Category: People

  • Pratiman joins Bosch to power global growth

    Pratiman joins Bosch to power global growth

    MUMBAI: After over a decade of driving growth for some of the world’s biggest brands, Pratiman is now steering into a new chapter as senior growth & demand marketing manager at Bosch, based in Stuttgart, Germany.

    In his new role, he will lead global growth and demand marketing for Bosch Software & Digital Solutions, focusing on account-based marketing, campaign strategy, pipeline acceleration, and customer engagement across markets.

    Pratiman’s career is a masterclass in modern marketing. Before joining Bosch, he served as CRM marketing lead at Hellmann Worldwide Logistics, where he drove global CRM transformation through Microsoft Dynamics 365, aligning marketing, sales, and IT to enhance customer journeys and operational efficiency.

    Previously, at SAP LeanIX, he honed his expertise in marketing automation and data-driven strategy, leading cross-channel campaigns via HubSpot and Salesforce while ensuring GDPR compliance and advanced analytics for global audiences.

    His freelance consulting years were equally prolific, advising brands such as Aviatrix, T-Systems, Rydoo, and Zeotap on intent-based marketing and CRM integrations. Earlier roles at Simba Dickie Group, Eran Group, and Audi shaped his early understanding of brand building, experiential marketing, and international market dynamics.

    Recognised as one of India’s youngest Top 100 Most Influential Marketing Leaders by the World Marketing Congress, Pratiman has built a career at the intersection of creativity, data, and technology.

    Now at Bosch, his focus is clear, to accelerate growth through precision marketing that fuses global insight with local relevance. For a marketer who’s driven results from Mumbai to Munich, this next pit stop at Bosch looks like another winning lap.

  • Zee Media appoints Raktim Das as new CEO

    Zee Media appoints Raktim Das as new CEO

    MUMBAI: Zee Media Corporation has named seasoned media professional Raktimanu Das, popularly known as Raktim Das, as its new chief executive officer, effective 4 November 2025. His appointment follows the resignation of former CEO Karan Abhishek Singh.

    The company’s board of directors approved the appointment at a meeting on 3 November 2025, as per its filings with the BSE and NSE. Das has also been designated as key managerial personnel of the company.

    A media veteran with over two decades of experience, Das has worked with leading organisations including TV9 Network, Zee Entertainment Enterprises, Network18, Direct News, India Today, and The Times of India. His career spans revenue leadership, editorial strategy, brand monetisation, and digital transformation.

    Before joining Zee Media, Das served as chief growth officer (digital & broadcasting) at TV9 Network, where he played a key role in building high-performing teams and driving growth through innovation and intrapreneurship.

    A pioneer in the Indian media landscape, Das has been credited with creating industry-first branded content practices and media IPs across broadcast, digital, and OTT platforms.

  • WolfzHowl names VAN Sharma to lead StraTech drive

    WolfzHowl names VAN Sharma to lead StraTech drive

    MUMBAI: WolfzHowl has brought on board Eswara VAN Sharma as consulting director – StraTech and brand orchestration for India and ASEAN, marking a key leadership addition to power its next phase of growth.

    In his new role, VAN will lead brand strategy, client success, and business growth, advancing WolfzHowl’s signature StraTech movement, which merges behavioural insight with technology to build future-ready brands.

    At its core, StraTech blends culture, behavioural science, data, and AI to help brands forge meaningful connections across every stage of the marketing funnel.

    VAN’s global career spans marketing, innovation, and strategy across India, the Middle East, and Southeast Asia, with stints at major brands including Mondelez, Emirates, Samsung, and ExxonMobil.

    Commenting on the appointment, WolfzHowl India founder and partner & head of strategy WolfzHowl Global Kalyan Ram Challapalli said, “As we enter a new chapter of strategic growth, we need seasoned leaders to scale and strengthen our StraTech vision. VAN’s experience, integrity, and collaborative leadership make him the perfect catalyst for this journey.”

    Reflecting on his new role, VAN Sharma said, “It’s rare to find a space that unites behavioural science, technology, and brand building so seamlessly. I’m excited to help orchestrate this convergence at WolfzHowl and shape what we proudly call StraTech.”

    Based in Bengaluru, VAN will also support WolfzHowl’s expansion across Southeast Asia and Australia, working closely with the global leadership team to amplify the consultancy’s innovation-led brand.

