Category: MAM

  • Hello Kitty rolls into India with cute new wheels for kids

    Hello Kitty rolls into India with cute new wheels for kids

    MUMBAI: Sanrio’s global pop icon Hello Kitty just got her own ride in India, and it’s got kids buzzing. In a purr-fect collaboration, tech-enabled Indian manufacturer Bidso has launched a new line of Hello Kitty-themed 3-wheeler scooters, designed for safety, fun, and some serious playground style.

    The range includes three delightfully designed SKUs that blend the charm of Hello Kitty with durable, child-friendly engineering. Manufactured in India and priced to please—starting at just Rs 899—the scooters promise quality without breaking the piggy bank.

    Now available exclusively on Flipkart, the launch makes it easy for families across the country to bring home some Hello Kitty joy, with doorstep delivery options and a seamless checkout experience.

    Bidso co-founder & head, Aditya Krishnakumar shared, “Partnering with Hello Kitty, a brand with a joyous global presence is an honor. At Bidso, we’re passionate about creating innovative, high-quality products, and this collaboration allows us to offer something truly special to families in India. We’re excited that these scooters will capture the hearts of both children and parents.”

    Bidso’s latest move signals its intent to become a key player in the child mobility segment, with a sharp focus on fun, affordability, and homegrown manufacturing. For Hello Kitty fans, it’s time to scoot in style.

  • EV91 revs up Delhi streets with electric fleet and gender-first last-mile delivery push

    EV91 revs up Delhi streets with electric fleet and gender-first last-mile delivery push

    MUMBAI: Delhi just got a jolt of clean energy, with wheels that mean business. Ev91technologies, one of India’s fastest-scaling electric mobility startups, officially rolled out its flagship electric two-wheeler operations fleet in the capital on 23 June 2025, setting its sights on both sustainable transport and urban employment equity.

    The new centre in Delhi-NCR comes equipped with tools for real-time diagnostics, battery testing, servicing, and spare part replacements. The facility aims to offer dependable post-sales support for the startup’s growing fleet of electric vehicles and their delivery partners.

    “Delhi is a crucial market for the EV transition, and this new centre is designed to support our customers with fast, reliable, and professional service. Our aim is to not only provide exceptional vehicles but also ensure an effortless post-sales experience that builds long-term trust”, said Ev91technologies founder & CEO Arun Kumar.

    The leadership team—including Manoj Kumar (COO), Lalith Kumar (CBO), and Umesh S K (CFO)—brings a unified vision of cleaner roads and wider access to electric mobility across India. Their strategy includes not just asset deployment but creating livelihoods powered by green tech.

    Industry partners present at the launch included Vaibhav Sarda from Stride, Rishabh Deo from Gogoro, Jyotir Jain from BizDateUp, and Partha Pratim from MotoVolt—signalling strong cross-sector alignment in finance, mobility, and startup innovation.

    In a bold social impact move, EV91 is partnering with Zepto, Big Basket, Flipkart Minutes, and Apollo to provide two-wheelers on a rental model to gig workers unable to afford their own vehicles. The result? A scalable solution that helps riders earn while pushing India’s EV transition forward.

    Women riders are firmly in focus too. EV91 is already collaborating with Rapido Pink to promote women-led fleet operations. The company plans to scale up to over 5,000 vehicles in the coming months, with 1,000 earmarked for female riders.

    “Our commitment remains clear — to create dignified, green, and scalable employment for underserved women across urban India”, said Kumar.

    From buzz to business, EV91Technologies appears to be wiring its growth model not just with batteries and bytes, but with purpose. Delhi, clearly, is only the first stop.

  • “Brands don’t really push the LBTQIA conversation beyond a tokenistic approach”- Dot Media’s Danny Advani

    “Brands don’t really push the LBTQIA conversation beyond a tokenistic approach”- Dot Media’s Danny Advani

    June is Pride Month – a time when rainbows pop up across corporate India, from brand logos to Instagram grids. But behind the hashtags and the colourful symbolism, a tougher question lurks: is this genuine progress or just another seasonal PR parade?

    Over the years, India Inc. has inched forward in recognising sexual diversity. But is it truly embracing the LGBTQIA+ community, or simply ticking the inclusion box for 30 days a year? To explore this, Indiantelevision.com turned to leaders in the advertising and marketing fraternity.

