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- On the
cover of Kreativ, Hungarian advertising magazine, may
2005.
- Click
here for the full article.
MM, Slovenian
marketing magazine.

Brand Equity,
India.

Brainerddispatch.com
and in their newspaper Brainerd Post, MN, US
WORLD TRAVELERS JOIN
RUSSELL HERDER.
BRAINERD DISPATCH,
US. JAN 2000.
- It's
nothing like they imagined.
-
-
When Shanky Das and Dalbir Singh were both hired by
Russell and Herder Advertising/Public Relations Inc. this
past November, as a copywriter and art director,
respectively, people tried to prepare them for what to
expect when they arrived in Minnesota a lot of snow and
bitter cold.
-
- The
two, natives of India, faced an unexpected surprise when
they got off the plane in Minneapolis. There was no snow
and there was no cold. The two arrived during one of the
warmest months of November on record.
-
- "We
were briefed that this was one of the coldest places in
America, so we over prepared (for cold and snow)," Das
said. "We landed and there was no snow. I was a little
disappointed."
-
- Das
and Singh have been paired as a creative team for the
past five years working all over the world. This
teamwork, however almost never happened. They both
started out in very different directions than where they
have ended up.
-
- Das,
a physician's son, thought he would also go into medicine
like many in his family had done, but he took a different
route and graduated from St. Xavier's College in Calcutta
with a degree in advertising management.
-
-
Aside from his work in advertising, he has been the lead
vocalist for an alternative rock band and he helped start
a company called, Hints and Allegations, which
coordinated and choreographed fashion shows.
-
- Singh's
path to advertising is even more unlikely. He graduated
from Calcutta University with a degree in accounting and
economics, though it was not his true passion. He said
that as a child he used to like to draw his own comic
books. To fill up the spare pages, he used to draw
advertisements. Soon, he said, drawing the advertisements
became more fun than drawing the comic.
-
- The
duo met at the J. Walter Thompson advertising agency's
Calcutta office. Though they weren't teamed from the
start of their employment there, they both volunteered to
take over a project no one else wanted. The project
resulted in an award for the pair launching their career
as a team.
-
- Collectively,
they have worked all over the world, from Hungary to
India to Hong Kong.
-
-
They have worked on major international accounts such as
Pepsi, Nike, Toyota and Pizza Hut. Singh said one of the
reasons he and Das have been so successful is because of
their diversity.
-
- "He's
not always the writer, I'm not always the designer, we're
thinkers. We want to be concept creators," he
said.
-
- Das
said the international exposure has also lent for
diversity in their work, and it's that aspect he feels
will be an asset to Russell and Herder. An asset from not
only working with several international clients, but also
in their experience in adapting their work for different
cultures.
-
- It
is that outside view that Das and Singh used to develop
their first ad campaign in Brainerd. They arrived in the
area during the deer hunting season itself entirely new
to them and were shocked to see news of hunters shooting
themselves.
-
- So
they came up with a concept and campaign on deer hunting
safety, and went out to look for someone to buy it, which
is the reverse of the normal process of selling and
creating advertising. Selling their new work didn't take
long. Cuyuna Regional Medical Center in Crosby purchased
the duo's campaign.
-
- Coming
to Brainerd, or even the U.S. for that matter, was about
the last thing on Das Singh'sand minds. The two learned
about the Russell and Herder positions while they were
working in the J. Walter Thompson-Hong Kong
agency.
-
- Das
said that one night, at about 3 a.m., he and Singh were
on the Internet and decided to look up jobs in
advertising. They came across vacancies at Russell and
Herder, and though "just goofing around," as Das put it,
they sent in their biographies and portfolios to the
Minnesota-based advertising agency.
-
- The
two were actually looking for jobs in Europe, but when
Russell and Herder called back, they couldn't pass up the
position. This is the first time either Das or Singh
have been to the U.S.
-
- Das,
who lived in Great Britain for eight years, said because
of his past in England the culture of Minnesota wasn't
too much of a shock, but the pace of life has taken some
time to adjust to.
-
- "Growing
up in cities, we're kind of used to different things,"
Das said. "The charm here is different." Added Singh: "We
went to the Mall of America and saw the crowds. It was
like we were home (in India)."
-
- The
charm may be different, but Das said that it's one of the
redeeming characteristics about Minnesota. "It is the
cold country with warm people," he likes to say, and
Singh agrees.
-
- "This
place grows on you," Singh said. "When we have to go to
Minneapolis for work, coming back here feels good. It
feels like home."
-
- Now
the two are getting to enjoy a typical Minnesota winter
and are adjusting to everything that comes with it. Das
said getting up in the morning is still a little hard
when the thermometer is below zero and driving for the
first time on snow was a little scary. Singh said
overall this winter hasn't been too trying.
-
- "The
first really cold day wasn't too bad," Singh said, but
added that he did figure out what other Minnesotans least
like about the cold. "I had to scrap the car windows, but
I had no gloves and I had no scraper."
-
- As
for how long the two would like to stay in Brainerd,
neither could say, but moving right now is the furthest
thing their minds.
-
-
"It's exciting, we're having a good time," Das said.
"There's no reason to change for the sake of changing
only."
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