MAM
AI rewires adland: Programmatic performance is the new marketing must-have
MUMBAI: No bots were harmed in the making of this conversation—but several were summoned. At Indiantelevision.com’s Media Investment Summit 2025, the panel ‘The Future of Programmatic & Performance Advertising: How Smart Can AI Get?’ brought together a league of marketers who’ve all but handed over their media briefs to machine learning.
Moderated by Deloitte south Asia ED Irvinder Ray, the session explored how programmatic advertising has gone from being a budget line item to becoming the spine of digital media strategy.
Kotak Life Insurance EVP & head – digital business Prasad Pimple laid out the insurance conundrum, “Not all customers can buy all products. We filter prospects by income band, age, and even eligibility”. With such a defined funnel, precision targeting is critical. “Everything we do today is data-informed, whether the data comes from our CRM or platforms like Google”, he added.
AI, for Kotak, is now part of the underwriting pipeline, campaign segmentation, and even voice-based customer profiling—making programmatic indispensable for performance and compliance alike.
Fino Payments Bank head of marketing Prashant Choudhari backed automation with a marketer’s pragmatism. “At any given point, at least 50–60 per cent of my media budget is programmatic. It helps with frequency capping, cost control, and better storytelling”, he said.
Choudhari explained how programmatic empowers smaller brands to punch above their weight. “It frees up time to work on narrative and creativity. Technology does the grunt work, and marketers focus on emotion”, he added.
“Walking into a bar and being greeted by name is personal. Being handed your usual drink without asking—that’s personalisation with memory”, said PayU Payments head of marketing Argho Bhattacharya. He used the analogy to illustrate how programmatic media and zero-party data allow brands to predict—not just reflect—consumer needs.
Bhattacharya cited how PayU moved from cohort-based messaging to individual targeting. “We no longer set campaigns by clusters. We do it by individual intent”, he said, citing PIN-code-level targeting for telecom dealers and energy providers, which delivered a campaign click-through rate (CTR) of 2.9 per cent and a brand uplift of 25 per cent.
Sachdeva also introduced the idea of always-on learning loops—real-time feedback mechanisms that adapt messaging based on ambient conditions like AQI, rain alerts, or commute times. “We don’t just predict needs. We mirror the environment”, he added.
Blis associate director sales Ishika Sharma focused on creative optimisation and exclusion logic. “We ran a campaign where creatives changed not just by city, but by street, down to the PIN code”, she said. The campaign avoided targeting existing customers by mapping Wi-Fi footprints and excluding IPs already associated with a service.
She warned against overstepping. “Too much targeting becomes surveillance. We must balance personalisation with respect”, she added.
VDO.AI CBO Akshay Chaturvedi explained how AI helps balance brand building with performance. “We used AI to layer performance KPIs over branding campaigns, so nothing was wasted. A single video could deliver awareness and CTR”, he said.
Chaturvedi also stressed multi-channel orchestration. “We use our own AI engine to decide what content to push where—Youtube, Zee5, Whatsapp, or the client’s CRM. It’s all synchronised”, he said.
The panel agreed that programmatic has shifted from being a media tool to a business enabler. Whether it’s AQI-based insurance ads or pizza shops pinging you mid-commute, the future of advertising is smarter, faster, and sharper.
As Ray concluded, “Tech can find the segment. But it takes human insight to tell the story. AI and marketers aren’t in competition—they’re co-authors”.
MAM
Why the Best Campaigns Today Start With Insights, Not Ideas
MUMBAI: For decades, creative storytelling has been the cornerstone of brand communication. The “big idea” amplified through catchy jingles, striking visuals, and memorable hooks was once the gold standard for relevance and recall. Creativity defined presence, and the loudest, boldest campaigns often won attention.
But the marketing landscape today looks very different.
Audiences are more exposed, more discerning, and far less patient. They are inundated with messages across platforms, formats, and creators, often encountering hundreds of brand touchpoints in a single day. In this environment, creativity alone especially when untethered from real consumer truths is no longer enough to move behaviour. Great ideas are abundant. Meaningful impact is not.
This is where insights matter.
The difference may seem subtle, but it is fundamental. An idea represents what a brand wants to say. An insight reflects what the audience is already thinking, feeling, or experiencing. The most effective campaigns emerge not from cleverness alone, but from the intersection of these two forces.
From creativity to relevance
As the marketing ecosystem becomes increasingly saturated, consumers are growing immune to inflated claims and surface-level storytelling. Even beautifully crafted campaigns can fail if they are disconnected from lived realities. The gap between a brand’s internal enthusiasm and the audience’s actual sentiment can be the difference between attention and indifference.
Insights help bridge this gap. They force brands to pause, listen, and observe to understand emotions, behaviours, cultural contexts, and contradictions. Instead of trying to be remembered through louder branding, insight-led campaigns allow audiences to see their own experiences reflected back at them. When a campaign articulates a problem that feels personal, relevance is created. Trust follows.
Insight is interpretation, not information
It’s important to distinguish between data and insight. Data tells us what is happening. Insight explains why it is happening. While data is measurable and structured, insights are interpretive and dynamic, shaped by real-time sentiment and human behaviour.
