India’s leading experts in applied semiotics for marketing, Leapfrog Strategy Consulting has recently launched a brand new website – www.leapfrogstrategy.com. The website aims to evangelise applied semiotics based on real experiences and tangible results delivered over the last ten years.

Chief semiotician and founder of Leapfrog Strategy Consulting, Ms. Hamsini Shivakumar, nostalgically talks about semiotics not being new at all, “Two years into our existence, Leapfrog Strategy had included Applied Semiotics into our proposals, as early as 2009.” Two years later in 2011, the semiotician with over a decade worth of experience co-founded Semiofest – a global conference in commercial semiotics that helps resolve interpretational conflicts and provides sharper tools for social meaning-making spaces.

What is semiotics? For the beginner, semiotics is the study of signs and symbols and what meaning they represent. Linguist Ferdinand de Saussure from Switzerland was perhaps the first semiotician; he spent considerable time studying how the meaning of words (in a language) is encoded into language. The nexus of symbols and signs and the meaning it forms as given by Saussure is still used by modern-day semioticians in their submissions. Charles Sanders Pierce, on the other hand, created a theory that was language-agnostic, that is to say, that signs and sign interpretations that are applicable across all classes of signs – mathematical, visual, symbols, etc. As part of their website and knowledge centre, Leapfrog Strategy shares a plethora of beginner-level information while also catering to experts in consumer insight. The website is akin to a bridge that joins theory and practice with respect to applied semiotics.

And how is semiotics useful? Often users say one thing but actually mean quite another. This confuses the marketer or the business owners with regard to their communication strategy. In such cases, semiotic decoding helps paint a truer picture of what’s going on in the consumers’ minds. Another use of semiotics is in simply understanding how some individuals think in a changing culture. For instance, our understanding of a mother’s role has changed over the years, she is no longer the sacrificing dying-but-still-cooking mother that we used to deify in the Nirupa Roy days. So perhaps communication to new mothers might now be about taking care of themselves, as opposed to the earlier notion of putting others first. Understanding these changing heuristics in dynamic cultures, helps us understand our consumers better, resulting in pinpointed and effective messaging.

The main attraction of the Leapfrog website is the knowledge centre – https://leapfrogstrategy.com/learning-centre/ containing a comprehensive and in-depth column dedicated to colour semiotics, video guides, reading material like articles, white papers, and even a list of books.

Broadly, Leapfrog Strategy has four offerings. The first is that one can commission a Semiotic Study or Research in Semiotics, for example, the Mahindra group commissioned a study about the alpha male for their SUV car category. The second is Brand Strategy where their Leapfrog’s semioticians help reimagine or reconstruct a brand to make it more future relevant, for example, the work the team did for Chambor cosmetics by tracking the brand’s 30-year history and mapping the changing contexts of user consumption. The third service they provide is Semiotic Inputs into Design, for example, they helped decode the SugarFree Green package design, and based on their inputs, their client Zydus Wellness’ sales grew at least ten times. Lastly, they provide training to marketing professionals in using semiotics in their jobs.

Rasika Batra, one of the semioticians in the Leapfrog team explains why the team is a pioneer in semiotic research that finds useful applications and proven results. She says, “The Leapfrog Strategy team consists of leading experts, a whole team works on the project, not just one person, so the client benefits exponentially from collective eyes and minds. I think our experience in strategy, particularly Hamsini’s thirty-plus years in advertising and consumer insight make our work highly implementable.”

www.leapfrogstrategy.com was launched on 1st June 2022.

To learn more about how semiotics is applied in the fields of marketing and advertising for brands and businesses, look up www.leapfrogstrategy.com

Leapfrog Strategy is a semiotics-approach strategy consulting firm that provides an overarching brand strategy to specific design inputs from brand packaging to product User Experience or User Interface (UI & UX). The team helps their clients identify their current problems within the category, with the design or with the understanding of the culture they are operating in. They then devise an actionable solution based on research and analyses. To know more about Leapfrog Strategy Consulting, visit – https://in.linkedin.com/company/leapfrog-strategy-consulting

Gurugram, Haryana, 17 January 2022

Leapfrog Strategy Consulting’s founder semiotician, Hamsini Shivakumar recently compiled an e-book, Branded Content: What’s Culture Got To Do With It. The book is downloadable <here –  https://www.buzzincontent.com/ebook.php > This book, authored for Buzz In Content, is intended as a guide for understanding the Hows and Whys of Branded Content.

