Amar Chitra Katha
Amar Chitra Katha
Amar Chitra Katha
Dr Amit Rangnekar
www.dramitrangnekar.com
Case learnings
Successful marketing strategy of an Indian childrens
brand
How ACK, built on print media, is connecting to its
target audience through relevant new platforms
ACKs attempt to emerge as a credible online authority
on India mythology & culture
Brand building in the Indian context
Analysis based on branding models
International
Expensive
Tintin
Asterix
Archies
Ben10
Afordable
Chandamama
Champak
Vernacular
Phantom
Popeye
Disney
Tinkle
Commando
Richie Rich
Noddy
DC (Superman, Batman,
Robin, Wonder Woman)
Marvel (Spiderman, Spider Girl,
X-Men & Wolverine, Hulk,
Fantastic 4)
Comics in India
1930s- US, animated films popular, led to comics
Superheroes- Phantom, Superman, Batman- hits
1947 Chandamama, published in 6 languages since
1950s- Indrajal Comics (TOI) published US comics
1960s-Daabu (Milap) by Pran (Chacha Chaudhary)
1967- Amar Chitra Katha- Indian mythology & culture
1980s- Indrajal NPL Bahadur, ACK NPL Tinkle
Comic graphics improved, but TV, Video games affected
2007- Rs 100cr industry, 5mn English + 25 mn vernacular
Possible to create a local Superman/ Batman?
Comics
School
Indian
History
Art
Hobby
Stories
Mythology
Childhood
Knowledge
ACK 2008
Indias most popular comic series ever
90+ million copies till date
3 million copies per year, 10000 every day
436 volumes collection
20+ languages
Global ambassador for Indian culture & heritage
Quintessential middle-class India culture ideologue
ACK genesis
Anant Pai, UDCT Engineer, passion- publishing & comics
Failed with children's magazine (Manav, 1954)
1967 Dismayed when Delhi boys unable to answer Indian
mythology quiz, but could answer on Greek mythology
Quit Indrajal (TOI) when Indian section dropped
Mooted comic on Indian mythology & national heroes,
most publishers rejected (Allied to Jaico)
1967 HG Mirchandani, India Book House, agreed
ACK conceived and edited by Pai (Uncle Pai)
Founding thoughts
Children love stories & stories with
pictures are even more popular
Objective- Credible source of
Indian mythology, folklore, epics,
history, culture & heritage for
children
Target- English educated urban
Indian children
Position- Indian-style Aesop fables
Comic book format, Art +
1st edition
1969- 1st issue Krishna, No. 11, 30 page
Monthly (then fortnightly)
Not full colour- Panels in yellow, blue & green
Subsequent issues, in full colour
1st issue lacked miracles-Krishna lifting Govardhan
Pai (engineer) skeptical of miracles, relented
(Superman without super powers?)
Krishna reprinted 60 times, 1 million+ copies
Followed by Ramayana and Mahabharata
Indias most popular comic series
ACK contribution
Colourful window into Indias glorious history and
mythology for urban Indian nuclear families
Filled traditional story telling void (Grandparents)
launch coincided with shift away from joint families
Ubiquitous, shaped Indian sensibility and identity
Entertainment + education + reading habits
Connects Indian diaspora to India
English helped reach majority of children
Brought alive architecture, costumes, flavours & facts
Non controversial, sober, parent & teacher
acceptance
Promote national integration & regional awareness
Familiar formats
ACK- Criticism
Stories simplistic, Indophilic and authentic
Often single source research
Most characters artist imaginations or from old
paintings and depictions
Gods & kings, always fair and well formed
Demons & villains dark & grotesque
Hindu mythology specific
Makeover
Mid-1980s, sleeker reprints of original comics
More durable editions, thick cardstock covers
Better colour separations
National footprint- all major book retailers, most
small bookstores and many vendors
Best-selling children's publication
Range
Fables & Folktales (Panchatantra, Hitopadesha,
Jataka)
History (Shivaji, Akbar, Rana Pratap)
Mythology (Krishna, Hanuman, Buddha)
The Epics (Ramayana, Mahabharata)
Humour & wit (Tenali Raman, Birbal)
Biographies (Vivekananda, Lokmanya Tilak)
