In-cInema advertIsIng - afaqs! space for what is called in-cinema advertising. As footfalls grew,...

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T he buzz in cinema circles - apart from Kick getting into the `200 crore club and the release of Singham Returns - was the recent takeover of Satyam Cineplexes by Inox Leisure for `182 crore. With this acquisition, the number of screens for Inox went up by 38 to 358, placing it behind leader PVR Cinemas, which has 444 screens across India. Together, the two control more than 40 per cent of the multiplex screens in the country. Big Cinemas has 280 screens, Cinepolis 84 screens and Fun Cinemas, 82 screens. Today there are over 1,500 multiplex screens while five years ago this number was around 250. More screens and more movies make for more advertising space for what is called in-cinema advertising. As footfalls grew, film releases gathered momentum, distribution improved and cinema became digitised, in-cinema advertising aroused the interest of a number of national advertisers. The genre grew at a compounded annual growth rate (CAGR) of 20 per cent in the last five years. According to a KPMG report, in-cinema advertising is varyingly between `400 to `600 crore. Consolidation is taking place in the multiplex business. INNOVATION PAYS N ow, over a century old, the Indian film industry is worth `13,000 crore. Nearly 30 films across 10 different languages are released every week. Experts point out that an estimated 3.5 billion tickets are sold annually and an average Indian visits the theatre thrice every year. It has also built up a great eco-system for brands to interact with audiences. In-cinema advertising refers to on-screen and off-screen branding that consumers see in theatres. “Many mainstream brands today,” points out Harshavardhan Gangurde, vice president, marketing, Inox Leisure, “are using in-cinema advertising and have upped spends after realising the impact.” In the on-screen space, a brand can run the traditional 30-, 45- or 60 second promos or 10-second static slides giving information. The interactive use of on-screen space has clicked too. Nokia designed a short film in November last year for the Lumia. In it, the protagonist, who is trapped in a maze, calls a person from the audience to help him out. The activation-cum-on-screen film ends with the protagonist coming out in person and gifting the viewer a Nokia Lumia. In the off-screen space, there is a mind-boggling variety of options ranging from seats, audi name(or door), lobby, wall, floor, box office, security check point, popcorn counter, lift, kiosk, product display, staircase, washroom, ticket jackets, interactive zones or kiosks, poster box and sampling. Piramal Healthcare partnered with Big Cinemas across 100 screens and placed the I-Sure (an ovulation test kit) communication in women’s washrooms. Sachin Rajpal, general manager, marketing, consumer products, Piramal Enterprises, says, “The dialogue between the brand and the consumer happened very well.” NO REMOTE BUTTON G autam Dutta, COO, PVR Cinemas, says, “Cinema delivers unparalleled impact as brands play with the senses of the consumer.” A brand manager is upset if the consumer switches channels, closes a browser or chooses the YouTube ad skip button but he is happy at a theatre because it does not allow the consumer this luxury. “Brands get a captive audience glued to the screens,” says Devang Sampat, business head, strategic initiatives, Cinepolis. Kapil Sharma, vice president, marketing, 9X Media (an advertiser in this space), however, argues that the attention wavers because of the commotion caused by people coming and going. Brands, however, get to know who they are interacting with and that the chances of spillover are less. Ronita Mitra, senior vice president, brand communication, insights and online, Vodafone India, says. “Cinema gives you a unique audience in every show and we can advertise in select geographies with different propositions.” In 2012-13, for instance, 9XM ran campaigns in 100 Cinemax screens (now PVR) in the Hindi- speaking markets to promote its Bade Chhote characters. Says Sharma, “Since we play Bollywood music, theatres were the perfect destination.” The medium allows even the small retailer Advertisers are trying out innovation and direct messages to market their wares in theatres. By Devesh Gupta IN-CINEMA ADVERTISING THE BIG BOYS (The top five advertising categories) 20 40 60 80 100 Now on multiplexes (in %) June 2014; Source: Ipsos MediaCT 808 screens Food and Beverages 94 Personal Care 77 Banking and Finance 60 Consumer Durables 57 Media 54 0

Transcript of In-cInema advertIsIng - afaqs! space for what is called in-cinema advertising. As footfalls grew,...

