What happened when 'Hamara Bajaj' was pitched to Rahul Bajaj? Here's the story told by the very people who worked on the immense Bajaj Auto account for years
A family riding Bajaj Scooter
Image: Reuters/Rupak De Chowdhuri (India)
It was 1988, Bajaj Auto was the first big client that we handled—Prashant Godbole and me—it was a mighty account and India’s No. 1 two-wheeler brand.
I was just two years in the ad business. Prashant had been in the business a shade longer but was already a whiz visualiser of sorts. Our mentor/boss, Kersey Katrak, had teamed us up as a copy-art duo. He had, in turn, been asked by Alyque Padamsee to be national creative director of Lintas India. So there we were on the 15th floor of Express Towers, brainstorming on the brand.
The Bajaj portfolio was immense and interesting—a two-wheeler for every price segment. At one end of the spectrum were the scooters, the Chetak and the Pushpak; the M80, a mini bike, occupied the centre, and the top end was the Kawasaki RTZ motorcycle.
Each of these brands had a specific share of the market, a specific price point, and therefore each posed a unique creative ‘problem’ to us, the creative team.