Category: MAM

  • Cinépolis partners with Amazon Pay for faster, smoother ticket booking

    Cinépolis partners with Amazon Pay for faster, smoother ticket booking

    MUMBAI: Popcorn? Check. Tickets? Check. Now with Cinépolis and Amazon Pay teaming up, your movie night just got a blockbuster upgrade. In a strategic move to amp up the convenience for cinema-goers, Cinépolis India, the country’s first international multiplex chain has partnered with Amazon Pay to roll out seamless, secure, and rewarding digital payments across all its theatres and platforms.

    From quick one-click checkouts to exclusive launch offers and reward points, the alliance aims to transform every step of the movie journey, right from booking to binging on buttery popcorn.

    “As a customer-first brand, we’re always looking to elevate the experience beyond just the big screen,” said Cinépolis India managing director Devang Sampat. “By integrating Amazon Pay, we’re offering patrons ease, trust, and extra value with every ticket or tub of caramel corn.”

    Beginning with exclusive offers, the rollout is being activated across all Cinépolis locations covering its 449 screens under Cinépolis, Cinépolis VIP, and Fun Cinemas brands.

    Amazon Pay India’s CEO Vikas Bansal added, “This collaboration is about combining secure, speedy transactions with entertainment. It’s one more step in making everyday spends including your next blockbuster binge more rewarding.”

    This isn’t Cinépolis’ first brush with innovation. From kid-friendly ‘Cinépolis Junior’ auditoriums with bean bags and loungers to its Club Cinépolis loyalty programme offering star-studded perks and pre-screening invites, the chain has built its name on tech-savvy hospitality.

    The partnership continues Cinépolis’ award-winning run having bagged the ‘Retailer of the Year – Leisure and Entertainment’ title at MAPIC 2024 and a string of other honours across 2023.

    And now, with the tap of a button, you can grab your seat, skip the queues, and get rewarded for every rom-com, thriller, or superhero saga you devour.

    In other words, paying for your film fix just got its own plot twist.

  • All pride, no prejudice, or just marketing metrics?

    All pride, no prejudice, or just marketing metrics?

    MUMBAI: As June’s rainbow wave floods timelines, store shelves and corporate logos alike, a sharper question emerges: are brands and agencies walking the talk on LGBTQ+ inclusion, or just flashing their colours for clicks?

    A quick glance across campaigns, policies and creative briefs shows a spectrum—from genuine transformation to performative wokeness. And some of India’s most visible brand voices are ready to call it like it is.

    From “We support Pride” to “We don’t know sh!t”

    Vanaja Pillai, President, 22feet Tribal Worldwide & Head – Inclusion & Impact, Omnicom Advertising Group India, leads with candour. “We believe real change happens when people can show up with curiosity, ask questions, and listen without fear,” she says. Their internal campaign ‘We Don’t Know Sh!t’ ditches moral high ground for messy, human conversations—and Pride is just one point in a year-round learning curve. 

    This year, their Pride initiative is themed ‘Words Build Worlds’, a linguistic lens on how inclusive language can shift narratives and erase bias. Events like Queerically Speaking, Postcards from Pride and even a queer stand-up showcase underscore that allyship doesn’t need a corporate brief—it needs honesty and a mic.

    Beauty with backbone

    At Joy Personal Care, CMO Poulomi Roy doesn’t just market moisturiser. “Inclusivity isn’t seasonal. It’s a mindset,” she says. The brand has walked the walk with a campaign starring Sushant Divgikar—not as a Pride-month gimmick, but as part of a consistent narrative.

    They’ve distributed over 100,000 personal care kits to transgender individuals and sex workers, not under CSR, but baked into their brand DNA. “Representation is not a checkbox for us,” Roy insists. And it shows. From acid attack survivors to plus-sized models, their campaigns are as inclusive behind the scenes as they are on screen.

    Her advice to the industry? “Tokenism is easy. But real impact comes when brands shift the lens from visibility to lived experience.”

