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IndiGo, Air India take sky war to ad world

NEWDELHI: The recent ad war between IndiGo and state-owned Air India (AI) has seen the national carrier taking on the country’s biggest airline by marketshare, quite

Published on: Sep 28, 2016 12:25 PM IST
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NEWDELHI: The recent ad war between IndiGo and state-owned Air India (AI) has seen the national carrier taking on the country’s biggest airline by marketshare, quite aggressively.

HT Image
HT Image

To be sure, AI was the one which initiated the latest ad war by putting up boards at the Mumbai airport. It said: “Wish you a comfortable flight. Next time fly with Air India and feel the difference.”

IndiGo, known for its smart ad campaigns, responded saying: “Yes, Air India, there is a difference. Says the Government.” The airline was referring to DGCA data, which showed its on-time performance was best and customer complaints lowest.

When most thought the duel was over, AI hit back with an ad, which sources said, was created by a senior pilot. “How do some of our friends react when their passengers discover that we offer more leg space, hot meals and more luggage allowance?... With INDIG nation!” said its latest ad.

While industry experts welcome the new found “aggressiveness” shown by AI, they feel the airline should take the counter attack in the same spirit. “I welcome AI taking an aggressive tone. It reflects confidence. AI should behave just like other private airlines do even if it carries the government legacy with it,” said Jitendra Bhargava, former executive director, AI.

AI said it had indeed become “aggressive” in its ad campaign to “gain visibility and prominence and recapture marketshare lost to competitors”.

The duel appears unlikely to end soon as IndiGo has termed as “misleading” AI’s second ad, and has said many of its seats actually had more leg space than many of the seats on AI flights.

 
ABOUT THE AUTHOR
Tushar Srivastava

Tushar was part of Hindustan Times’ nationwide network of correspondents that brings news, analysis and information to its readers. He no longer works with the Hindustan Times.

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