The document summarizes a study by TNS India on creating effective television advertising during Diwali. It analyzed nine ads from brands such as Amazon, Cadbury, Coca-Cola, and found the most successful ads integrated the Diwali themes and values authentically while staying true to the brand. The best ads achieved both short-term activation and long-term brand building by understanding the audience's ideals related to Diwali and not over-sentimentalizing or dismissing holiday values. The study also found brands need to balance Diwali themes with their own values to have an authentic integration.
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Welcome
Diwali promises to be a time of
intensive sales promotion activity in
India. Advertisers will vie for the
gifting budgets of both individuals
and organisations as the festival
of lights provides a prime
opportunity to capitalise on heavy
trade volumes.
Immediate returns are expected from
investment in communications and
promotion, but the pressure is also
on as brands compete to raise their
brand equity in a period notorious
for cluttered holiday advertising.
We recently examined a number of high profile 2014 Diwali ads to determine the attributes of
success for brands investing in promotional activity during this lucrative sales period.
In this report, we employed three leading TNS metrics to establish the success of these Diwali ads:
g Short-term index: This index establishes how motivated people feel to act having watched the
ads. It is based on all Diwali ads measured in the study and uses TNS AdEval methodology.
g Long-term index: This index establishes the long-term brand building potential of an ad through
an ‘affective memory potential’ (AMP) score covering the three dimensions of ’novelty’, ‘affective
impact’ and ’relevance’. This judges whether the campaign will be noticed and brand associations
assimilated into long term memory.
g NeedScope: Our proprietary toolkit for understanding emotions in marketing is a psychological
framework, revealing the emotional territory that the campaign occupies; and uncovering the
drivers of irresistibility in brands.
Our in-depth study has uncovered the three key insights that help define Diwali success when it
comes to holiday campaign investment.
If you are interested in learning more about anything you read here, please do get in touch.
Best wishes,
Chhavi Bhargava
Managing Director
TNS India
Chhavi.Bhargava@tnsglobal.com
+91 124 4488800
Nitin Nishandar
Regional Managing Director,
Brand & Communication,
TNS in Asia Pacific
nitin.nishandar@tnsglobal.com
+65 6597 7387
4. The Diwali Effect
Brand building
versus activation
Good advertising can secure immediate audience
engagement and provide positive benchmark
metrics, but in their efforts to secure the rupees
of shoppers during this key holiday period, some
brands sacrifice brand building in favour of
activation. Those that only focus on short-term
results can do themselves a disservice.
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5. The Diwali Effect 5
LG NeedScope positioning
The NeedScope profile reveals a lack of distinction as the ad
hovers in the ‘no-man’s land’ centre of the map, confirming that
the audience found it lacked a clear emotional direction due to its
unoriginal content. The montage of a young family using the
various LG products during Diwali lacked both a compelling
storyline and stirring visuals, failing to move the audience
on an emotional level. Whilst it was tactically effective at
communicating product information, it neglected the
longer-term brand-building opportunity.
Brand building versus activation
Case Study: LG
LG promotes a wide product range in this tactical TVC with snippets of
information conveyed about each new product as the camera jumps from
situation to situation throughout the home – cooking a meal in a LG
microwave, fetching a drink from an LG fridge at a party, taking photos
during the celebrations, ending with fireworks on the family’s balcony.
The ad over-indexes on short-term impact - the highest ranked ad of all
reviewed - but brand building suffered as it significantly under-indexed on
long-term impact metrics.
6. The Diwali Effect 6
Case Study: Snapdeal
It is possible for holiday ads to successfully promote immediate sales and
simultaneously nurture longer-term brand equity. In this short ad from online
shopping portal Snapdeal, the veteran Bollywood actor and favourite babuji
(Indian father figure) gives Diwali blessings to viewers. He moves from a
traditional setting to a not-so-traditional location - a graffitied street - whilst
discussing the availability and access to original products on Snapdeal. It is
straightforward in its dramatic structure led by the talking-head speaking
directly to the audience, but nevertheless is engaging and scores highly for
the ‘novelty’ and ‘relevance’ AMP metrics.
Brand building versus activation
Novelty was generated through quirky twists of phrase and setting, whilst
‘relevance’ came via the promise of original products. Snapdeal’s tactical
approach dynamically aligned it with the practical needs of its audience -
discounts - and over-indexed on short-term engagement measures. But it
also captured the audience in a way that elevated long-term measures. In
comparison to LG, this ad provides the better return on advertising spend.
7. The Diwali Effect 7
Short and long term scores of Snapdeal ad
The efficient use of the Diwali theme coupled with the celebrity casting
created lasting brand memories and helped the ad establish short term
and long term impact.
See Talk
Short term
72
78
Norm
Long term
Novelty Affective Relevance
59
55 56
Norm
Brand building versus activation
8. The Diwali Effect 8
The role of emotions
and values
Advertising during the holiday season has different rules to the rest of the
year as brands must be respectful of the special considerations unique to
Indian festival. Despite it being a poignant time of year, brands must also
be careful not to rely too heavily on emotions to carry their ad without
showcasing anything new.
Indian audiences are more demanding of their TV commercials during
festivals like Diwali, as attention is not only more divided because
people are busier, but the cultural collective conscious is more precisely
focused around seasonal ideas, like prosperity and positivity. In a 2014
TNS UK Christmas advertising study, brands faced similar challenges to
entertain seasonal audiences whilst achieving advertising objectives and
maintaining holiday spirit
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9. The Diwali Effect 9
The role of emotions and values
Case Study: Cadbury
In this ad a forlorn soldier is playing cards on Diwali eve with his
military unit when his family surprises him. Whilst it scored highly
for the third AMP metric (affective impact) because of its ‘family’
messaging, it was average for ‘relevance’ and ‘novelty’ due to its
familiar approach, which did not highlight anything new about the
brand. Overall, over-reliance on emotion and lack of novelty has
limited the long term potential of the ad.