    Strategy with substance

    Sonica Aron, founder of Marching Sheep, believes intent is everything. “Pride isn’t about logos in rainbow hues, it’s about policies, partnerships, and presence—every single day.”

    She sees progress in brands that ditch the June-only visibility playbook. “The best campaigns come from rooms where queer folks are not just featured, but decision-makers. That’s when messaging hits home,” says Aron.

    For Aron, real inclusion also looks like safe workplaces, inclusive benefits, and storytelling that avoids the tired tropes. “Less punchline, more person,” she sums up.

    Campaigns with commitment

    Over at White Rivers Media, senior vice president, business strategy & growth, Mitchelle Rozario Jansen sees the shift. “There’s a rise in year-round brand commitment—beyond just posting a rainbow flag,” she says. The agency now partners directly with queer creators to ensure campaigns don’t just represent, but resonate.

    While not every brand is there yet, she’s optimistic. “Today, queer characters aren’t just shown as ‘different’ or comic relief. More stories are about them as people, parents, co-workers and friends. And that’s the real shift.”

    What does the data actually say?

    The numbers don’t lie, especially when it comes to Gen Z. “Younger consumers back brands that back values,” says Roy. “Inclusion drives deeper emotional connections and loyalty that goes beyond seasonal sales.”

    Small audiences? Maybe. But the engagement? “Genuine. Vocal. Long-lasting,” she comments.

    Social Panga founder Gaurav Arora, believes the brands that walk the talk are cashing in where it counts: loyalty, love, and repeat purchases.

    Surveys show 68 per cent of Gen Z and 55 per cent of millennials stick with brands that demonstrate genuine LGBTQ+ inclusion. Companies that offer inclusive benefits, pronoun options, and support queer employee groups have seen a 12–15 per cent jump in repeat business. That’s not just goodwill—it’s growth.

    Inside the evolution of allyship

    “Allyship is now the baseline,” says Arora. “These young consumers expect to see queer inclusion across HR, campaigns, partnerships—even product design.”

    He further says that many brands are stepping up. Gone are the days of token rainbow logos in June. Today’s leaders are offering gender-neutral product lines, non-discrimination clauses, and year-round collaborations with LGBTQ+ organisations. They’re co-creating content with queer voices, embedding representation in hiring and storytelling, and hosting real conversations—not just reels.

    Meanwhile, rainbow-washing is getting called out fast. “Seasonal ads with no follow-through? Bright in June, forgotten by July,” Arora concludes.

    So, are Indian brands truly embracing inclusivity—or still riding the rainbow wave? It’s a bit of both. The glitter is still there, but the groundwork is growing. When campaigns move from optics to action, when hiring shifts from compliance to culture, and when queer stories are told with nuance, not novelty, that’s when the real change happens.

    Until then, the rainbow will remain both a symbol and a litmus test.

  • IFA Berlin unveils new innovation awards to spotlight tech breakthroughs

    IFA Berlin unveils new innovation awards to spotlight tech breakthroughs

    BERLIN:  IFA Berlin, the world’s leading home and consumer technology event, has launched a new global awards programme: the IFA Innovation Awards.  These awards, set to debut at IFA 2025 in Berlin, aim to celebrate exceptional innovation, design, and market impact within the industry.

    Clarion Events managing director James McGough, stated that the awards will “recognise the Best of IFA, rewarding the incredible progress being made in home and consumer technology.”  He added that the initiative would help identify brands “truly shaping how we live, work and play,” particularly those implementing AI and designing sustainable and accessible solutions. 

    Geekspin editor in chief and jury member Helena Stone highlighted that the IFA Innovation Awards represent “the natural evolution of IFA’s century-long commitment to showcasing the technologies that transform how we live, work, and connect.”  She believes these awards will “spotlight the innovations that define the future of consumer technology” as IFA enters its second century. 

    The new awards follow IFA’s hundredth anniversary in 2024, which attracted over 215,000 visitors from 138 countries and more than 1,800 exhibitors. 

