Category: Media and Advertising

  • Vishnu Kanth Gokul ‘leapfrogs’ into creative carnage

    Vishnu Kanth Gokul ‘leapfrogs’ into creative carnage

    He is not just any punter. This is the top dog with 300+ WhatsApp groups under his belt and 20 thriving communities he’s built from scratch. One man, pure genius and probably a tad knackered from all that graft!

    Need a community so strong it could win a rugby scrum? Or perhaps just a bit of a kick up the arse (aka mentorship) to get your career motoring? Vishnu Kanth Gokul’s strategic noise is the game-changer you are looking for. He’s got more tricks up his sleeve than a magician at a royal variety show.

    Over the past two decades, he’s had the smashing privilege of contributing to the growth stories of some of India’s most iconic platforms from Rediff.com, Sify.com, Rajshri.com, 123Greetings.com, Cricbuzz.com to Percept, Qoruz, FoxyMoron Sida (South Indian Digital Awards).

    Today, he’s the co-founder and chief revenue officer at The Leapfrog Network, leading the charge on growth strategy, revenue and brand partnerships. He’s blending content, media and creative innovation like a master chef, cooking up brands that actually matter. None of your wishy-washy rubbish here, just pure, unadulterated brand brilliance!

    Indiantelevision.com’s Rohin Ramesh managed to collar Gokul for a tete a tete via email. Keen as mustard, he was ready to spill the beans on his spanking new role and a whole lot more!

    Excerpts:

    On taking the leap with The Leapfrog Network whether it was love at first brand or your co-founder buddies Yash and Rishabh charmed you over a chai banter

    It was a bit of both, honestly. The vision was clear from day one, we weren’t building just another agency, we were building a cultural engine. Yash and Rishabh brought the firepower with their storytelling chops, and over multiple chai sessions, it evolved into a blueprint for something bigger. It wasn’t just about creating content but is all about shifting conversations. I knew this was the leap worth taking.

    On any original clients who jumped on early and are staying loyal

    Yes, we had a few early believers who backed us not just for the work we promised, but for the energy we brought. OTTplay was one of our first marquee collaborations, and working with a brand that already had scale gave us the chance to shape something culturally sticky. Their trust gave us the runway to experiment, fail fast, and grow sharper. We’ll always tip our hats to  early partners who saw the spark before the flame.

    On the overall team strength creative and strategy wise

    We’re a tight-knit crew of 65 today. Honestly, we don’t like boxing people into roles. One day someone’s cracking memes, and the next they’re presenting to a boardroom. That agility is our edge. We hire for mindset over resumes, people who think like strategists but execute like creators.

    On secret of brands taking the leap with The Leapfrog Network

    Our superpower is cultural intuition. We don’t chase virality, we engineer resonance. Every campaign, every post, every reel is backed by behavioral insights. We bridge brand goals with cultural fluency. And we’re not afraid to tell clients what not to do. That honesty, paired with hustle, builds trust. That’s our secret sauce.

    On juggling all the responsibilities without going wrong on creative

    There’s always a bit of creative chaos, and that’s the fun part. But I believe in systemising creativity. We’ve built ops that are robust enough to track ROI, but flexible enough to pivot when a trend shifts overnight. Delegation, clarity, and trust in the team allow me to juggle without burnout. It’s not about doing everything, it’s about empowering the right people to do the right things.

    On balancing bold commercial moves without losing the agency’s pop culture

    That’s a tightrope walk, no doubt. But for us, business growth and cultural relevance are not at odds, they’re intertwined. The brands that win today are the ones that can entertain, engage, and still convert. We ensure every growth lever we pull still speaks in the language of our audience. It’s a strategy without selling out.

    On keeping your machete sharp and staying ahead of the algorithmic anacondas

    We keep our machete sharp with a mix of curiosity and humility. Platforms evolve, but audience behavior is the constant. We’re not chasing every new feature blindly, we’re observing, testing, and iterating. Weekly trend roundups, tight feedback loops, and a very geeky media + analytics team ensure we’re not just following the algorithm, sometimes, we beat it to the punch.

