Business Daily from THE HINDU group of publications
Thursday, Jun 14, 2007
ePaper


News
Features
Stocks
Cross Currency
Shipping
Archives
Google

Group Sites

Marketing - Strategy
Industry & Economy - Radio/TV
Radio City's high decibel campaign

Our Bureaus

Mumbai/ New Delhi June 13 Radio City 91.1 FM is launching its largest campaign ever in an effort to mark out a unique position amidst the clutter of radio channels.

Declining to comment on the budget of the `Fun ki nayi Bhasha' campaign which aired last weekend, the channel's National Head of Marketing, Mr Rana Barua, said: "It's the largest we have done so far, and we will run 160 spots a day, over the next three months, and also have ground activities across malls."

The campaign is an extension of the company's recent music video `Bolo whatte fun' starring comic actor Vinay Pathak.The need of the hour for the radio industry is segmentation and differentiation, says Mr Barua. The Music Broadcast Private Ltd (MBPL)-owned radio has identified its listeners as belonging to the age group of 25-34 and from SEC (socio-economic class) AB. The content is strictly adult contemporary.

"We are not into breaking music (read the latest hits). It's more music of the '70s, '80s and '90s," says Mr Barua. The channel is also trying to differentiate itself from competition, offering English content to early morning listeners in Chennai, and Hindi to those in Hyderabad.

With eight stations up and running, the channel expects to add another 12 by July. While cities such as Baroda, Surat, Nagpur and Ahmednagar are on the map for stations, the channel is also expanding its network to smaller towns such as Nagdeo and Sangli in Maharashtra. For the eastern zone, where Radio City has no license, it is considering entering into a strategic alliance.

The channel claims 30 per cent market share in terms of advertisement revenue on radio. According to Mr Ashit Kukian, National Sales Head of Radio City, the market is currently valued at Rs 360 crore, and radio accounts for only 4 per cent of the advertising pie. However, radio's share is expected to double to 8 per cent in the next few years. With advertisers such as Cadbury, Marico and Tata Sky on board, the company expects to grab a significant share of this growth. The radio channel is considering expanding into dedicated music portal space in the next three years.

More Stories on : Strategy | Radio/TV

Article E-Mail :: Comment :: Syndication :: Printer Friendly Page



Stories in this Section
Radio City's high decibel campaign


Honda Motors mulls new bike in 100 cc segment
GM plans mini car rollout at Talegaon plant
Maruti hikes discounts on select models
Coop gains from selling arecanut in small packets
Emirates' super value packages
Café Coffee `sports' store in Pune
Voluntary CAS in 55 cities mooted
Wipro to sell Apple products in India
Pyramid Retail plans home delivery format for TruMart stores
Subhiksha mulls stores in four more States
Heritage Foods plans Daily@ stores
Organised food retailing can increase rural income, cut inflation: Crisil
Fortis plans Rs 800-cr retail spend
`For now, China won't displace India as IT destination'
Booming business
Godrej Consumer launches FairGlow face wash
Sonata unveils plastic watch range
OfficeScan 8.0 unveiled
New hard disc drive from Seagate
Yamaha launches Alba
Digital cameras from Samsung


The Hindu Group: Home | About Us | Copyright | Archives | Contacts | Subscription
Group Sites: The Hindu | The Hindu ePaper | Business Line | Business Line ePaper | Sportstar | Frontline | The Hindu eBooks | The Hindu Images | Home |

Copyright © 2007, The Hindu Business Line. Republication or redissemination of the contents of this screen are expressly prohibited without the written consent of The Hindu Business Line