Literary Classics (Shakuntala, Nala Damayanti)
Lingua Franca
Mid- 1980s
5 lakh copies per month
English, Hindi, Bengali, Marathi, Assamese, Gujarati,
Punjabi, Kannada, Telugu, Tamil, Sanskrit, Urdu
French, Spanish, German, Swahili, Indonesian, Fijian
and Serbo-Croat
Indian animation
Indian animation DNA exception than norm,
outsourced
Hanuman, Disneys Roadside Romeo, Toonzs Tenali
Raman, Green Golds Chota Bheem & BIG Animations
Little Krishna- closer to world-class
ACK Media
2006 ACK Media, founder Samir Patil (Ex Mckinsey)
N3Y $20mn- M&A + portfolio (brands, titles, content)
N3Y- Top Indian content producer (stories, characters)
2006- M&A Amar Chitra Katha +Tinkle titles (IBH)
M&A controlling stake in Karadi Tales
Revive ACK popularity levels using new media
Set up 20-25 ACK Lounges in metros and large cities
Shop-in-shops & reading lounges- browse at leisure
Brand expansion
Print media to
entertainment
Category
Broadcast
+ virtual
media
Channel
ACK
Adjacent
Segment
Geography
Indian to global
TV
Cinema
Mobile
Internet
ACK Website
2007 1 stop shop, global delivery, India free delivery
Credible to suit gen now
Target Indian children + Indian diaspora
e-comics @Rs 45, promotions galore
Telugu, Kannada, Tamil, Gujarati, Bengali & Marathi
Ads on relevant issues, cultural updates
ACKpedia- India encyclopedia- credible online authority
Focus on customer engagement
Customer engagement
Flip-pages to give comic feel
Download ACK heroes
Write own stories
Draw own art
Narrate own tales, share with others
Design and mail a new ACK comic cover for existing
title
ACK-Vodafone
Comics, stories & dramas, poetry on Vodafone Live
Download ringtones, characters, wallpapers, quiz,
jokes
Monthly subscription Rs 30
Rs 5 to download video, Rs 15 ring tones, Rs 50 games
"Today mobiles have as big a reach as TV. For content
owners like us, this is very critical. By launching wide
range of ACK games, wall papers, comics & audio
stories we have taken an important 1st step forward.
CEO Patil
Why TV
We grew up in a different world. But to connect with
today's kids, you have to be present in the broadcast
(TV, films) media. CEO Patil
"Popular Children TV shows are from foreign sources,
hence dubbed, but adult programs are produced locally
& suit Indian tastes. So we have adopted localisation
strategy to take Indian kids' channels content to the
next level. Monica Tata- Turner TV
ACK on TV
Turner International- Content tie up
Adjacent expansion, strategic fit (Harry Potter)
3 properties: Pre-production work+ In-house Cartoon
Network work+ Outsource production to other studios
On air in 2010- Shivaji,Hanuman,Mahabharata
ACK entertained many generations, so its a great idea
to bring alive those amazing stories, which most Indian
adults have grown up with. Monica Tata, Turner
ACK similar plans for Tinkle magazines
Turner TV deal
Archives- 26 episodes (30 mins) + 2 films (70 mins)
Cartoon Network- Turners global animation channel
Pogo- Turners 100% Indian channel (only country)
Deal range-30 mins @Rs 12-20L, Film @ Rs 50L+
Basis- content strength+ channel reach+ deal period
Turner- perpetual film rights, 7 years sub-continent
series rights, ACK can exploit other markets
ACK Turners 35th Indian animation title in L10Y
Turner TV
Harness popularity of Indian animations/cartoons
Screened- Little Krishna & Chotta Bheem, Bal
Ganesh, Akbar Birbal, Tenali Raman, Vikram Betaal
Movies- Tripura- The 3 Cities of Maya- Summer
2010, e-comic for itunes
Sons of Rama- Diwali 2010, Hindi e-comic
i-Remedi
Technological tie-up- iRemedi Corp US
Hi-res e-comics for iPhone & iPods from iTunes @$1.99
Retell ACK classics to global audiences
Titles- Krishna, Buddha, Gita, Ashoka, Saibaba, Karna,
Shakuntala, Panchantantra, Mirabai and Bheeshma
This launch has brought the world of Indian storytelling to the iPhone community. Besides comics we will
create new applications and games for this platform,
CEO Patil
Copyrights
No copyrights on mythological characters?