    On missing the good old sales floor days at Rediff where the only strategy was hustle

    I do. There was raw energy on the floor, no decks, just drive. But those days taught me resilience and the power of showing up. Now, I bring that hustle to a more structured ecosystem. It’s still a people-first business, whether you’re selling ad slots or narratives. What’s changed is the toolkit, not the hunger.

    On TLF ever be the next Marvel of branded content

    We’re definitely building our own universe just not with capes. Thinking creator-first IPs, snackable series, and community-led platforms. We don’t just want to activate influencers, we want to co-create with them. There are a couple of IPs in stealth mode right now, and if they hit like we believe they will, we won’t just be running campaigns, we’ll be producing culture.

    On your personal mission at TLF whether it be saving the world, one meme at a time

    My mission is to make marketing more human and more honest. I want to help brands speak with people, not at them. If a meme can spark a conversation that leads to a connection, our job is done. The world doesn’t need more ads; it needs more clarity.

    On cracking ROI or decoding the Gen Z lexicon  

    Decoding Gen Z, hands down. ROI has formulas. Gen Z has feelings, filters, and a whole vocabulary that evolves faster than a budget cycle. But once you stop overthinking and start listening you realise they’re not that complex. They just want brands to show up real, not rehearsed.

    On a scale from “mild disruption” to “creative carnage,” you see TLF heading under your revenue radar

    We’re definitely mixing up with “creative carnage” but the good kind. We’re not here to play it safe. We’re scaling, yes, but not at the cost of our creative soul. We want to be the agency that launches narratives, not just ads. So expect disruption, with a healthy dose of discipline.

    On some new ripples we expect from you in the Leapfrog way of working

    Trends are table stakes. What we bring is foresight, basically the ability to spot shifts before they become mainstream. We’re building playbooks that are agile, data-rich, and culturally sharp. The goal is not to ride the wave but to shape it.

  • Publicis Groupe smashes expectations with blistering 5.9 per cent organic growth

    Publicis Groupe smashes expectations with blistering 5.9 per cent organic growth

    PARIS: Publicis Groupe delivered a scorching second quarter that left competitors in the dust, posting 5.9 per cent organic growth that significantly outpaced expectations and cemented its position as the industry’s standout performer.

    The French advertising behemoth’s net revenue hit €3.6bn in Q2, up 4.6 per cent on a reported basis, whilst organic growth accelerated to 5.9 per cent – well ahead of the company’s five-year compound annual growth rate of 4.9 per cent for the quarter.

    Chairman & chief executive Arthur Sadoun didn’t mince words about the performance: “In a tough macroeconomic environment, Publicis had a very strong Q2 ahead of expectations,” he said, highlighting an “outperformance versus competition once again, of 800 basis points.”

    The stellar quarter was underpinned by what Sadoun called an “unprecedented new business run” of over a dozen material wins in the first six months of 2025, prompting the company to raise its full-year organic growth guidance to close to five per cent, up from the previous four to five  per cent range.

    Every major region delivered solid growth in Q2, with north America posting 5.8 per cent organic growth (5.3 per cent in the US), Europe climbing 4.6 per cent, and Asia Pacific surging 5.7 per cent. Latin America was the standout with a blistering 19.8 per cent organic growth.

    The company’s integrated model proved its worth in North America, where connected media and intelligent creativity drove “very solid growth,” whilst technology posted slight positive organic growth despite delayed capex spending across the IT consulting industry.

    Perhaps most impressively, Publicis managed to expand its operating margin to a record 17.4 per cent in the first half whilst sustaining significant investments in artificial intelligence, talent acquisition, and new business development.

    First-half net revenue reached €7.2bn, up 6.9 per cent, with organic growth of 5.4 per cent. Headline diluted earnings per share rose 3.8 per cent to €3.51, whilst free cash flow before working capital changes jumped 11.3 per cent to €828m.

    The company has been on a targeted acquisition tear, snapping up seven companies in the first half including Lotame’s identity solutions, Captiv8’s influencer technology platform, and Australia’s Atomic 212º media agency. These deals are designed to bolster Publicis’s AI-led capabilities and strengthen its “category of one” positioning.

    Despite ongoing global economic uncertainty, Publicis maintained its industry-high financial targets for 2025, expecting operating margins slightly above 18 per cent and free cash flow of around €1.9bn.

