Category: MAM

  • How Indian brands hit the festive marketing jackpot in 2025

    How Indian brands hit the festive marketing jackpot in 2025

    MUMBAI: If there’s anything we Indians look forward to as much as our morning chai and newspaper, it’s the festive season. Homes come alive with the glow of diyas, embodying the victory of good over evil; floors bloom with rangoli and laxmi charans; the air fills with laughter, and the sweet aroma of mithai. And amid all this joy, brands flood algorithms, billboards, and social media timelines, eager to strengthen their customer base or build one from scratch. It’s the most lucrative time of the year for brands, with marketers pulling out all stops to win over audiences. For instance, international brands go all out to strike a chord with their Indian diaspora. Who would’ve thought we’d ever see a Diwali Barbie draped in a Anita Dongre lehenga choli? With cultural resonance ticked off and fair representation for the brown community, this isn’t just festive marketing, it’s festive marketing on steroids.

    Back home, Indian brands aren’t far behind, leaving no stone unturned during the peak festive season. The festive marketing report card for India’s FMCG sector is glowing. This year, the festive season didn’t just light up homes; it set marketing budgets ablaze. With recent GST cuts lowering costs and boosting consumer sentiment, brands rolled out campaigns that evoke creativity, value, and cultural relevance.

    For instance, launching gold scheme campaigns is fairly common in the retail jewellery industry, but Tanishq changed the script altogether. The House of Tata brand launched a campaign, headlined by former cricketer Sachin Tendulkar, encouraging households to repurpose existing gold, estimated at 25,000 tonnes in homes, into new designs. This reduces dependence on gold imports, which account for nearly 99 per cent of India’s annual requirement. By highlighting locally sourced and recycled gold, the campaign shifts the focus toward Indian production and sustainability, while still tapping into the cultural significance of gold during festivals.

    Meanwhile, it’s no news that the concert economy in India is booming. Recently, celebrated rapper and singer Travis Scott brought his Circus Maximus World Tour to India. Bookmyshow’s new campaign ‘Travis Wali Diwali’ shows how some brands can make the most of such moments and bring in attention from their target audience. Set in a vibrant Delhi household, the film shows how young Indians blend tradition with contemporary flair, from Travis-inspired rangolis and cactus-themed décor to stylish fusion outfits. The film captures the true spirit of a generation that embraces global trends while staying rooted in India’s festive culture.

    Squidjc founder Siddharth Jalan believes that last year’s post-pandemic, bargain-heavy approach is giving way to “premium storytelling” that taps into culture and identity rather than just price. He noted that consumers aren’t hunting for deals as much as they are looking to feel “part of the broader narrative.” For instance, “People don’t want a brand or a product, they want the story. Can I buy into the story? That’s when I’ll purchase your product,” he added.

    Meanwhile, Abhay Group managing director and co-founder Apurv Modi points out that the ad-spend boom is being fuelled by newer platforms and formats. The rise of quick commerce, precise digital targeting and interactive hoardings is enabling brands to be everywhere i.e physical stores, social media platforms, and even hyperlocal outdoor screens.

    The two leaders find common ground in noting how digital-out-of-home (DOOH) and hyperlocal advertising are gaining traction as outdoor screens become programmatic and locally tailored. At the same time, brands are diversifying across channels such as quick commerce, social media apps like Whatsapp, and precision-targeted digital spaces, reflecting how today’s consumers shop and engage. Modi added that experiential rewards and bundled offers are replacing simple markdowns, creating stronger perceived value.

    On similar grounds, Jalan emphasises that Gen Z and emerging consumers are drawn to campaigns that lean into sustainability, inclusivity and regional identity, rather than just discount tags.

    Influencer marketing has become another critical avenue. “Budgets are increasingly moving toward micro-influencers and mixed-use influencers who can authentically connect with niche audiences. Consumers are inspired by brands that integrate culture and identity into their messaging,” he explained.

    Other notable industry moguls said this year marked a clear shift towards campaigns that marry value, emotion, and innovation: a trinity that made festive marketing more personal and purposeful than ever before. And with recent GST cuts lowering costs and lifting consumer sentiment, brands across the country are rolling out campaigns that club all these factors.

