studios and producers do not like to show the film to anyone in advance. So, all a theatre owner or a distributor watches is rushes.

It is impossible to have a comprehensive marketing plan without knowing what you are selling well in advance. In the US, theatre chains see the film several weeks before a marketing plan is devised.

The other issue is more evolutionary. Sunil Punjabi, CEO, Cinemax, points out that most chains have experimented with a loyalty programme or still have one. And most of them sit on a lot of data.

For example, the scheduling guy at a multiplex chain would know that Dabangg will do well only in three of the 20 screens in south Mumbai. But little effort is put into using this data to improve footfalls or top lines.

Punjabi reckons that it is a matter of focus. At this stage of its growth, the industry is focused on setting up as many screens as possible, as quickly as possible.

There is very little energy, time and money to spend on building systems and processes that could capture and use data to improve consumer experiences and footfalls.

Much of the benefits of building these systems, which could cost anywhere between Rs 1 crore and Rs 2. crore in the back-end alone, are reaped in the long term.

He may have a point. Large retail chains such as the Future Group (which owns Pantaloons and Big Bazaar among other chains) have spent a long time and a lot of money to build the kind of processes they have to capture data which are used to shape strategy. So what could trigger multiplexes to replicate this model?

Punjabi estimates that at 2,000 screens, the scramble to get the best system going could start. That is when competition will force theatres to fight for every footfall, especially in crowded markets such as Delhi or Mumbai.

And the whole retail marketing play will become a part of the game.

Till then, wait for the special treatment by your local multiplex. Vanita Kohli-Khandekar in New Delhi
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