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Executive creative director Jagdish Acharya has decided to call it a day at Mudra DDB. He has started his own creative shop, interestingly called Cut The Crap (CTC).
Speaking to afaqs!, Acharya says that after spending close to fifteen years at Mudra, things were beginning to get repetitive and a little boring. Friends and colleagues also encouraged him to start his own venture.
Acharya says that CTC will be a virtual agency, with no actual office. Translated, this means that the team will work from home. According to him, this will ensure that all employees work when they are at their creative peak – and not mechanically throughout the day just because they have to. They will also have the freedom to pursue other interests such as salsa and short film direction.
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As of now, the CTC team consists of three-four employees, but will expand over time. A couple of Acharya's colleagues from Mudra have joined him.
CTC has already started work for one client, the details of which will be revealed soon. To ensure better output, Acharya says that Cut The Crap will work for just four or five clients at a time and he will personally head each project.
The name, CTC, came up in a brainstorming session during which the team realised that they ended up doing a lot of things mechanically, and not because they wanted to do them. For instance, people are usually expected to report to work at a certain time in the morning. Working for a virtual agency will cut out the formality and give the employees creative freedom. However, the team plans to meet at least once a week to brainstorm.
CTC does not have a servicing team and the client will interact directly with the creative person to help build relations.
Acharya has spent his entire career at Mudra. He started out in client servicing and planning, followed by servicing and creative, and finally settling in creative.
Reliance ADAG, Lipton, Johnson & Johnson, Dhara, Rasna, TTK Prestige, Sugar Free, Paragon and McDowell's are some of the clients that Acharya has worked for in the past.
Recently, Sukumar Menon, who was executive creative director at Leo Burnett, started his own agency called Black Swan Life. Incidentally, he has also done away with the servicing department in his venture. At this rate, one wonders if client servicing will soon become extinct.
© 2010 afaqs!From sanjay Chauhan, Fri 09 Jan 2009 05:03:21 PM Just commenting on the observation on CS, client servicing will never be extinct this role will be taken over by the creative people.
Things are evolving i guess, 'jiska kaam vohi beche' seems correct also.
From vandana achwat, Fri 09 Jan 2009 09:55:05 AM and he did sethji with paresh raval for rasna international- i think that was the first and the best use of raval...
From pinakin bhatt, Thu 08 Jan 2009 08:00:25 PM his work on rmkv beats lead india hollow...only that rmkv campaign was only in chennai
From chirag, Thu 08 Jan 2009 07:04:23 PM veeru k m was by anup-ren. jags did the tvcs with paresh raval - paresh's first campaign - for rasna international...'sethji'..
From vasudev bhist, Thu 08 Jan 2009 05:44:47 PM hey he didn't do veeru ki maa...he did roti kapda makaan aur mobile phone. he did 'my daddy strongest' 'jalebi' 'pairon ke liye paragon', rmkv 50,000 color saree...
From ashish kapoor, Thu 08 Jan 2009 05:30:22 PM I feel Jagadish creative best would be Viru Ki Maa... it had such an emotional connect... ashish...
From Anand, Thu 08 Jan 2009 05:02:59 PM Jagdish Acharya is the distinguished 'creative' brain behind such classics like: Reliance Veeru Ki Maa, Nutrine Buffalo, McDowell's Space Professor, Reliance Big TV Moustache/Fatso and other such gems which Indian television viewers can never ever forget. Its appropriate he decided to call his agency cut the crap. Congrats!
From sudarshan, Thu 08 Jan 2009 01:44:06 PM way to go Jaggu... one more feather to your cap...Sudharshan
From Ravi Deshpande, Thu 08 Jan 2009 12:39:40 PM Way to go. With rapidly evolving technologies, communication is easier. Many more will adopt such a route in the coming times.
All the best Jagdish.