Modern consumers are full of contradictions. They demand authenticity while remaining deeply aspirational. They want brands to take a stand but expect nuance, not instruction. They seek transparency, yet are drawn to curated narratives. These tensions are not obstacles, they are opportunities. When understood correctly, they can shape communication that feels timely, credible, and human.
Some of the most effective campaigns today are born not in isolated brainstorm rooms, but through listening to audiences, creators, editors, online communities, and cultural signals. Insights often exist in blurred patterns, but once identified, they can redefine how a brand connects.
A recent campaign we executed for Domino’s illustrates this shift clearly. The brief wasn’t to make a pizza look bigger or louder. Instead, it was rooted in a simple behavioural truth: in Tier 2 and Tier 3 markets, sharing food is an emotional act tied to family, celebration, and value perception. The “Big Big 6-in-1 Pizza” became a canvas for this insight. The campaign leaned into regional voices and real sharing moments, allowing people to show how they experienced the product rather than being told why they should buy it. Influencers and celebrities amplified genuine usage, not scripted endorsements. The impact from engagement to footfall to sales came not from a clever idea, but from understanding how people relate to food in their everyday lives.
Shifting the starting point
Today’s consumer landscape demands a shift in perspective from “What should the brand say?” to “What does the audience need to hear right now?” This marks a move away from inward-led marketing toward communication shaped by behaviour, emotion, and cultural relevance.
Brands leading today are keen observers. They notice when perfection stops resonating. They sense when luxury shifts from aspiration to excess. They recognise when influencer content begins to feel repetitive and trust erodes.
Virality, too, is often misunderstood. It is not a strategy to chase, but an outcome. Campaigns rooted in insight do not aim to go viral; they aim to resonate. When content reflects something familiar, a shared truth, emotion, or tension, it travels organically because people see themselves in it.
Ideas attract attention. Insights build connection.
The evolving role of PR
For PR professionals, this shift has redefined success. Coverage volume alone no longer tells the full story. The more meaningful questions today are: Did the communication influence behaviour? Did it align with cultural conversations? Did it address a real consumer pain point?
Insight-first thinking allows these questions to be answered at the planning stage, rather than corrected midway through execution.
In a world where formats and platforms will continue to evolve, what remains constant is the power of authentic communication. The strongest campaigns today do not begin with a brainstorm, but with observation, interpretation, and empathy. That is not just better marketing, it is more responsible, resilient, and meaningful brand-building.
Brands
Ahmad Muneeb elevated to VP – HR centre of excellence at Zepto
MUMBAI: Zepto has elevated Ahmad Muneeb to vice president – HR centre of excellence, placing him at the helm of the company’s total rewards, executive compensation and organisational effectiveness as the quick-commerce firm powers through a high-growth phase.
The move follows his stint as senior director of the HR COE, where he played a central role in preparing the company for IPO readiness while scaling its people analytics capabilities. During this period, Muneeb helped align complex performance management structures with more streamlined and scalable employee experience frameworks.
In his new role, he will steer the design of total rewards strategies, executive compensation planning and organisational design, while also overseeing performance management, employee experience initiatives and people analytics programmes.
Before joining Zepto, Muneeb spent nearly three years at Meesho, where he held multiple rewards and HR business partner roles. Earlier in his career, he worked as a senior rewards consultant at Mercer, advising high-tech clients on compensation benchmarking, pay structures and talent-focused reward frameworks.
He began his hr journey at Cognizant, where he supported compensation programmes for nearly two lakh employees across India and worked on m&a compensation alignment and skill-based pay initiatives. Prior to moving into HR, Muneeb started his career as a software engineer at Netcracker, bringing a technical grounding to his people strategy work.
With a mix of consulting rigour, start-up agility and enterprise-scale experience, Muneeb’s elevation signals Zepto’s continued focus on building robust people systems as it races towards its next phase of growth.
Brands
Dell names Aishwarya Sudhakar director of marketing intelligence
INDIA: Dell Technologies is doubling down on artificial intelligence in marketing. The company has elevated Aishwarya Sudhakar to director of marketing measures and intelligence engineering, tasking her with building an enterprise-wide framework for AI-led measurement and customer intelligence.
In the role, Sudhakar will oversee unified data strategy, advanced modelling and context engineering: areas increasingly central to how large technology firms link marketing performance to business outcomes. Her remit includes shaping scalable systems that support Dell’s next phase of AI deployment across marketing functions.
Sudhakar steps into the position after holding a series of senior roles at Dell, including AI lead for marketing orchestration, senior manager, and senior data scientist in customer insights. Across these roles, she led global teams working on large-scale machine learning models, data pipelines and customer analytics.
Before joining Dell, she began her career at Tata Consultancy Services as a systems engineer and later founded Oclor, a shopping discovery start-up, where she built end-to-end technology platforms. The combination of enterprise-scale data work and entrepreneurial experience has shaped her focus on product-led, engineering-first innovation.
As technology companies seek sharper attribution and intelligence in an AI-saturated market, Dell’s move underscores the growing importance of marketing measurement as an engineering discipline rather than a reporting function.
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