Category: MAM

  • NDTV launches defence podcast ‘CTRL + ALT DEFENCE’ with Vishnu Som and Shiv Aroor

    NDTV launches defence podcast ‘CTRL + ALT DEFENCE’ with Vishnu Som and Shiv Aroor

    MUMBAI: India’s military machinery is finally getting a voice in the podcast space—and it comes with the firepower of two veteran journalists. On 22 May 2025, NDTV unveiled CTRL + ALT DEFENCE, its first-ever dedicated defence podcast hosted by Vishnu Som and Shiv Aroor. New episodes drop every Saturday at 6 pm across Apple Podcasts, Spotify, Youtube, and NDTV.com.

    The inaugural episode, aired on 17 May and titled Drones, Airstrikes, Media Narratives: Weapons of Operation Sindoor, dissected India’s calculated response to the Pahalgam terror attack. From drones and airstrikes to border defence systems and battlefront PR strategy, the episode laid the groundwork for a series promising deep insight with zero jargon.

    Between them, Som and Aroor boast over 50 years of field reporting. Som has covered conflict zones from Siachen to Iraq and Ukraine, specialising in military tech and satellite defence intel. Aroor brings 21 years of on-ground reporting from war fronts in Sri Lanka, Libya, and beyond. Together, they combine real-world combat insight with storytelling precision, offering listeners more than just the news cycle.

    “War is never just about headlines and breaking news; it’s a multidimensional subject that demands context, technical understanding, and lived experience to truly interpret”, the hosts emphasised.

    The podcast appeals to a broad base—from defence analysts to curious citizens. It covers missile systems, drone warfare, strategy, and the moral calculus behind conflict. Its tone is crisp, conversational, and informed by first-hand exposure to battlefields like Kargil, Pahalgam, Congo, and Kyiv.

    As India’s defence conversation gets more mainstream, CTRL + ALT DEFENCE fills a glaring void with both rigour and relatability.

    Watch the podcast here: ndtv.com/podcast/ctrl-alt-defence-1018

  • Shahid Kapoor joins Taapsee Pannu to put the ‘eye’ in style for Vogue Eyewear

    Shahid Kapoor joins Taapsee Pannu to put the ‘eye’ in style for Vogue Eyewear

    MUMBAI: Eyewear just got a whole lot sexier. Shahid Kapoor has officially joined the Vogue Eyewear style squad alongside longtime face Taapsee Pannu, in a campaign that throws the rulebook out the window and invites fans to live loud, look sharp, and wear their vibe with no apologies.

    In a film dripping with gallery-chic aesthetics and playful chemistry, Shahid and Taapsee bring to life the spirit of Vogue Eyewear’s ‘No Rules Club’—a movement that champions bold self-expression over boring convention. Think edgy frames, eye-popping colourways, and a clear message: be you, all the way.

    “Style to me has always been about self-expression without boundaries. I’m excited to join Vogue Eyewear and to be part of its campaign, that encourages people to be themselves, unapologetically and without rules,” said Shahid Kapoor.

    Echoing this spirit, Taapsee Pannu added, “Working with Vogue Eyewear has always been about embracing who I am — unfiltered and free”. She also shared her excitement about the collaboration in the new campaign, “Together we hope to inspire more people to own their style, their way.”

    From cat-eye drama to metal-cool classics, the new collection has it all. Shahid’s picks lean sleek, with minimalist gold frames and industrial-edge details, while Taapsee rocks bold silhouettes, vibrant lenses, and chunky temples that scream high fashion with heart.

    Hero pieces from the collection include:
    – Taapsee’s 0VO5637SU: retro cat-eyes in bold shades – Rs 5,890
    – Shahid’s 0VO4322S: timeless square frames in luxe metal – Rs 7,090
    – Taapsee’s 0VO5628: floral-detailed opticals with personality – Rs 5,990
    – Shahid’s 0VO5617: faceted frames with fresh colour play – Rs 5,990

    Prices range from Rs 3,090 to Rs 8,290 and are available at top stores and online platforms.

