Category: MAM

  • AI to the rescue: Flipkart gives bachelor pads a big billion makeover

    AI to the rescue: Flipkart gives bachelor pads a big billion makeover

    MUMBAI: From bro-caves to glow-caves, bachelors are getting a festive glow-up. Flipkart is taking the guesswork out of home upgrades with its cheeky new ‘Bachelor upgrade yojana,’ launched ahead of its mega big billion days sale starting 23 September.

    Conceptualised by 22feet Tribal Worldwide, the campaign taps into AI to help bachelors, notorious for putting off home improvement, spruce up their spaces without lifting more than a finger. All it takes is a quick picture on Whatsapp: the AI-powered bot scans the room and serves up stylish, functional product recommendations, each linked directly to special big billion days offers.

    The idea is rooted in a simple truth: bachelors don’t skip upgrades because they don’t care, but because it feels like too much effort. This bot does the heavy lifting, from curtains to cookware, making a bachelor pad look Diwali-ready in a few clicks.

    The campaign’s film plays up the humour of bachelor life, poking fun at mismatched furniture and makeshift décor while showing how Flipkart swoops in to save the day.

    Flipkart, VP and head of growth & marketing, Pratik Shetty said: “With ‘Yahan kuch bhi ho sakta hai’ as our key theme for this year’s big billion days, we wanted ideas that spark unexpected wonder. The bachelor upgrade yojana does exactly that, turning one of the most change-averse groups into eager home improvers with irresistible deals.”

    22feet Tribal Worldwide, national creative director, Vishnu Srivatsav added: “Big billion days is for everyone, but bachelors probably need it most. With a little AI magic, we spoke to them directly, drawing from hostel and PG stories that everyone can relate to.”

    By mixing AI smarts with festive deals, Flipkart has turned a seasonal sale into a cultural talking point and made bachelor pads the unlikely stars of the big billion days buzz.

  • Fast and festive: Instamart’s quick India sale delivers deals in minutes

    Fast and festive: Instamart’s quick India sale delivers deals in minutes

    MUMBAI: No time like the present, especially when the present arrives in 10 minutes. Instamart has kicked off its ‘Ouick India movement 2025,’ promising shoppers lightning-fast festive deals with savings of up to 90 percent.

    http://quickindiamovement.in

    Running from 19 to 28 September on the Swiggy and Instamart apps, the sale is packing in over 50,000 products: from iphones and smart speakers to Barbie dolls and beauty essentials, all dropped at your doorstep in minutes.

    Tech lovers can score blockbuster discounts on top smartphones like the iphone 17, Oneplus, Samsung, OPPO and Motorola, alongside hot gadgets such as the Lenovo ideapad slim 3, JBL flip 5 speakers and Philips smart home must-haves. Beauty buffs, meanwhile, can nab a Plum green tea face wash for just Rs 99, while toy fans get their pick of LEGO and Barbie.

    Adding a playful twist, shoppers voted for their favourite deals to appear during the daily golden hour (5–7 pm), unlocking crowd-pleasers such as the Oneplus 13r at Rs 38,999, Hammer airflow earbuds at Rs 349 and a 20-piece Cello opalware dinner set at Rs 799. Hourly price drops promise even more surprises.

    Instamart, CEO, Amitesh Jha called it “the country’s mega-festive season sale delivering thousands of products at unbeatable value and speed… no more waiting days for your orders to arrive.”

    On top of jaw-dropping deals, banks and wallets are sweetening the pot with instant discounts and cashback offers, including 10 percent off with Axis, ICICI, RBL and HSBC cards, plus extra rewards for Swiggy HDFC credit card and Phonepe UPI users.

    Backed by leading brands such as boat, Philips, Pampers and Nestasia, Instamart’s quick India movement is shaping up as the fastest way to tick off every festive wish list. Because why wait for tomorrow’s deals, when today’s can be at your door in ten minutes flat?
     

  • Ad green: IAS and Good-Loop take carbon out of the digital equation

    Ad green: IAS and Good-Loop take carbon out of the digital equation

    MUMBAI: Less hot air, more clean air. That’s the promise as Integral Ad Science (IAS) teams up with Good-Loop to help advertisers track and shrink their digital carbon footprint, without the added cost.

