Category: Media Agencies

  • 1702 Digital taps Vishal Dhar to lead digital charge

    1702 Digital taps Vishal Dhar to lead digital charge

    MUMBAI: 1702 Digital is betting on experience to fuel its next growth spurt. The Mumbai-based consultancy, which bills itself as one of India’s fastest-growing full-service digital transformation shops, has appointed Vishal Dhar as vice president of digital—a move designed to muscle up its strategic firepower in an increasingly crowded market.

    Dhar will lead digital strategy, performance marketing and innovation initiatives, working alongside the leadership team to sharpen the agency’s integrated offerings. His brief: drive large-scale campaigns that marry data-driven insights with creativity whilst delivering measurable results.

    The appointment comes as 1702 Digital pushes to redefine how brands connect with audiences through what it calls a blend of creativity, technology and measurable impact. Translation: no fluff, all outcomes.

    “I’m thrilled to join 1702 Digital at a time when the digital space is evolving faster than ever,” said Dhar. “The agency’s bold approach, creative agility and focus on impact-driven results resonate deeply with my own vision. I look forward to contributing to the next phase of 1702’s growth and driving success for our clients.”

    1702 Digital co-founder Mihir Joshi welcomed the hire as a strategic upgrade. “Vishal’s experience and strategic mindset will further elevate our digital capabilities and strengthen our position as a leading partner for brands looking to achieve transformative growth through digital innovation.”

    Founder & managing director Aanchal Arora doubled down on the sentiment. “His experience and understanding of the evolving digital landscape make him a perfect fit for our next phase of growth. As we continue to expand our digital ecosystem, Vishal’s leadership and strategic insight will play a pivotal role in elevating our capabilities and reinforcing 1702 Digital’s position as a creative powerhouse.”

    The hire marks a key milestone in 1702 Digital’s expansion trajectory, signalling ambitions to move beyond fast-growing upstart status into established player territory. Dhar brings extensive experience across marketing, digital transformation and business growth—credentials the agency clearly believes will help it punch above its weight in pitches and delivery.

    Whether 1702 Digital’s bet on seasoned leadership translates into the transformative growth its founders promise remains to be seen. But in an industry where digital expertise is currency and results are king, hiring someone who’s driven large-scale campaigns before is a sensible play. Now Dhar just needs to prove he can do it again—this time with 1702’s name on the work.

  • WPP Media’s ‘beyond price tags’ redefines India’s e-commerce game

    WPP Media’s ‘beyond price tags’ redefines India’s e-commerce game

    MUMBAI: Forget discounts and flash sales. India’s next e-commerce boom is getting a luxury makeover. WPP Media India has unveiled ‘Beyond Price Tags: The Power of Premiumization’ in India’s e-commerce boom, a new playbook that argues the future of online shopping is not just digital, but decisively premium.

    Launched in Mumbai, the report sheds light on how Indian consumers are moving beyond price wars and seeking something more lasting: experiences, personalisation, and ethics over mere affordability. The message is clear: value is being redefined.

    Drawing from insights by leading platforms, brands, and experts, the playbook highlights that premium demand is now democratised. Thanks to credit solutions, efficient delivery networks, and the rise of social and quick commerce, premium choices are no longer limited to metro buyers, they’re reaching the heart of Bharat.

    Among its key findings, the report identifies five defining shifts: the democratisation of premium demand; consumers’ appetite for elevated experiences; platform-driven brand reinvention; a cross-category tilt towards feature-rich, design-led products; and the evolution of mass brands into “masstige” offerings.

    To help brands turn insight into action, WPP Media introduces four strategic frameworks: Flash, Vista, Prime, and Rise, each designed to guide discoverability, curation, customer experience, and loyalty building in the digital era.

    “At WPP Media, we are constantly at the forefront of shaping the future of commerce,” said WPP Media South Asia COO Ashwin Padmanabhan. “The premiumization trend in Indian e-commerce is more than just a shift in price points, it reflects evolving consumer aspirations and the growing desire for quality, experience, and status.”

    Echoing this, WPP Media India head of commerce Sairam Ranganathan added, “Premiumization marks a pivotal shift where rising aspirations, global exposure, and digital empowerment are redefining how consumers engage with brands. This playbook is not just a guide but a catalyst for growth.”

     

  • WPP faces twin lawsuits as media arm stumbles

    WPP faces twin lawsuits as media arm stumbles

    NEW YORK: WPP, the world’s biggest advertising group, is being sued by investors who reckon the company misled them about the state of its struggling media business. Two class-action lawsuits—one from Rosen Law Firm, another from Glancy Prongay & Murray—have reportedly been filed against the British giant, both chasing shareholders who bought American depositary shares between 27 February and 8 July 2025.

