http://knowledge.wharton.upenn.edu/india/article.cfm?articleid=4328


Newspapers: Indian Language Readers Are Making Their Voices Heard
Published: October 30, 2008 in India [EMAIL PROTECTED]


Newspapers in India, as elsewhere in the world, are habit-forming
products. Readers grow used to a certain format and style along with
their morning cup of tea or coffee, and it takes a lot to make them
change. In Kolkata, The Telegraph, a daily produced by the Ananda
Bazar Patrika group, had to fight for years to overtake The Statesman,
which had earlier been the city's dominant English language daily. The
trade unions, which refused to allow the latter to modernize, had a
role to play in this. Similar battles are taking place among daily
newspapers in other cities. In Delhi, The Times of India (ToI) is
battling it out with Hindustan Times (HT). Both sides claim victory.
In Chennai, the Hindu has beaten back its challengers.

In Mumbai, one of the most competitive markets and the richest in
terms of advertising revenue, ToI still is the dominant daily -- but
it faces a rival that has been shaking up the market for the past
three years. Daily News & Analysis (DNA), which was launched in the
city on July 30, 2005, has built a readership of 622,000, according to
data from the 2008 Indian Readership Survey (IRS). ToI is ahead with
1,571,000 and is followed by stable mate Mumbai Mirror (737,000). But
Mirror piggybacks on ToI -- you can buy the two of them at a
combination price -- so some people question the readership numbers.
DNA is No. 3, ahead of old-timers like Mid-Day (538,000) and newcomers
like HT (381,000), which started its Mumbai edition in mid-July 2005.

DNA's battle with the ToI in Mumbai offers insights into the model
that the Rs3,000 crore ($600 million) Bhaskar Group uses to penetrate
new markets. DNA is the first English venture of the Bhopal-based
conglomerate, which owns several Indian language newspapers such as
Dainik Bhaskar in Hindi and Divya Bhaskar in Gujarati. Experts
interviewed by India [EMAIL PROTECTED] say that the Bhaskar Group's
growth strategy can teach important lessons on the growing market for
Indian language publications as well as the importance of market
research in India's media industry.

"When we looked around, we saw that the vernacular (or Indian
language) markets were taken for granted," says Girish Agarwaal (who
spells his name with an added 'a'), a director of DB Corp., a newly
formed company that oversees the group's media interests. (DNA is run
by a different company -- Diligent Media, a joint venture of the
Bhaskar Group and Subhash Chandra, founder of Zee TV.) "Publishers
just assumed that readers wanted certain things," Agarwaal continues.
They gave them just that through the least expensive means. He gives
an example. Gujaratis are very business minded. The assumption in the
Gujarati press was that business should dominate Page 1. A little
research showed that the folks in this western Indian state were just
as keen on movies and cricket -- which are practically religions in
India -- as readers from other Indian states.

Market Research -- or what some people in Bhaskar describe as MR -- is
crucial to the story of this publishing house. The Bhaskar group
started in 1955 with a Hindi morning daily called Prakash. It sold
some 2,000 copies and soon folded. The driving force was Girish's
grandfather and father of current chairman Ramesh Agarwal. "I was the
odd-job boy," recollects Ramesh.

Dainik Bhaskar, which is today India's No. 2 Hindi daily with an IRS
figure of 31.9 million (Dainik Jagran leads with 56.6 million) was
launched in 1965. When the new generation of Agarwals -- Girish, his
elder brother Sudhir and younger brother Pawan -- started getting
involved, the pace of growth picked up. The inflexion point was
perhaps the launch of the Indore edition in 1983. "At that time Nai
Duniya was the market leader with a circulation of 120,000," says
Ramesh. Dainik Bhaskar started with an initial print run of around
30,000. It stepped that up rapidly. It offered the readers new types
of content. It became No. 1 in months. Since then, Dainik Bhaskar has
chosen its new markets well. "In every city we have gone after that,
our approach has been to be No. 1 from day one," says Girish, who has
been handling sales and marketing. Sudhir, who is managing director,
oversees editorial content while Pawan is responsible for technology,
human resources and new initiatives. Ramesh oversees the group's
non-media businesses. The conglomerate is involved in solvent
extraction (revenues: Rs1,289 crore -- US$265 million) and textiles
(Rs228 crore -- US$47 million) plus several other smaller businesses
which don't contribute much today. Publishing (Rs782 crore -- US$160
million) is less than a third of the business.

