Raahil Chopra
Aug 31, 2012

Printweek India Conclave: "Print is liquid," says Josy Paul

Josy Paul, chairman and national creative director, BBDO India, talks about brands and campaigns in India that used print

Printweek India Conclave:

In his session at the inaugural Printweek India conclave, Josy Paul, chairman and national creative director, BBDO India, explained how print can be compared to a liquid, as it can be bent, or can take the shape of one's own imagination. 

He supported his statement with images of Benetton's 'Unhate' print campaign which won a Grand Prix at Cannes this year before holding up The Times of India dated 16 April 2000.

This was Indya.com's front page advertisement - the first instance of The Times of India hosting a full page ad. The front page ad lead to copy on the last page which read, "India changes its name to Indya.com".

"This front page advertisement was the first time The Times of India, allowed a full front page ad. Ads have followed Indya.com's advertisement, but none have been as powerful,” said Paul.

He then moved from Indya.com in 2000 to 2012 and BlackBerry. He explained the emphasis of the word ‘action’ in the campaign and how the word lacked a symbol before this campaign.  

He then showcased a bold campaign for White Collar Hippies, which made the brand famous. “This is where we used the internet in print,” said Paul.

He also gave examples of print campaigns for GE and Aviva’s book wall.

Source:
Campaign India

Related Articles

Just Published

4 hours ago

Toilet soaps dominate TV advertising in 2025: TAM AdEx

Hindustan Unilever and Reckitt remained the largest spenders, even as muted consumer demand saw FMCG companies tightening their ad budgets.

5 hours ago

Coca-Cola reignites AI ad debate with new holiday ...

A new version of the classic ‘Holidays Are Coming’ reinforces the brand’s commitment to generative tech and storytelling.

5 hours ago

The great escape? What they don’t tell you about ...

Life after the network machine: the highs, the headaches and the surprising truth about creative freedom.

5 hours ago

Lego Christmas ad spotlights power of play with ...

Because someone needs to tell the kids to ditch their tablets and phones in favour of playing with real, tactile toys.