The team at Leapfrog Strategy, led by Hamsini Shivakumar, had already published around 75 white papers or articles, each of which took research and analyses of different Branded Content campaigns; this translated into a phenomenal amount of research around branded content. As a semiotics expert, Hamsini Shivakumar explains, “Branded Content is a fairly new concept without proper definition and rules. It is, more often than not, misplaced with traditional advertising. But a growing number of content creators or artists, if you will, are learning by doing. The aim of my book ‘Branded Content: What’s Culture Got to do with it?’ is to widen perspectives and deepen the knowledge of content practitioners, and that, I hope, will enrich the ecosystem of content creation.”

About the book, the team of semioticians say, “In this book, we look at content from a cultural lens to produce structured knowledge on the topic. Our approach is part theory and part application which means that while examining the existing literature on the topic, we also substantiate it with contemporary examples.”

A representative of Leapfrog Strategy Consulting, a semiotician herself, explained the journey of Branded Content and how cultural discourse is the missing part that helps put things in place.

Content is key to deep engagement

The ecosystem of content creation has seen a drastic change in terms of audience interaction since the onset of the digital marketing boom. Content has long been looked upon as the product of the advertising process and not a part of it. Traditional advertising accounts for creation, production, distribution and the measurement of the effectiveness of the content but they overlook what stands in the heart of this gigantic process- content itself. Content has the power to drive conversations, evoke emotions and hence have a potential impact on the audience. Thus based on its execution, content can form the basis of a deeper engagement for brands.

And Then Brands Turned Into Publishers

Earlier marketers and brands were mere investors of media channels that produced content for the audience. These gripping channels created stuff that kept their consumers engaged and always anticipating for more. Hence, in between that when advertisements popped up, the audience watched that as well since it lowered their viewing cost. But this traditional method of advertising is not piquing the interest of the people anymore.

Brands have also realised that with the advent of social media and digital marketing, their need to market themselves goes way beyond the scope of conventional media channels. Hence, they have introduced the idea of IMC or Integrated Marketing Communication. These concepts converge with a greater importance being given to the brand vis-à-vis product and the need to build brands via a multiplicity of touchpoints. With the help of Integrated Marketing Communications, marketers have started directly engaging with the audience via the content that they are consuming. In this way, brands can bring light to their visions and worldviews and build real-time connections with their audience.

With investment in Integrated Marketing Communication, one can say that marketers have turned into quasi-publishers and content creators but have not yet become full-fledged content creators like a media channel would be.

Content Creation In Various Social Media

Social media can be given a lot of credit for creating a large number of content creators. A huge amount of impetus lies on them, for completely reconfiguring the way marketers, publishers and content consumers are looked upon. The audiences are content consumers and creators, and marketers are advertisers and creators both. Hence, media channels have taken this situation to their advantage. They have now started creating mediums and platforms via which they can direct the relevant audience to their news, opinions, stories, etc.

What’s Culture Got To Do With It?

In such a situation, it is of paramount importance that the brand comprehends the impact of culture on its content. Because these platforms give them a unique space to interact with their consumers which are aligned with their vision, directly. Culture helps their audience understand what the brand stands for, especially in terms of sensitive issues, since we already mentioned earlier that content can drive essential conversations and mold opinions.

Branded Content: What’s Culture  Got To Do With It was launched on December 17th at the BuzzinContent Awards.

To study how cultural discourse can shape the thinking of your audience, and how to produce content that aligns with culture, download the e-book from https://www.buzzincontent.com/ebook.php

To learn more about how semiotic thinking can be applied to brands and cultural lens to content, contact Hamsini Shivakumar at email to hamsini@leapfrogstrategy.com

Leapfrog Strategy is a brand strategy consulting firm with cutting edge expertise in semiotics. The team helps clients devise an edgy strategy for brands, analyses contemporary trends and content and the role they play in brand engagement. To know more about Leapfrog Strategy Consulting, visit – https://in.linkedin.com/company/leapfrog-strategy-consulting

Contact:    Leapfrog Strategy Consulting Pvt Ltd

Email:       hamsini@leapfrogstrategy.com