    Fresh from the launch of the ‘Global media sustainability framework’ at Cannes, IAS has now rolled out advanced emissions measurement across every ad impression on the open internet. The move means advertisers can monitor, manage, and meaningfully reduce the environmental impact of their digital campaigns, all while still ticking the usual boxes for viewability, fraud prevention, and brand safety.

    Good-Loop, a B corp on a mission to make advertising climate-friendly, has already been powering IAS’s emissions measurement for three years. The collaboration now goes mainstream, offering advertisers across the globe a chance to see exactly how green, or not, their media buying really is.

    Good-Loop’s Founder & CEO, Amy Williams put it plainly “We now know, in no uncertain terms, the environmental impact that media buying has, and it’s time to take this information into the mainstream, to change our industry for the better.”

    IAS, CEO, Lisa Utzschneider added: “Sustainability in advertising requires more than promises, it needs accountability. Every impression we measure will now come with data on its carbon impact.”

    With new carbon legislation around the corner and sustainability pledges stacking up, the move sets a precedent: carbon counts as much as clicks. And as the industry warms to greener metrics, IAS and Good-Loop’s initiative could help cool things down for the planet.

  • CX marks the spot as brands bet big on experience over everything else

    CX marks the spot as brands bet big on experience over everything else

    MUMBAI: What do movie remixes and customer experience (CX) have in common? Both, as it turns out, need staying power, emotional hooks, and the ability to get even the toughest crowd on their feet. That was the mood at the 3rd India Brand Summit 2025, where CX leaders gathered for a session titled CX-Led Growth: Why Experience is the Ultimate Differentiator and the conversation hit all the right notes.

    Session chair Deloitte India, partner Vivette D’Cruz set the tone by urging brands to design CX not just for today but for the decades to come: “Make it like a remix that still works 20 years later evergreen, adaptable and impossible to resist.”

    From there, the panellists spanning sectors from entertainment and holidays to manufacturing and consumer goods unpacked how experience has become the real battlefield for brand loyalty.

    Mahindra Holidays & Resorts India VP for customer operations Shweta Srivastava traced CX’s rise from a back-end support function to boardroom strategy. “Customer experience has evolved from reactive firefighting to being a core driver. Many companies now have Chief Customer Experience Officers at the table,” she said. Her advice: pick three metrics that matter most, whether CSAT, NPS, or retention, and make them part of leadership KRAs. That way, ownership spreads across functions finance, supply chain, marketing not just the service desk.

    She recalled an e-commerce fix designed through empathy: “We created a ‘green pass’ tag for loyal customers, flagged in the CRM. It allowed frontline agents to override rigid return policies and say ‘no questions asked’ because loyalty deserves flexibility.”

    Panasonic Electric Works India head of customer services Rakesh Gupta highlighted how embedding CX into culture requires mapping the entire customer journey. From browsing switches on a website to watching demo panels at a shop, installation, servicing, and even product disposal, every stage was considered. “We even run chai-samosa meetings with electricians, train dealers, and reward loyalty. Because one grumpy ‘Chotu’ at the store can undo months of marketing effort,” he quipped.

    Digital tools like AR/VR are now part of the mix. Customers can virtually test whether a fan matches their walls or a plate complements their curtains. Panasonic also recently piloted a “ballroom” model where its most skilled technicians guide local teams through AI-driven video support, saving costly travel and slashing resolution times.

    Hindalco Industries (Aditya Birla Group) head of customer centricity Namita Bohara stressed that in B2B, trust is built as much through billing details as through product quality. “We measure customer satisfaction through something we call the Fairness Index tracking not just value but whether customers feel they are treated fairly. Even small requests like a GST line item on an invoice matter hugely in cementing loyalty,” she explained.

    Her mantra: listen, learn, act, and close the loop by showing customers how their feedback drove change. Increasingly, Hindalco is co-creating solutions with clients, anticipating needs before they arise.

    For Shemaroo head of digital marketing Anvesha Poswalia CX boils down to emotional connect. “We’ve pivoted from B2B to B2C. Customers come to us not for discounts but for goosebumps,” she said. Citing the Gujarati film Umrooni Pen Paar, she described how Shemaroo turned its launch into a cultural moment by encouraging audiences to share their own ‘first threshold’ stories. “It wasn’t just about streaming a film, but sparking conversations people related to. That’s how you build loyalty,” she said, adding: “Our mission is to make Gujaratis fall in love again with Gujarati cinema.”