    “This year, festive marketing is becoming even more value, and emotion driven. Compared to
    previous years, we’re seeing a greater emphasis on regional relevance, personalisation, and
    deeper engagement, rather than just top-of-the-funnel campaigns,” said Hyfun Foods head of marketing Vincent Noronha. “The recent GST rate cuts, especially packaged foods, have certainly freed up some marketing budgets. This provides both established and emerging brands, particularly regional players, an opportunity to increase visibility during the busy festive window.”  

    The brand recently launched its campaign “Hyfun Khao Sona Pao,” offering a direct incentive of winning gold to its customers. The campaign taps into the Indian tradition of auspicious gold purchases during festivals, creating an immediate call-to-action beyond the product itself. By strategically combining OOH advertising in Bengaluru and Delhi NCR with digital ads and quick commerce platform banners, the brand has orchestrated a cohesive, high-recall marketing blitz to leave a lasting imprint on consumers.

    In a similar vein, for skincare brand Joy Personal Care (RSH Global), GST cuts and rising disposable incomes are driving broader festive engagement. CMO Poulomi Roy notes, “Economic stability, along with government measures such as GST rate reductions and tax exemptions up to ₹12 lakh, has boosted consumer confidence and purchasing power. Coupled with renewed optimism and increasing disposable incomes, these conditions are encouraging brands to invest more actively in festive campaigns.” Consumers now seek fresh looks and meaningful brand experiences, prompting brands to maintain engagement throughout the season via targeted offers, new product launches, and regional content, she added.  

    Roy predicts that with rising disposable incomes leading to greater affluence, certain FMCG and food categories might witness the first wave of increased consumption particularly dairy, cheese, biscuits, sauces, condiments, and instant food products. In the personal care segment, stronger traction for larger pack sizes in everyday categories such as lotions and shampoos is anticipated.

    Whereas, incense sticks manufacturer and supplier Zed Black’s director Ankit Agrawal pointed out, “Lower GST rates bring cost flexibility, allowing us to reinvest in regional activations and consumer engagement.” The brand unveiled an experiential campaign featuring an eight-foot Durga idol made of incense sticks during Pujo in Kolkata, illustrating the shift from generic festive greetings to immersive storytelling. Premiumisation is a key driver, with consumers upgrading to aesthetically appealing, long-lasting products, from masala agarbatti to white-stick series.

    However, Jalan offered a measured view, “GST reductions are more of a motivator than a game-changer. Consumers may feel happier, but purchasing habits haven’t shifted dramatically. For brands, the opportunity lies in leveraging the festive moment effectively and delivering value without compromising brand equity.”  

    He also identified key categories seeing an uptick in festive campaigns. “Beauty, fashion, and footwear are booming, along with niche segments like spices and seeds. There’s a post-pandemic appetite for premium, culturally resonant, and exotic products, giving brands more room to innovate and engage.”

    There has been another consequential observation being made around the industry during this festive season: the resurgence of OOH and DOOH campaigns, but with a twist.

    The role of outdoor advertising has evolved. Hyperglocal business head Sumit Taneja, observed that “brands are investing heavily in OOH and point-of-purchase branding to build stronger festive visibility.” Large-format sites, high-street displays, and transit zones, combined with in-store décor and last-mile activations, are converting awareness into purchase. Real-time data, automation, and immersive displays ensure campaigns reach consumers where they shop, travel, and celebrate.

    Meanwhile, The Stone Sapphire India managing director & CEO Shobhit Singh had a lot to add regarding the surge of DOOH campaigns. “In an over-crowded and noisy digital environment, outdoor media delivers scale, visibility, and credibility, especially in high footfall locations like malls, shopping areas, and residential developments. For purchases in gifts for the home and toys, where sight and gift-giving are very important experiential elements to OOH, such as interactive displays, augmented reality billboards, and 3D displays, are connecting the offline life with digital storytelling. OOH is no longer stagnant; it is establishing itself as a dynamic storytelling opportunity, activating festive sentiment and impulse purchases,” he opined.