    In the second part of our Executive Dossier series, Indiantelevision.com’s Rohin Ramesh had an email interaction with Danny Advani, head of business strategy at Dot Media. Previously, where Mihir’s take on Indian brands during Pride Month felt like a rainbow with a silver lining — cautiously optimistic, yet hopeful — Advani’s perspective is the thundercloud that follows. In a sharp contrast to the celebratory tone often seen in June, he lays it bare: we’ve barely scratched the surface. For him, the truth is uncomfortable — most brands are still dancing around the idea of inclusion, not walking the talk. His take sparks a necessary debate: are brands truly evolving, or are we still mistaking seasonal signaling for sustained support?

    Advani isn’t buying into the optimism. His perspective acts as a stark counterpoint — a reminder that beyond the sparkle of Pride-themed campaigns, the reality remains largely cosmetic. For him, the issue isn’t that brands are doing too little during Pride Month; it’s that they’re doing so only during Pride Month.

    The tension between these viewpoints opens up a much-needed dialogue: Is India’s brand ecosystem truly evolving in its understanding and representation of LGBTQIA+ identities, or are we still stuck in a cycle of rainbow-washing, safe tokenism, and corporate convenience?

    Excerpts from the interaction  follow.

    On brands evolving from symbolic gestures during pride month to sustained representation in product design, hiring policies, partnerships and campaigns that sparked conversation vs those that felt like rainbow-washing.

    In the Indian brand landscape, I personally haven’t come across any brand that really pushes the boundaries of the LBTQIA conversation beyond a tokenistic approach during the pride month? Where does the association disappear after June? Do we see more open conversations around them? Not yet! Are we ready as a country, not yet! Of course some brands are inclusive in conversations but is it an always on approach? Don’t think so!

    On creative, PR, and digital agencies working to ensure LGBTQ+ stories are told authentically, with lived experience and not just layered filters.

    My response remains the same above. But yes, there are agencies and organisations that do put in the effort for representation and create a safe space and welcoming environment for the community. Parmesh Sahani has been integral in doing this for Godrej now for years and I think we need more of these flag bearers to help open the archaic mindset of most organisations.

    On Indian brands showing up for the queer community throughout the year, or only when it trends.

    Let me switch my gay spotlight on and say ‘Oh honey, don’t even get me started”. Brands don’t care, most of them, they don’t care about Mothers Day, Fathers Day let alone pride. It is a trend that they ride the wave hoping they get to see the golden pot aka ROI across the rainbow.

    But I must say, some brands have at least made some inclusions in their choices of talents being used, be it as a face for commercials, or product shoots but there seems to be some movement in the positive direction.

    On the data about LGBTQ+ inclusion driving brand loyalty, especially among Gen Z and millennial consumers.

    I am not even sure if there’s a substantial data pool in the Indian landscape, but globally brands like Levis, Skittles, etc have seen proof of success in being an inclusive brand. I remember reading a paper that says skittles saw an engagement spike of 20-25 per cent during their pride campaign and as per Nielsen research paper “LGBTQ+-inclusive ads saw 23 per cent higher brand recall among Gen Z, and were 2x more likely to lead to purchase intent”. Even Close Up as a brand in India has been inclusive in their campaigns in the past and not necessarily for Pride but even during Valentines.

    On brands showing solidarity without falling into legal or cultural backlash traps, given the legal grey areas around same-sex marriage in India.

    No one is asking any brand to endorse or fight for the rights of the community by showcasing any strong statements but just have the appetite to showcase and accept the community first for who they are and stop questioning their choices. I remember an incident when X used to be Twitter and a certain Top TIer Bank had rolled out a campaign and a service for same sex couples to have a joint holder account. But when my friend applied for it, she was denied and it became a Twitter War. Pinkwashing isn’t cool!

    On the LGBT market being a big enough market in India to be targeted for products specially designed for them.

    Can’t remember any digital film, television commercial that showcased anything outside a heteronormative lens. The Indian ecosystem is too fragile and lacks awareness of anything outside the biological gender to accept or even have a conversation that could be in the benefit of the community.

    On the LGBT market being a big enough market in India to be targeted for products specially designed for them.

    Take a page from the new age fashion brands and I ain’t talking about the e-commerce giants. Brands in the fashion space today are aware of the choices that the community needs so instead they are keeping it unisex. It’s not necessarily defined by biological gender but by the design and the collection that is inclusive for all.

    On where the right attitude towards the LGBTQ+ community in an organisation truly begins — leadership, middle management, or peers.