    Hamilton Housewares’ head of CX & Service, Uday Bhosale, argued that technology must augment, not replace, human connection. “Fifteen years ago, call centres were the only channel. Today, we have bots, Whatsapp, emails, even AI answering calls. But businesses must decide where to draw the line. Use bots for order status or FAQs, but when frustration and emotions enter, only a human should step in,” he warned.

    He noted that 70 per cent of companies deploying AI for cost-cutting miss their targets. The better approach: let AI assist agents by surfacing faster answers, while humans handle empathy-driven queries.

    Shweta added that transparency in personalisation is non-negotiable. “Customers should feel their data is enhancing their experience, not invading privacy. In our membership model, we use past holiday behaviour to design plans that fit their lives. When personalisation feels helpful, it works,” she said.

    The session ended with consensus: CX is less about one-off “wow” moments and more about remixing consistency with innovation. Whether through loyalty councils, AI-enhanced service, fairness indices, or goosebump-worthy cultural campaigns, the goal is to make CX the evergreen anthem of brand growth.

    As one speaker summed it up, “Technology and human connection must work hand in hand because in the end, customers don’t just remember the transaction, they remember the feeling.”

  • Brands unplugged as CXOs decode trust, traffic and tech at IBS 2025

    Brands unplugged as CXOs decode trust, traffic and tech at IBS 2025

    MUMBAI: When it comes to building brands in today’s attribution-obsessed world, traffic isn’t just on the roads, it’s the lifeblood of every founder’s morning routine. That was the cheeky starting point at the CXOs Unplugged: Building Brands in the Age of Attribution session at the 3rd India Brand Summit 2025, where candid confessions flowed as freely as marketing buzzwords.

    Bartisans co-founder Jovita Mascarenhas admitted she checks Shopify impressions before coffee: “How many people even got to know about us? Conversion comes later. Awareness is the scariest metric.” For Abhinav Pathak, CEO & Co-Founder of Escape Plan, the stress of traffic is daily revenue pressure: “Yesterday’s traffic, today’s revenue. I’d be on my toes with WhatsApp broadcasts to make up the gap.”

    But traffic panic wasn’t the only anxiety in the room. Aseem Shakti founder & CEO Swati Singh delivered a sharp warning on the limits of AI: “A major disruption will come from the growing skepticism around AI-generated content. Trust is diminishing. Offline marketing will be just as important as digital in the next few years.” Her mantra: trust-building is oxygen for the present, but authentic storytelling is the food that sustains brand longevity. “If you feed your company junk food weak storytelling, it may survive today but not thrive tomorrow.”

    Taboola advertising account director Vibhu Anand pushed back gently, arguing AI is less about hype, more about real-time insights. “AI is a phase everyone’s jumping on, but it’s about finding your niche. It’s still going to need people to guide the insights. Trust-building will require heavy investment in technology.” Taboola itself is testing Deepadive, an AI engine to keep readers loyal to publisher sites in an age of content drift.

    The conversation veered into funding scars when Mascarenhas recalled her early VC experience: “They once told me, ‘Shut down.’ Cocktail mixers in India? People thought it was fruit juice. Building a category takes patience VCs often don’t have.” Her solution has been doubling down on storytelling, a mother-son brand journey, clean ingredients, and unapologetic positioning in a culture wary of drinking at home.

    Pathak echoed the need for balancing numbers with narrative. “Performance marketing is oxygen, but content is fitness. I want my brand to last 10, 20, 50 years, not just today.” She confessed Shark Tank still drives virality every month, but admitted splurging on radio and film premieres despite fuzzy attribution because “it builds trust and perception.”

    And if consumer trust is wobbling, commerce itself isn’t slowing. Mascarenhas quipped that “quick commerce will continue disrupting retail for the next few years,” underscoring how founders now battle both shrinking consumer patience and multiplying competition.

    Wondrlab COO Sanju Menon, session chair, kept the banter flowing, but the takeaway was clear: in an age where every click is tracked, brand-building is about patience, authenticity, and choosing when to lean on dashboards versus when to lean into storytelling.