    Roy offered a slightly different perspective. “While traditional OOH may not always directly drive engagement, formats that encourage interaction and enhance the overall experience are proving to be more effective. Interactive setups near shopping hubs and digital OOH enhanced with augmented AI can deliver stronger engagement and create more memorable brand experiences, both during the festive season and beyond.”  

    Jalan also agreed on the fact that DOOH is seeing a resurgence. “Outdoor is evolving. Digital billboards are no longer prohibitively costly, and even smaller startups can leverage them for short bursts of highly targeted campaigns. Hyperlocal digital outdoor, near points of sale, is increasingly being used to drive sales with a higher ROI,” he said.  

    Personalisation and technology are also playing a key role. “There’s tracking software that allows brands to analyse movement around a billboard and even create interactive afterimages in real time. While this isn’t widespread yet in India, it’s an example of how innovation is shaping engagement,” he added.

    Similarly, Roy also shed some light on emerging technologies influencing festive campaigns. “Martech continues to be strong. Brands are using data analytics and audience insights to better understand purchase intentions, personalize festive messaging, and deliver more relevant consumer experiences across digital and offline touchpoints,” she opined.

    What stands out this festive season is how brands are pushing beyond conventional campaigns to create experiences that truly resonate with consumers. From hyperlocal DOOH activations and interactive outdoor displays to storytelling rooted in culture, identity, and emotion, marketers are finding innovative ways to capture attention and engagement. Technology, personalisation, and cultural insight are no longer optional, they are essential tools in connecting with audiences in meaningful ways.

     

  • Rannvijay shifts gears with Madcap Luxe lunch

    Rannvijay shifts gears with Madcap Luxe lunch

    MUMBAI: Fasten your seatbelts, luxury just hit the fast lane. Rannvijay Singha, along with co-founders Arvind Balan and Rohit Jha, has launched Madcap Luxe Travel Experiences, India’s first cultural powerhouse that merges motorsport, heritage, and high-end adventure into one roaring movement.

    Born from the thrill of the open road, Madcap Luxe redefines travel as an emotion rather than an itinerary. The brand blends self-drive expeditions with world-class hospitality, taking travellers from private F1 paddocks and Dakar rally zones to royal palaces and Michelin-starred dining tables, all wrapped in an unmistakable spirit of Indian luxury.

    “Madcap Luxe is not about itineraries, it’s about emotion engineered,” says Rannvijay Singha. “It’s for those who live boldly and want to drive their own legend.”

    The venture also introduces a second vertical, Madcap Lifestyle & Adventure IPs, with its debut property, Blackout 40, India’s first 40-hour non-stop biker festival in the deserts of Rajasthan. Designed as an immersive cultural celebration, it unites bikers, artists, and adventurers in a heady mix of music, craftsmanship and desert soul.

    “We are creating formats that go beyond festivals, these are cultural movements,” says Arvind Balan. “Blackout 40 celebrates India’s roots and modern identity in one frame.”

    Powered by experiential marketing giant Maxperience, the creative force behind 500 plus campaigns for Porsche, Hyundai, and Royal Enfield, Madcap Luxe is positioning itself as a global experiential brand built in India for the world.

    The 2026 global luxe drive calendar revs up the experience with curated international expeditions, from the Saudi Grand Drive – Dakar Edition to the Grand American Drive – Route 66 Centennial Edition. With its bespoke “Curate Your Own” journeys and “Rare Experiences” offering everything from F1 laps at Monza to desert glamping in Arabia, Madcap Luxe is redefining how India travels, where adrenaline meets elegance, and every mile tells a story.
     

  • Rise of zebra striping as drinkers mix spirits with sobriety

    Rise of zebra striping as drinkers mix spirits with sobriety

    MUMBAI: Raise a glass and then a soda. The world’s latest drinking trend, dubbed “zebra striping”, is rewriting social rituals one sip at a time. According to new research by Euromonitor International, consumers are alternating between alcoholic and non-alcoholic beverages in a single evening, a mindful move that’s helping people balance indulgence with intention.

    The global alcoholic drinks industry poured out 253 billion litres in 2024, but growth is showing signs of a hangover. Enter zebra striping, a trend spreading faster than happy-hour offers, especially among Gen Z and younger millennials who are redefining what it means to “go out for a drink.”