  • Warner Music strikes a new note with CFO hire

    Warner Music strikes a new note with CFO hire

    MUMBAI: Warner Music India has hit a high note in its leadership line-up, naming Vikram Kulkarni as its new chief financial officer. The appointment underscores the company’s push to amplify its business strategy and deepen collaboration across the Asia-Pacific region.

    Armed with over 17 years of experience across finance, strategy, and governance, Vikram brings a sharp understanding of balancing numbers with creative ambition. Before joining Warner Music, he served as finance controller at Thermo Fisher Scientific, where he partnered with India and South Asia leadership to drive sustainable growth. He has also held key roles at Ernst & Young and Welspun Group, honing expertise in financial reporting, audit, tax, and business performance management.

    “I’m honoured to join Warner Music India during such a dynamic time for the music industry,” said Vikram Kulkarni. “The company’s artist-first vision and commitment to creative growth inspire me. I look forward to building strong financial foundations that fuel innovation and long-term success.”

    Warner Music India & SAARC managing director Jay Mehta added, “Vikram brings the perfect mix of financial insight and leadership. His strategic perspective will be vital as we continue expanding Warner Music’s presence and impact across India and South Asia.”

    With Kulkarni now in the mix, Warner Music India looks set to fine-tune its rhythm of growth, blending business precision with creative passion in one of the world’s fastest-growing music markets.

     

  • BharatPe brings Shilpi Kapoor on board

    BharatPe brings Shilpi Kapoor on board

    MUMBAI: BharatPe has roped in seasoned marketer Shilpi Kapoor as its new head of marketing, marking a strategic move as the fintech player sharpens its brand play and digital growth strategy.

    With over two decades of experience across powerhouse brands, Kapoor joins BharatPe from Airtel Payments Bank, where she served as chief marketing officer and helped position it as one of India’s leading digital financial institutions. Her standout contributions included creating the ‘Safe second account’ category and scaling the bank’s active user base to over 100 million.

    Before Airtel, Kapoor made her mark at American Express, Renault, Godfrey Phillips, Bharti Airtel, and Coca-Cola, driving some of the most memorable brand stories in recent years. From leading Amex’s ‘Don’t Live Life Without It’ campaign to launching Renault KWID into India’s fast lane, her track record reflects a flair for insight-led, high-impact marketing.

    At BharatPe, Kapoor will oversee brand strategy, integrated marketing, and digital engagement across the company’s growing portfolio.

    BharatPe CEO Nalin Negi said, “We are building a digital-first financial ecosystem that merchants and consumers can trust. Shilpi’s expertise in scaling iconic brands will help us deepen engagement and drive our next phase of growth.”

    Sharing her excitement, Kapoor said, “BharatPe has been a game-changer for digital commerce in India. My goal is to strengthen its brand trust and cultural relevance while empowering millions of merchants and consumers nationwide.”

    Her appointment underscores BharatPe’s focus on consumer-centric storytelling and brand-led growth, as the fintech firm gears up to expand its footprint in India’s rapidly evolving digital finance landscape.

    With Kapoor at the helm of marketing, BharatPe seems ready to add a fresh coat of brand brilliance to its growth story.
     

  • LatentView adds power minds to its AI think tank

    LatentView adds power minds to its AI think tank

    MUMBAI: When it comes to sharpening its data game, LatentView Analytics isn’t just adding numbers, it’s adding names that count. The AI-driven analytics and consulting firm has welcomed Vandana Rana and Divesh Singla to its Advisory Council, signalling a bold move to strengthen its leadership in AI and digital transformation.

    Divesh Singla, a veteran with over two decades in analytics and life sciences, has helmed leadership roles at Signant Health, IQVIA, Eli Lilly, and Parexel. Known for building world-class Global Capability Centres (GCCs), he’s also among India’s top 100 AI & analytics leaders.

    Meanwhile, Vandana Rana, an AI and data science trailblazer, brings global experience from Walmart Global Tech, Microsoft, and T-Mobile. A champion of responsible AI, she’s known for building scalable, high-impact data systems that turn innovation into real-world value.

    Commenting on the appointments, LatentView Analytics CEO Rajan Sethuraman said, “Enterprises today are clear about their AI priorities. To deliver measurable impact, we must stay ahead. Strengthening our Advisory Council with industry experts enhances our ability to help clients make confident, data-driven decisions.”

