Category: Media and Advertising

  • Saif turns up the cool as brand face of Thermocool’s appliance portfolio

    Saif turns up the cool as brand face of Thermocool’s appliance portfolio

    MUMBAI: Bollywood’s Nawab of charm is now king of cool. Saif Ali Khan has been signed on as the brand ambassador for Thermocool Home Appliances, stepping into the spotlight to endorse the company’s cooler division, which includes desert air coolers, room coolers, and portable units.

    The tie-up, spanning two years, will see Saif front high-profile activations, interactive digital campaigns, and a string of consumer promotions designed to give the trusted homegrown brand a stylish new edge just in time for India’s scorching summers.

    Calling the association a “strategic milestone,” Thermocool MD Rajeev Kumar Gupta said Khan represents the perfect blend of “utility and style,” aligning with Thermocool’s push for high-performance yet aspirational products.

    Adding to that, Thermocool director of operations Tushar Gupta highlighted that Saif’s versatility and credibility would cement Thermocool’s place as a preferred choice in a crowded market. Meanwhile Thermocool director of sales & marketing Tanuj Gupta, called him “the embodiment of style meeting substance,” noting his multi-generational appeal.

    For decades, Thermocool has enjoyed a special place in Indian households, trusted for innovation and reliability. Now, with Saif lending his star power, the brand aims to refresh its connect with younger, design-conscious buyers while continuing to deliver quality cooling solutions to millions across the country.

    The rollout will span media platforms nationwide, promising consumers not just effective cooling tech but also a dash of stardom with every campaign. After all, when it comes to beating the heat, Thermocool is banking on Saif to keep things effortlessly chilled.

  • Huella makes its ad move, ropes in Prabhvir Sahmey as strategy advisor

    Huella makes its ad move, ropes in Prabhvir Sahmey as strategy advisor

    MUMBAI: When an adtech player wants to make a statement, it brings in a strategist who’s seen the script unfold for decades. Huella, one of India’s fastest-growing independent adtech companies, has appointed Prabhvir Sahmey as strategic advisor, a move designed to sharpen its market narrative and fuel its next growth chapter. Sahmey isn’t new to the spotlight. With 25 years of experience across digital, media, and adtech, he has played pivotal roles in shaping India’s advertising ecosystem. His most recent stint was as senior director, ad sales at Samsung Ads, where he drove innovation in connected TV and programmatic solutions.

    For Huella, which is rapidly scaling from being a challenger brand to a market mover, Sahmey’s addition is about more than just marquee credentials. Based out of Delhi/NCR, he will guide the company’s efforts to strengthen its product portfolio, refine internal structures, and amplify its external presence.

    “Huella has always been about building something larger than a company, it’s an ecosystem where creativity, technology, and credibility meet,” said Huella co-founder & CEO Prrincey Roy. “Bringing Prabhvir on board is a deliberate step to ensure we scale this vision with discipline and ambition.”

    For his part, Sahmey called the appointment “an exciting opportunity to work with a transformational leadership team that’s building a future-ready adtech ecosystem.” He added that Huella’s clarity of vision makes it a fertile ground for meaningful impact.

    As the adtech sector in India prepares for a period of consolidation and innovation, Huella’s latest move signals that it wants to play in the big leagues not just chasing growth, but writing the next chapter of the country’s digital advertising playbook.

  • Humsa Dhir signs off from Sony after a decade of scripting its story

    Humsa Dhir signs off from Sony after a decade of scripting its story

     MUMBAI: Every great story needs a strong narrator and for Sony Pictures Networks India (SPNI), that voice has been Humsa Dhir for the last 10 years. Now, after an extraordinary decade as Senior vice president and head of corporate communications, she is bidding farewell to the network she helped define.

    Joining SPNI in 2015, Dhir steered the company’s reputation through broadcast, digital, and sports ventures, shaping how the brand was seen and understood. From deft crisis management to bold corporate storytelling, her tenure became the playbook for communications done with both strategy and sensitivity.