    Euromonitor’s World Market for Alcoholic Drinks 2025 report finds that moderation is now mainstream. Only 17 per cent of consumers say they drink weekly in 2025, a sharp drop from 23 per cent in 2020 while 53 per cent are actively cutting back. The share of people who never drink at all has risen by 3 percentage points in just five years.

    Behind the shift lies a mix of health goals and pragmatism: 87 per cent of respondents cited a desire to feel healthier and avoid long-term health risks; 30 per cent said saving money mattered, while 25 per cent credited better sleep as motivation. The “sober curious” movement is making abstinence aspirational and redefining nightlife as we know it.

    Among those swapping cocktails for kombucha, Gen Z stands out with 36 per cent of legal-age respondents never having consumed alcohol at all. Hedonism, it seems, is being traded for hydration.

    Yet, while traditional booze is flatlining, India is raising the bar. The country is projected to add 357 million litres to its alcoholic drinks consumption between 2024 and 2029, making it a standout growth market. With rising incomes and evolving social norms, India along with Brazil, Mexico, and South Africa is expected to outpour mature markets where spending power remains under strain.

    Globally, the adult non-alcoholic category is bubbling with momentum. In 2024, total alcoholic beverage volume grew a modest 0.6 per cent, reaching a 1.7 trillion dollars market, while the no/low segment soared: non-alcoholic spirits rose 17 per cent, RTDs 14 per cent, non/low beer 11 per cent, and non-alcoholic wine 7 per cent. Between 2025 and 2029, the adult non-alcoholic drinks market is expected to swell by 24 per cent, surpassing 10.2 billion litres by 2029.

    As Euromonitor, global insight manager for alcoholic drinks Spiros Malandrakis put it: “Non-alcoholic alternatives are no longer niche, they’re becoming central to how people celebrate and connect.”

    So, the next time someone says they’re going for a drink, don’t be surprised if it’s an alcohol-free G&T. After all, in today’s world, balance is the new buzz.

  • Kaabil shines light on women who power change

    Kaabil shines light on women who power change

    MUMBAI: They came, they skilled, they conquered. Mahindra & Mahindra’s Kaabil initiative and Centum Foundation have unveiled a stirring new film that celebrates the extraordinary journeys of women who turned opportunity into empowerment.

    Conceptualised by Upgrad Enterprise’s marketing team, the short film spotlights women from across 19 states whose lives have been transformed through skill-based training and sustainable livelihoods. Told through powerful first-person stories, it’s a moving ode to resilience, dignity and the quiet revolution taking shape in rural India.

    Opening with a voiceover comparing women’s strength to ‘Shakti’, the film captures the struggles and triumphs of women finding their footing in sectors like automotive, retail and customer service. The Kaabil Initiative, Mahindra Group’s flagship CSR programme, has already trained over 20,000 women across 250 locations, with more than 9,000 placed in meaningful jobs, many for the very first time.

    Mahindra & Mahindra head of women’s empowerment Pooja Nanda said, “Kaabil aims to empower one million women by 2027 through skilling and employability. Our partnership with Centum Foundation has helped us scale our impact and foster lasting livelihoods.”

    Adding to this, Upgrad Enterprise revenue head Sunita Mohant noted, “These women aren’t just statistics, they’re stories of courage and transformation. Their ambition proves that India’s growth isn’t limited to its cities.”

    With its heartwarming visuals and purpose-led storytelling, the film goes beyond awareness to ignite inspiration, reminding viewers that true empowerment begins when skill meets opportunity.

     

  • India braces for a grey wave as elderly numbers set to hit 230m by 2036

    India braces for a grey wave as elderly numbers set to hit 230m by 2036

    MUMBAI India’s population is ageing fast. By 2036, roughly 230 million Indians—one in seven—will be 60 or older, more than double the 100 million recorded in 2011. It’s a demographic earthquake that will reshape everything from healthcare to housing, pensions to public transport.