    Oh, the chicken and the egg question! Let’s be honest, it all has to work in tandem with each other. The management can set the groundwork and help create an environment that is inclusive, but the middle management and the peers are equally responsible for you to feel it’s a safe space to work. You cannot have your leadership valuing your contributions while your peers and middle management try to tear you apart with ignorant remarks or homophobic slurs. It seems like a lot to ask but you need the majority in an organisation doing the right to silence the wrong. 
     

  • Blunt and loud: Go5 launches edgy new audio brand for India’s Gen Z

    Blunt and loud: Go5 launches edgy new audio brand for India’s Gen Z

    MUMBAI: Go5 Incorporation, the force behind TecSox and Deal99.in, has just dropped its boldest bet yet — Blunt, a new audio brand that’s unapologetically built for India’s Gen Z. Ditching dull tech and overpriced polish, Blunt speaks to creators, hustlers, gamers, and style-conscious college-goers looking for gear with guts.

    Launched with wireless neckbands, TWS earbuds, wired earphones, and Bluetooth speakers, Blunt blends punchy sound with underground design — think matte blacks, LED trims, industrial accents and attitude-heavy branding. Built-in quick charge, long battery life, and deep bass come as standard.

    Go5 Incorporation founder & promoter, Puneet Gulati said, “We saw a cultural gap where most affordable audio products were either plain functional or overpriced lifestyle gear. Blunt was born to challenge that. It’s gritty, raw, and real just like its audience.”

    The brand leans heavily into subcultures – from streetwear and indie music to gaming and hip-hop — making it as much a cultural statement as a tech offering. It’s tech that flexes.

    Backed by Go5’s success with TecSox — which sells over a million units with a sub-2 per cent return rate — Blunt enters the market with scale and street cred.

    In short, Blunt isn’t just about what you hear. It’s about how loud you live.

  • Triooh launches to bring data-driven change in OOH advertising

    Triooh launches to bring data-driven change in OOH advertising

    MUMBAI: If billboards could think, they’d probably call Triooh for a brand makeover. Launching with a bang, Triooh is the newest kid on the block aiming to shake up the Out-of-Home (OOH) advertising space not with size, but with smarts. Founded by industry veteran Anuj Bhandari, Triooh is blending creative flair with data intelligence to take media planning from guesswork to precision science.

    While traditional OOH often leaned on legacy placements and gut feel, Triooh flips the script by putting data at the heart of its planning process right from the start. “The industry was never short on creativity, but it needed smarter tools,” said Bhandari. “We’re here to make every ad placement not just visible, but valuable.”

    With services spanning media planning, buying, execution and experiential marketing, Triooh is built for modern brands seeking accountability, sharper targeting, and real-time audience insights. Whether it’s a roadside hoarding or a branded experience, the agency wants every campaign to deliver measurable impact on minds and metrics alike.

    The team is as hybrid as their approach: seasoned industry pros meet agile new talent, all working to power up performance in a rapidly evolving medium. “OOH is no longer just about billboards. It’s a data-driven ecosystem,” Bhandari said.

    Triooh is currently self-funded, but already in talks with major agency networks to raise strategic investment as it accelerates its vision. With advertisers demanding more accountability and smarter ROI from OOH formats, Triooh is positioning itself as the medium’s modern-day makeover artist where bold ideas meet bold data.

    For the OOH world, it looks like the writing’s on the wall. And this time, it’s backed by analytics.

  • Cushman taps retail ace Sona Aggarwal to lead APAC’s shopfront strategy

    Cushman taps retail ace Sona Aggarwal to lead APAC’s shopfront strategy

    MUMBAI: She’s opened stores, managed cross-border teams, and built brands now she’s opening new doors for Cushman & Wakefield. Cushman & Wakefield has appointed retail veteran Sona Aggarwal as managing director, head of retail sales and strategy, Asia Pacific, in a move that signals the real estate giant’s intensified focus on the region’s fast-evolving consumer landscape. Based in Singapore, Sona steps into a newly created role aimed at boosting retail growth across markets and connecting global clients with on-ground insights and solutions.

    Sona brings over 25 years of experience in brand management and retail operations, having launched and scaled 200 plus stores across APAC and led cross-functional teams of 1,300 plus people. Her portfolio spans everything from beauty and apparel to healthcare, home furnishings, and watches, with deep expertise in tailoring go-to-market strategies for diverse local markets.

