Want to listen to some music while driving? Switch the stereo on and it's quite likely you have to make do with a political party's jingle.
And watching television before elections essentially means staring at competing visions of political parties, on an endless loop.
Gone are the days of bland government ads. Welcome to the age of sleek political advertising-- creative and engaging.
The recent CAG indictment of the AAP government for "violating" Supreme Court guidelines by conflating the party with the government in its ads or by promoting Arvind Kejriwal has put the spotlight on this rapidly evolving area.
"If you are a party in government, lines get blurred between the communications being put out by the government and the party. It is very easy to point fingers that the government has used public funds to take credit for the party.
"Whereas the intention is of spreading awareness among citizens about government projects. Citizens will decide too if it's not what they wanted eventually," says Dilip Cherian, a top communications consultant and political campaign advisor.
Nitin Pai, who spearheads the Bengaluru-based Takshashila Institution, an independent think tank, thinks it would be unfair to single out the AAP for doing "what all parties do".
Contemporary politics is all about larger-than-life individuals, who loom large over the landscape of the nation, as messiahs or saviours, often relegating pertinent issues to the back burner.
Does it also reflect in political advertising? Analysts believe it does. Ad campaigns, even the political ones, are driven by a "protagonist or a brand ambassador".
"In India today, every political party seems to be thriving on personality-driven advertising and communication," Cherian says.
"I do not think more rules are a solution, if our top political leaders lack a sense of decorum and propriety," he says.
In 2015, the Supreme Court had barred the use of photographs of politicians in ads except that of the Prime Minister.
The President the Chief Justice of India were alos exempt.
It had later modified the order and allowed the pictures of Union Ministers, Chief Ministers, Governors and State Ministers in government advertisements.
Cherian says ads and jingles are meant to create awareness and thereafter, it is up to the consumer or the public to decide whether to "buy" what is being communicated.
"Unlike Fast-moving consumer goods (FMCG) products, where large volumes of advertisements are meant to promote sales, a social or government advertising is primarily meant to disseminate information. If it persuades it's great advertising. If it does not then money is wasted," he says.
Pai believes that it depends on what is being conveyed, who is persuading and under what circumstances.
Disclaimer: No Business Standard Journalist was involved in creation of this content
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