Page 1: In-cInema advertIsIng - afaqs! space for what is called in-cinema advertising. As footfalls grew, ... Chocon Pepsi Kesh King Kurkure Mirinda Whirlpool ... line of acquisitions ...

The buzz in cinema circles - apart from Kick getting into the `200 crore club and the release of Singham Returns - was the recent takeover of Satyam Cineplexes by

Inox Leisure for `182 crore.With this acquisition, the number of screens

for Inox went up by 38 to 358, placing it behind leader PVR Cinemas, which has 444 screens across India. Together, the two control more than 40 per cent of the multiplex screens in the country. Big Cinemas has 280 screens, Cinepolis 84 screens and Fun Cinemas, 82 screens. Today there are over 1,500 multiplex screens while five years ago this number was around 250.

More screens and more movies make for more advertising space for what is called in-cinema advertising. As footfalls grew, film releases gathered momentum, distribution improved and cinema became digitised, in-cinema advertising aroused the interest of a number of national advertisers. The genre grew at a compounded annual growth rate (CAGR) of 20 per cent in the last five years.

According to a KPMG report, in-cinema advertising is varyingly between ̀ 400 to ̀ 600 crore. Consolidation is taking place in the multiplex business.

InnovatIon pays

Now, over a century old, the Indian film industry is worth `13,000 crore. Nearly 30

films across 10 different languages are released every week. Experts point out that an estimated 3.5 billion tickets are sold annually and an average Indian visits the theatre thrice every year. It has also built up a great eco-system for brands to interact with audiences.

In-cinema advertising refers to on-screen

and off-screen branding that consumers see in theatres. “Many mainstream brands today,” points out Harshavardhan Gangurde, vice president, marketing, Inox Leisure, “are using in-cinema advertising and have upped spends after realising the impact.” In the on-screen space, a brand can run the traditional 30-, 45- or 60 second promos or 10-second static slides giving information.

The interactive use of on-screen space has clicked too. Nokia designed a short film in November last year for the Lumia. In it, the

protagonist, who is trapped in a maze, calls a person from the audience to help him out. The activation-cum-on-screen film ends with the protagonist coming out in person and gifting the viewer a Nokia Lumia.

In the off-screen space, there is a mind-boggling variety of options ranging from seats, audi name(or door), lobby, wall, floor, box office, security check point, popcorn counter, lift, kiosk, product display, staircase, washroom, ticket jackets, interactive

zones or kiosks, poster box and sampling.Piramal Healthcare partnered with Big

Cinemas across 100 screens and placed the I-Sure (an ovulation test kit) communication in women’s washrooms. Sachin Rajpal, general manager, marketing, consumer products, Piramal Enterprises, says, “The dialogue between the brand and the consumer happened very well.”

no remote button

Gautam Dutta, COO, PVR Cinemas, says, “Cinema delivers unparalleled impact as

brands play with the senses of the consumer.” A brand manager is upset if the consumer switches channels, closes a browser or chooses the YouTube ad skip button but he is happy at a theatre because it does not allow the consumer this luxury.

“Brands get a captive audience glued to the screens,” says Devang Sampat, business head, strategic initiatives, Cinepolis. Kapil Sharma, vice president, marketing, 9X Media (an advertiser in this space), however, argues that the attention wavers because of the commotion caused by people coming and going.

Brands, however, get to know who they are interacting with and that the chances of spillover are less. Ronita Mitra, senior vice president, brand communication, insights and online, Vodafone India, says. “Cinema gives you a unique audience in every show and we can advertise in select geographies with different propositions.” In 2012-13, for instance, 9XM ran campaigns in 100 Cinemax screens (now PVR) in the Hindi-speaking markets to promote its Bade Chhote characters. Says Sharma, “Since we play Bollywood music, theatres were the perfect destination.”