    The comprehensive programme will recognise innovations across various sectors, including smart home and IoT, sustainable technology, health and wellness tech, gaming and entertainment, mobile communication, audio-visual excellence, kitchen and home appliances, and emerging technologies. Winners will receive either the official IFA “Best of category” or “Innovation Award” certification, along with full licensing rights to use the awards logo. Additional benefits include an exclusive showcase at IFA 2026’s Innovation Gallery, prominent placement across IFA’s global media channels, and coverage in official IFA publications and social media. 

    Helena Stone affirmed that the IFA Innovation Awards are poised to “become the gold standard for consumer technology recognition in Europe and beyond,” with an international jury of experts ensuring the winners represent “truly groundbreaking achievements.” 

    The awards are open to manufacturers, designers, engineers, start-ups, and technology companies worldwide. Eligible products must be innovative consumer technology or home appliance solutions commercially launched between 1 February 2025 and 30 April 2026, and must be available in European markets.  Applications are now open, with an independent panel of global technology experts, industry analysts, and innovation specialists overseeing the evaluation process.

  • Gameskraft powers Indian athletes across track, field, para and archery

    Gameskraft powers Indian athletes across track, field, para and archery

    MUMBAI: When skill meets support, the scoreboard changes. That’s exactly what Gameskraft Foundation is banking on as it doubles down on India’s medal ambitions reaffirming partnerships with four key sporting foundations, the Inspire Institute of Sport (IIS), Anju Bobby Sports Foundation (ABSF), Gosports Foundation, and the Dola & Rahul Banerjee Sports Foundation (DRBSF).

    “Over the past few years, our partnerships have shown encouraging results,” said Rishi Wadhera, Vice President – Corporate Communications & CSR, Gameskraft. “It’s been heartening to see how consistent support can make a meaningful difference in the journeys of emerging athletes. Our focus remains on nurturing potential, building sustainable infrastructure, and supporting communities in their efforts to create future champions. These collaborations are a reflection of our continued commitment to contributing positively to India’s sporting ecosystem with a long-term vision and are grateful to our partners for their commitment.”

    Together, these collaborations form a medal-making machine supporting everything from para-athletes to archers and track stars, from grassroots training to global podiums.

    At IIS, the Foundation backs the Athletics Centre of Excellence, whose star pupil Neeraj Chopra took home Silver in Javelin at the 2024 Paris Olympics. At ABSF, a new academy is taking shape in Bengaluru to foster more future Shaili Singhs who leapt to Bronze in Long Jump at the 2025 Asian Athletics Championships.

    Lauding the efforts of the Gameskraft Foundation and their long-term commitment to a robust sports-driven culture, Anju Bobby George, Founder of ABSF and India’s first medallist in the World Athletic Championship said, “Our association with Gameskraft Foundation has been anchored in a shared belief in long-term impact. The backing we’ve received is not just empowering for our training infrastructure but has been vital in inspiring young girls from small towns to dream bigger.”

    Gameskraft’s partnership with GoSports Foundation under the Para Champions Programme is a testament to inclusivity in sports. At the 2024 Paralympics, the results were golden literally with Sumit Antil and Dharambir grabbing Gold, Suhas Yethiraj securing Silver, and Rakesh Kumar bagging Bronze.

    In the archery arena, Deepika Kumari supported via DRBSF scored Bronze at the 2025 Archery World Cup, aiming true with Gameskraft in her corner.

    “For Indian sport to reach the success we aspire, it needs the coming together of more than just talent. Corporate India’s involvement in sport is pivotal, and some of our more prominent achievements have been a result of this support. At Gameskraft Foundation, we have people who are as obsessed with us about our Olympic ambitions. Together we have created a system for our athletes that gives them the best possible chance to succeed, and I am confident we will have more podiums coming from track and field in the near future.”, said Manisha Malhotra, President, Inspire Institute of Sport.

    The results are already on the leaderboard, but Gameskraft isn’t done yet. With every laurel and long jump, the foundation is showing that gaming companies can play a serious role in India’s Olympic journey not just virtually, but with real impact on real tracks.

    Now that’s how you level up.