    As Anand put it, “It’s more expensive to acquire a new user than keep a repeat one. Storytelling and trust may not show up on a dashboard tomorrow, but six months down the line, they slash your acquisition costs by 25 per cent.”

    Attribution may be the age we live in, but as the CXOs unplugged, it’s still trust, traffic, and timeless storytelling that keep brands truly alive.

  • Imagine by Ample gamifies iphone 17 pre-bookings with ‘Imagine More’

    Imagine by Ample gamifies iphone 17 pre-bookings with ‘Imagine More’

    MUMBAI: Booking a phone just got an upgrade. Imagine by Ample has shaken up India’s premium retail market with its “Imagine More” campaign: a gamified, consumer-first approach to iphone 17 pre-bookings that promises more than just a transaction.

    Conceptualised by creative agency Schbang, the campaign cuts through the usual clutter of offers and queues by focusing on “more offers, more rewards, more experiences.” At the heart of the innovation lies the ‘More Portal’: a seven-day gamified Whatsapp journey that keeps customers engaged from pre-booking to delivery, with surprises, rewards, and interactive touchpoints along the way.

    Ample Group, chief marketing officer, Neha Jindal explained, “With the iphone 17, we’ve gone beyond convenience to create a first-of-its-kind platform that makes the journey fun, engaging, and rewarding. At Imagine, Apple fans don’t just upgrade, they celebrate.”

    Backed by 36 micro-influencers, eight city-specific PR rollouts, and regional storytelling in Tamil, Malayalam, and Bangalore-centric activations, the campaign ensures Apple enthusiasts across India feel both excited and included.

    “This launch was never about just enabling pre-bookings,” said Schbang’s Vrinda Bajaj. “It was about crafting an experience that built anticipation at every step, so Apple fans felt celebrated, not just serviced.”

    With 47 stores across south India and a strong digital footprint, Imagine by Ample has already cemented itself as one of India’s leading Apple-exclusive retailers. By transforming a routine pre-order process into an immersive, gamified journey, it has now raised the bar for how brands can create loyalty and excitement in a crowded market.

    In short, Imagine isn’t just selling iphones, it’s selling the thrill of the wait.

  • TCS reaps growth honours with Everest Group’s 2025 Elevate recognition

    TCS reaps growth honours with Everest Group’s 2025 Elevate recognition

    MUMBAI: Scaling new peaks comes naturally to TCS. Tata Consultancy Services has been crowned with the ‘Growth Honor’ of the year at Everest Group’s 2025 Elevate Honors in Dallas, a recognition that applauds its industry-leading organic growth and market impact.

    The IT giant marked a staggering 39.4 billion dollars in total contract value and 30 billion dollars in revenues in FY25, consolidating its position as one of the world’s most powerful tech players. Everest Group noted TCS’ consistent revenue growth among global peers with revenues above 5 billion dollars, calling it proof of delivery excellence, operational strength, and innovation at scale.

    “This award reflects our unwavering commitment to growth, driven by our expertise in AI and digital transformation, and the trust our clients place in us,” said TCS, global head – analyst relations, Nikhil Shahane.

    The recognition caps a landmark year for TCS. In 2025, it became the world’s second-largest IT services brand, with a valuation of 21.3 billion dollars, and secured a spot in Fortune’s ‘World’s Most Admired Companies.’ Meanwhile, Whitelane Research ranked TCS first for customer satisfaction in Europe, for the twelfth consecutive year.

    Everest Group, partner, Ronak Doshi said: “Elevate Honors are based on fact-based, analyst-driven research. Honourees like TCS are recognised solely for high performance and excellence.”

    TCS’ growth story is being fuelled by next-gen bets, especially on artificial intelligence. The firm recently appointed a chief AI and services transformation officer and expanded services spanning AI, cloud, data, cyber security, and digital engineering. Its global clientele includes the top names in banking, telecom, retail, healthcare, and entertainment.

    With over 600,000 employees across 55 countries, TCS is not only delivering technology-led transformation but also investing in long-term partnerships, sustainability, and community impact, including sponsorship of marathons from New York to London to Sydney.

    In short, TCS isn’t just climbing mountains, it’s building them.
     

