Marketing and branding experts reckon the latest campaign tagline of Tata Salt—tez baccho se hi toh tez desh banta hain—is adding salt to the wounds. Find out why
The camera rolls, and the first frame makes a sharp point. A mother is visibly concerned about the immense academic workload of her daughter: A science project, scholarship test, computer exam and school contest. And all of them taking place in a day! The vibrant kid, on the other hand, stays unruffled and flashes a sweet smile. The camera, meanwhile, catches more sharp images in the latest campaign of Tata Salt. The child is seen solving a Rubik’s cube, the camera zooms in and displays the badge of ‘captain’ worn by the kid, and the confident little girl dishes out a reassuring reply to her jittery mother: “No problem, mummy. No problem.â€
Over the next few frames, the mom talks about the importance of consuming iodine-laced salt. “Tata namak main hai sahi matra main iodine jo bachhhon ko tez rakhta hai (Tata Salt has got the right dose of iodine, which makes kids sharp). The commercial ends with a tagline and voiceover: ‘Tez baccho se hi toh tez desh banta hai (sharp kids make a sharp nation)’.
Though the mother and daughter are beaming, advertising and marketing experts have frown upon the commercial and find it too salty. The reason is not hard to fathom. The brand, they reckon, is playing on the insecurity and FOMO of mothers, and goes on to reinforce the clichéd and negative imagery of parents yearning for sharp kids. “Why are you emphasising on tez (sharp) kids?†asks Harish Bijoor, who runs an eponymous brand consulting firm. Already kids are under enormous pressure and stress to perform… one more brand unleashing an assault on the fragile minds is like adding salt to the wounds. “Is Tata Salt trying to become a new Horlicks?†he adds, alluding to the tagline and positioning that Horlicks has been underlining since years: Taller, stronger and sharper. “Why tez kids, and why the expectation from them to make a tez nation?†he asks, adding that the commercial lacks sensitivity.   Â
Also read: Dhoni, Kohli, celebs and the menace of misleading ads