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“Condom Bindaas Bol”

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[Moderators note: Web link to the condom promotion campaign follows the text of

the news].

Speak up!

Nanditta Chibber / New Delhi October 04, 2006

ADVERTISING: A campaign to help Indian youth overcome a big

handicap: shyness.

It doesn't take much. It's easy to say. So say it when you have to,

like you'd say anything else. This is the message of Lowe

India's " Condom Bindaas Bol " advertising campaign, currently airing

on TV.

One spot has a bunch of coolies nudging a hesitant peer to say the

word " condom " aloud. Another has lawyers encouraging a colleague to

do the same. The idea is to take the sting of embarrassment out of

the condom by making it a word that doesn't attract glares.

This, reasons Lowe, is the best way to promote the use of latex

prophylactics, which research indicates are up against a mental

block in almost every socio-economic segment.

According to a survey conducted by Synovate India in 2005-06 in

north Indian cities, two out of every five men admit purchase

occasion " embarrassment " as a barrier to condom usage.

Typically, this sense heightens if the transaction undergoes

elongation — say, in asking for specific types. Shyness in buying

condoms, of course, comes from a fear of social reproach. Or worse,

a fear of being judged to be a sexual deviant.

It's a challenge. " How do you normalise the image of a condom? " asks

Anand Sinha, country director, United States Agency for

International Development (USAID) India, which initiated the effort

in 2004 in collaboration with ICICI Bank and the Ministry of Family

and Health Welfare (MoHFW), an effort that is now in its third

phase.

Most commercial condom brands, assuming that the generic decision of

usage has already been taken, tend to focus on the pleasure of

making love, to use the adline of a top brand.

And social campaigns like the Heroes Project or the BBC World

Service Trust-National Aids Control Organisation-Prasar Bharti

campaign, tend to promote the condom as a safety device against HIV-

AIDS and other horrors.

According to Sinha, the campaign intends not to make the condom

aspirational or embarrassing in any way, but a sign of being

responsible and caring.

The seven-month long campaign, apart from using a mix of public

service ads and celebrity endorsements, will also have on-ground

activities to engage shopkeepers and customers across 10 north

Indian states.

Shops are being encouraged to display condoms openly and prominently

through a display contest. There are also on-the-spot prizes for

customers who ask for condoms confidently.

The retail trade is enthusiastic. In fact, some shops in Agra and

Bhopal are already reporting higher sales on account of better

display. Lowe claims success on other measures too.

Condom usage amongst its target audience, it claims, has increased

to 41 per cent in 2005 from 37 per cent in 2004. People, it seems,

are learning to speak up at last.

http://www.business-standard.com/common/storypage.php?

leftnm=lmnu7 & subLeft=2 & autono=260508 & tab=r

________________________

Below are links to an outstandiing generic condom promotion

campaign. We believe it's a refreshing approach not seen in years in

the condom category.

lawyer ad -

coolie ad -

police ad -

Thanks & Regards

Varsha Chawda

Social Marketing & COmmunications Lintas India

E-MAIL: <varshachawda@...>

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