    The south is greying fastest. Kerala, already home to 13 per cent elderly in 2011, will see that figure leap to 23 per cent by 2036, matching developed nations. Tamil Nadu and Himachal Pradesh aren’t far behind. 

    Meanwhile, northern states like Uttar Pradesh, though younger now, are catching up quickly—elderly numbers there will nearly double from 7 per cent to 12 per cent.

    Women dominate the demographic. They make up 58 per cent of India’s elderly, with a sex ratio of 1,065 females per 1,000 males. More than half are widows. The overall dependency ratio—62 dependents per 100 working-age people—signals mounting pressure on families and the state.

    The challenges are stacked high. Mental health stigma around dementia and Alzheimer’s persists. Geriatric infrastructure is patchy, especially in rural areas. Social security remains inadequate even as living costs climb. Traditional family support systems are fraying under the weight of urbanisation and nuclear households. And India’s infrastructure—from public transport to pavements—remains stubbornly unfriendly to the elderly.

    New Delhi is scrambling to respond. The ministry of social justice and empowerment has rolled out a raft of schemes. The Atal Pension Yojana, launched in 2015, has swelled from 15.4 million subscribers in 2019 to 82.7 million by October 2025, managing assets worth over Rs 49,000 crore. It promises monthly pensions of Rs 1,000 to Rs 5,000 after subscribers turn 60.

    The Integrated Programme for Senior Citizens runs 696 old-age homes across 29 states and union territories, with 84 more approved this year. The Rashtriya Vayoshri Yojana distributes walking sticks, hearing aids, wheelchairs and dentures to low-income seniors. A toll-free helpline—14567—offers support. The Sacred portal helps those over 60 find jobs. The SAGE portal encourages start-ups to develop elderly care solutions, offering equity support of up to Rs 1 crore per project.

    Legal muscle backs the effort. The Maintenance and Welfare of Parents and Senior Citizens Act, amended in 2019, compels children—including step-children and in-laws—to provide for parents. It scrapped the Rs 10,000 monthly maintenance cap and mandated special police units for seniors in every district. All hospitals, private included, must now provide dedicated queues, beds and geriatric care.

    Technology is pitching in too. Telemedicine platforms like e-Sanjeevani offer free home consultations. Wearable devices track vital signs. Online pharmacies deliver medicines to doorsteps. Smart home sensors let families monitor elderly relatives remotely.

    The silver economy—goods and services for those over 50—is booming. Valued at Rs 73,000 crore in 2024, it’s set for multi-fold growth. Globally, senior citizens and professionals aged 45 to 64 are the wealthiest cohort. India’s senior care market presents vast opportunities for health and wellness firms, both at home and abroad.
    Yet success hinges on more than schemes and start-ups. India needs specialised regulations for senior care, policy reforms anchored in evaluation frameworks, and better coordination across ministries. Panchayati raj institutions, urban local bodies, NGOs and private providers must work in concert. Public-private collaboration across healthcare is essential.

    The clock is ticking. By 2050, India’s elderly population will swell to 319 million, growing at three per cent annually. The country that once prided itself on youthful demographics now faces a greying future. Whether it becomes a burden or a boon depends on how swiftly India adapts. The grey wave is coming. Ready or not.

  • Fortune serves up flavour with Bhojan Bahini

    Fortune serves up flavour with Bhojan Bahini

    MUMBAI: Talk about a power play in the kitchen! Fortune, India’s leading edible oil brand from AWL Agri Business Ltd., has bowled Bengal over with its new regional campaign, Bhojan Bahini (Food Force,) a cinematic tribute to the state’s eternal love affair with food.

    Premiering on 28 October, the campaign brings together two of Bengal’s biggest icons, cricket legend Sourav Ganguly and actor Abir Chatterjee, in a deliciously entertaining film that blends humour, drama and nostalgia. Playing the witty “Food Police”, the duo set out on a flavourful mission to uncover the secret behind the perfect Bengali meal. The answer? Fortune’s unbeatable No.1 jodi, Mustard Oil and Soyabean Oil.

    Packed with the sizzling sounds of luchis and the mouth-watering aroma of kosha mangsho, Bhojan Bahini celebrates authenticity in every drop. The film’s core message, “choose quality over compromise,” reminds viewers that the essence of great taste lies in trusted ingredients, and for Bengal, that means Fortune.