    The complaints claim WPP painted a rosy picture whilst hiding an ugly truth: that its media arm, formerly called GroupM and now renamed WPP Media, was losing ground to rivals and couldn’t hack the tough economic climate. On 9 July, the firm finally admitted that performance had “deteriorated” through the second quarter, blaming “macro uncertainty” and “weaker net new business” alongside “distraction” from restructuring its media operations.

    Investors weren’t amused. The shares plunged $6.48—an 18.1 per cent drop—to close at $29.34. The lawsuits allege that WPP’s upbeat statements lacked any reasonable basis and that executives concealed the media division’s market-share losses.

    Both firms are now racing to recruit a lead plaintiff before the 8 December deadline. Rosen Law Firm, which boasts of securing the largest-ever securities settlement against a Chinese company, says investors may be entitled to compensation without upfront costs. Glancy Prongay & Murray is pitching a similar deal.
    No class has been certified yet, and shareholders needn’t do anything to remain part of the action. But if they fancy leading the charge, they’d better move fast. WPP’s troubles, it seems, are only just beginning to bite.

  • Wpp Media bags integrated media mandate for Leeford Healthcare

    Wpp Media bags integrated media mandate for Leeford Healthcare

    MUMBAI: Wpp Media has won the integrated media mandate for five of Leeford Healthcare Limited’s strategic consumer brands, covering atl, full-funnel digital, e-commerce, q-commerce, performance marketing, and seo. The win marks a significant expansion of Wpp Media’s footprint in India’s healthcare and personal care sector.

    Under the mandate, Wpp Media will oversee end-to-end planning and buying across key platforms, leveraging data-led strategies to deliver scale, efficiency, and measurable impact. For Leeford, one of India’s fastest-growing pharmaceutical and healthcare companies and the second-largest player in general medicine, the partnership aims to strengthen brand visibility, optimise consumer journeys, and drive sustainable business growth.

    “Leeford Healthcare’s journey is rooted in trust while rapidly scaling into personal care and orthopedics,” said Wpp Media South Asia president- client solutions Navin Khemka. “This mandate goes beyond media, it’s about shaping how a brand of scale connects with millions in a digital-first world. By fusing data intelligence, commerce expertise, and creative storytelling, we aim to craft seamless consumer experiences across platforms.”

    Echoing the sentiment, Leeford Healthcare founder & managing director Amit Gupta said, “Our vision is to build Leeford into a diversified consumer powerhouse that blends healthcare credibility with lifestyle relevance. To scale this vision, we needed a partner who could combine strategy with execution and Wpp Media is best equipped to help fuel the next chapter of our growth story.”

    Founded with the purpose of making quality healthcare more accessible, Leeford Healthcare continues to evolve into a broad-based health, wellness, and personal care brand. With this partnership, both companies are set to craft a media strategy that’s equal parts precision, performance, and purpose, a formula fit for India’s fast-changing healthcare landscape.

  • Horizon and Havas forge $20bn media giant to shake up agency world

    Horizon and Havas forge $20bn media giant to shake up agency world

    NEW YORK: Two heavyweights of the advertising world are joining forces to take on the industry’s entrenched giants. Horizon Media Holdings and Havas have launched Horizon Global, a joint venture that instantly vaults into the top tier of global media investors with $20bn in combined billings spanning more than 100 countries.

    The New York-based network arrives as a pointed alternative to what the partners call an increasingly “constrained” market dominated by a handful of holding companies. Horizon Global will hunt for American-centric global clients, whilst Horizon Media and Havas Media Network continue to operate independently on their existing books of business.

    At the venture’s core sits BluConverged, a mash-up of Horizon’s Blu platform and Havas’s Converged.AI that promises clients an “AI-native experience” delivering faster insights and genuine transparency—a perennial gripe in an industry notorious for opacity.

    “Built exclusively for the needs of the modern global marketer, Horizon Global is rewriting the agency network playbook,” said Horizon Media Holdings. chief executive and founder Bill Koenigsberg. “As the first agency network built in the AI era, we’re leading with future-forward ways of working.”

    Havas chief executive and chairman Yannick Bolloré  called the partnership “a significant moment” in a shifting industry landscape. “I’ve known Bill for years, and I’m incredibly proud Horizon has turned to Havas as its global partner.”

     Horizon Media Holdings president Bob Lord takes the helm as interim chief executive of Horizon Global whilst keeping his current role. Renata Spackova, based in Paris, becomes global chief operating officer, overseeing the rollout across more than 100 markets.

    The pair will report to a board including Koenigsberg, Bolloré, Peter Mears (global chief executive of Havas Media Network) and other senior leaders from both shops.