    “This is a significant appointment for our retail business in Asia Pacific,” said Tenant Representation chief executive for India and SEA & APAC Anshul Jain. “Sona brings a client-side view sharpened by years at iconic global retail brands giving us the edge we need to evolve with the times.”

    In her new role, Sona will spearhead Cushman & Wakefield’s APAC retail strategy, working closely with local teams to expand client partnerships and integrate the firm’s global retail insights with local execution. The focus: to unlock growth in both mature and emerging markets, and build a sustainable, future-ready retail platform.

    “Retail has never been more dynamic,” Sona said. “Demographically and psychographically, the APAC region is undergoing a seismic shift. With a rising middle class, young digital natives, and a booming appetite for global and homegrown brands, this market is ripe with opportunity.”

    She also pointed to outbound momentum: “The Western world is discovering Asia in new ways whether it’s in health and beauty, wellness, hospitality or F&B. At the same time, we’re seeing a tech-driven surge in categories like Auto and EV, and a growing need for differentiated luxury and financial experiences to match the rise of high-net-worth consumers.”

    Sona’s mission? To stitch together Cushman & Wakefield’s operational scale, talent and data insights with local understanding to deliver retail strategies that are not just globally informed but culturally attuned.

    As the lines between physical and digital retail blur, and consumption patterns evolve at warp speed, Cushman & Wakefield is betting on leaders who understand both the shop floor and the boardroom. And in Sona Aggarwal, they’ve found someone who’s fluent in both.

  • Symphonies Life ditches plain sleep pitch, rebrands bedtime as a lifestyle with Volume

    Symphonies Life ditches plain sleep pitch, rebrands bedtime as a lifestyle with Volume

    MUMBAI: Sleep is no longer just something you fall into. It’s now something you buy into. Symphonies Life has unveiled a fresh brand identity that signals a shift from product to philosophy—from mattress to mindful ritual. And leading the rebranding charge is creative agency Volume.

    Announced on 23 June 2025, the overhaul is built on the narrative of ‘engineering better sleep for a more conscious lifestyle’. From wave-like visual metaphors to motion-inspired branding that breathes rhythm and calm, the identity leans into the science and soul of sleep.

    Volume created a modern, minimalistic visual language that reflects stillness and serenity, anchoring the brand in experiences rather than just specifications. Across POS displays, social content, packaging, influencer kits, and experience zones, Symphonies Life now speaks in a consistent tone of calm.

    “We wanted to go beyond just being another mattress in the market. With Volume, we were able to build a brand that speaks to a more conscious, wellness-focused consumer”, said Symphonies Life CEO Shivans Agarwaal. “Sleep is personal, emotional, and essential, and our new identity finally does justice to that philosophy”.

    “Symphonies Life is no longer just a product you buy, it’s a ritual you invest in. Our role was to balance commercial intent with emotional resonance. Every element, from brand voice to visual rhythm, was crafted to elevate sleep into the lifestyle space”, added Volume brand director Rishabh Srivastava.

    The D2C strategy ties together intuitive packaging with immersive storytelling, reinforcing the brand’s push to carve out space in the wellness economy. With a design-led, emotionally charged refresh, Symphonies Life is positioning itself as a serious player in the premium sleep market.

  • Startupbootcamp India charges up climate tech with new pre-accelerator for energy startups

    Startupbootcamp India charges up climate tech with new pre-accelerator for energy startups

    MUMBAI: Climate tech is having a startup moment, and Startupbootcamp India (SBC India) is making sure the power surge is real. The new joint venture between Startupbootcamp Australia and BRK Ventures launched its first pre-accelerator programme for clean energy startups on 23 June 2025, with a full charge of ambition and international firepower.

    The three-month programme kicks off in August and targets early-stage founders working across six high-impact domains: AI-driven energy systems, smart grids, renewable integration, next-gen storage, green hydrogen, decarbonisation, and blockchain-enabled decentralised markets.

    Only 12 startups will be selected from over 300 expected applications. Startups at the idea, MVP, or pre-revenue stage can apply until 31 July.

    “We’re excited to partner with BRK Ventures to launch Startupbootcamp India and support the next wave of climate tech innovation. India has the talent, urgency, and scale to drive impactful climate solutions that resonate both locally and globally. By backing early-stage founders in energy transition sectors, we aim to foster commercially viable ventures that accelerate decarbonisation and create meaningful international collaboration opportunities”, said Startupbootcamp Australia CEO Trevor Townsend.