  • InMobi names Kunal Nagpal as chief business officer to spearhead ad empire makeover

    InMobi names Kunal Nagpal as chief business officer to spearhead ad empire makeover

    MUMBAI: Mobile advertising heavyweight InMobi has tapped Kunal Nagpal as its new chief business officer for advertising, tasking him with orchestrating a bold unification of its ad platforms—including the newly launched Glance AI, InMobi DSP, and the InMobi Exchange.

    The newly minted role is a key move in InMobi’s ongoing push to centralise its global go-to-market (GTM) strategy and tighten its grip on the evolving world of programmatic, AI-led, and first-party advertising.

    “We are on a transformative journey to build a stronger, more unified team and the ability to better adapt to market needs,” says InMobi Advertising CEO & co-founder Abhay Singhal. “Centralizing our advertising GTM across all product lines is essential for maintaining our growth momentum, and Kunal’s proven expertise with the company across InMobi Exchange positions him as the perfect leader for this initiative.”

    Over the past five years, Nagpal has helped scale InMobi Exchange into the second-largest full-funnel mobile SSP, expanding well beyond just mobile and in-app. In his new role, he’s now charged with monetising Glance AI—a generative AI commerce engine launched last month-while also aligning InMobi’s suite of ad products under one powerful umbrella.

    “The drive to redefine advertising through innovation requires strong leadership and bold strategies,” says Nagpal. “I am eager to embrace this challenge and collaborate with our incredible teams to generate even more value for our partners and customers.”

    Glance AI, InMobi’s latest innovation, lets users generate hyper-realistic fashion looks from a selfie using Google’s Gemini and Imagen models—creating one-tap shopping across 400+ brands. With Nagpal now at the helm, the platform is expected to play a larger role in InMobi’s monetisation machine.

  • ONO appoints Anurag Sinha as CBO to lead its next agri-charge across India’s mandi networks

    ONO appoints Anurag Sinha as CBO to lead its next agri-charge across India’s mandi networks

    MUMBAI: The mandi may be a centuries-old system, but ONO is betting on a modern formula: data, tech and now, a seasoned operator with two decades in the trenches. On June 24, 2025, Bengaluru-based agri-tech startup ONO appointed Anurag Sinha as its chief business officer (CBO) to lead its expansion across India’s vast and varied mandi ecosystem.

    Sinha, whose career spans leadership roles in firms like ITC and BigHaat, brings hands-on experience in agri-finance, tech and supply chains. From early-stage ventures to scale-stage challenges, he has consistently shaped agri-businesses into impact-led enterprises—a skill ONO is counting on as it doubles down on market linkages, credit access and logistics for India’s smallholders and agri-entrepreneurs.

    “Agriculture continues to be one of the most crucial yet underserved sectors when it comes to tech-enabled efficiency and data-driven decision making. I am excited to join ONO’s mission to reimagine agricultural supply chains through data, innovation, and ecosystem collaboration. I look forward to working with this dynamic team and driving meaningful change in the agriculture landscape”, Sinha said.

    As CBO, he will anchor ONO’s go-to-market operations, grow partnerships, and build new channels to enhance the platform’s core offering: mandi digitisation. ONO currently provides services such as formal credit access, price intelligence, logistics, and market linkages, backed by investor Aeravti Ventures.

    “Anurag’s proven experience in business building and execution will accelerate our vision and help us bring more stakeholders into the fold. We are happy to have him on board”, said ONO founder & CEO Rama Rao Kancharapu.

    Founded to modernise the traditional mandi model with data and transparency, ONO is emerging as a crucial enabler in India’s agri-value chain—bridging age-old practices with next-gen technology. Sinha’s entry signals a sharper focus on execution, market depth and ecosystem-building as ONO eyes national scale.

    If India’s farm-to-market puzzle needs solving, ONO seems ready with the algorithm—and Anurag Sinha may just be the codebreaker.

  • Butterfly unveils new identity with fingerprint wings, celebrates change in every Indian kitchen

    Butterfly unveils new identity with fingerprint wings, celebrates change in every Indian kitchen

    MUMBAI: Some brands age.