    “We are uniquely positioned to continue to win market share by bringing clients the immediate business solutions they need to grow in an uncertain global context,” Sadoun declared, signalling the company’s confidence in its ability to outmaneuver rivals in a disrupted industry.

    The results underscore Publicis’s transformation from traditional advertising agency to an integrated marketing technology powerhouse, with its data-driven approach and AI capabilities proving increasingly attractive to clients navigating digital disruption.

    With 108,000 professionals across over 100 countries, Publicis appears well-positioned to maintain its momentum through the remainder of 2025, despite anticipated client spending reductions in the second half.

  • Red Bull-branded jumper Felix Baumgartner dies in paragliding crash at 56

    Red Bull-branded jumper Felix Baumgartner dies in paragliding crash at 56

    MUMBAI: Felix Baumgartner, the Austrian skydiver who stunned the world with his supersonic leap from the edge of space in 2012, has died aged 56 in a paragliding crash in Porto Sant’Elpidio, Italy.

    The Red Bull poster boy, dubbed “Fearless Felix”, reportedly lost control of his glider and plummeted to the ground near a hotel swimming pool, with local authorities suspecting a medical emergency during flight.

    Baumgartner shot to fame in October 2012 when he jumped from 39km above the Earth as part of the Red Bull Stratos project. The death-defying stunt saw him break three records—highest freefall, fastest speed in freefall, and highest manned balloon flight—and made him the first human to break the sound barrier without mechanical assistance.

    The former paratrooper and Base jumping legend carved a name for himself leaping off skyscrapers, bridges and cliffs. His Red Bull jump remains one of the most iconic branded stunts of all time, catapulting the energy drink maker into global cultural relevance.

    His death marks the end of an era for extreme sports.

  • Inderpeet Singh Gaba joins Miraggio as vp, brand marketing

    Inderpeet Singh Gaba joins Miraggio as vp, brand marketing

    MUMBAI: After putting his best foot forward with global giants like Birkenstock and Luxottica, Inderpeet Singh Gaba has now slung his marketing savvy over his shoulder, quite literally, by stepping into his new role as vice president, brand marketing at Miraggio, the fast-growing handbag brand.

    With a résumé that reads like a fashion week guest list stints at Sunglass Hut, LensCrafters, Vision Express, PepperTap and Aditya Birla Group — Gaba brings a heady mix of retail precision, digital chops, and global brand-building firepower. Most recently, at Birkenstock, he helped plant the iconic German sandal brand firmly into the Indian fashion consciousness.

    From comfortable soles to luxury totes, Gaba’s marketing journey proves he’s no stranger to switching gears and strutting with style.

  • PW adds more force to its formula with Satish Sharma as new CMO

    PW adds more force to its formula with Satish Sharma as new CMO

    MUMBAI: It’s not rocket science, it’s marketing. And Physicswallah just found the right mind to lead the charge. In a move to amplify its brand and deepen its market resonance, India’s edtech powerhouse has appointed Satish Sharma as its new chief marketing officer (CMO). Sharma, a seasoned leader with over two decades of experience, has donned many hats entrepreneur, brand strategist, and tech transformation expert. Most recently, he co-founded Unyscape, a global marketing and analytics firm, where he served as both COO and CMO. Prior to that, he held formative roles at IBM and Tata Steel, adding operational muscle to his marketing brain.

    A graduate of IIT Varanasi, Satish now steps into Physicswallah (PW) at a time when the company is doubling down on its mission to democratise education across India and beyond. With offerings spanning test prep, skilling, higher education, and study abroad, PW is evolving rapidly and it needs marketing leadership to match its ambition.

    “The brand’s attempt at making education accessible to those who wish to learn deeply resonates with me,” Sharma said. “I look forward to amplifying the impact with authenticity and empathy.”

    PW’s Founder and CEO, Alakh Pandey, echoed the sentiment: “Satish brings a rare mix of strategic clarity and operational excellence. As we enter the next chapter of growth, his experience will be invaluable in building a brand learners trust and love.”

    With Sharma in the cockpit, Physicswallah is clearly gearing up to accelerate its brand journey powered not just by formulas and facts, but by focus and finesse.