    Her influence stretched far beyond press releases. She chaired the organisation’s Anti-Sexual Harassment Committee for two terms, established social media governance frameworks, and championed initiatives such as the award-winning Go-Beyond Podcast, which won praise for reinventing corporate storytelling.

    Across media, energy, manufacturing, and automotive sectors, Dhir’s broader career has seen her advise CXOs and boards across Asia, Europe, and the Middle East on trust, change, and long-term value creation. At Sony, those skills translated into campaigns that resonated, and a reputation that endured.

    “Humsa has been an exceptional custodian of SPNI’s reputation and values,” said SPNI CHRO Manu Wadhwa hailing her ability to craft compelling narratives while building trust with stakeholders. “We will truly miss her insight, her partnership, and the calm confidence she always brought to the table.”

    Reflecting on her own journey, Dhir called the role “a privilege” and “a decade of growth,” noting that it gave her opportunities to blend strategy with sensitivity while building a trusted communications function. “As I close this chapter, I do so with deep gratitude and a clear sense of readiness to take this experience into new environments,” she said, hinting at broader mandates ahead.

    As she steps away, Sony loses its voice behind the curtain, the calm strategist who ensured its stories found the right tone at the right time. But for Dhir, the next chapter promises new audiences, bigger stages, and fresh scripts waiting to be written.

  • Mars cosmetics names Anmol Sahai Mathur as vp marketing for brand push

    Mars cosmetics names Anmol Sahai Mathur as vp marketing for brand push

    MUMBAI: Mars is reaching for the stars in beauty. The fast-growing Indian cosmetics brand has appointed Anmol Sahai Mathur as its new vice president of marketing, signalling its intent to move from challenger to household name.

    A seasoned marketer with more than a decade of experience, Mathur has built a career at the crossroads of digital storytelling, influencer partnerships and brand strategy. He has worked with platforms such as Triller and Eloelo, and most recently led digital marketing at the open network for digital commerce (ondc).

    Speaking on his appointment, Mathur said, “Mars has always stood out with its bold, inclusive approach to beauty. I look forward to creating campaigns that mirror the spirit of our consumers and strengthen the brand’s position as a go-to choice across India.”

    Having worked with Mars before, Mathur is no stranger to the brand’s core ethos of affordability, innovation and quality. His return, according to the company, is about deepening consumer bonds and driving digital-first growth.

    Mars cosmetics, business administrator, Rishabh Sethia said, “With Anmol’s deep understanding of our brand and his digital expertise, we are confident he will lead the next phase of growth and help us connect even more meaningfully with consumers.”

    In his new role, Mathur will focus on sharpening brand identity, building out Mar’s digital presence and crafting emotionally resonant campaigns under the company’s “make-up for everyone” vision.
     

  • Pickleball auction serves up Rs 6.6 crore as global stars join the rally

    Pickleball auction serves up Rs 6.6 crore as global stars join the rally

    MUMBAI: Pickleball has smashed its way into the big leagues. The Global Sports Pickleball (GSP) Season 2 Pro & Challenger League Auction in Mumbai turned into a sporting spectacle, with 10 teams battling it out for talent worth a potential Rs 6.6 crore. Each franchise had a player budget of Rs 66 lakhs Rs 55 lakhs for the Pro League and Rs 11 lakhs for the Challenger League setting the tone for a season that promises fierce rallies on and off the court.

    The headline-grabbing deal of the day was 19-year-old Quang Duong from Vietnam, who went for a whopping Rs 27 lakhs to Mumbai Chhatrapati Warriors, proving youth is just as prized as experience. Close behind was Megan Fudge (USA), snapped up by Ahmedabad Olympians for Rs 25.5 lakhs, followed by fellow American Jack Munro at Rs 25 lakhs for Jaipur Stallions. The Delhi Snipers pulled the trigger on Bobbi Oshiro (USA) for Rs 24.5 lakhs, while Hyderabad Vikings secured Roos Van Reek (Netherlands) at Rs 23.5 lakhs. With ages spanning late teens to late thirties, the Pro League’s top buys showed the perfect blend of fresh legs and seasoned grit.

