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Mahindra culture curry has biz flavour

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Arijit Barman Mumbai
Last Updated : Jan 25 2013 | 2:53 AM IST

Anand Mahindra loves Muddy Waters — the nickname given to McKinley Morganfield, considered the father of modern Chicago blues. But his personal passion had nothing to do with the Mahindra Group’s blues fest in Mumbai last week.

“In business, personal passion should not be an indulgence, but a promise of excellence,” said Mahindra, the vice-chairman & managing director of India’s leading farm equipment-to-software group.

The Mahindra cultural calendar is crammed with events that have nothing to do with the adjectives usually attributed to the group: Durability, strength or resilience. It is collaborating with Sundance Institute, the Mecca of independent filmmakers, to award screenplay writers, as well as organising the Mahindra Sanatkada Lucknow Festival and Kabir Festival.

Blame it all on movement marketing, Mahindra’s strategic mantra. In a post-meltdown world where trust is at a premium, corporations are realising that their association with consumers has to move far beyond a product or service offering.

“Companies need to convince consumers that they are worthy members of their community,” explained Mahindra. And that’s at the core of this new drive. It also dovetails with the group’s new global brand positioning: ‘Rise’.

Rise is a rallying cry. The group wants a global community built around it — a community that loves films and listens to the blues. And a business can grow on the foundations of such strong bonds with potential or existing consumers, believes Mahindra. His message is loud and clear: “We want to enrich your lives, we ‘Rise’ with you and also help you to ‘Rise’.”

There are still flagship events or associations that have a direct link to utility vehicle or two-wheeler brands. Mahindra Great Escape and the Engines Engineering MotoGP team make obvious business sense. But they are in-your-face product hardsell.

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While participation in such events will continue, the focus now is to go beyond them and create a wider ecosystem. “We won’t do vanilla sponsorship of events any more. Each of our programmes or events has to have a strategic quotient,” added a Mahindra Group executive, who did not wish to be identified.

What the group has figured out is that even culture can influence sales. So, it’s no coincidence that the Lucknow festival, which aims to help revive local craftsmanship and the legendary Lucknowi tehzeeb, is the political and cultural capital of Uttar Pradesh — and a key market.

Mahindra Excellence in Theatre Awards, now in its sixth year, is striving to popularise theatre as an art form on a national scale. “It’s aspirational for theatre groups to get that kind of recognition,” said the company official.

The blues and Kabir festivals typify the oneness of communities. “If you cross-pollinate culture, it’s a much more effective means of communication,” said Mahindra. “We are planning to make the blues event the biggest outside the US. We want to propagate the culture of Mississippi blues in another democracy.”

The immediate connection is also not lost. The US is a strategic market for the group, and the southern states are huge potential tractor markets. It’s part of an ongoing entry strategy. Mahindra has been offering scholarships to women to pursue agricultural degrees and sponsors the popular National Bull Riding Competition.

Films are big business and they offer enormous scope for growth at Mumbai Mantra, the group’s fledgling movie production company. With Sundance Institute, the association is two pronged: An award for the four best screenplays, which may later even translate to production opportunities for Mumbai Mantra; and secondly, a year-long screenplay writing lab in India.

Others are impressed, while agreeing that the business gains of this strategy are still a long shot. “There is an underlying theme behind all this: An old world manufacturing company that used to make boxcars desires to be part of the aspirational lifestyle of New India. This enhances the valuation of the company and its mother brand,” explained Anirban Mukherjee, head of consulting at Future Brands.

Several of these cultural events are start-ups; some, like the Kabir or Lucknow festivals are conceived by others like NGO Sanatkada. Mahindra came in with support and funds to raise the decibel level.

Funding for most of these initiatives comes from the Mahindra corporate brand-building budget. Sector-specific events are funded by the different business groups or verticals.

In some cases, they are co-funded. Either way, Mahindra offers a ray of light in the muddy waters of movement marketing in India.

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First Published: Feb 09 2011 | 12:02 AM IST

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