    So whether you’re team bold or team understated cool, there’s a frame with your name on it. The only rule? There are no rules.

    Watch the campaign film here: YouTube

  • C Com Digital cracks the autism code with Frat campaign in the US

    C Com Digital cracks the autism code with Frat campaign in the US

    MUMBAI: Mumbai-based C Com Digital has pulled off a stunner across the pond, crafting a high-impact digital campaign for Religen Inc, a US healthcare company, and its flagship diagnostic product, the Folate Receptor Antibody Test (Frat). 

    The goal? 

    Raise awareness around early autism diagnosis. The result? Over a  million reached, 15,000+ tested, and a major shift in the conversation.

    FRAT identifies folate receptor autoantibodies—linked to cerebral folate deficiency, a condition often associated with autism spectrum disorders. With over 52 per cent of tested individuals showing these markers, the stakes are high and the science, complex.

    But C Com didn’t just throw facts at the feed. They brought the story to life—with animated explainers, viral social content, sharp infographics, and blogs aimed at both physicians and families. A single TikTok testimonial—a parent recounting their child’s transformation post-diagnosis—went ballistic, racking up 800K+ views and tens of thousands of shares.

    More importantly, the campaign halved cost-per-click and drove a whopping 754 per cent spike in new users.

    “This was more than just a campaign; it was a mission,” said C Com Digital founder/director Chandan Bagwe. “While we led the digital execution, the insights and support from FRAT, medical experts, and families made this a truly collaborative project. It demonstrated how storytelling and science can work hand-in-hand to create real awareness and action.”

    Religen Inc founder Bhushan Sawant added, “C Com Digital played a key role in crafting the campaign’s messaging and outreach, and the results speak for themselves. Their understanding of healthcare communication helped us engage with families and professionals meaningfully.”

    The campaign also stepped beyond the screen—partnering with autism support groups, engaging in platforms like the National Taca Conference, and driving participation in the #BlueBucketPledge. From online virality to offline solidarity, the message was loud and clear: early diagnosis changes everything.

    A masterclass in humanising health tech, this Frat campaign proves that when done right, digital storytelling doesn’t just inform—it transforms.

    Pictured above Chandan Bagwe (Left)  and Bhushan Sawant (Right)

  • Partha Sinha bids adieu to Times Group, gears up for global innings

    Partha Sinha bids adieu to Times Group, gears up for global innings

    MUMBAI: Partha Sinha—engineer, brand whisperer, and boardroom charmer—has called time on his high-profile stint at Bennett, Coleman & Co. Ltd. (aka The Times of India Group). Word on the street (and confirmed by Sinha himself) is that he’s moving on to a global giant  in an advisory role. But true to form, he’s zipped his lips on the details.

    “I will announce where I am headed in the next fortnight or so when my on-boarding process is completed,” Sinha told indiantelevision.com. 

    Sinha’s departure closes a defining chapter in BCCL’s brand and revenue playbook. Since joining in 2020 as president, response (that’s the revenue engine, in TOI-speak), he led the post-COVID business bounce-back with flair—sharpening monetisation levers, dialling up audience-centricity, and reimagining legacy brands for a digital-first world.

    In July 2024, he took on the dual hat of president and chief brand officer, overseeing consumer-facing powerhouses like The Times of India, Economic Times, Femina, and Mirror. His brand play? Bold, contextual, and never shy of a pivot.

    A rare crossover of nuclear engineering, Citibank cubicles, and Madison Avenue swagger, Sinha’s career reads like a greatest hits compilation of Indian marketing. An IIT Kharagpur and IIM Ahmedabad alum, he kicked off in nuclear design (yes, really) before finding his groove in the brand world via Citibank. What followed was a series of heavyweight gigs at Ogilvy & Mather, Publicis, BBH, and McCann Worldgroup India—where he wore the vice chairman and MD mantle with style.

    At Ogilvy, he helped birth strategic planning as a serious discipline in Indian advertising. BBH and McCann only deepened his rep as a master of merging business metrics with cultural mojo.