    Both new members expressed excitement about shaping LatentView’s vision. Singla highlighted India’s 100-billion dollars GCC opportunity, while Rana pointed out the need to operationalise AI effectively, turning experimentation into enterprise success.

    With these appointments, LatentView’s Advisory Council grows stronger as a think tank of innovators, guiding the company’s next phase of AI-driven growth, global partnerships, and purpose-led digital transformation.

  • DriveX rides ahead with new CEO Devesh Taparia

    DriveX rides ahead with new CEO Devesh Taparia

    MUMBAI: DriveX is revving up for its next big ride. The pre-owned two-wheeler brand has appointed Devesh Taparia as its new chief executive officer, signalling a fresh phase of technology-led growth, retail expansion and customer-focused innovation.

    A mobility enthusiast with a flair for transformation, Taparia brings over a decade of leadership experience from Mahindra & Mahindra, Peugeot Motocycles and TVS Motor Company. At TVS, he spearheaded strategic initiatives across global markets, driving innovation and business transformation, qualities that make him a perfect fit for DriveX’s next lap of growth.

    At the heart of his new mandate lies a clear goal, to make DriveX the most trusted tech-enabled mobility brand in India. Taparia will focus on scaling DriveX Direct, the company’s direct-to-customer model, and strengthening its omnichannel retail network across the country.

    “Devesh joins DriveX at a defining moment in our journey,” said DriveX director on the board Sharad Mohan Mishra. “His deep understanding of mobility, technology and customer behaviour aligns perfectly with our mission to deliver trust, transparency and innovation.”

    Expressing his excitement, Taparia said, “DriveX represents the future of pre-owned mobility, where intelligent technology, data insights and customer trust come together. I look forward to scaling our presence through DriveX Direct and next-generation retail experiences.”

    With plans to boost its AI-driven operations, expand refurbishment centres and open new stores across key cities, DriveX is clearly in top gear, ready to steer India’s pre-owned two-wheeler market into a smarter, faster and more trusted future.

     

  • Mars Cosmetics welcomes Anshu Arora Sindhwani to lead innovation

    Mars Cosmetics welcomes Anshu Arora Sindhwani to lead innovation

    MUMBAI: Looks like Mars just found its next shining star. India’s fastest-growing homegrown beauty brand, Mars Cosmetics, has roped in Anshu Arora Sindhwani as head of product, as it powers into its next phase of innovation and category expansion.

    With over 15 years of experience painting success stories across beauty, colour cosmetics, and FMCG, Sindhwani is no stranger to creating products that don’t just sit pretty on shelves, they fly off them. Her career spans top-tier brands such as Akzonobel (Dulux), Colorbar, Mary Kay, and Win-Medicare, where she crafted high-performance portfolios that blended strategy, science, and sparkle in equal measure.

    At Mars, Sindhwani’s mission is clear: to make “Makeup for Everyone” more than a tagline. She will steer end-to-end product strategy from new product development and category planning to lifecycle management and innovation architecture. Her focus will be on building a robust pipeline of launches that balance creativity with performance and affordability, the winning formula that’s fast turning Mars into the people’s beauty brand.

    “MARS represents a new era in Indian beauty, bold, experimental, and deeply attuned to its consumers,” Sindhwani said. “I’m excited to build on this energy by crafting innovations that not only perform but also connect bringing together creativity, technology, and inclusivity in every formulation and finish.”

    Her words mirror the brand’s growing confidence that beauty need not be imported or inaccessible. Mars has steadily carved a niche as the Indian disruptor redefining what affordable glam looks like, taking cues from its consumers rather than dictating trends from boardrooms.

    Founded with the vision of democratising makeup, Mars Cosmetics has been among India’s most dynamic homegrown names in the beauty space, capturing hearts (and vanities) across Tier 1 to Tier 3 cities. Its vibrant, high-performance products have found favour with Gen Z creators, beauty professionals, and everyday users alike, powered by a deep understanding of what Indian consumers actually want from their makeup: fun, functionality, and fair pricing.

    Adding Sindhwani to the mix signals a strategic leap towards design-led innovation and global competitiveness. “We are thrilled to have Anshu join the Mars family,” said Mars Cosmetics business administrator Rishabh Sethia. “Her deep understanding of consumers, strategic mindset, and innovation-driven approach will help us strengthen our position as India’s leading product-driven beauty brand.”