    Indian players weren’t far behind in the bidding wars. Harsh Mehta led the Pro League pack with a Rs 21 lakh signing for Chennai Cool Cats, followed by Arjun Singh at Rs 8 lakhs for Nashik Ninjas and Aditya Ruhela at Rs 5 lakhs for Jaipur Stallions. In the Challenger League, homegrown talent sparkled Mihika Yadav was signed by Mumbai Chhatrapati Warriors for Rs 4.4 lakhs, Aman Patel by Jaipur Stallions at Rs 4 lakhs, and Tejas Gulati by Coimbatore Super Smashers at Rs 3.7 lakhs.

    The Challenger League also brought international flair, with Leah Tauber (India) topping the charts at Rs 5.2 lakhs for Delhi Snipers, followed by Mihika Yadav and Alex Emery (USA) at Rs 4.2 lakhs for Ahmedabad Olympians. With base bids starting as low as Rs 50,000 and soaring much higher thanks to intense franchise battles, the auction underscored the sport’s rapid rise.

    All 10 franchises, Ahmedabad Olympians, Bengaluru Blazers, Chennai Cool Cats, Coimbatore Super Smashers, Delhi Snipers, Hyderabad Vikings, Jaipur Stallions, Kolkata Kingz, Mumbai Chhatrapati Warriors, and Nashik Ninjas walked away with talent to watch.

    Calling it a watershed moment Pickleball Growth chief architect Hemal Jain said the competition reflected the “groundwork being laid for pickleball to become a mainstream professional sport in India.” Co-founder of Global Sports and filmmaker Shashank Khaitan added that the event not only showcased fierce bidding and top-tier players but also “helped build a sustainable sports ecosystem for the long haul.”

    With Rs 6.6 crore in play, marquee global names in the mix, and Indian youngsters stepping into the spotlight, Season 2 looks set to make pickleball not just a pastime, but a primetime passion.

  • Caratlane makes a Pujo proposal with a love story set to Rabindra Sangeet

    Caratlane makes a Pujo proposal with a love story set to Rabindra Sangeet

    MUMBAI: When love meets Pujo, sparks fly louder than dhak beats. Caratlane has dropped a new festive film that transforms Durga Puja into the most romantic stage for a proposal, complete with sindoor, Rabindra Sangeet, and one unforgettable ring.

    The campaign, titled ‘Maayer Aashirbaad’, is conceptualised by BBH India and directed by award-winning filmmaker Bauddhayan Mukherji of Little Lamb Films. At its core is Caratlane’s elegant proposal ring, unveiled as the ultimate symbol of commitment, timed to match the emotional crescendo of Bengal’s grandest celebration.

    Music drives the entire storytelling. Composed by Debojyoti Mishra, the score is a soul-stirring medley that blends timeless Rabindra Sangeet with earthy folk melodies. Sung by Mekhla Dasgupta and Chirantan Banerjee, the tracks double as dialogue, with lyrics becoming playful exchanges between the protagonists, actors Ayoshi Talukdar and Subhrojit Saha. Their chemistry carries the love story from Shoshthi to Doshomi, across iconic moments like Anjali, Dhunuchi Naach, and Bhog.

    The film reaches its high point during Doshomi’s sindoor khela, where the male lead drops down on one knee in a cinematic proposal. The ring gleams not just as jewellery but as a promise rooted in tradition yet charged with spontaneity. It’s the kind of moment that lingers, much like the colours of Pujo itself.

    For BBH India, CCO Parikshit Bhattacharya the festival was always a love story waiting to be framed. “Durga Pujo is already about romance, rituals, and memories. We wanted to set one more love story against that backdrop,” he said, emphasising how cultural truths create deeper brand narratives.

    Caratlane MD Saumen Bhaumik echoed that sentiment, noting that proposals are “matters of the heart free flowing, spontaneous, like a melody.” By weaving music, ritual and romance, the campaign aims to move beyond standard jewellery ads into something more heartfelt and enduring.