    “India’s energy transition needs a 360 degrees approach to battle several problems like increasing pollution in large cities, flooding, climate change affecting agricultural produce and much more. We are keen to be a partner in finding solutions that can help India emerge as a powerful $35 trillion economy by 2047. Our belief is to support climate tech focused startups in their very early days with strategic partnerships like SBC Australia to position Indian startups solving India and global climate change problems”, added BRK Ventures managing partner Kamal Bansal.

    SBC India will culminate the programme with a showcase day in November 2025, inviting marquee VCs and investors to evaluate the cohort for early-stage capital and collaboration. The programme is designed to support founders with access to industry experts, market linkages, and global mentorship networks tailored to climate-tech startups.

    With backing from partners like Shell, Microsoft, AWS, Mitsubishi, and Bosch, Startupbootcamp Australia brings global experience to India’s growing clean-tech landscape. BRK Ventures, meanwhile, adds local knowledge and pre-revenue capital muscle to plug early-stage funding gaps.

    With tools, traction, and talent on tap, SBC India’s first run promises to energise India’s net-zero mission and fuel the country’s push toward climate resilience and inclusive growth.

  • Animeta helps Bassi scrub up a Bronze Lion for Garnier with viral facewash showdown

    Animeta helps Bassi scrub up a Bronze Lion for Garnier with viral facewash showdown

    MUMBAI: A facewash, a punchline, and 400 million views later, influencer marketing got its Cannes moment. Animeta Brandstar, the influencer engine behind some of India’s most viral campaigns, struck gold—or rather, Bronze—with its collaboration on the ‘Bassi vs Garnier Men Facewash’ campaign. The effort earned a Bronze Lion at the 2025 Cannes Lions International Festival of Creativity.

    The spark? Comedian Anubhav Singh Bassi casually dropped a satirical clip online poking fun at men’s skincare. What followed was a masterclass in agile brand storytelling. Garnier, alongside its agency Publicis Groupe, saw an opening and ran with it. Animeta swooped in to power the influencer machine—fast.

    Animeta’s key move was getting Bassi on board with remarkable speed to ride the viral wave. The campaign went further when fellow comedian and Bassi’s close friend Harsh Gujral entered the frame, adding layers of relatability and momentum.

    The campaign crescendoed with Bassi trying a men’s facewash on camera for the first time—a moment of comic catharsis for his fans. Animeta handled the nuts and bolts: from coordinating the DVC shoot and syncing influencer content, to managing creator interactions with Garnier brand ambassador John Abraham.

    The result? More than 400 million views tracked across Bassi’s Instagram and Youtube channels, all measured via Animeta Brandstar’s analytics platform. It was moment marketing done right—spontaneous, sharp, and scalable.

    “We are incredibly proud to have been a part of this groundbreaking campaign that resonated so deeply with audiences and garnered international recognition at Cannes”, said Branded Content and Creator Strategy SVP Vishu Ray. “This win underscores the power of authentic influencer collaboration and agile moment marketing in creating truly memorable and effective advertising”.

    For Animeta, the campaign wasn’t just a win for Garnier—it cemented the company’s place in the global conversation on what modern advertising should look like: quick on the uptake, creator-led, and built for scroll-stopping impact.

  • Moms rolls out Mother Dairy’s expansive OOH campaign in Lucknow & Varanasi

    Moms rolls out Mother Dairy’s expansive OOH campaign in Lucknow & Varanasi

    MUMBAI: Moms, the outdoor specialised unit of Madison World, has successfully rolled out a high-impact outdoor campaign for Mother Dairy, covering the key cities of Lucknow and Varanasi.

    The campaign spans a diverse mix of media formats, including billboards, unipoles, metro station branding, train wraps, LEDs and FOB facades — all strategically placed across high-footfall zones. The objective was to reinforce Mother Dairy’s strong presence in the region and engage consumers through a visually striking and expansive outdoor network.

    Speaking on the campaign, Moms VP – North & East, Prashant Mishra said, “Our strategy was to drive high-frequency and high-impact visibility through a blend of static and dynamic formats. Lucknow and Varanasi are key markets for Mother Dairy and this campaign ensures the brand connects with consumers through smart placements and extensive reach.”

    Mother Dairy spokesperson added, “This outdoor campaign, rooted in our Maa Jaisi brand narrative, is a step forward in reinforcing our presence in key markets of Uttar Pradesh. Through a vibrant and wide- reaching OOH network, we aim to strengthen brand visibility and deepen our connect with consumers in Lucknow and Varanasi.”