    Commenting on the campaign, AWL Agri Business Ltd. joint president sales & marketing Mukesh Mishra said, “With Bhojan Bahini, we’re celebrating Bengal’s unbreakable bond with food. Sourav and Abir perfectly embody the state’s love for authenticity and quality.”

    Vibrant, witty and packed with flavour, the campaign goes beyond entertainment to strike an emotional chord, reminding Bengali homes that tradition and taste truly go hand in hand. With Bhojan Bahini, Fortune once again proves why it remains the undisputed leader on Bengal’s dining tables.

  • India’s AI ambitions hit the high note with Microsoft scholarship surge

    India’s AI ambitions hit the high note with Microsoft scholarship surge

    MUMBAI: India isn’t just coding the future, it’s rewriting it, line by line, in AI. The country has emerged as one of the top applicant nations for the 1 million dollars Microsoft AI Innovator Global Scholarships, a landmark initiative by Women in Cloud, launched alongside Opulis: Women Powering Microsoft’s Trillion-Dollar Shift.

    The collector’s edition coffee table book endorsed by Microsoft and the Microsoft Alumni Network celebrates 50 women tech leaders who have helped steer the company through its transformation into the AI era. But this is more than just glossy pages and golden stories; Opulis doubles up as a career catalyst through its Book-to-Scholarship Model, where every purchase unlocks real AI learning opportunities for aspiring professionals.

    Since its launch, the scholarship programme has drawn over 700 applications from 20-plus countries, including Brazil, the US, Nigeria, India, Australia, South Africa, Canada, Kenya, and Egypt. India’s strong showing underscores its growing momentum in AI skilling particularly among young professionals and women technologists eyeing the global digital workforce.

    “We’re ensuring that access to AI careers and education isn’t limited to a few, it belongs to everyone, especially women ready to lead India’s digital future,” said Opulis president of women in cloud and executive producer Chaitra Vedullapalli. “Electricity unlocked the industrial revolution, and AI is unlocking quantum progress.”

    Through 1,000 Opulis book pre-orders worldwide, Women in Cloud has already unlocked 100 Microsoft AI Certification Scholarships offering learners world-class credentials that can power careers worth Rs 55–60 lakh per annum. The move is projected to create over Rs 60 crore in new economic value annually, translating to about 7 million dollars in wages and an estimated 21 million dollars total economic impact.

    The ultimate goal? To ignite 1,000 AI careers by 2030, powered by book sponsorships, corporate grants, and community support proof that storytelling and access can together spark large-scale economic mobility.

    Marking Microsoft’s 50th anniversary, Opulis also spotlights five Indian-origin women leaders shaping the company’s AI journey: Chaitra Vedullapalli, Monika Mital Gupta, Aparana Gupta, Sharmila Rathinam, and Nitasha Chopra. Among them, Aparana Gupta, based in India, leads as Director of Engineering and Principal Software Engineering Manager at Microsoft embodying the homegrown excellence the programme seeks to inspire.

    Available in hardcover and digital editions across Amazon, Barnes & Noble, and over 4,000 global retailers, Opulis carries a unique promise: every 10 books sold funds one AI Innovator Scholarship, creating a virtuous loop of knowledge, opportunity, and empowerment.

    In the end, Opulis isn’t just chronicling women who powered Microsoft’s trillion-dollar shift, it’s scripting a new chapter where Indian women and technologists worldwide can claim their seat at the AI table. And this time, they’re not just participating in the revolution, they’re training it.

  • ITC Hotels unveils an ‘Epiq’ new chapter in luxury

    ITC Hotels unveils an ‘Epiq’ new chapter in luxury

    MUMBAI: ITC Hotels is spelling epic with a ‘q’. The hospitality giant has unveiled its newest premium brand, Epiq Collection, marking a fresh chapter in its growth story and adding sparkle to its ‘Asset-Right’ expansion strategy.