  • Zomato’s ‘Fuel Your Hustle’ campaign serves a hot tribute to India’s silent strivers

    Zomato’s ‘Fuel Your Hustle’ campaign serves a hot tribute to India’s silent strivers

    MUMBAI: Zomato is dishing out a power-packed ode to perseverance with its latest campaign, ‘Fuel Your Hustle’, starring a heavyweight cast of Indian icons: Shah Rukh Khan, Mary Kom, AR Rahman, and Jasprit Bumrah.

    The emotionally charged campaign spotlights the sweat behind the stardom, tracing each personality’s journey through rare archival footage — some of it never seen before — and gritty behind-the-scenes moments from iconic matches, studios, and film sets. The film is underscored by a stirring track from Kalmi (Nikhil Kalimireddy), the voice behind the viral anthem “Big Dawgs”.

    In a world chasing instant wins, ‘Fuel Your Hustle’ flips the script. It’s a celebration of those long, unglamorous hours of hustle — whether it’s SRK’s early theatre days, Mary Kom’s fight against the odds as a mother and champion, Rahman’s studio grind, or Bumrah’s rise from the nets to global cricketing glory.

     

     
     
     
     
     
     
     
     
     
     
     
     
     
     
     

    A post shared by Zomato (@zomato)

     

     

     

    Commenting on the campaign, Zomato marketing Sahibjeet Singh Sawhney said, “This campaign is for a new generation of doers, a reminder that even the stars they look up to started small, stumbled, and kept going. It’s a cheer for the millions of Indians building something, following dreams, caring for loved ones and for themselves, even when it’s hard and no one’s clapping.”

    “We’re rooting for those chasing what they care deeply about and showing up for it consistently. Food is just their fuel and we’re glad to be a small part of their journey,” he added.

    Posted by Deepinder Goyal, Zomato’s CEO, and live across YouTube, Instagram, and outdoor touchpoints, the campaign rolls out as a full-throttle 360-degree blitz across digital, print, and social media.

    (If you are an Anime fan and love Anime like Demon Slayer, Spy X Family, Hunter X Hunter, Tokyo Revengers, Dan Da Dan and Slime, Buy your favourite Anime merchandise on AnimeOriginals.com.)

  • Manoj Nair takes off as marketing director, India & subcontinent, at Saudi Tourism Authority

    Manoj Nair takes off as marketing director, India & subcontinent, at Saudi Tourism Authority

    MUMBAI: Manoj Nair has been appointed marketing director for India and the subcontinent at the Saudi Tourism Authority (STA), marking a pivotal move in STA’s push to deepen its footprint across one of its fastest-growing outbound travel markets.

    Nair was previously CEO of Sartha Global Marketing and Mileage Communications, where he represented marquee tourism boards including Brand USA, Visit California, Hong Kong Tourism Board, and TripAdvisor. With over 20 years of experience in the travel and tourism sector, his career has spanned brand-building, customer-centric innovation, and business growth.

    Before his CEO innings, Nair led marketing at FCM Travel Solutions, the Indian arm of Flight Centre Travel Group, where he helped sharpen the brand’s edge in a crowded marketplace. His earlier stints with Thomas Cook and Kuoni further cemented his reputation as a marketer with a sharp global lens and local nuance.

    A recipient of the Most Influential Marketing Leader title from the World Marketing Congress, Nair holds degrees from Mumbai University, IIM Kolkata, and an international MBA from Marketing Week London. He has also advised IIM Sirmaur, India’s only IIM offering a tourism-focused MBA programme.

    (If you are an Anime fan and love Anime like Demon Slayer, Spy X Family, Hunter X Hunter, Tokyo Revengers, Dan Da Dan and Slime, Buy your favourite Anime merchandise on AnimeOriginals.com.)

  • Rohit Jangra rises to senior director, integrated planning at dentsu

    Rohit Jangra rises to senior director, integrated planning at dentsu

    MUMBAI: Rohit Jangra has been promoted to senior director, integrated planning at dentsu, marking another milestone in his steadily rising career within the agency’s planning and strategy ranks.

    Jangra, who joined dentsu in 2017 as lead media manager, has worn many hats since, climbing to group head in 2018, associate director in 2021, and director in 2022, before stepping into his newest role. His journey is a masterclass in consistency, curiosity, and campaign craft.