10. The Diwali Effect 10
The role of emotions and values
The ad challenges both Diwali traditions and etiquette and comes off as
disrespectful, rather than the aim of being casual and fun. This is a significant
contributor to its low relevance score and flat affective impact.
Case Study: Coca-Cola
When a brand does not properly acknowledge the significance or
connotations of Diwali, it can quickly result in a negative impact. Brands must
carefully balance the core festival values with their own. This ad depicts an
aunt and uncle paying a surprise visit to their nephew and his wife, the latter
of whom they relieve of formal hosting duties by bringing a bottle of
Coca-Cola.
11. The Diwali Effect 11
Case Study: Titan
Likewise, this ad begins with a young, affluent
couple who feel distanced from each other. As a way
of requesting more of her husband’s time she gives
him the metaphorical gift of time - a wristwatch.
The subtle tensions portrayed are incongruent with
traditional Diwali sentiments, such as happiness,
feeling and belonging. While the Titan ad scored
close to norms on both short-term and long-term
measures, it could have been even more successful
if the festive sentiments had been integrated more
strongly into the narrative.
Case Study: Havells
Upholding festival values also extends to advertising
tonality. This ad suffers due to its negative, sarcastic
take on gifting by depicting a formerly disgruntled
customer who gifts his energy provider customer
service representative a box of LED lights. He explains
that the lights have saved him money and jeeringly
suggests that the energy company use them too.
The storyline is innovative, but the ad scored lowest
overall, and on each individual AMP metric because
the protagonist gives his gift in ridicule, a sentiment
that does not align with the values of Diwali - hope
and positivity. Viewers rejected the value system that
the ad endorses, and it fails because the ad does not
‘understand’.
The role of emotions and values
70%
35%
65%
31%
Norms
Short: 73%
Long: 36%
Short term
Long term
Short and long term responses
to Havells and Titan ads
Both ads perform below average due to
the negative or sarcastic emotions which
are at odds with the spirit of Diwali.
12. Authenticity is key
Although understanding what to avoid is useful, for key sales
periods like Diwali, the ‘what to do’ is absolutely crucial. Ads that
authentically integrate the Diwali theme and values performed
better on long-term brand building. The challenge is to determine
how to faithfully incorporate those festival themes and values with
the brand’s assets and values, especially when they seem disparate.
Despite the route to integration being more obvious for brands like
Cadbury and Coca-Cola, that naturally reside in the same friendly
territory as Diwali, having a similar emotive positioning to the
holiday is no guarantee of a successful outcome. As already
identified, neither executed their creative well and both
under-indexed. In fact the Coca-Cola ad’s NeedScope profile
revealed a more assertive’ profile in contrast to the brand’s normal
‘friendly’ and ‘carefree’ positioning, a space that Diwali also
naturally embraces.
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The Diwali Effect 12
13. The Diwali Effect 13
Coca-Cola Needscope positioning
The ‘friendly’ and ‘carefree’ positioning were already the core of Coca-Cola values, but
in this ad the brand stretched in the opposite direction and reached the ‘assertive’ area
- far removed from its heartland and that of Diwali.
Need
Heartland of Diwali and brand
roots of Coca-Cola The Coca-Cola Diwali ad roots
Authenticity is key
14. The Diwali Effect 14
Authenticity is key
Sony NeedScope positioning
Sony’s brand roots position it on the ‘assertive’ side of
the Needscope framework but its Diwali ad has shifted
the brand further towards the centre. This brand stretch
allows it to align with Diwali as the ad has migrated the
brand positioning towards the holiday area. However, as
with the successfully ads analysed in the 2014 TNS study,
Revealed: The Chinese New Year ads delivering double
prosperity, Sony was careful to not migrate too far from its
recognised brand territory. By using the shimmer of Diwali
sparklers as a visual metaphor for the technology, Sony
inextricably links the Diwali theme to the ad execution.
Case Study: Sony
Authentic holiday ad integration goes beyond emotive positioning, with the best ads
embracing the ideas of the festival and using them as a starting point for communications
development. When Diwali festivities were used conceptually in ad design, results were
better - ads that embraced the festival theme holistically tested better than those that only
used the obvious trappings of Diwali in a superficial way. The ad from Sony is a beautiful
and mesmerising piece of footage complimented by a emotive soundtrack. The ad features
children playing with Diwali sparklers to showcase Sony’s TriluminousTM LED television
display technology and is a good example of how ads can use the holiday theme to
highlight product features and benefits in order to reap the greatest advantage.
73%
42%
Norms
Short: 73%
Long:36%
Short term
Long term
Need
Heartland of Diwali Sony brand roots
15. The Diwali Effect
The Diwali Effect study has shown that the
best ads take advantage of both activation and
brand-building opportunities, thoroughly understand
their audience’s ideals in relation to the holiday, and
crucially, do not over-sentimentalise nor dismiss
holiday values and traditions. It can be challenging
for brands whose roots naturally lie in the ‘assertive’
territory to successfully integrate Diwali themes and
simultaneously remaining true to their brand values.
Success during Diwali
The best commercials holistically integrate
the holiday into the communication using the
festival’s symbolism, principles and metaphors
whilst exemplifying the brand in a way that is
authentic as well as faithful to the holiday.
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