  • WARC ad forecast: Digital giants to gorge on global bonanza in 2025

    WARC ad forecast: Digital giants to gorge on global bonanza in 2025

    MUMBAI: Global advertising expenditure is set to surge by 7.4 per cent this year to $1.17trn, according to WARC’s latest forecast—the first upward revision in more than a year. The research firm has boosted its projection by 1.2 percentage points since June, driven by what it calls a “social media windfall” and frenetic pre-tariff spending.

    The bonanza is heavily skewed towards a handful of technology titans. Meta, Alphabet and Amazon are forecast to hoover up nearly two-thirds of all advertising growth in 2025, cementing their stranglehold on the global marketing purse strings. Outside China, the trio already commands 55.8 per cent of all advertising spend—a share set to exceed 60 per cent by 2030.

    Digital platforms are cannibalising traditional media with ruthless efficiency. Nine in every ten new advertising dollars are flowing to online-only platforms, leaving legacy media owners—even those with digital arms—to scrap over what WARC likens to “the equivalent of Facebook’s monthly revenue.”

    Social media has emerged as the single largest advertising medium globally, gobbling up 40.6 per cent of new marketing dollars. Spending on the channel is projected to rocket by 14.9 per cent to $306.4bn this year, representing more than a quarter of total global advertising expenditure. Meta remains the chief beneficiary, capturing 60 per cent of all social media advertising spend.

    The spending spree was particularly pronounced in the second quarter, when social media expenditure jumped 20.2 per cent year-on-year—well above WARC’s initial projection of 12.4 per cent growth. The surge was driven by retailers rushing to stockpile inventory and promote value ahead of expected price hikes, with retail now the largest category on both Instagram and TikTok.

    Search advertising is attracting around 22 per cent of new dollars, while retail media platforms are capturing another 21.5 per cent. Amazon is poised to claim over a third of the retail media pie, which is forecast to grow 13.7 per cent to $175bn in 2025.

    The momentum is expected to accelerate further, with global advertising spend projected to rise 8.1 per cent to $1.27trn in 2026 and 7.1 per cent to $1.36trn in 2027. The market is on track to nearly double in value since the pandemic, underscoring advertising’s remarkable resilience despite economic headwinds.

    “This includes disruption to global trade and reduced purchasing power among consumers, brands are doubling down on Meta, Alphabet and Amazon,” said WARC director of data, intelligence and forecasting James Mcdonald. “The global market is set to nearly double in value since the pandemic, underscoring the resilience of advertising in a tougher economic climate.”

    The rosy outlook contrasts sharply with some other industry forecasts. eMarketer recently slashed its projections for American digital advertising spending, citing the impact of trade wars on automotive and retail sectors. But WARC’s global perspective suggests the digital advertising juggernaut shows no signs of slowing.

  • WPP Media places  Mindshare veteran to steer Fulcrum’s south Asian operations

    WPP Media places Mindshare veteran to steer Fulcrum’s south Asian operations

    MUMBAI: WPP Media has nabbed Vinish Mathews, former chief strategy officer at Mindshare India, to head its team Fulcrum operations across south Asia. The appointment marks a homecoming of sorts for Mathews, who previously orchestrated strategic planning for Hindustan Unilever’s sprawling personal care empire during his decade-long stint at Mindshare.

    Mathews arrives with 22 years of battle-tested experience spanning India, China and Southeast Asia. His CV reads like a tour through advertising’s most cutthroat markets—from steering Nestlé and PepsiCo campaigns in China’s digital-first landscape to managing Unilever’s 30-brand portfolio including Dove, Lux and Fair & Lovely in India.

    The 45-year-old executive cut his teeth at The New Indian Express before climbing the ranks at The Media Edge and Mindshare. His most recent role saw him as managing director of Mindshare China, where he juggled marquee accounts including Royal Caribbean and Tourism New Zealand whilst leading Alibaba’s outbound business across Asia-Pacific, Europe and North America.

    At Essence, Mathews served as vice-president and client partner for Google across India and Southeast Asia, cementing his reputation as a digital media heavyweight. His expertise spans the full spectrum from FMCG giants to fintech upstarts, with forays into automotive, tourism and consumer durables.

    WPP Media’s decision to bring Mathews aboard signals its intent to capitalise on south Asia’s booming advertising market. The region has become a crucial battleground for global agencies as brands chase the spending power of India’s burgeoning middle class and the digital transformation sweeping across emerging markets.

    Mathews will now task himself with driving growth and transformation for team Fulcrum’s client roster, leveraging his cross-cultural expertise and proven track record in building “immersive consumer connections.” For WPP, it represents a strategic coup in the ongoing war for talent between the world’s largest advertising groups.