Surprising the Reader

The Bhaskar Group launched Divya Bhaskar -- a Gujarati daily -- in
2003. Today, it has a readership of 6 million. (Sandesh has 6.9
million and Gujarat Samachar 8.8 million.) Is Divya Bhaskar No. 1?
According to the Agarwals, in most of the markets in which it is
available, the answer is "Yes". Competitors don't necessarily agree.
But the Agarwals have achieved something that goes beyond quibbling
over numbers. They have put the reader on center stage. "The
vernacular Press in India has been rather static in its approach to
the market, its sets of consumers and their changing needs, wants,
aspirations and desires," says Harish Bijoor, brand specialist and CEO
of Harish Bijoor Consults, a Bangalore based consulting firm.

"Indian newspapers were ignoring readers until the advent of the
Internet," notes Sridhar Samu, assistant professor of strategic
marketing at the Hyderabad-based Indian School of Business (ISB).
"Once the Internet came, they started to serve the computer-savvy
market slightly better by creating and maintaining a website. However,
they still continued to neglect the rest of the market and the bulk of
this was in the rural areas. This rural market not only suffered
because of the content (or lack of content), but also because of
distribution and pricing issues."

The Bhaskar Group has had a different approach. It tries to learn what
the market wants, and instead of outsourcing this task to a market
research agency, it does this largely in-house. For example, when
Dainik Bhaskar made its Rajasthan entry in 1996 with its Jaipur
edition, it surveyed 200,000 potential readers. Before launching DNA
in Mumbai, it went one better; some 600,000 people were surveyed in
the first round. "For us, this is much more than market research; it
is a way of involving the reader," says Girish. Adds Pawan: "We have
always looked at what our consumers want. We have always looked at
things that are latent rather than what they already know. This has
been our primary differentiator in our approach to content. We look at
how we can surprise our reader rather than just please him."

The number of readers that the Bhaskar Group surveys is massive. "If a
survey of 500,000 people were done by an outside agency, the
interviews alone would cost Rs1.25 crore (US$250,000)," says Bijoor.
And the number crunching would further inflate the bill. "At any point
of time, I can call upon 500 people and they'll be there," says
Ramesh. This small army -- the core research team -- is drawn from
both the media arm and the group's other businesses. But does this
group deliver? Girish says they are trained and they have more
commitment. The survey is done over a couple of months, so it's not a
big strain. It also makes a difference that a person from Dainik
Bhaskar is administering the questionnaire. It's not a college student
making some pocket money but an employee aware of the product. Most
prospects -- who are potential readers -- are interviewed twice.

This approach has worked, and observers say it goes well beyond
traditional market research. "I would consider this part of a
relationship-building process," says Samu of ISB. "Increasing the
level of involvement of consumers with any product or brand can lead
to higher levels of commitment to the product and a continued
engagement with it. Customer relationship management is a
well-established field within marketing and has been used by
international companies, such as Unilever with their Dove brand."

"This is not plain old market research," says Bijoor. "I believe it is
intrusive marketing. It is marketing of the paper and its appeal
intrusively from Day 1. It is a way of interactive marketing as well.
The reader gets involved in putting together the formula for her
paper, right in her own home. This becomes a talking point. The
newspaper gets created amidst large sets of consumers and not dipstick
sample sizes. To that extent it is intrusive, interactive, involving
and lowbrow. Readers and consumers love this. The first one that does
this gets remembered and gets away with it. If someone else repeats
it, the benefit is less."

Bhaskar Group executives say the purpose of the exercise is not just
to create awareness, but to get readers involved in designing the
newspaper. Ramesh gives an example. When they launched Diyva Bhaskar
in Gujarat, their research discovered that readers preferred a mixture
of English and Gujarati (the easily understood language of the
ordinary man) rather than the pure Gujarati (which had little presence
outside the textbooks). "That's what we gave them," he says. Adds
group editor Shravan Garg: "The story of successful newspapers should
not be different from the box-office hits of Bollywood." (In India's
film capital and ad world, the language of the movies is Hinglish --
an amalgam of Hindi and English. Even American icon Pepsi launched in
India with the line: "Yehi hai right choice, baby.")

