Business Standard

Swinging at fifty

Will one of the country’s oldest brand mascots live to be a hundred?

- SOHINI DAS

For one who has spent a lifetime staring down hoardings, the Amul girl wearing what would be a fashion malfunctio­n today — a polka-dotted frock — wields far greater clout than any brand ambassador does in India. Her sharp and stinging take on current events makes her the undisputed showstoppe­r at any brand party. But can she survive the age of outrage?

Rahul daCunha, managing director and creative head, daCunha Communicat­ions, is unfazed. He believes her popularity even today is proof that “Amul is going to comment forever.” Relevance, he says, has in fact grown with the advent of social media.

Social media has helped the agency keep pace with public opinion far better than it could have done half a decade back. It has helped keep the brand fresh even as the number of ads has increased several times since its early years. “From one creative a month in the initial years it’s now five or six creatives a week,” he says.

Is this not overkill? To an extent this is inevitable. daCunha says, “India in 2016 is bound to have over bombardmen­t of informatio­n. Politicall­y, socially, there is so much happening now which was not the case even five years ago.” But how does he deal with the tirade brigade that takes offence easily and targets brands that court controvers­y?

“We keep a close watch on when to react. Like for instance, we came out with a topical (ad) immediatel­y after the Pathankot attacks, but in case of Uri, we waited for eight days trying to analyse how the nation is thinking,” he explains. That does not mean that the Amul girl will stop sticking her neck out, he adds.

While the ads make an effort to keep up with the times and stay relevant to changing audience, the manner in which the ad is created has not changed much since the time it all started. Cartoonist Jayant Rane painstakin­gly paints the creatives which are scanned into a computer and the final creative is generated. Copywriter Manish Jhaveri comes up with tongue-in-cheek one-liners. The original was created by Eustace Fernandes, art director of DaCunha Communicat­ions in 1966 and the ageless jingle “utterly butterly delicious” coined by Sylvester’s wife Nisha daCunha. Today daCunha says that there is an extended team of around ten people. This has been necessary given that the ad now comes up with topical taglines in regional languages too.

daCunha says that over the years, his team has tried to make the mascot and the ads more relevant by taking local sensibilit­ies into account. It also runs separate campaigns for some cities. daCunha says, “Chennai is like a country in itself. We do a separate campaign for Chennai. The people don’t speak Hindi and Bollywood is definitely not a craze.” For instance, recently a ~55 crore wedding in Chennai was the talk of the town. It was not really a rage in the national media but the ad was tweaked to reflect that. “The main task is to gauge if an issue is ‘hot’ today, whether it will still remain ‘hot’ after five days,” he says. And that keeps the Amul ads sizzling, even at fifty.

 ??  ?? The Amul tagline has remained unchanged since it was first coined in 1966
The Amul tagline has remained unchanged since it was first coined in 1966

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