    Sindhwani’s career reads like a masterclass in product-led storytelling. Known for her consumer-first, design-thinking approach, she has pioneered several first-in-category launches that pushed boundaries of what Indian beauty could be playful, potent, and proudly local.

    Her appointment comes at a pivotal time for Mars, which is expanding rapidly and cementing its image as India’s fastest-growing beauty brand. The company’s focus on building high-performance yet accessible formulations has positioned it as a favourite among digital-native consumers who crave both authenticity and affordability.

    As the beauty industry becomes increasingly crowded, Mars is setting its sights higher and its strategy sharper. With Sindhwani at the helm of product development, the brand seems poised to blend science with sass, data with dazzle.

    In an era where every brand claims to “innovate,” Mars’ real edge may just be in how it listens and now, how it lets a product visionary like Sindhwani lead that conversation.

    Because when Mars and innovation align, beauty might just find its new orbit.

  • Celebrating Piyush: Mumbai’s ad world gathers to remember the maestro who made advertising human

    Celebrating Piyush: Mumbai’s ad world gathers to remember the maestro who made advertising human

    MUMBAI: At 10am on a Sunday morning, 1,500 of India’s advertising elite crammed into Mumbai’s Grand Hyatt to do what the industry does best: tell stories. This time, though, the subject was one of their own. Piyush Pandey, the creative titan who died last week, got the send-off befitting a man who transformed Indian advertising from borrowed jingles and forced sophistication into raw, real-life observation. The numbers would have swelled far higher had Ogilvy thrown open the doors, but this was an invitation-only affair—a gathering of those who’d worked alongside, been mentored by, or simply marvelled at the man who made “front foot pe khelo” the rallying cry of an entire generation.

    The two-hour tribute played out like a masterclass in the man himself—equal parts emotion, irreverence and creative brilliance. Hepzibah Pathak, Ogilvy India’s executive chairperson, took the stage visibly shaken, setting the tone for what would become an outpouring of stories that captured Pandey’s essence better than any obituary could. She was followed by a caravan of speakers: WPP’s chief operating officer Devika Bulchandani, Ogilvy India group chief executive Rajesh VR, chief strategy officer Prem Narayan, chief creative officers Kainaz Karmakar and Harshad Rajadhyaksha, vice-chairman and director client relations Madhukar Sabnavis, the legendary R Balki, McCann Erickson’s Prasoon Joshi, Pidilite director Madhukar Parekh, marketing guru Suhel Seth, his nephew and agency boss Abhijit Avasthi, and Asian Paints chief executive and managing director Amit Syngle. Even commerce minister Piyush Goyal made time to pay tribute, underscoring the breadth of Pandey’s influence beyond advertising’s narrow confines.

    PIYUSH GOYALThe 6:30am phone calls became the event’s leitmotif. Most speakers wore them as badges of honour—those dawn raids when Pandey would ring, sometimes to share a creative idea that had struck him in the shower, other times to help them excavate their own. His Ogilvy team recalled in granular detail how he mentored them: kind words when they delivered good work, sharp rebukes when they didn’t push hard enough. “Front foot pe khelo,” he’d say, deploying his favourite cricket analogy to urge aggression over timidity. Karmakar captured the bittersweet mood: “Who will make those 6:30am calls now?” she asked, confessing she’d hated being woken but lived for those conversations. Others complained they’d been left out of the dawn club, wondering aloud why Pandey’s Rolodex of early-morning confidants hadn’t included them.

    His creative team peeled back the curtain on his teaching methods. At a Cannes Lions masterclass, he’d begun not with case studies or charts but with meditative breathing. Inhale deeply and slowly, he’d instructed global participants. That’s observation—riding trains, chatting with taxi drivers, watching life unfold in its messy, unscripted glory. Exhale. That’s the creative work that connects with real audiences, not the manufactured personas of focus groups. It was vintage Pandey: grounding the lofty business of advertising in the quotidian rituals of simply paying attention.

    Syngle, who worked with Pandey for 37 years across Cadbury, Pidilite and Asian Paints, painted a portrait of a man allergic to pretence. He recalled being dragged from formal dinners during overseas trips—the kind with white tablecloths and wine lists—to eat dal chawal and bhindi at hole-in-the-wall Nepalese joints. “That was Piyush,” Syngle said. “Authentic. You got what you saw.” When invited to join the Pidilite board, Pandey made clear he wouldn’t wear formal clothes to meetings. Not as rebellion, but as declaration: this is who I am. Take it or leave it.

