Igor Liskovest of Google discusses what is driving customer purchases

The number of smart phone devices are increasing and with that we see an increase in the number of searches and questions about the products that a consumer wants to buy. Hence the whole purchase journey of a consumer is also getting complex.

Igor Liskovets, Google’s director of online to offline and call solutions, outlines this consumer journey and also shares how Google is helping consumers navigate this journey.

“People are asking on the internet lot of questions around their purchases like what should I do. What should I buy?” Liskovets said.

VIP bets big on upcoming holiday season

VIP industries is gearing up for the upcoming holiday season with the launch ad campaigns for its brands Carlton, Caprese and Aristocrat.

All three went live in April. Each of these ads have their own distinguished storyline which resonate with the unique identities that the respective brand stands for. Sudip Ghose, the newly appointed CEO of VIP Industries spoke  about these campaigns.

Video: Critterati: India’s first luxury hotel for dogs & cats

Critterati is one stop destination for all the needs of dogs and cats – everything, right from the swimming pool, to leaving them to boarding a full daycare that you can choose from.

They have 26 different kind of room categories which starts from standard to deluxe, twin-sharing rooms where two dogs can stay together.

The criteria for hiring people for Critterati is they should be dog lovers and they should have their own dog.

 5 Minutes Read

Martin Sorrell leaves behind shoes too big to fill

KV Prasad Jun 13, 2022, 06:35 AM IST (Published)

 Listen to the Article (6 Minutes)

Summary

Sorrell is different – he is a dream subject for an interview. Even post his WPP life, he will be.

I’ve had more opportunities to interview Sir Martin Sorrell than most journalists have.  In addition to interviewing him each time he visited India, for a year I interviewed him every month, wherever he was in the world, for a show on CNBC-TV18 that we created called “30 minutes with Martin Sorrell.”

In addition to my interviews, my colleagues interviewed him regularly at Cannes and at Davos.

Each time I heard that he was coming to India, I would scramble and ensure that I got ‘quality’ time with him – at least half an hour.

There is no other network agency head or advertising agency head that I would do this for.

Sorrell is different – he is a dream subject for an interview. Even post his WPP life, he will be.

Because he can talk, with authority, on an incredibly wide range of subjects. He can talk about advertising, about media, about creativity, about blockchain, about Modi, about the Congress party, about Brexit, about Theresa May, about Trump, about the impact of the monsoons on India and the latest Opec decisions on the European Union, about the change in policies in China and how these would affect the tech companies.

He has called Facebook and Google names: he dubbed them ‘frenemies’.

He can talk about cricket.

He can talk about food.

And he remembers the names and faces of everyone of importance that he has met.

That’s why Martin Sorrell is a dream subject for an interviewer.

As my former colleague at CNBC TV18 and current friend Pavni Mittal tweeted, “As someone who has interviewed him multiple times, I can’t think of a CEO as sharp, articulate – and fun. If you walked away with a bad Martin Sorrell interview, it was your fault!”

I break up Sorrell into three elements: the global industrialist, the network agency head and the Sorrell who has a special spot for India. And it is because he is all of these three elements that WPP will find it hard to deal with his departure, as will the advertising business as a whole.

Let’s deal with these different Sorrell and the impact of his leaving WPP.

The impact on the advertising industry as a whole: Sorrell, through his ability to understand, interpret and magically articulate the state of the economy or political developments was a far sought after talking head on news TV whenever anything major happened in the western world or in China. Anything. He willy-nilly ‘represented’ the advertising and marketing businesses in such situations, lending gravitas to a business that struggled to be seen as having gravitas in any country, including India. Sorrell was a regular at Davos, rubbing shoulders with leaders of countries, leaders of industries and policymakers from across the world. In short, Sorrell made the world take advertising seriously. After all, if advertising wasn’t a serious and important business, why was Sorrell on prime time news along with prime ministers, presidents and CEOs?

In Sorrell’s absence, who will be the flag-bearer of advertising? I can’t think of ONE.

Sorrell has an amazing ability to remember names and faces that matter to his business and has raised relationship-building and relationship maintenance to a fine art. In the past week, I have mailed him twice. In both instances, I have received a response in a few minutes. This, while he was going through the most difficult time of his WPP journey.

