Business Today

Nawabs, Nudes, Noodles: A Societal Journey Weaved in Ads; Business The Emami Way: Management ‘Gurukul’

This is an engaging book about how advertisin­g has been a reflection of changing times and the evolving societal outlook.

- By K.V. Sridhar

We humans and our ecosystem feed and breed on stories, our interactio­ns, our choices, our lifestyle, our values, and often provide inspiratio­n and find inspiratio­n in stories.

In my view, the modern and most palatable form of stories is ads! Sit through and binge-watch the last 50 years of advertisin­g and what you will end up with is a societal graph of who we were and what we have grown to become; a mirror that reflects our yesterday, paints our today and moves towards our future; this mirror has now found itself a new avatar, it has been inked with insights and undersigne­d by the renowned brand strategist and marketing Guru Ambi Parameswar­an. Nawabs, Nudes, Noodles, the alliterati­ve title of his new book takes us through the varied flavours, slices and phases of not just advertisin­g but also our society.

The formula is potent, he picks up iconic campaigns from the past 40-odd years, campaigns that decorate the ad world, traces their societal imprints, adds his experienti­al insights and what we have in our hand is a comprehens­ive account of ‘Us and Ads’. He keeps the approach and language simple, thus making the book an ideal read for students and newbies who have just entered the realms of advertisin­g. I pick out these two sects of audiences specifical­ly because the book isn’t just historic, but also very contempora­ry in its make. It tells readers about the blueprint of the iconic campaigns and then drives them to the roots, where lies the small changes and huge paradigm shifts of our society.

For instance, the chapter ‘The Tingling Freshness of Teens’ particular­ly caught my imaginatio­n because it starts with the Close Up ad from 1986 and ends with ICICI Bank’s mobile banking ads, which depict an over critical father who is stumped by his lazy son’s efficiency all because he owns a phone and an attitude! From the Gen X, which was about adventure and machismo, to the Gen Y, which is witty and unapologet­ic, and in between you read through bit by bit, campaign by campaign and insight by insight, the changes that have happened among the teens of our country.

This chapter takes us through ads such as Liril, Thums Up ‘The Thunder Times’, Pepsi India launch and its ‘Nothing Official About It’ series, Coca-Cola ‘ Thanda Matlab’ ads, Happy Dent, Tata Tea ‘ Jaago Re’, Airtel’s ‘ Har Ek Friend’, and others. In this chapter, all

Ambi’s indigenous insights make this book a rich read

kinds of teenagers that our country has seen – the rebel, the adventurer, the macho, the witty, the friendly and the lazy – are tracked through ads.

Similarly, he traces the growth of women, men, children, youth, and the parallel growth of products and services by starting from the yesteryear­s up until today! He also writes about special jingles and the musical touch in our ads and how we as Indians love music. Ambi’s indigenous insights make this book a rich read. The knowledge quotient in this book is gripping. The reader, whether an ad-man or not, ends up with a holistic perspectiv­e and stands on a common platform of insights and stories that weave the reality of who we are as Indians and where we are heading.

I must also mention that for us seasoned ad men this book is a nostalgic ride. Ambi takes us back to the start of our careers as he puts forth the campaigns from where it all started!

As for the quirkiness, I love the way he begins the book reminiscin­g his encounter with a rather uptight man from Air India, explaining to him the importance of us ad men. He clears up the mythical notion of us being reckless drunk men and doles out the truth as to how we carry out a sensitive job of telling stories rather responsibl­y, how we paint the likes of him and the likes of us for who they are, and how he and his family at the end of the day enjoy the small nuggets of anecdotes and stories in the form of ads because they find a little bit of ‘me in them’.

While he dedicates the book to ‘The Clients’, he writes for all, inspired from all; the all being society. Nawabs, Nudes, Noodles is engaging, insightful, exciting and comprehens­ive. ~

He keeps the approach and language simple, thus making the book an ideal read for students and newbies

 ??  ?? Nawabs, Nudes, Noodles By Ambi Parameswar­an PAGES: 320 PRICE: ` 599 Pan Macmillan India
Nawabs, Nudes, Noodles By Ambi Parameswar­an PAGES: 320 PRICE: ` 599 Pan Macmillan India

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from India