July
10, 2000
Yeh dil mange more
The two advertising
agencies doing battle for the cola kings have already slugged it out
on these pages, so let me punch in a non-cola drinking viewers
opinion. Forget the statistics and the debate, as far as advertising
recall goes, Pepsi has no competition at all. Also, it has won the war
in style, creating slogans that have captured the fancy of an entire
nation. Its true that there was fairly tame and irritating stuff too,
like the Eat Cricket, Sleep Cricket slugfest.
But, the Nothing official about it campaign
the coup which spoiled Cokes World Cup has probably made
Pepsi eternally grateful to its advertising agency. The other big one
was the Dil mange more campaign.
The
slogan gained immortality with Captain Vikram Batra, the Param Vir Chakra
awardee saying the words in the context of the Kargil just before he
was martyred during the battle for Tiger Hill. It demonstrates the sort
of mindshare and recall that Pepsi dare not speak about without being
labelled downright crass. But there is no doubt at all that the television
image of the brave Batras had had an entire nation all choked
up. Finally, there is the Hritik commercial. From the viewer point of
view, Coke took a mega sensation and wasted him with a soppy story line.
Pepsi may be number two around the world, but it seems the big winner
in India and that is not a sponsored opinion.
Wage notes
The battle for the housing turf is getting all as vicious as the cola
wars. The battle here is between HDFC and ICICI (no also rans) and we
will bring you frequent reports from the front. For the moment, a reader
(shareholder) has mailed us the salaries of HDFCs Big
Guys which were kept out of its annual report. Chairman
Deepak Parekh draws Rs 46.6 lakh, less than half that of his rival K.V.Kamath
in ICICI even minus ESOPs. Its MD, Deepak Satwalekar takes home Rs 30.1
lakh no comparison at all to Lalita Gupte or even Bhojani.
Others
are K.M.Mistry (Rs 28 lakh), Renu Karnad (Rs 17.8 lakh), and the General
Managers M.G. Barve (12.4 lakh), Satish Mehta (10.6 lakh), S. N. Shroff
(10.3 lakh) and Susil Kumar (10.2 lakh). Our reader agrees that HDFC
is probably embarrassed at how many of them are so small
in relation to comparable organisations! and says that even
if one takes into account the stock options, HDFC is probably much
better placed than Hindustan Lever to give a thumping big raise to its
employees - at least to those who are performing!
Topiwallah v/s tiewallah
There was a time when Indias oldest stock exchange was proud of
its image as the good old desi exchange comprising topiwallah brokers
and traders as compared to the upstart, automated, institutional, tiewallah
National Stock Exchange (NSE). Globalisation and Anand Rathis
tenure as President has changed all that today the BSE is more
tiewallah than the NSE. Probably part of its image to attract the attention
of the New York Stock Exchange and the NASDAQ. In the meanwhile, the
NSE which is the richer exchange seems to be continuously expanding
its turf with strategic investments in a range of businesses. It now
has tie-ups with CRISIL for index products, with IL & FS for a debt
market portal and HDFC Bank. It is also looking at doing more with its
broker-testing module having already initiated talks with a couple of
companies.
The SHCIL audit
There is more on the anonymous letter that has alleged irregularities
at the Stock Holding Corporation of India (SHCIL). Though the last board
meeting did not discuss the letter, it has been referred to the Audit
Committee for inquiry. Also, P.S.Subramaniam is expected to be far more
hands-on than SHCILss past chairpersons and probe issues raised
by the letter. In fact, Subramaniam, was to be inducted as Chairman
at an even earlier board meeting and had walked away with irritation
at what he considered were delaying tactics by the management. He is
particularly keen on a proper reconciliation of securities, both physical
and demat ones in SHCILss possession.
Updated
weekly.
The
author's e-mail address is: suchetadalal@yahoo.com
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