Sorrell knows every important client of his across the world. Because clients are important to him. He knows Kumar Mangalam Birla, he knows Sanjiv Mehta, he knows Sunil Sood, and so on. He makes it clear to them that he knows them and that they are important to WPP. If that’s not a dream and near-perfect client servicing result, I don’t know what is.

He knows key WPP employees across the world – and has close relationships with them. He appointed them, trusted them, delegated, gambled on them and gained thanks to them. There is no other way he could run a company that operated in over 100 countries and with 200,000 employees.

He has been derided for being a Math Man as opposed to being a Mad Man, but that derision is hugely misplaced. Under his watch, WPP and their constituents have been regularly at the top of the leaderboard at Cannes and at almost every significant award you can name. While he is definitely an accountant, his ability to hire the best (or buy the best, as he did with JWT and Ogilvy in his early days) and retain the best speaks volumes of the focus on the business. He clearly understands what makes creativity tick – creative people. His relationship with creative stars at WPP globally can be seen at Cannes, where all of them are under one ‘roof’.

He saw the importance of Asia in particular and the BRICS nations in general far ahead of is peers and competition, resulting in greater investments in offices and people in these markets, resulting further in greater market share in these markets.

As far as India is concerned, Sorrell has been an annual magnet, his visits becoming the provocation to discuss all things good and bad about the business in India. Each visit also sparked discussions on possible acquisitions and acquisition targets, though, in the last so many years, Sorrell has stayed away from investments in all but the digital domain. He would have loved to have done a deal with Madison or cleaned up the uncertainty at Rediffusion Y&R, but, sadly, that’s for a future CEO to deal with.

Finally, he is a math man. He understands numbers well, and his understanding of numbers has seen his WPP empire grow to almost GBP 20 billion at one point (it is estimated to be worth, even today, at GBP 22 billion if broken up into different businesses).

So what’s next for WPP? Whatever the new management does, Sorrell’s shoes are not easy to fill – and the replacement will NOT be able to fill them.

And advertising will be the poorer for this inability.

As will all the journalists who regularly interviewed Sir Martin Sorrell.

Elon Musk forms several ‘X Holdings’ companies to fund potential Twitter buyout

3 Mins Read

Thursday’s filing dispelled some doubts, though Musk still has work to do. He and his advisers will spend the coming days vetting potential investors for the equity portion of his offer, according to people familiar with the matter

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KV Prasad Journo follow politics, process in Parliament and US Congress. Former Congressional APSA-Fulbright Fellow

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index Price Change
nifty 50 ₹16,986.00 -72.15
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index Price Change
nifty 50 ₹16,986.00 -7.15
sensex ₹1,882.60 +8.30
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Storyboard looks at trust building by brands; impact of block chain technology

Rob Norman, Director, Zeotap is of the view that trust is becoming increasingly important but it is also incredibly undermined. In a conversation with CNBC-TV18’s Anant Rangaswami he talks about how trust is very hard to earn hence the future of branding is going to be very bright.

He also throws more light on how brands can build trust in a world that is so democratised yet corrupted.

Last year, Mindshare announced its intention to place its business unit FAST (Future Adaptive Specialist Team) at the heart of its business as part of an ongoing transformation programme and appointed Gowthaman Ragothaman as the Global Chief Strategy Officer. Storyboard talks to Gowthaman or G’man about many things including data, measurement and the future impact of block chain technology.

Storyboard: In conversation with Matt Brocklehurst

On CNBC-TV18’s special show Storyboard, watch the interview of Matt Brocklehurst Programmatic & Platforms – Market Lead, Google Asia Pacific who spoke about the programmatic landscape in India.

Storyboard also caught up with David Shing, Global Digital Prophet, OATH and spoke to him about why digital really requires a prophet.

Watch videos for more….

What differentiates WPP Stream from a conference

IT/ITES, coronavirus, COVID19

This week on Storyboard, on the side-lines of the recently held WPP Steam in Jaipur, Storyboard caught up with the host of the event Scott Spirit, Chief Digital Officer at WPP and spoke to him about what his organisation stands to achieve from an event such as this. Also watch Anant Rangaswami caught up with CVL Srinivas, Country Manager of WPP India & CEO of GroupM South Asia to gather his opinion on this year’s WPP Stream.

On this week’s Noticeboard, Lenovo is telling parents #GiftThemDreams as children across the country are prepping for exams.

 Watch videos for more.