    Others evolve.

    And then there’s Butterfly-the Chennai-born kitchenware veteran that just reinvented itself with a deeply personal twist.

    On 23rd June 2025, Butterfly unveiled a revamped identity that fuses a timeless symbol with a powerful message: celebrate change without losing yourself.

    At the centre of this makeover is a design choice that’s as poetic as it is powerful. The new Butterfly logo incorporates a fingerprint seamlessly merging into the wings—marking every swirl with the individuality of the person using it. In a world that’s obsessed with change, Butterfly seems to say: your essence still matters.

    This refreshed identity isn’t just a nod to design—it’s a shift in mindset. Butterfly now speaks to a psychographic, not a demographic. Targeting what it calls the ‘zillenial attitude’, the brand aligns itself with those who may not be united by age but by how they engage with life: fluid, evolving, yet fiercely authentic.

    “For over 40 years, Butterfly has been a part of millions of kitchens across India. Today, as homes become more fluid and identities more self-defined, our new identity reflects not just who we are—but who we’re here for”, said Butterfly CBO Swetha Sagar.

    Backed by Crompton, the parent company known for its home solutions muscle, Butterfly is now turning the heat up in India’s fast-modernising kitchens. From mixer grinders to cooktops, its products are being overhauled to match the rhythms of hybrid lifestyles and shifting household roles—without losing durability or design edge.

    “This is more than a rebrand. It’s a reimagining of what it means to belong in a modern Indian kitchen. Butterfly is for the originals. The ones who grow, shift, and adapt, but never lose the essence of who they are”, Sagar added.

    The campaign—titled ‘Celebrating Change’—embraces the unpredictability of modern life, while doubling down on authenticity. In tone, language, and iconography, Butterfly signals a departure from traditional kitchen narratives that once revolved around functionality alone.

    The new visual identity reflects the stories of those who stir with soul, sauté with sass, and season with self-expression. It’s not just a kitchen upgrade—it’s an identity reset.

  • Dove mends it like Kintsugi in rebonding tale of strength and strands

    Dove mends it like Kintsugi in rebonding tale of strength and strands

    MUMBAI: Hair today, stronger tomorrow. Dove is flipping the damage-care narrative with its biggest launch in 15 years the Peptide Bond Strength range, fronted by a powerful campaign titled ‘Reborn Stronger’. But this isn’t just about split ends and smooth strands. This is about scars, strength and strand-by-strand self-acceptance.

    Drawing inspiration from Kintsugi, the Japanese art of honouring cracks with gold, Dove isn’t just sealing split hair, it’s celebrating the story behind it. Just like the artform, the new campaign doesn’t aim to return things to their former state. It shows that every break can lead to beauty that’s more profound, more radiant, and more resilient than before.

    At the centre of the campaign is a poetic film that quite literally glows. Fractured hair strands are mended with soft golden light, a visual metaphor for Dove’s new Protein-Peptide Complex, which rebuilds hair from within by restoring broken bonds. The result? Not just repaired hair but reborn hair.

    “The campaign isn’t about hiding damage, it’s about redefining it,” says Unilever vice president for hair care Sairam Subramanian. “This is for every woman who’s picked herself up and rebuilt, stronger and more radiant. ‘Reborn Stronger’ is her story, told strand by strand.”

    With warm tones, gentle voiceovers and real women in everyday acts of care brushing, tying, letting their hair down the campaign paints a picture that’s less about vanity and more about vulnerability. The message: resilience isn’t loud, it’s lived-in.

    Dove’s Peptide Bond Strength range is more than a formula upgrade. It’s a philosophy. Powered by the Protein-Peptide Complex, the new line works at a molecular level to repair internal hair damage and strengthen fibres from the inside out.

    The brand that has stood for real beauty now invites everyone to see hair and healing as more than a return to form. As the campaign quietly declares: It’s not about going back. It’s about coming back stronger. And that’s a promise as deep as the roots.

