Starts 3rd October

Vanita Keswani

Madison Media Sigma

Poulomi Roy

Joy Personal Care

Hema Malik

IPG Mediabrands

Anita Kotwani

Dentsu Media

Archana Aggarwal

Ex-Airtel

Anjali Madan

Mondelez India

Anupriya Acharya

Publicis Groupe

Suhasini Haidar

The Hindu

Sheran Mehra

Tata Digital

Rathi Gangappa

Starcom India

Mayanti Langer Binny

Sports Prensented

Swati Rathi

Godrej Appliances

Anisha Iyer

OMD India

  • ESPN bungs in more centres for School Quiz 2001

    The ESPN School Quiz 2001 kicked off in Mumbai last Thursday at the Shanmukhananda Hall in central Mumbai with over 3

  • MRUC ready to monitor ratings systems, seeks meeting with IBF

    The Media Research Users Council (MRUC), in its response to the controversy surrounding the leakage in television pan

  • Channel Guide makes formal launch

    Submitted by ITV Production on Sep 08, 2001

    Channel Guide, which started beaming its test signals four months ago, was formally launched earlier this week at the Club in the northern Mumbai suburb of Andheri.
    Channel Guide India managing director Rajesh Jain says that loads of research has gone into the channel before its launch.
    ‘We are spending more on state-of-art technology and distribution, but the programming cost is almost nil for us. All the data is provided by the advertising channels themselves. I feel this will help us to break even in fourteen months,‘ says a visibly relaxed and confident Jain.

    The television channel is an innovation for the Indian market as it is hoping to serve as a promotional platform for the entire entertainment industry - namely, television, films, music and events.

    ‘It also provides programming info to viewers in a simple format. Any person will get to know maximum within six minutes what is going on on any of the channels,‘ he points out.

    At present, Channel Guide is not charging advertisers and partners for placing their promos. Channel Guide COO Ravi Deshmukh says that advertisers will be provided prime and non-prime time slots with rates for the former being on a par with the prevailing commercial market rates.

    ‘We will start charging from mid-October when our channel will be reaching 3 million homes,‘ says Deshmukh. As of now the reach, is 2.1 million.

    Deshmukh reveals that that three channels have already confirmed their partnership status with Channel Guide.

    From 1:00 pm to 7:00 pm, time slots will be sold to advertisers - be they channels or event creators or producers - for shows/events that each of them wants to promote. The rest of the time will be allocated to promos of various channels in a format designed by Channel Guide programming executives themselves.

    Each screen can have a maximum of 16 small windows, showing what is going on 16 channels at any point of time along with a live programming schedule which will change every few minutes. The management is planning to reduce the number of channels visible to four at a time.

    Programming blocks in Hindi and English have been set aside. "In the near future we are going to dedicate separate time slots for regional languages," says Deshmukh. "Marathi, Gujarathi, Bengali and Punjabi are the four languages on the cards."

    One of the shows that Deshmukh is extremely kicked about is Meet the Telebrity featuring a popular TV personality. The first episode features Amar (Mihir) Upadhayay.

    Channel Guide is beaming off Thaicom-3 as a free-to-air service. The channel is looking forward to getting an Indian uplinking from either Delhi or Hyderabad.

    Technical Specifications:

    Satellite : Thaicom - 3
    Downlink Frequency : 3554 MHz
    FEC : 2/3
    Downlink Polarisation : Vertical
    Symbol rate : 13333 Kg Symbol/sec
    Free-To-Air

     

  • Channel Guide makes formal launch

    Channel Guide, which started beaming its test signals four months ago, was formally launched earlier this week at the

  • ZEE TV: NO RATINGS, NO SWEAT - YOUR TIME WILL COME

    The latest TAM ratings are out.

  • MRUC ready to monitor ratings systems, seeks meeting with IBF

    Submitted by ITV Production on Sep 08, 2001

    The Media Research Users Council (MRUC), in its response to the controversy surrounding the leakage in television panel lists in Mumbai on Monday and subsequently in Chennai yesterday, today offered to take up the role of a monitoring body and ensure that the research is credible and economical.

    The resolution came after a rather heated meeting held immediately after the release of the IRS 2001 Platinum Report (a study of the media and product consumption habits of India‘s top 3.7 per cent sampling six metropolitan cities), has committed to offering suggestions on how to rectify the systemic collapse.

    Among those who actively participated in the discussions were advertising and media doyen Roda Mehta, Rathnakar Rai, MD, Primetime-IP Media Services Ltd, Ashish Bhasin, president, Initiative Media and Andrey Purushottam, MD, Starcom.

    There were some key key points that came through in the discussions:

    1) Need for accurate data;

    2)People meters are the best option;

    3)There were definite doubts in the minds of users / industry;

    4) There were concerns expressed as to the way the samples were organised - both in size terms and the bundling of panels in very close proximity.

    Bhasin suggested that till a proper response was given by the research agencies (TAM and INTAM), the industry should suppress the data given by the two organisations. He also demanded the total revamp of all the panels, not just in Mumbai, but all over the country.

    Purushottam urged that the merger process of the two agencies be accelerated while at the same time instituting clear controls on the functioning of the new entity with regards to data collation.

    Mehta lamented the lack of investment being put into quality research by the industry saying: "A healthy industry needs good healthy research."

    She saw MRUC‘s role (provided adequate funds were made available by the industry) as an overseer, designing the research methodologies and monitoring the fieldwork.

    This whole exercise will be futile if funding was not made available, Mehta said.

    It was also suggested that the MRUC and the Indian Broadcasting Foundation have a meeting to thrash out key issues required to be addressed so as to get things in order again.

    A step that MRUC has agreed to take.

     


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