http://www.business-standard.com/india/news/sunil-jain-ad-vantage-anil/367868/
*Sunil Jain:* Ad-vantage Anil Anil Ambani's high-decibel campaign against
the government seems to be workingSunil Jain / New Delhi August 24, 2009,
0:14 IST



If you’re wondering what prompted Anil Ambani to launch a high-decibel
campaign against the government, it is because we’ve seen over the years
that, if conducted well, such campaigns work. In the late 1990s, for
instance, when the government accused Suzuki Motor Company of foul play in
Maruti Udyog Limited, Suzuki ran an ad campaign exposing each one of these
claims. Though it took years for Suzuki to get full control of Maruti,
things started turning around after this as the government lost the moral
high ground.

Ambani learnt this the hard way when, in 2002, he and elder brother Mukesh
(in the pre-split days) muscled their way into the mobile phone market
despite having just a fixed line licence. Thanks to unfair rules, Reliance’s
CDMA-mobile phone had a huge advantage — anyone who called it had to pay
money while when you called an Airtel phone, the Airtel customer paid for
the incoming call. This made the Reliance phone cheaper by half — and since
it hadn’t paid any licence fee, it was even cheaper. The cellular mobile
industry retaliated by blocking calls to/from Reliance; an ad blitz followed
asking a simple question: Why was the telecom regulator being unfair to 11
million cellular mobile users by making them pay for their incoming calls
while these were free for Reliance customers? And why was Reliance not asked
to pay licence fee while their phone companies had to — and passed this on
to them.

Within a few months, the regulator introduced Calling Party Pays which made
incoming calls free for the cellular mobile users as well and Reliance was
forced to pay a licence fee plus a penalty. Cellular tariffs crashed and the
market boomed. As a result, Anil’s group which now owns the telephony part
of the business has moved to cellular mobile. Almost to the day, you can
trace the change in fortunes to that well-orchestrated ad campaign (as in
the Ambani case, there was also a highly-paid legal campaign that ran in
tandem) that, in its wake, also saw Telecom Minister Pramod Mahajan lose his
job for blatantly favouring Reliance.

It’s hardly surprising then, that Anil is using similar tactics now. There
are differences/similarities between the campaigns. The cellular one was
done after the Supreme Court had ruled asking the telecom tribunal to
re-look at the matter keeping in mind the specific allegations of unfair
treatment; the Ambani blitz comes before the Supreme Court has heard the
matter. Both targeted the government through proxies — cellular firms
trained their guns on the telecom regulator and Ambani is focusing on
Petroleum Minister Murli Deora.

It’s difficult to tell if the Ambani campaign has caught the popular
imagination but, while talking of the national interest, the ads focus too
much on brother Mukesh’s Reliance Industries Limited’s (RIL) profits and
consequent losses to the government. For someone who is following the fight,
this makes sense, but does it to others? The cellular industry, by way of
example, has carried out a campaign (not through ads in newspapers) talking
of a Rs 50,000 crore loss Telecom Minister A Raja has caused the exchequer
(that’s much more than what Anil claims the petroleum ministry is helping
RIL skim off), but I haven’t seen any citizen protest.

The Ambani campaign does say the government’s largesse will hike power and
fertiliser costs but not in the kind of detail you’d have liked. If RIL
supplied the 40 mmscmd of gas both Anil and NTPC are in court for, this
would be enough to supply electricity to 10-15 million families. An ad
talking only of how the government was raising the electricity bill of 10-15
million families by 50 per cent would surely be more evocative? Right now,
public perception is that the real fight is about which Ambani should pocket
the money. The ads have done nothing to dispel this, though Anil Ambani
officials privately claim they won’t pocket the money since the cheaper gas
will lower power prices for everyone. It would help if this was stated
upfront as a commitment.

For now though, with the government making noises about protecting NTPC’s
interests — something it hasn’t done for the last five years — the
campaign’s impact is visible. This and the fact that the government has
given some kind of a reply to the charges against it are a welcome move
towards transparency. If the government realises its actions — and not just
in this case — are increasingly going to be exposed publicly, the ad
campaign will have served its purpose. Irrespective of what the Supreme
Court decides.

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