and You. on 27 February 2010. The participants were presented with a detailed analysis of the implications of the Budget proposals.
About Moneylife
Contact Us

Parle Agro Hippo: Another social idea, Sirji!
February 05, 2010 01:08 PM | Bookmark and Share
Anil Thakraney

Just when you thought advertising couldn’t get more bizarre, along comes this ad

Since our lazy and incompetent netas and babus aren’t able to deal with our myriad social problems, it appears that private marketers have taken it upon themselves to sort out screw-ups facing the nation (and the world at large). And curiously enough, this route is being used by brands, which, er, have nothing new to say to the consumers about themselves. Brands that are stuck in product categories packed with rival hysterical brands and promises. In other words, commerce, not social conscience, is the driving force behind this bleeding-heart strategy.

After IDEA and Tata Tea, it’s the turn of a munchies brand to save us from the fast-approaching Armageddon. And Parle’s Hippo couldn’t be bothered with faltu stuff like losing weight, saving trees and casting votes. They want to solve the mother of all problems: eradicating hunger! 

The television commercial stirs things up with an ancient Hindi film song, ‘Pyaar baant te chalo’, and it features an invisible creature called ‘Hippo’ which solves the world's food crisis. The core message is that since hunger is the root cause of all the evils plaguing the world, it’s best to kill this first so that other issues can get sorted out on their own. So no more wars, riots, terror attacks, corruption, child exploitation, milk adulteration, etc. And the TVC has criminals and other assorted elements mending their ways immediately after Hippo is offered to them.

Bizarre and insane? Yup, of course. And what about that small thing called credibility? Absolute zero. And what does this social message have to do with time-pass munchies? Zilch. In fact all that a fatty, low-nutrition food would do is make people more angsty and more obese. (And then IDEA can step in and re-release its ‘walk when you talk’ campaign).

So then why are they indulging in this madness? Well, for two reasons. One, to generate some cheap, good laughs. In other words, they are happily mocking the malaise of hunger, and so only the well-fed might be amused. And two, devoid of any USP within the brand, the trick is to break the high television clutter by creating totally wild, atrocious advertising. So if nothing else works, at least the brand will be recalled at the retail outlet by the otherwise forgetful housewife. Admittedly, for the last part, the brand could achieve some amount of success. So good luck to them.

Having said that, spoofing serious problems for commercial gains is a questionable tactic. What next, one wonders. An ice-cream brand running an anti-rape campaign? Or a refrigerator brand running an anti-dowry campaign? Well, Kelvinator definitely won’t. It’s unofficially called India’s ‘dowry fridge’.  
 



Submit your comments

Name * :
Email Id * :
Author Url:
Comment*:
Security Code: Security code
What's Hot
From this section



What's Hot
Recent Additions


Big winners & losers after the Budget
Several stocks are riding high on the back of friendly proposals in the recent Budget; others have taken a beating and are sliding down
Low MF assets speak volumes on investor apathy
Despite a booming economy and vibrant equity markets, equity assets under management at many mutual fund houses remain abysmally low
Know your bank as well, says Kishori J Udeshi of BCSBI, in
While banks have ‘know your customer’ norms, it is also essential for customers to ‘know your bank’, says the former deputy governor of the RBI.
DQE’s growth may bank on its IP content
DQE has shifted its business model from a largely outsourced model to a co-production model and its future growth may depend on continued rollout of IP content in which the
SEBI asks all investors to pay 100% margin upfront for
In a bid to create a level playing field between all investor participants, all investors, including QIBs, will now be required to make full payment during new share applications.


> Promotional Material
Inside
Moneylife Magazine

Latest Moneylife issue cover
Look out for regular sections in every issue on -
Current events, Stocks, Mutual Funds, Spending, Insurance, Borrowing, Books, Charity & many more!

Subscribe to Moneylife Magaine now!


Moneylife Shop

Pathbreakers
Pages - 223

List Price - Rs.1200
Our Price: - Rs.1000
Plain Truth about Stock Investing
Pages - 96

List Price - Rs.125
Our Price: - Rs.100
Plain Truths about Mutual Funds
Pages - 104

List Price - Rs.125
Our Price: - Rs.100
Plain Truths about Investments
Pages - 115

List Price - Rs.125
Our Price: - Rs.100
Plenty more interesting articles in the ML Store inside, Gift it to someone else or yourself!

Go to Moneylife Shop
Moneylife
Navigator

Go Top | Subscribe Moneylife | Send a Gift Subscription | Visit Moneylife Store | Offers & Promotions | Moneylife Newsletter | Useful Resources

Newsviewer | Commentary | Markets | Companies & Sectors | Investing | Personal Finance | Small Business | Life

Moneylife Home | Moneylife Magazine | Moneylife Shop | Corporate Moneylife | Contact Us



© 2009-10. All rights reserved by Moneywise Media and it's subsidiaries.

No contents of Moneylife.in website or Moneylife Magazine shall be reproduced without prior permissions from the authors of
Moneylife.in website and/or publisher of Moneylife Magazine.

You are bound by Terms and Conditions for using this website any further this point.
We maintain standard guidelines of User Privacy and may not disclose private user information to third parties.

Write to Moneylife webmaster for all the questions, reports and complaints pertaining to this website.