    With its lush visuals, rich soundscape, and a story that plays out as much in the heart as on screen, Maayer Aashirbaad isn’t just a campaign, it’s a proposal wrapped in the colours, chaos, and cadences of Pujo itself.

  • Publicis brings Ravi Bhaya home to script client-first transformation

    Publicis brings Ravi Bhaya home to script client-first transformation

    MUMBAI: Talk about a full-circle moment, Ravi Bhaya is back at Publicis, this time to steer the ship as chief client officer at Publicis Media India. Based in Mumbai and reporting to Lalatendu Das, CEO of Publicis Media South Asia, Bhaya’s brief is crystal clear: transform client partnerships with a mix of data, AI and creativity that sets the group apart in what it calls a “Category of One.”

    It’s a homecoming for Bhaya, who spent over two decades shaping global media strategies across India, Germany, South Africa, Indonesia, Vietnam, Singapore and North America. His CV reads like a travelogue of transformation leading mandates for marquee brands including P&G, Samsung, Coca-Cola, BMW and Mondelez, expanding agency capabilities in new markets, and driving growth strategies rooted in performance-led marketing.

    Bhaya also dabbled in the startup world, co-founding Rsquared Global Ventures (R2GV) to advise Martech, Adtech, data and commerce ventures on scaling strategies, while working closely with VCs to spot high-growth bets in emerging tech. Before that, as managing director for global growth at Munich-based Serviceplan Group, he was instrumental in driving alliances, partnerships and international expansion.

    His return to Publicis signals a sharper client-first agenda. With Starcom, Zenith and Performics under his wing, Bhaya is tasked with deepening partnerships and pushing integrated, future-ready solutions in India’s rapidly shifting media landscape. For Publicis Groupe, which has doubled down on data-led and AI-powered offerings, the appointment underscores its ambition to blend global expertise with local impact.

    Or as Bhaya himself put it, coming back feels both “familiar and fresh” rooted in trust, fuelled by renewed ambition, and very much tuned to what’s next for clients in an industry where data, creativity and AI are increasingly inseparable.

  • Adman Diwan Arun Nanda gave India a marketing conscience

    Adman Diwan Arun Nanda gave India a marketing conscience

    MUMBAI: Diwan Arun Nanda who passed away this week was one of the founding fathers of independent Indian advertising and co-founder of the agency Rdiffusion.  Over half a century, Nanda transformed the way Indians understood brands, and equally, how brands understood Indians. His legacy lies not just in memorable campaigns but in the rare conviction that advertising should win trust, not merely attention.

    Born in Mumbai in 1948, Nanda belonged to the pioneering first batch of the Indian Institute of Management, Ahmedabad, where he graduated with a gold medal for academic excellence. He joined Hindustan Lever as part of its celebrated management trainee programme, a finishing school for the country’s future business leaders.

    At Lever, Nanda’s intuitive grasp of consumer recall and semiotics surfaced quickly. He was instrumental in introducing Rin’s lightning-bolt symbol, a clean graphic that turned detergent into iconography. Household recognition was instantaneous, and so was the reputation of a young executive whose instincts straddled both commerce and creativity.

    In 1973, tired of working within large corporate structures and spotting an opening in India’s communication landscape, Nanda teamed up with Ajit Balakrishnan and Mohammed Khan to found Rediffusion. Their move came at a time when multinational agencies dominated the client rosters. A truly Indian firm challenging the giants was seen as audacious.

    The gamble paid off spectacularly. Their win of the Eveready batteries account, with the deceptively simple line “The chosen one. For your transistor,” established Rediffusion as a creative force that could shape consumer culture. For the first time, Indian advertising talent was asserting that local creativity did not have to play second fiddle to imported gloss.