    The first destinations to host this new brand are two of India’s most culturally vibrant cities, Puri and Tirupati. The 118-key Epiq Collection Puri, an owned property, and the 201-key Epiq Collection Tirupati, a managed hotel, are set to open within the next two years, both joining the Club ITC rewards programme. Together, they signal a refined blend of modern sensibility and soulful Indian hospitality.

    “The launch of Epiq Collection marks an important milestone in the evolution of ITC Hotels’ brand architecture,” said ITC Hotels Limited managing director Anil Chadha. “We are curating experiences that are contemporary in sensibility yet timeless in their connection to place.”

    The brand aims to add around 1,000 rooms in the medium term and will feature premium hotels and resorts, each with its own distinctive character, design language and culinary identity. Staying true to ITC Hotels’ reputation for sustainability and culinary excellence, the Epiq Collection will celebrate regional cuisines with a modern twist, where local inspiration meets global sophistication.

    Designed to host both new builds and repositioned premium properties, Epiq Collection promises to be a reflection of social vitality, service finesse, and that unmistakable Indian warmth that defines ITC’s hospitality ethos.
     

  • Kabeer Biswas quits Flipkart after brief stint scaling quick-commerce arm

    Kabeer Biswas quits Flipkart after brief stint scaling quick-commerce arm

    BENGALURU: Kabeer Biswas has skipped out from Flipkart after barely ten months, leaving behind the quick-commerce outfit he helped scale to over 300,000 daily orders. The Dunzo co-founder, who joined the e-commerce behemoth in January 2024 as vice-president of Flipkart Minutes, is already eyeing his next move—likely within the cut-throat world of ten-minute delivery.

    Flipkart confirmed the exit, with company veteran Kunal Gupta, currently vice-president, taking the reins. “Biswas has contributed notably to the growth of Flipkart Minutes and strengthening of customer experience,” a spokesperson told Moneycontrol, which first reported the departure.

    During his blink-and-you’ll-miss-it tenure, Biswas expanded Flipkart Minutes to multiple cities including Guwahati, marking the firm’s deeper thrust into India’s north-east. He built out a network of roughly 800 dark stores, narrowing the gap with established rivals Blinkit, Zepto and Swiggy Instamart. Executives reckon the platform pulled in over 50  million new visitors to Flipkart’s ecosystem last year—proof that rapid delivery has become a potent customer magnet.

    Biswas founded Dunzo in 2015 before stepping down from the Reliance-backed startup ahead of his Flipkart move. Industry watchers now expect him to resurface at one of the big three quick-commerce players, either at the helm or whispering strategy from the sidelines. In India’s breakneck delivery wars, a ten-month pit stop counts as a breather.

  • Dulcoflex has a gut feeling about change

    Dulcoflex has a gut feeling about change

    MUMBAI: Looks like it’s time for some toilet talk with a twist! Dulcoflex, India’s trusted digestive wellness brand, has launched its cheeky yet impactful campaign, ‘kNOw Constipation’, to get Indians talking about something we all do, but rarely discuss.

    Constipation affects one in every five Indians, yet the topic remains hushed behind closed doors. Dulcoflex wants to change that with a dose of humour and heart, turning an everyday discomfort into an open, stigma-free conversation.

    What makes this campaign stand out is its refreshing tone. Instead of awkward metaphors or exaggerated ads, ‘kNOw Constipation’ brings together popular comedians like Aanchal Aggarwal, Srishti Dixit, Soumya Venugopal, Gurleen Pannu, Jamie Lever, and Shreya Roy, using relatable stand-up sets to break the silence without mocking those who suffer.

    Opella CHC India head of brand & innovation Nupur Gurbaxani explained, “Campaigns around constipation often centre on men and trivialise the issue. With ‘kNOw Constipation’, we want women to lead the conversation, understand the problem, and address it right. Only when we know constipation, can we truly say no to it.”

    The campaign goes beyond laughs and likes. It will roll out across digital, radio, and grassroots initiatives, bringing awareness to both urban and rural communities.

    With 276 million Indians struggling daily and many relying solely on home remedies, Dulcoflex’s initiative brings a fresh, fearless voice to a subject long flushed out of public dialogue. Because, as Dulcoflex cheekily reminds us, it’s time to let it out.