The medium allows even the small retailer

Advertisers are trying out innovation and direct messages to market their wares in theatres. By Devesh Gupta

In-cInema advertIsIng

the big boys(The top five advertising categories)

20

40

60

80

100

Now

on

mul

tiple

xes

(in %

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June 2014; Source: Ipsos MediaCT 808 screens

Food and Beverages

94

Personal Care

77

Banking and Finance

60

Consumer Durables

57

Media

54

0

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to advertise and play longer ads that could be prohibitively expensive on TV. The effect, however, may not be the same. “It is not a frequency building medium. The cinema screen acts as an ancillary to any large TVC,” adds Gangurde of Inox. Theatres are great for sampling. Samsung, for instance, placed small fridges in the aisle next to the seats in PVR’s Gold Class filled with eatables and encouraged viewers to consume the products and judge the efficacy of the fridge.

the joy of growIng

There are many reason why in-cinema advertising was not explored much in the

past. Single screen theatres used print rolls that were prone to damage, expensive to produce and had to be distributed individually to each theatre.

These theatres were not designed for off-screen branding and mostly reported incorrect footfall numbers. Piracy also lead to several single screens shutting down. All that has changed. “The emergence of multiplexes and their rapid expansion to tier I and II cities is a big reason why this change has begun,” says Ajay Mehta, managing director, Interactive Television, part of GroupM. In 2013, growth came from tier II and III cities. PVR added 60 screens, Inox 21 and Satyam Cineplex (now Inox) 12 that year.

Multiplexes have better ambience and good picture quality and drew SEC A, AB, A+ audiences back to the theatres. A KPMG report points out that the occupancy levels for major multiplexes rose from 23-27 per cent in 2011 to 30 per cent in 2013. PVR claims to get more than 72 million viewers annually, while Big Cinemas gets 40 million. According to the report, average ticket prices went up from `150-160 in 2011 to `168-175 in 2013 for leading multiplex chains.

Other developments have changed the movie-going experience. Digitisation has improved film quality. Digital prints cost less than analogue and are easy to distribute. Today, viewers in big and small cities get to see the show on the

day of release. Kick, for example, was released simultaneously in 4,000 screens. Producers push films on as many screens on Day One but their shelf life is low.

Multiplexes monitor footfalls and provide brands with a log of the ad (when, where and how many times it played) thereby bringing transparency. Most multiplexes have a capacity of

200-500, giving them the flexibility to run small ticket films, giving more options to the advertisers.

them and us

When it comes to in-cinema advertising, are there watertight compartments? Do regional

brands advertise with big-ticket Hindi or English films? Will a national brand advertise in a regional

film? “We measure capacity on demand and assign the number of shows. A regional brand would not mind advertising with any other language movie if it can benefit,” says Dutta of PVR.

Swaroop Reddy, managing director of the Chennai-based Sathyam Cinemas (no connection with the Delhi-based Satyam chain) differs. He says that the fact that a movie is regional, Bollywood or English does affect advertisers’ decisions. Gangurde of Inox points out that most brands tend to go for larger Hindi releases with assured eyeballs. Sampat of Cinepolis adds that advertising depends on the resources available, not whether the movie is regional, Bollywood or Hollywood. “If the brand is allocating budgets to its regional offices then advertising with regional and small budget movies is more. But if it is only from the central pool then it is mostly the national campaigns with big ticket films,” he explains.

screen vs screen

More than 70 per cent of the 13,000 cinema screens in India are single, which are less

monetised from an advertising perspective. The rest are multiplexes. On the revenue front, the latter gets 70 per cent of its income from ticket sales, 20 per cent food and beverages (F&B) and 10 per cent from ads. Both F&B and in-cinema advertising make multiplexes profitable.

the high-visibility brands...(The top advertisers in multiplexes, June 2014)

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HDFC Life IIFA Awards Xolo Vicco WSO

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...and where they placed themselves(Brands can choose their moment of appearance)

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62

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94

6

5

95

18

82

93

7

62

38

4

96

51

49

70

30

Vicco WSO

A Kotak moment

The Norton ‘security check’ The Polo window

I Sure in women’s washrooms

During intervalBefore movie starts

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With the consolidation in the multiplex business, brands and agencies now have to deal with fewer people. Inox-Satyam is the latest in a line of acquisitions - PVR acquired Cinemax in 2012 and Inox Leisure acquired Fame Cinemas in 2010. Many brands opt for cinema deals based on cost per thousand (CPT). According to Sharma of 9X Media, there will be low and high days because weekdays in north India see thin attendance. On the other hand, footfalls are heavy through the week in the South, especially Tamil Nadu. Surprisingly, brands prefer to advertise more in western Indian theatres.