    Over the next decades, Nanda marshalled Rediffusion into one of the country’s great agencies, winning clients across telecom, consumer goods, airlines and banking. Its campaigns became pop-culture staples. Rediffusion was cheeky, self-assured and intensely Indian—and at its helm was a leader who prized rigour as much as wit.
    If Nanda delighted in bold slogans, he was equally defined by what he refused to sell. When a magazine failed to live up to readership claims touted in Rediffusion’s ads, Nanda chose to resign the account, believing his agency had, however inadvertently, misled consumers. Few contemporaries would have walked away. He did so without fanfare, only with the conviction that trust was more valuable in the long run than billings.

    This rare streak of principle separated him from peers in an industry where sleight of hand often outpaces substance. To Nanda, advertising was about persuasion, not deception; about clarity, not cleverness for its own sake.

    Nanda’s influence stretched beyond the confines of the ad world. In the 1980s he advised prime minister Rajiv Gandhi on communications, contributing to the narrative of a youthful, reform-minded leadership. He struck a joint venture with global player Young & Rubicam, strengthening Rediffusion’s international profile without sacrificing its independence.

    Corporate India also sought his judgement. He served as a director on the boards of Air India, Eveready, Kingfisher Airlines and Yes Bank, his counsel valued for its mix of marketing acumen, strategic vision and clean governance.

    Colleagues fondly recall Nanda’s insistence on discipline and clarity. He was a mentor who disdained jargon and demanded that ideas shine through in the simplest possible way. In an age when advertising was becoming increasingly performative, he grounded his protégés in first principles: honesty, insight, storytelling.

    He often reflected with pride on Rediffusion’s long journey, which he described as “a dream run”. It was one of the few Indian-founded agencies to achieve scale, reputation and global stature without being absorbed by a multinational. That sense of independence mirrored Nanda’s own personality—ambitious, exacting, yet unfailingly proud of domestic creativity.

    With his passing, Indian advertising loses not only a giant but also a moral compass. Nanda represented a generation that carved out space for Indian talent at a time of foreign dominance, that proved ideas from Mumbai could rival Madison Avenue, and that insisted commercial success meant little if not grounded in integrity.

    Today’s industry, beset by algorithms, influencer culture and data-driven messaging, may seem far from the world of transistors and detergents in which Nanda first honed his craft. But the central lessons he preached—that a brand must earn trust, that persuasion must be rooted in truth—remain as urgent as ever.

    Diwan Arun Nanda’s journey—from a meticulous trainee at Hindustan Lever to a mentor of agencies, CEOs and politicians—was, as he himself would admit, a testament to ambition without compromise. His campaigns lit up households, but it was his conscience that set him apart.

  • Adman Diwan Arun Nanda, co-founder of Rediffusion, passes away

    Adman Diwan Arun Nanda, co-founder of Rediffusion, passes away

    MUMBAI: Diwan Arun Nanda, one of Indian advertising’s towering figures and co-founder of the agency Rediffusion, passed away this week in Mumbai. He was 76.

    Born in 1948, Nanda cut his teeth at Hindustan Lever after graduating as a gold medallist from the Indian Institute of Management, Ahmedabad. His early work included the lightning-bolt logo for Rin detergent, which seared itself into household memory.

    In 1973, with Ajit Balakrishnan and Mohammed Khan, he set up Rediffusion, thumbing his nose at the global giants then ruling the market. A coup soon came with Eveready’s transistor-battery campaign—“The chosen one”—that announced the firm’s creative muscle.

    Over the next decades Nanda steered Rediffusion into the premier league, wooing clients from telecoms to fast-moving consumer goods. His fame rested not just on catchy slogans but on fierce integrity. When a magazine failed to deliver on claims hyped in its ads, he promptly gave up the account, unwilling to mislead.

    Nanda’s reach went well beyond Madison Avenue. He advised prime minister Rajiv Gandhi in the 1980s, forged a tie-up with Young & Rubicam, and sat on the boards of Air India, Eveready, Kingfisher Airlines and Yes Bank. Colleagues remember him as a demanding mentor who valued clarity and principles as much as creativity.

    “Rediffusion’s journey was a dream run,” he once said. His death marks the close of an era in Indian advertising—an era of audacity, pride in home-grown talent, and the rare refusal to compromise.

  • 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.