    So what’s next for the brand sage? For now, he’s staying tight-lipped. But if history’s any clue, it’ll be clever, culture-shifting, and possibly global in scale. An ardent Arsenal fan who loves listening to Hindustani classical music, Partha’s jovial self will be missed at the Old Lady of Boribunder. 

    Stay tuned. The next episode of the Partha Sinha show promises to be unmissable. Where once again, he will set the corridors alive.

  • GoaFest 2025: Brands swipe right on GenZ  – Spotify, Nivea and Saregama decode the next big consumer wave

    GoaFest 2025: Brands swipe right on GenZ – Spotify, Nivea and Saregama decode the next big consumer wave

    MUMBAI: At Goafest 2025, the panel titled ‘Swipe Right for Relevance: Building Brands Gen Z Cares About’ brought together three brand leaders and one big question: How do brands win over a generation raised on infinite scrolls, sceptical of polished campaigns, and loyal only to authenticity?

    Moderated by journalist and producer Anuradha SenGupta, the panel featured Spotify India MD Amarjit Singh Batra, Nivea India MD Geetika Mehta, and Saregama India MD Vikram Mehra. Together, they delivered a candid crash course in decoding India’s most attention-deficit yet value-driven demographic.

    Batra opened by stating the obvious: Gen Z isn’t just part of Spotify’s strategy—they are the strategy. Over 50 per cent of Spotify’s listeners in India are under 25. “They’re not just listeners, they’re the creators, the curators, the interns, and our future employees,” he said. Spotify’s recent early career postings attracted 3,000 applicants in a few hours—a sign of cultural stickiness few brands can claim.

    Mehta called Gen Z “discerning, not distracted,” adding, “If you give them something of value, they’ll stay longer than six seconds. If you don’t, they’ll scroll faster than your media spend”. For Nivea, that has meant rethinking everything from product development to influencer selection. She admitted, “We never imagined handing the brand to 500 micro-influencers. It’s scary. But it works. We’ve learned to let go.”

    Mehra brought the data to the drama. “Eighty percent of Saregama’s digital engagement comes from Gen Z,” he revealed. But he didn’t stop there. At Saregama, anyone over 30 is officially banned from making music selection decisions. “Every song I pick flops,” he joked. “So we gave the reins to people who are the audience.”

    The panel underscored several hard truths: celebrities don’t sell to Gen Z anymore; authenticity beats aspiration; brand values must go beyond the packaging; and content must be real, not rehearsed. “We don’t just test ads,” said Mehta. “We test brand values—and Gen Z fact-checks.”

    Social listening emerged as a key tool. Batra said, “What Gen Z memes or shares tells us more than any focus group. But attention is expensive—you have to earn it.” Mehra warned against boardroom-led branding, urging top management to “let go” and hand creative control to younger teams.

    As the session closed, panellists shared their Gen Z frustrations. Mehra struggled with their work-life boundaries (“They don’t answer calls after 7 pm”). Mehra cited their need for constant senior engagement. Mehra found it tough to keep up with their multitasking and content standards. “You really have to wow them—just being good isn’t good enough.”

    Gen Z may be the toughest audience yet—but they’re also the most rewarding. And as Goafest day one showed, brands that don’t speak their language may soon be left un-sampled and unused.

    (Pictured above: From left to right – Amarjit Singh Batra, Anuradha SenGupta, Geetika Mehta & Vikram Mehra.)
     

  • GoaFest 2025: Future Tense Rishad Tobaccowla urges leaders to rewrite the rules before AI does  

    GoaFest 2025: Future Tense Rishad Tobaccowla urges leaders to rewrite the rules before AI does  

    GOA: Change sucks, but irrelevance sucks harder. With that disarming one-liner, author and Publicis Groupe senior advisor Rishad Tobaccowala had the GoaFest 2025 crowd hooked. In a sharp and soul-searching fireside chat with Publicis Groupe CEO of  South Asia Anupriya Acharya Tobaccowala offered a crash course in survival and soul in an era increasingly dominated by algorithms, automation and AI anxieties.