    Academically, Jangra holds a postgraduate diploma in advertising and public relations from K.C. College, Churchgate, specialising in media planning, along with a bachelor’s degree in mass media (advertising) from Birla College of Arts, Science & Commerce.

    (If you are an Anime fan and love Anime like Demon Slayer, Spy X Family, Hunter X Hunter, Tokyo Revengers, Dan Da Dan and Slime, Buy your favourite Anime merchandise on AnimeOriginals.com.)

  • BITS Pilani ropes in edtech veteran Samit Dayal to lead digital push

    BITS Pilani ropes in edtech veteran Samit Dayal to lead digital push

    MUMBAI: BITS Pilani has appointed seasoned education and SaaS executive Samit Dayal as general manager – institutional engagement at BITS Pilani Digital, its ambitious foray into the online learning space. With a 25-year track record of launching and scaling multimillion-dollar education and tech ventures across South Asia and the Middle East, Dayal is expected to power BITS’ plans of reaching over 100,000 students in five years.

    In his new role, Dayal will drive partnerships with colleges, universities and edtech platforms, integrate online courses into existing curricula, and design school outreach programmes—all aimed at cementing BITS Pilani Digital’s presence in India’s rapidly evolving higher education market.

    Dayal most recently served as business head at SafeBus (MTAP Technologies), where he drove Rs 1 crore in revenue, led an international foray into Germany and the Gulf, and maintained a 100 per cent renewal rate across key school contracts.

    Earlier, as vice president – education at FranklinCovey South Asia, he built the India and SAARC operations from scratch, raking in over $400,000 in revenues and forging license deals across Nepal, Bhutan, Sri Lanka and the Maldives. His previous stints also include key leadership roles at HeadHonchos, Career Launcher, and i360, with a deep focus on franchise expansion, B2B/B2C education sales, and executive learning programmes.

    Known for his strategic acumen and people-first approach, Dayal blends mindfulness with aggressive go-to-market tactics. With the Indian edtech sector shifting from boom to consolidation, his entry signals BITS Pilani’s serious intent to dominate the digital education space—not just with legacy, but with lethal execution.

  • Zomato serves up a motivational feast with Fuel Your Hustle campaign

    Zomato serves up a motivational feast with Fuel Your Hustle campaign

    MUMBAI: Food delivery and experiences company Zomato has dished out a high-octane, monochrome television commercial, “Fuel Your Hustle”, drawing comparisons to Nike’s iconic “Just Do It” ethos. The star-studded TVC features Hindi cinema’s Shah Rukh Khan, cricketing ace Jasprit Bumrah, boxing legend Mary Kom, and musical maestro AR Rahman, all united in a quest to uncover the “secret ingredient” of greatness.  

    The film is tied together by a compelling music track from Kalmi (Nikhil Kalimireddy), best known for his hit “Big Dawgs”. The background score features a dynamic blend of Indian and western sounds, characterised by a prominent use of percussion and drums that amplify the motivational fervour. 

    The advert kicks off with an intriguing question: “What’s their secret ingredient? Their secret sauce for greatness? What do they know that others don’t?”. What follows is a compelling visual narrative of each icon’s relentless dedication to their craft. Khan is seen meticulously re-taking scenes, Rahman passionately wrestling with his keyboards to perfect a tune, Kom relentlessly skipping and sparring in the boxing ring, and Bumrah unleashing thunderous deliveries that send stumps cartwheeling. 

    A montage of candid shots interspersed with their rigorous routines is accompanied by a haunting voiceover. It declares, “They know the taste of sweat. The salt of tears. They wake up when it’s dark. They show up when it’s hard. They know what it takes, retakes, mistakes. The truth is they are just like you and me. There’s no secret recipe. They JUST WANT IT MORE. THE SECRET INGREDIENT IS HUSTLE. FUEL YOUR HUSTLE. Zomato.” 

    The TVC, with its powerful personalities, stirring message, and driving soundtrack, undoubtedly commands attention. It not only positions Zomato as a brand that embodies its own “hustle,” but also aims to inspire the common person to fuel their ambitions. This ad suggests that Zomato is hungry for more, and wants its customers to feel the same zest for life.