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She
was visible everywhere — on the ramps, magazine covers and
advertisements. Now one can catch her on the net also.
Banker-turned-model Anagha Fowler has launched her personal
website www.anagha.com. This news may give some respite to
her fans, as the almond-eyed model plans to shift her base
from India to Australia in the coming months. So even if she
says good-bye to Delhi, there is a link available.
In a world where casting couches and leery advertising
executives are the norm, model Anagha Fowler, 26, has trod a
different route to success. Perhaps the first Indian model to
use technology to her advantage - certainly the first to use
it so spectacularly Anagha has, within the space of a year,
turned from a little-known Delhi wannabe to a much-in-demand
international model.
A unique success story sans compare, almost, Anagha woke up
one morning, like it happens in books, and decided she needed
to do something to kickstart her career. And while she was
doing it, she thought, why restrict herself to India? At a
time when anything Indian was sweeping the globe, or like she
says, India is the spice of the new millennium, the world was
her oyster, quite literally.
Born into a traditional Hindu Brahmin family, Anagha always
wanted to be a model, but actually ended up taking to banking
after her graduation in Economics (Honours!) from St.
Stephen's College, where she found another passion
basketball! She actually only set foot on the modelling road,
however, when a local photographer insisted on taking
pictures to show a few people but it wasn't happening fast
enough. Along with photographer husband David Fowler, then,
Anagha, whose name means pure or without sin in Sanskrit, set
up her own web site, www.anagha.com.
"There are no real risks involved in promoting yourself
through the Web. And there's a whole world out there; you can
decide how you want to appear to them. You have complete
control of the images and content that appear on your site,"
she says. The initial investment cost, she adds, with high
graphic content, was a one-off bill of Rs 1,50,000, with
hosting charges logging in at approximately Rs 25,000 per
annum. Indeed, her networking of the search engines was so
good, that for months, whenever you typed in the keywords of
Indian and fashion, anagha.com would almost always be on top
of the search results.
That wasn't all. Since she was working with the web, it was
easy to incorporate as modus operandi the connectivity
afforded by the medium. "Marketing your web site requires a
little more initiative and investment," she continues. "I
produced a post card of my home page and sent it to modeling
agencies and senior executives within advertising agencies
around the world. The investment here was close to Rs 40,000.
And the returns were excellent; I immediately started
getting, first, feelers and then offers and contracts from
around the world," she gushes. One decent assignment, she
points out, covers most of your costs and assignments
abroad are extremely lucrative.
Today, she's more successful than the big names you read
about, and with a three-year contract with a New York based
agency, has made it faster internationally than the ones who
go and spend six months in London and come back saying they
missed their parathas. Among her assignments since, are
location shoots all over the world Prague is her favourite
place, followed by Australia.
And naturally, like anything else that is accepted
internationally, the Indians have clasped her to their heart.
Among her local campaigns are commercials like Ravissant, The
Canterbury Tales, DeBeers, Ogaan, Suneet Varma and others,
with photographers like Prabuddha Das Gupta, Atul Kasbekar,
Tarun Khiwal and Bharat Sikka.
But what about the dangers of the web? What about crank
emails, hacking and so on? "So far, I haven't faced any of
those except for four nasty emails out of approximately
25000," says the 5-foot-9½ inch tall model.