  • Digital video veteran jumps ship to Spanish adtech darling

    Digital video veteran jumps ship to Spanish adtech darling

    NEW DELHI: Shikha Singh, the executive who helped Dailymotion crack the notoriously difficult Indian market, has jumped ship to join Marfeel, a Spanish adtech firm, as sales director for Asia-Pacific. The move marks another coup for European technology companies seeking to expand their footprint across the region’s fragmented digital landscape.

    Singh’s departure from Dailymotion, where she spent over seven years building the French video platform’s Indian operations, signals the intense competition for experienced hands in the publisher technology space. At Marfeel, she will spearhead the Barcelona-based company’s push into markets where digital advertising spending continues to surge despite global economic headwinds.

    The appointment comes as Marfeel, which helps publishers optimise their websites for better user engagement and revenue, looks to capitalise on the growing demand for sophisticated content management tools across Asia. The company’s technology promises to boost page views and advertising income—a compelling proposition for cash-strapped media organisations grappling with declining print revenues.

    Singh’s track record suggests Marfeel has chosen wisely. During her tenure as country manager for India at Dailymotion, she delivered what she describes as “phenomenal growth” of 120 per cent over two years whilst serving as sales director for supply and enterprise sales. Her knack for “executing complex conversations with C-level people” and managing partnerships across the chaotic Indian media ecosystem made her a valuable asset for Vivendi-owned Dailymotion.

    Before her Dailymotion stint, Singh cut her teeth at some of India’s most prominent digital media companies. She managed partnerships at Times Internet, the digital arm of India’s largest newspaper group, and worked on business development for Dainik Bhaskar Group, one of the country’s biggest Hindi-language publishers. Earlier roles at adtech firms LocoVida and Kaumarc Media, plus a brief entrepreneurial venture with JobsandResults.com, rounded out her experience in the rough-and-tumble world of Indian digital media.

    The move reflects broader trends in the global adtech industry, where European companies are increasingly challenging American dominance in Asia-Pacific markets. Spanish firms, in particular, have been aggressive in their expansion, leveraging their experience in similarly fragmented European markets to tackle the complexities of Asian publishing.

    For Marfeel, Singh’s appointment represents a bet that the company can replicate its European success in markets where publishers are desperately seeking new revenue streams. Her deep understanding of the SaaS sales model and ability to navigate the relationship-heavy Indian business culture could prove crucial as the company attempts to win over sceptical Asian publishers.

    The timing appears fortuitous. Digital advertising spending across Asia-Pacific is expected to continue growing, driven by rising smartphone penetration and increasingly sophisticated programmatic advertising tools. Publishers who can demonstrate measurable improvements in user engagement and revenue generation are well-positioned to capture a larger share of advertisers’ budgets.

    Whether Singh can work the same magic for Marfeel that she did for Dailymotion remains to be seen. But her appointment signals that the battle for Asia-Pacific’s publisher technology market is heating up—and European companies are not content to let their American rivals have all the fun.

  • Publicis promotes Krishna Mothey to senior vice president

    Publicis promotes Krishna Mothey to senior vice president

    MUMBAI: Publicis Groupe India has elevated Krishna Mothey to senior vice president after six years with the agency. Mothey, who joined in 2019 to establish its commerce practice, has overseen its expansion from a two-member team into a 300-strong unit.

    In his new role, Mothey will continue as practice lead for commerce, steering strategy across e-commerce, direct-to-consumer channels, content, analytics and marketplaces.

    “I’m proud of the journey we’ve taken. When I started, it was with a vision to create the commerce practice, and it’s been a phenomenal experience to watch the team grow,” Mothey said in a note marking the promotion. He credited the support of Publicis leadership, internal teams, brand partners and clients, adding that he was “energised for the future.”

    Mothey’s promotion caps a career spanning more than 15 years in digital marketing and e-commerce. He has previously held senior roles at GroupM, iProspect and Ybrant Digital, and is also a founding member of The Digital Brunch, a training initiative.

  • Havas India launches Gate One consultancy in Bengaluru

    Havas India launches Gate One consultancy in Bengaluru

    BENGALURU: Havas India has launched Gate One, its global business and digital transformation consultancy, signalling that the Indian consulting market is too large—and growing too fast—to ignore. India becomes the fourth market for Gate One after the UK, Ireland and the US, with France lined up next. For Havas, it also marks the sixth global agency launch in the country, underscoring India’s rising weight in its worldwide network.

    Gate One India will be led by Karan Ingle, client director, based at Havas’s integrated village in Bengaluru. He will report to Rana Barua, group chief executive of Havas India, South East Asia and North Asia, and to Ben Tye, managing partner, Gate One.

    The consultancy will offer expertise in customer experience, marketing transformation, digital, data and AI strategy, as Havas looks to position itself as a full-service player combining creativity, media and consultancy. 

    The expansion aims to help Indian brands unlock new opportunities and reimagine customer engagement at a time when digital transformation budgets are ballooning.