To attract crowds on weekdays, tickets are priced low and marketing initiatives used in collaboration with brands such as Vodafone, Vivel, Kotak, and Freecharge.in. These are win-win situations for all parties. Cinema houses co-invest with brands to make them grow. It works quite well.

PVR’s ad revenue for last three fiscal years rose from `85 crore to `140 crore between 2011-12 and 2013-14. Big Cinemas’ revenue went up from `18 crore to `44 crore, while Inox Leisure saw revenues move from `33 crore to `50 crore in the same period. Many single screens are trying to transform themselves or converting to multiplexes. Companies like UFO Moviez (which holds rights for 3,500 single screens) provide digitization solutions. The audience is larger (SEC B and C) and it is cheaper to advertise here. Government ads that attempt to educate or spread awareness go for single screens. However, Gurudutt Monas, senior manager, corporate ad sales, UFO Moviez, says, “Corporates are also taking this route and look to full year deals.”

recall and returns

With increasing disposable incomes, families don’t mind spending at multiplexes. On

an average, a family of four in big cities spends at least `1,500 in theatres during the weekends. Every brand is after this audience. The best part about in-cinema advertising is that the recall is higher compared to other media. “Cinema is a much better place to advertise as people are more receptive than in their offices or homes,” says Dutta of PVR.

Measuring the return on investment (ROI) is, however, difficult. According to Karthi Marshan, EVP and head group marketing, Kotak Mahindra Bank, cinema amplifies brand campaigns running on TV so there is no direct ROI for it. Brands can measure kiosk sales and leads, but it’s difficult to put a number to the impact from static branding.

The cost per contact may be high but people like Cherian Peter, CMO, Muthoot Group, feel that it is not a problem. “Everything cannot be looked from an ROI perspective because there are certain things we do for brand building purpose, not for ROI,” he says. Another problem is the limited reach of the medium. Brands have to run multicity and multiweek campaigns since they want more accuracy and transparency.

The density of screens in India is low. There are just eight screens per million people compared to 117 per million in the US. Metros are saturated and next set of investment is coming in the non-metro cities. Brands, unfortunately, are not as bullish about these markets as the theatres would like them to be. n

[email protected]

Onscreen ads are still the most preferred among brands. A multiplex plays an average of 23 ads

(30 seconds each) or 12-15 minutes of advertising. The rate differs from chain to chain and could range from `7,000-20,000 for a 30-second ad. When it comes to off-screen models, poster branding costs between `15,000 and `30,000 a month per poster box while a standee costs around `18,000-25,000.

Brands are now beginning to opt for quarterly, semi-annual and annual deals. A niche or an upmar-ket product goes for screens attracting the SEC A+ audience, while a mass product goes for SEC A, AB screens. Says Shirish Srivastava, senior vice presi-dent - marketing & sales at Reliance MediaWorks, ‘‘Today, 50 per cent of brands opt for the annual deals.’’ It insulates the brand from box-office failures.

Annual deals give companies the chance to use the space to advertise different products at different points of time. Media agencies help theatres get 40 per cent of the deals struck, while the exhibitors get the rest themselves. The innovations are executed by the outdoor agencies. Theatres have adopted the ‘pay per eyeball’ model where brand pays for the number of people visiting the theatre in that period. For now, only premium brands get this offer. "Kotak," says Karthi Marshan, EVP and group head market-ing, "assesses its investments based on the eyeballs reached and not the number of ads aired."

blockbusters