    Tobaccowala’s core thesis was clear: AI won’t replace you, someone using AI better will. But the real danger isn’t the technology, it’s complacency. “Too many companies are trying to use AI to make their broken models slightly more efficient,” he warned. “You don’t just want faster printing presses you want a new way to communicate entirely.”

    To prove the point, he spotlighted the New York Times, a legacy media brand that reinvented itself from a print-first paper to a digital-first platform with 12 online subscribers for every print one. Today, 35 per cent of its revenue comes not from news, but from games, recipes, and other lifestyle content. “They don’t call themselves a newspaper anymore, they’re an entertainment brand with a news vertical,” he quipped.

    Referencing Andy Grove’s classic Only the Paranoid Survive, Tobaccowala argued that the age of paranoia has passed. In its place? Dual thinking. “Successful companies must run two business models at once, one for today, and one for tomorrow,” he said.

    His advice: Spend five to 10 per cent of your money and 20–25 per cent of your best talent building the future. “Don’t assign tomorrow’s strategy to the person you don’t know what to do with,” he warned. “That’s like watering your grandfather’s grave instead of feeding your kids.”

    “I worked 37 years in one company, lived 45 years in the same city, and met my wife 53 years ago,” he said. “So when I say I hate change, I mean it. But irrelevance? That’s worse.”

    He dismantled the sugar-coated corporate approach to transformation. “Telling people change is good is a lie. It’s painful. It makes you look stupid. It scrapes your knees like learning to ride a bike.” What works instead? A three-part formula: incentives, training, and personal relevance. “Tell employees what’s in it for them, not just what’s in it for the company,” he urged.

    Tobaccowala didn’t mince words about leadership either. “We’ve entered the age of de-bossi-fication. Nobody wants a boss. They want a leader.”

    Monitoring, allocating, and measuring won’t cut it anymore. Today’s leaders must inspire, create, and mentor. If you’re not spending at least 50 per cent of your time leading instead of managing, he warned, “you’ll be retired by machines or Gen Z sooner than you think.”

    Tobaccowala also had sharp advice for younger professionals: “You’re in a 50-year career. Stop thinking in 6-month cycles.” He urged them to chase growth over glam, pick the right boss, and resist jumping ship just because the grass looks greener. “The grass is greener because it’s fertilised with… well, you know what,” he joked.

    Despite all the AI hype, Tobaccowala believes the machines may help us rediscover what makes us human. In 2023, the most popular AI tools weren’t just about productivity, they were about relationships, purpose, and self-growth.

    “AI will amplify your creativity, but it can’t replace your conviction,” he said. “It’s not about resisting AI. It’s about partnering with it without outsourcing your soul.”

    As he signed off, Tobaccowala reminded the audience of something many forget. “India is not the future. It is the present. Publicis gets 65 per cent of its workforce and a growing chunk of its global revenue from India, China, and the US,” he noted. “You’re not a footnote. You’re a headline.”

    He ended with a final, cheeky mic-drop about his book’s global release: “My publisher didn’t want to launch in India first. Said it wouldn’t sell. Now India is the only place it’s sold out twice.”

  • Goafest 2025 kicks off with AI, stardom and Gen Z in a high-octane creative melting pot

    Goafest 2025 kicks off with AI, stardom and Gen Z in a high-octane creative melting pot

    GOA: : Goafest 2025 opened its gates with more than just confetti. On 21 May, the industry’s most awaited gathering lit up the Taj Cidade de Goa with provocations, predictions, and panels that sparked sharp thinking and bolder storytelling. The event, themed ‘Ignite ___’, kicked off with performances, power panels, and provocative conversations that challenged status quos and invited fresh perspectives.

    Hosted by The Advertising Agencies Association of India (AAAI) and The Advertising Club (TAC), GoaFest 2025 began with a ceremonial champagne pop, a lamp lighting, and a high-voltage performance by Mika Singh. Amazon MX Player, Mediakart, and other partners set the tone with a theme of momentum, celebration, and transformation.