    Friends and cricketers Amit Mathur and Arun Lal delivered the comic relief Pandey would have demanded. They shared his joke about why actress Sridevi wouldn’t marry Lal: “Because she wouldn’t want to be called Sridevi Lal”—a reference to politician Chaudhary Devi Lal that sent Pandey into his trademark loud guffaws. The joke was terrible. The memory was priceless.

    PRASOON PANDEYGoyal’s recollection offered a window into Pandey’s principles. In 2014, the minister spent six hours at Pandey’s Shivaji Park home trying to convince him to handle BJP’s election advertising. “Despite years of friendship, he was stubborn every time I approached him for days,” Goyal explained. “I thought I’d failed. Next morning, relief: he called saying he’d do it.” The result was “Ab ki baar, Modi Sarkar”—a slogan that became the soundtrack of that election. What persuaded him remains unclear, but the episode revealed a man who wouldn’t be rushed or arm-twisted, even by friends in high places.

    Balki and Joshi traded admiration for Pandey’s work, but Balki’s anecdote cut deeper. They’d once decided to quit smoking together after visiting a hypnotherapist. Pandey called daily to compare notes—until he didn’t. When Balki rang, Pandey admitted he’d started smoking again. Balki lasted longer, then folded too. But Balki struck a defiant, almost evangelical note: at a time when advertising has become dreary—all performance metrics and programmatic buying and jargon-stuffed decks—Pandey’s death has ironically handed the industry its biggest campaign. “To bring advertising back into focus,” he said. “No amount of jargon, no amount of people trying to distract us from the fact that we have to do great stuff will work now. People are looking and saying: this is advertising. We’ve got the best opportunity for great work.” It was a call to arms wrapped in a eulogy.

    Prasoon Pandey, Piyush’s younger brother and an accomplished film-maker, delivered perhaps the most wrenching tribute. After seeing the industry’s outpouring, he wondered if his own love had been enough. “He was my elder brother, my father, my hero,” he said. “We’d speak six or seven times a day—not about work, but jokes, vicious pranks he wanted to pull on family or friends.” On work, the dynamic was pure Piyush: he’d hand Prasoon the soul of an idea in three or four words and expect execution. “We were drinking beer on our balcony when he asked: how strong would eggs be from a hen that feeds from a Fevicol container?” Prasoon recalled. “I thought it brilliant. He told me to go do it.” The result was one of Indian advertising’s most memorable campaigns—born not in a conference room but over beers and brotherly banter.

    The event was interspersed with screenings of Pandey’s greatest ads—the Fevicol campaigns, the Cadbury work that made Indians fall in love with chocolate again, the Asian Paints spots that turned home décor into emotion. The audience responded with applause, oohs, ahs, and more than a few tears.

    Lunch followed the stories: a spread of his favourite Indian dishes, the kind he’d have sought out in that Nepalese eatery instead of rubber chicken at a five-star buffet. Attendees left smiling, bellies and hearts full, having spent two hours remembering a man who’d taught them that the best advertising doesn’t sell products—it celebrates life.

    Piyush would have approved: tears, laughter, great work on screen, and damn good food to finish. Front foot pe khelo, indeed.

  • Preetam Thingalaya joins Bullet as vp–marketing

    Preetam Thingalaya joins Bullet as vp–marketing

    MUMBAI: Looks like Bullet has fired its next big shot. Preetam Thingalaya has joined the newly launched micro-drama app as vice president marketing, bringing with him more than 20 years of brand-building experience across media, FMCG, tech, and entertainment.

    Preetam’s move comes at a time when Bullet, in partnership with Zee Entertainment, is aiming to reshape digital storytelling through bite-sized, vertical-format dramas designed for binge-watching.

    An industry veteran known for crafting digital ecosystems and forging creator partnerships, Preetam has previously led marketing at Eshtory, a premium original audio storytelling platform. Before that, he held key roles at Mirum India (a VML company), ZEE5, Mindshare, and Hindustan Unilever.

    With Bullet blending tech, storytelling, and creator energy, Preetam’s appointment signals the brand’s next act, making micro-dramas a macro trend.