  • Brands queue up for Neeraj Chopra Classic as javelin goes prime time in India

    Brands queue up for Neeraj Chopra Classic as javelin goes prime time in India

    MUMBAI: India’s golden boy of athletics is attracting more than just medals. The inaugural ‘Neeraj Chopra Classic’—India’s first global javelin competition—is drawing serious brand muscle ahead of its 5 July debut at Bengaluru’s Sree Kanteerava Stadium.

    The event is headlined by Bharat Petroleum Corporation Ltd (BPCL) and backed by a power-packed sponsor roster that includes Visa (official partner), Audi India (mobility partner), BodyArmor Lyte ORS (hydration partner), Duolingo English Test (learning partner), and Snapchat (content partner).

    Radisson Hotel Group is the hospitality partner, JioStar the broadcast partner, and FanCode Shop is handling official merchandise—making the NC Classic a 360-degree sporting spectacle both on-ground and online.

    Speaking on the response from brands to the NC Classic, JSW Sports chief commercial officer, Karan Yadav said, “The versatility and range of brands that have decided to come on board with the NC Classic is testament to the potential this competition has. These are the biggest names in world javelin, spearheaded by Neeraj, competing on Indian soil for the first time. The event has all the ingredients to be a blockbuster, and a regular fixture on the world athletics calendar. The response to partner with the event has been fantastic, and it only augurs well for the future of live sport planned to global standards, in India.”

    With the world’s top javelin throwers gearing up to compete, the Neeraj Chopra Classic is shaping up to be more than just a one-off event—it’s India’s blockbuster entry into the world of elite field sports.

  • Ugro Capital appoints Anuj Pandey as CEO to steer its MSME engine into the next growth orbit

    Ugro Capital appoints Anuj Pandey as CEO to steer its MSME engine into the next growth orbit

    MUMBAI: In India’s rapidly evolving fintech theatre, few stages are as critical-and crowded-as MSME lending. Now, Ugro Capital, the Datatech-driven non-banking finance company, has shuffled the deck and handed the reins to a man who helped script its earliest chapters. On 24 June 2025, Ugro announced the elevation of Anuj Pandey—its founding team member and chief risk officer—as its new chief executive officer (CEO).

    Pandey steps into the top role at a pivotal moment. The company recently crossed Rs 12,000 crore in assets under management, announced the strategic acquisition of Profectus Capital, and completed a large capital raise. With over 300 branches now in play, Ugro is transitioning from growth mode to scale mode—and Pandey has been handed the wheel to steer that transition.

    As CEO, he will lead Ugro’s national MSME operations, digital lending platforms, and partner ecosystem. He will report to Shachindra Nath, founder, VC, & managing director, who continues to helm the company’s strategic direction, governance and investor relations.

    “Anuj’s elevation as CEO is a natural progression in Ugro’s evolution as an institution. As a founding member and chief risk officer, his deep understanding of MSME lending, risk, and technology-driven operations makes him ideally suited to lead execution. I will remain fully accountable for Ugro’s strategic and governance matters, while Anuj takes full charge of the business. With recently concluded acquisition of Profectus and a large capital raise, I along with my Board felt that Ugro should be steered under one strong hand who exclusively focuses on the operating performance while I continue to focus on the strategic agenda of making Ugro as India’s largest financial institution for MSME financing”, said Nath.

    Pandey, an alumnus of IIM Lucknow with a B.Tech in Mechanical Engineering, brings over 25 years of experience from GSK Consumer, ABN AMRO, Barclays and Religare. At Ugro, he has built its credit and risk architecture from the ground up, helping shape the company’s data-first approach to MSME financing.

    “I have been working with Shachindra for last seven years even prior to our formation. Being part of Ugro’s founding journey has been a privilege. I look forward to leading the next phase of growth — expanding our MSME reach, scaling embedded finance, and continuing our mission of ‘solving the unsolved’ credit gap with discipline and innovation”, Pandey said.

    His elevation signals Ugro’s ambition to pair entrepreneurial vision with institutional rigour. As it scales new lending frontiers, the company appears intent on anchoring growth with continuity—and trusting those who helped build the ship to now captain it.