    Publicis Groupe senior advisor Rishad Tobaccowala opened with a riveting session presented by Set India and Sab TV, titled ‘Staying Relevant in an Age of Machines’. Moderated by Publicis south Asia Anupriya Acharya, the keynote decoded AI’s future impact on creativity. Tobaccowala called AI “underhyped” and said the true differentiator will be “HI” — human ingenuity, intuition, and inventiveness. “Agencies must embrace AI to rethink storytelling and business models”, he warned, adding, “It’s time to burn the old ways of thinking and upgrade your mental operating system”.

    The spotlight then shifted to Hindi cinema royalty. Kareena Kapoor Khan took the stage in a session presented by Amazon MX Player and powered by Times Network. In conversation with Atika Farooqi, she reframed her iconic line “Main Apni Favourite Hoon” as a life philosophy. “Self-love is not just a phrase—it’s the foundation of everything”, she said, while speaking about motherhood, reinvention, and resilience in cinema.

    The final session of the day, ‘Swipe Right for Relevance’, tackled gen z brand affinity. Powered by Whisper World and Eenadu, and moderated by journalist Anuradha Sen Gupta, it featured Amarjit Singh Batra (Spotify), Geetika Mehta (Nivea India), and Vikram Mehra (Saregama). All three echoed the same beat: Gen z wants authenticity, not advertisements. Batra said, “More than 50 per cent of our audience is under 25. Gen z values experiences, honesty, and wellness”. Mehta added, “They’re not distracted, they’re discerning. Sustainability, purpose, and credibility are expectations, not bonuses”. Mehra called it straight: “They see through gimmicks. Micro-influencers and social listening trump celebrities.”

    AAAI president and GroupM south Asia CEO Prasanth Kumar, anchored the day, saying, “Goafest 2025 is about igniting transformative ideas. With 60+ speakers, 35+ sessions, and 20+ masterclasses, we’re not just discussing the future — we’re creating it”.

    The Abby Awards 2025 Powered by One Show saw 4,076 entries from 233 companies, marking its fourth year in collaboration with The One Show. The day wrapped with a sunset Sundowner powered by Truecaller & Big Live, followed by the Publisher & Media Abby awards, co-powered by Amazon MX Player, Mediakart, and Zee. DJ SLG and JioStar lit up the After Hours Party.

    Day one ended on a high, as Goafest reaffirmed its reputation as the pulse of India’s creative economy.

  • Wavemaker India & ABP ride crest of Creative & Publisher Abbys by One Show

    Wavemaker India & ABP ride crest of Creative & Publisher Abbys by One Show

    GOA: One Show’s Abby  Creative Awards 2025 has crowned its champions, and Wavemaker India has surfed to victory with a staggering haul. The media powerhouse dominated the agency battlefield, amassing an eye-watering 124 points through a medal collection that would make an Olympian blush—six golds, eight silvers and four bronzes.

    In a ceremony held in Goa during Day one of the annual industry confab GoaFest 2025, the finest in advertising and marketing gathered to discover who had clinched advertising glory.

    Mediagencyoftheyear

    Mindshare India made a respectable splash, securing second position with 76 points through a balanced medal cabinet of four golds, four silvers and five bronzes. EssenceMediacom rounded out the podium with a modest 36 points.

    The competition saw ABP Pvt Ltd emerge victorious in the publisher category, netting 30 points through a crafty combination of one gold, three silvers, one bronze and—perhaps most impressively—no requirements for a calculator to tally their score.Publisheroftheyear

    Bennett & Coleman, the venerable media house, strutted away with 28 points, while Jagran Prakashnan Ltd secured a neat 22 points with two golds but a notably barren bronze cabinet.

    FCB India, despite having a worldwide reputation that could intimidate the competition, managed a humble 10 points, tying with TheHindu Group. Both proved that legacy doesn’t always translate to hardware.

