MUMBAI; They could have gone in for a single CEO like Disney Star India – or Star India before that – had done in the past.
But with the magical Uday Shankar on top as the vice-chairperson to guide and direct strategy, the trio of Disney, Reliance Industries, and Bodhi Tree systems decided to go in for a troika of CEOs for the joint venture. Kevin Vaz to lead entertainment across platforms, Kiran Mani to head the combined digital organisation and the affable but effective Sanjog Gupta to spearhead the combined sports initiatives.
A press release issued by Reliance Industries announced that the expectation is that the three will lead the new firm into a new era of ambition and disruption. “Together, they will leverage their unique strengths to cultivate a bold transformative vision that challenges the status quo and sets new standards in the industry,” it adds.
Ambani is known to be a man in a hurry and willing to take risks. Leadership in every sector his group is involved in is all he asks. He is willing to give it time, but his watch runs differently, faster than every other entrepreneur in the business.
Uday Shankar is built in the same vein. He has built a reputation of being on business steroids. Number one or nothing has always been his credo. Being the best in whatever he takes up. He is known to have taken tremendous risks, some say gambles, and on almost all occasions he has come out on top. The team below him will have to keep pace.
Kevin Vaz is a steady, consistent performer, who has stuck by Star for almost a score of years. An astute sales person, he has learnt to run a mean entertainment driven organisation. First, heading English language channels, then regional language ones, kids and infotainment ones. Finally, Hindi entertainment offerings - the entire gamut before going on to settle at Viacom18 as CEO. With a strong second and third rung of creatives and programming heads leading the shows and series, he will not have too many a challenge from any of the others in the same space.
Kiran Mani first cut his teeth in advertising working on Unilever brands. Then he spent eight years in IBM in marketing and channel sales in India. He hopped onto Microsoft where once again he led marketing, strategy and operations. He then turned entrepreneur with an ad tech platform for which he found a buyer in two years. After a short stint at advising the National University of Singapore on its MBA programme, he dived into Google where he stayed for a baker’s dozen years, shuffling between India, the Bay area and Japan and Asia Pacific, finally settling down as general manager of android and Google Play for Asia Pacific and Japan when he was scouted and picked up to head Viacom18 Media. He burned the mid-night oil and weekends advising and angel investing in startups taking bets on emerging platforms and technologies while rapidly shooting up the corporate ladders.
Credentials like that are not easy to find, and he is the executive upon whom a lot rests as the world of entertainment consumption continues to transition from cable and linear TV to wireless streaming, handheld devices like mobile phones and tablets and connected TVs. And of course generative AI and machine learning. The area is teeming with competition with global biggies like Prime Video, Disney+ and Netflix and Google’s YouTube. What will hold him in good stead his deep attachment to meditation, mindfulness, and yoga which he has being practising for more than a dozen years.
The bearded Sanjog Gupta is known to be a backroom executive, reticent, a quiet thinking leader who is more comfortable and does better in meeting rooms with his team and clients then he does in front of the camera or journalists. With deep relationships across sports federations – both globally and locally, rights owners, athletes and sportsmen, a close and sharp eye on sports technology that vows the consumer, he has stayed ahead of all broadcast sports executives in the country. His challenge will be to keep the top line and bottom line healthy in an era of skyrocketing licensing fees for sports like cricket. This apart, the Ambani family has taken upon itself to encourage other sports in the country, especially in the Olympic and Asian Games arena. Sanjog will have to find a way to train Indian viewers to start enjoying and staying hooked to these sports as India vies to stage the Olympics within its shores in the next decade.