http://www.business-standard.com/india/news/six-leading-advertising-chiefs-quit-to-start-own-agencies/00/32/349178/

Six leading advertising chiefs quit to start own agencies

Seema Sindhu / New Delhi February 16, 2009, 0:16 IST


Six advertising chiefs from leading agencies like JWT, Leo Burnett,
DDB Mudra and Grey Worldwide called it quits over the last
one-and-a-half month to set up their own shops despite the slowing
economy.



A month ago Agnello Dias (former chief creative director of JWT) and
Santosh Padhi (executive creative director, ECD, Leo Burnett)
inaugurated their own agency christened TapRoot India. So did Jagdish
Acharya (former ECD with DDB Mudra) who named his outfit Cut the Crap.
Sukumar Menon (former ECD with Leo Burnett) joined the band with his
agency Black Swan Life, and Brijesh Jacob (former ECD with Grey
Worldwide) set up a digital agency called 22 Feet and a full-service
agency called White Canvas.

All these admen say the slowdown has had no impact on their start-ups,
and they have no difficulty getting clients. They believe they are
more focused, and specialised services will get them clients.

Many of the marketing heads of top companies are from the advertising
world, they reason. Not all of them buy the "all solutions under one
roof" idea, because they know how it works.

Said Santosh Padhi of TapRoot India: "Big agencies will suffer more
than others. When clients can get the same work done for less money,
why wouldn't they move to newborns or any mid-size agency? Ultimately
it's work that matters to them and not agency brand."

He disagreed that dispersing activities across multiple agencies is
expensive. "Big agencies charge no paltry sum. Moreover, a specialised
agency gives better value for money." That's why agencies like Idea,
Adwork, Webchutney have survived, he added.

Emerging media is one favourite area start-ups plan to tap. Padhi said
the duo plans to set up two more ventures in digital and design area.
Cut The Crap has tied up with Design Intersect for product and web
designing. Digital media is just emerging, so it becomes an obvious
choice.

Industry insiders said getting clients for start-ups run by renowned
admen is never a problem since clients connect more with the names
than agencies. Thus, Times of India and Mid Day (earlier with JWT)
have moved to TapRoot India now. TapRoot is also on the verge of
signing four more well-recognised brands in media, retail, cosmetics
and services.

"Clients basically look for a matching personality with their
advertising agenda. That's why agency name takes a back seat and the
adman working on the account becomes more important (this works for
these admen in getting clients)," said Jagdish Acharya from Cut the
Crap.

Added Arvind Sharma, chairman and CEO, Leo Burnett India, concurs:
"Their good past helps them. Negative or positive economic conditions,
it is evident that clients identify more with the creative directors
than the agency."

"Multinational clients and FMCG clients don't have a history of moving
to the startups as their head offices have strict guidelines for their
marketing teams. But domestic biggies don't mind," said Prabhakar
Mundkur, COO, Percept/H.

Others from the fraternity believe that downturn actually might make
the job easy for these start-ups. Mona Jain, India head, strategic
investments, India Media Exchange, (a division of Publicis Groupe
Media), said: "The recession will work to their advantage in terms of
resources at lower rates like office space and workforce."

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