Another example, says Ramesh, is that in the past, stock market quotes
in all Gujarati papers were listed according to the Gujarati names of
the companies. Nobody could find a company without a lot of searching.
(People were used to referring to them by their English acronyms.) "We
started listing them in English," says Ramesh. "Now everybody does
that." Girish adds: "When you get your readers involved in the
creation process, you create a sense of ownership."

"It depends on the level of involvement the company is able to
create," says Samu of ISB. "It is possible for consumers to identify
with the product (normally more with a brand rather than a product)
when they feel that the company is responsive to their suggestions.
This is typically referred to as "brand community" and is part of the
marketing of some well-known international brands such as Harley
Davidson." Adds Bijoor: "Consumers identify with the product,
particularly if you keep harping about it all the time, as the Bhaskar
group has done. You must not only do it, but you must also keep
reminding readers that you have done it."

There were other launch innovations, too. Among them: an invitation
price lower than the normal rate and a six-month subscription offer at
a discounted rate. "If people willingly pay the full price for a car
and then wait several months for delivery, why shouldn't they do it
for a newspaper?" asks Pawan. Some of these techniques, however, have
been tried out by others.

"Pre-selling of a paper is a price bundling strategy," says Bijoor.
"When you adopt this, you adopt a discounting strategy. This helps
because it does wonders to the working capital requirement of the
publication and costs less than market-borrowed funds, ensures a
six-month loyalty period for a newspaper in an individual home,
ensures lock-in of the reader, helps facilitate an environment of
sameness of publication in an individual home which results in
reduction of dissonance with the brand due to repeat use alone, and
most importantly is a barrier to entry for other publications into the
home."

"On a scale of 1 (not innovation) to 10 (high level of innovation), I
would rank pre-selling as a 3 or 4," says Samu. "So it is not really a
significant innovation. Magazines have been doing this for a long
time. However, this was one of the first examples of a newspaper doing
this and it has certainly worked very well for them."

What about the invitation price? "An invitation price goes back to
theories of learning," Samu explains. "When consumers are given an
opportunity to buy something at a low invitation price, they are more
likely to buy the product. After a few purchases, consumers learn to
like the product and they continue to purchase it even after the price
reverts back to its normal level. Of course, there is a significant
drop-off if regular prices are much higher than the invitation price."

India's leading publishing house, Bennett Coleman & Co., which
publishes The Times of India, has experimented with these marketing
tactics. With several publications, its marketing executives have also
tried combination subscription pricing for various publications and
have extended the concept to ad rates. What makes the Bhaskar Group's
approach different is the massive consumer survey, which has made it
the subject of various Indian case studies. According to a report by
Erehwon Innovation Consulting, "The Dainik survey is an awesome
experience. They build their own teams of part-timers from scratch.
For instance, in Ahmedabad [for the Divya Bhaskar launch], they used
1,050 surveyors, 64 supervisors, 16 zonal managers and four divisional
managers. Dainik surveyed 1,200,000 households -- possibly the single
biggest consumer contact program in history. And they met each
household twice.

"Intense training was conducted on grooming, etiquette, body language,
social skills and methods of engagement.... The surveyors did so well
that when they went back for the second round, they were greeted like
long-lost friends and offered refreshments.... Their morning begins
with a prayer... with over 200 people standing in straight lines and
singing in unison... Then after a short briefing, they hit the road."

Divya Bhaskar has also been the subject of a case study by the Indian
Institute of Management (Ahmedabad), and Dainik Bhaskar's Jaipur
launch has been likewise written up by the Mudra Institute of
Communications, also in Hyderabad. "The strength of the group has been
its [ability to] connect at the ground level with not only the channel
that distributes its publications, but the readers in the end-home as
well," says Bijoor.

Sudhir Agarwal has a problem, however, with all these case studies
that celebrate the group's "marketing" achievements. "In my view,
'case studies in marketing' should not be misunderstood in the
editorial context," he says. "Making a product successful requires a
holistic approach. When you reach a new market or a new reader, what
matters most are the company's name, its goodwill, its past successes
and the kind of emotional connectivity it can offer. The reader is yet
to see the product editorially. In a world dominated by corporate
competition, the best of editorial content may fail to see the light
of day if not marketed properly. But, at the same time, it should also
be accepted that marketing alone will not help any product sustain
itself for a long time. The successes of Dainik Bhaskar and Divya
Bhaskar should be considered case studies in editorial marketing."

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