    The ceremony, powered by One Show, continues to be the advertising industry’s moment to preen, posture and occasionally be  pleased that competitors are winning, delighted at the excellent work being rewarded.

  • “Goafest 2025 is our canvas; we want brands to be comfortable forging content partnerships on MX Player” – Amogh Dusad

    “Goafest 2025 is our canvas; we want brands to be comfortable forging content partnerships on MX Player” – Amogh Dusad

    MUMBAI: On the sun-kissed shores of Goafest 2025, amidst the creative chaos and infectious enthusiasm of India’s advertising aristocracy, Amazon MX Player made a splash—not merely as a passive sponsor but as an ingenious storyteller poised to rewrite the rulebook on how brands engage their audience. Content maestro Amogh Dusad, appearing as though he thrives solely on a potent cocktail of wit, charm, and industry savvy, laid bare exactly how Amazon MX Player plans to dazzle and delight the notoriously unpredictable advertising elite.
    In this buzzing carnival of ideas and innovation, Indian Television Dot Com’s Sreeyom Sil gladly swapped leisurely sun-loungers for spirited verbal fencing, exchanging lively repartee with Amazon MX Player’s charismatic content wizard Dusad to unravel the secrets behind his devilishly clever content crusade. Below is a distillation of Dusad’s interview, served fresh in a brisk question-and-answer dossier.  Excerpts: 

    How is Amazon MX Player positioning itself to impress India’s top advertising minds at Goafest?
    We want to use this opportunity to talk about some of our upcoming tentpole shows. Also give them full comfort and trust on the kind of content that is on the service so that brands feel comfortable in deeper content partnerships.These forums build awareness around our upcoming slate. Our masterclass here offers brands a journey into our ecosystem—demonstrating seamless brand integrations in our narratives, ensuring advertisers feel confident forging deeper content partnerships.

    Can you give a specific example of brand integration in Amazon MX Player’s content?
    There’s a lot of brand integrations in LinkedIn in Jamnapaar, or Realme sponsored Hip Hop India.  We’ve successfully embedded brands directly into storytelling. Unlike traditional TV, where ads often become ambient noise, OTT’s intimate viewing ensures audiences engage fully. Shows like Lock Upp and Campus Diaries seamlessly weave brand messages into compelling stories, amplified further through our social media.

    Are there any new storytelling trends from Goafest influencing Amazon MX Player’s content?
    The festival’s just begun, but we constantly reassess our content. The rapid popularity of hip-hop among India’s youth, for instance, inspired our show Hip Hop India, integrating subculture and music in an energetic format, demonstrating our commitment to riding cultural waves swiftly.

    Has involvement in Goafest planning influenced your decision to double down on dubbed international content?
    No videsi as a category. We’ve been programming for almost two to three years now. We’ve curated international hits, notably from East Asia, for a few years now. Our recent anime venture dubbed in Hindi, Tamil, and Telugu, a free-to-view innovation, was an independent, successful experiment reinforcing our strategic direction.

    Any exclusive content reveals at Goafest 2025 from Amazon MX Player?
    We will be screening  the first episodes of popular returning franchise Half CA season 2 and new series Mitti: Ek Nayi Pehchaan, featuring Ishwak Singh. We will also be having a fireside chat featuring actor Sunil Shetty on the returning season of Hunter and insights from our upcoming unscripted show featuring Ashneer Grover will give attendees an exclusive taste.

    How is Amazon MX Player leveraging Goafest as a testing ground for new ad formats?
    Being the presenting sponsor gives us significant engagement opportunities. Through masterclasses and interactive sessions, we’re challenging the industry’s brightest to rethink brand storytelling beyond traditional paradigms. Our aim is bold yet simple: innovate or perish.

    Reflecting on your role, how have your leadership decisions shaped Amazon MX Player?
    My journey here has been immensely rewarding, producing over 20 returning franchises within just three years. Our next frontier? MX Fatafat, an innovative vertical short-form drama series with two minute episodes tailored to a thumb-scrolling audience, expected later this yea