But specific artworks can be patented
Mythological characters- familiar, accepted, growth
potential
So less money to familiarise & build such brands
Lesser content development time as storylines &
characteristics known
Scope to create new stories on accepted platforms
4Ps
VFM, affordable,
volumes based
Indias history,
culture &
heritage
Online, retailers,
book stores
Online, WoM
back of book,
STPD
Indian school
children
English educated
urban Indian school
children
Route to their
roots
Credible, sober,
variety
TV
Gaming
Cinema
Online
iRemedy
Synqua
Turner TV
Vodafone
ACK Media M&A
2006
2007
2008 2009
2010
Ansoff matrix
X Market
N Product
X Product
Penetration
N Market
FunctionalAuthentic, insightful,
easy to read, sober
EconomicVFM, Sets
(Perception)
Credible
source of
Indian
mythology
& history
for
children
Customers Mind
Indian,
credible
route to
roots
Credible &
acceptable
source of
Indian
mythology
& history
POP
Comic
English & Vernacular
VFM
POD
Credible
Accepted
Range
Reach
ACK-Aakers
Model
Extended
o
Gl
l
a
b
Core
Children
Brand Essence
Tales
Mu
lti
me
dia
Education
er
ta
in
me
n
Multilingual
le
b
il a
a
Av
Relationship
(Brand to customer)Social, family, ethical
Culture (Brand in
customers conscience)
Sharing, common roots
Reflection (Customer
identifies wrt brand)Values, focus
Self-Image (Customer
identifies brand wrt self)Credible, acceptable
Internalisation
Externalisation
Building blocks
R
Br elat
an ion
dc s
us hip
tom
er
co
nn
ec
t
Kellers CBBE /
Brand Equity Pyramid
Int
en
se
loy
alt
Loyalty, connect,
y
r
ive
sit
Po
Re
W spo
ha n
t a se
bo
ut
yo
u
engagement, attachment
Me
W an
ho in
ar g
ey
ou
OD
Awareness
/P
Accepted, traditional
P
PO
Identity
ns
Indian, roots
io
ct
ea
Researched, credible
Case questions
Can the ACK comics model be
replicated across digital media
Would todays kids reared on
western characters lap up
Indian mythology & icons
Can ACK revamp to suit gen now
Would a virtual ACK emerge as
credible Indian online authority
on people, places and culture
References
India's Immortal Comic Books: Gods, Kings, and Other Heroes, by Karline McLain,
Indiana University Press, 2009. ISBN 978-0-253-22052-3
Turner laps up Amar Chitra Katha, Omkar Sapre PUNE , ET 7Aug09 p18
http://ibnlive.in.com/news/amar-chitra-katha-to-make-its-tv-debut-soon/99031-8.ht
ml
A New Avatar For Amar Chithra Katha! Mumbai, July 20, 2009
http://living.oneindia.in/kids/book-movie-reviews/2009/amar-chitra-katha-270709.h
tml
Amar Chitra Katha and the construction of the Indian Identity- Pramod Nayar, The
ICFAI Journal of English Studies, Vol. 1, No. 1, pp. 26-35, March 2006
Amar Chitra Katha & Turner Ink Deal For Animated Films & TV Series; Legend of
Katha
http://www.medianama.com/2009/08/223-amar-chitra-katha-legend-of-katha/
Synqua Games To Develop Games On Amar Chitra Katha
http://www.medianama.com/2009/04/223-synqua-games-to-develop-games-on-amar-ch
itra-katha-tinkle-rights-to-mythological-characters/
Now Amar Chitra Katha is available on iPhone, iPods, Business Standard
References
The Classic Popular: Amar Chitra Katha, 1967-2007. By Nandini
Chandra. New Delhi: Yoda Press, 2008. 260pp Paperback: ISBN-10:
8190363433 || ISBN-13: 9788190363433
ACK Media Pvt Ltd. Updated 03/8/2009
http://investing.businessweek.com/research/stocks/private/snapshot.asp?priv
capId=39144912
The Classic Popular: Amar Chitra Katha (1967-2007), by Nandini Chandra,
Yoda Press, 2008. ISBN 81-903634-3-3.
Amar Chitra Katha makes a comeback online Oct 15, 2008
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Anant_Pai
The Evolution Of Comic Strip And Its Changing Characteristics,Manas
Maisnam http://www.kanglaonline.com/index.php?template=kshow&kid=728
Comics may be India's new cult biz TNN 18 August 2006
Amar Chitra Katha to make its TV debut soon Manisha Mahaldar / CNN-IBN,
Wed, Aug 12, 2009
http://www.expressindia.com/latest-news/Amar-Chitra-Katha-makes-a-comeback
-online/373664/
References