  • Cleartrip sends prices on holiday with festive travel deals from Rs 2,999

    Cleartrip sends prices on holiday with festive travel deals from Rs 2,999

    MUMBAI: Cleartrip is giving travellers a reason to pack their bags and their worries away this festive season. The Flipkart-owned travel platform has launched its new campaign, “Prices jo karde sabki chhutti,” just in time for The Big Billion Days (TBBD) 2025, making five-star stays start at just Rs 2,999 and international flights from as low as Rs 5,999.

    The idea is simple: everyone dreams of a break, and Cleartrip’s prices make it almost too easy to say yes. Along with unbelievable value, the brand has rolled out a ‘Visa Denial Cover’ for extra peace of mind and expanded its hotel listings fourfold, from 20,000 to over 80,000 properties.

    The campaign’s light-hearted films playfully show how Cleartrip’s prices don’t just unlock destinations, but also moments of relief and joy. A digital-first push, the content spans short, snappy Youtube and Instagram videos, along with influencer tie-ups designed to resonate with Gen Z and families in Tier II and III cities where festive demand is surging.

    “Through Cleartrip, people aren’t just booking hotels or flights; they’re buying into an experience, a memory, a pause,” said Cleartrip, head of brand marketing, Govind Bansal. “It’s not just about discounts but making travel anxiety-free and within everyone’s reach.”

    Tilt Brand Solutions, chief creative officer, Adarsh Atal added, “We wanted to break the clutter just as Cleartrip has done with its offers. The thought was simple: when deals are this good, everyday hassles can go on a trip of their own.” 

  • Sudhanshu Vats to helm Asci in landmark 40th year

    Sudhanshu Vats to helm Asci in landmark 40th year

    MUMBAI: Pidilite Industries managing director Sudhanshu Vats has been elected chairman of the Advertising Standards Council of India (Asci) at its 39th annual general meeting, taking charge as the country’s advertising regulator-by-consensus enters its fourth decade.

    MullenLowe Global chief strategy officer S Subramanyeswar  moves in as vice-chairman, while industry veteran Paritosh Joshi of Provocateur Advisory becomes honorary treasurer.

    Founded in 1985 as a voluntary self-regulatory body, Asci is recognised by the Cable TV Act, Doordarshan, All India Radio and several key regulators. Its consumer complaints committee enjoys extraordinary acceptance for a voluntary code: in FY 2024-25, compliance hit 98 per cent for print advertising, 97 per cent for television and 81 per cent for digital. The supreme court has repeatedly cited Asci’s role in consumer protection.

    Vats said the council’s job has “never been more important” as advertising mutates with technology and new formats. “Our responsibility is to ensure advertising is executed with integrity—centred on the product promise, respectful of the community and mindful of consumers,” he told members. “Self-regulation provides guidance to the industry and assurance to the public. The simple principle is to keep the consumer’s interest front and centre.”

    Outgoing chairman Partha Sinha called his tenure “a comma in a sentence that keeps unfolding”. Over the past years, he said, Asci has “moved from being a watchdog to an enabler of responsible communication—partnering, not just policing,” and stepped “firmly into the digital arena, because responsibility cannot lag behind technology.”

    To mark its fortieth year, the council unveiled an ambitious agenda:

    * AdWise literacy drive – training more than a million schoolchildren to identify, question and evaluate advertising messages, reducing their vulnerability to misleading or harmful pitches.
    * Gen-Alpha research – an ethnographic study of children born into the touchscreen age to craft a framework for responsible advertising to the next generation.
    * New city offices – expansion of Asci’s physical footprint to Bengaluru and Delhi to deepen engagement across India.
    * Legal knowledge hub – a comprehensive online resource on advertising codes and laws, developed with leading law firm Khaitan & Co.
    * Podcast partnerships – a new series with The Logical Indian and Marketing Minds to spread awareness of responsible advertising.
    * Visual commitment badge – a mark members can display in their communications and on websites to signal adherence to the Asci code.

    Asci’s influence has widened well beyond complaint adjudication. The Asci Academy now drives education and thought leadership through masterclasses for marketers, faculty development programmes in media and advertising colleges, and a pre-production advisory service that helps advertisers check compliance before campaigns go live—avoiding costly post-release fixes.

    In recent years the council has published widely cited white papers on dark patterns, artificial intelligence in advertising, the depiction of masculinity and the trust deficit around digital influencers. It has issued pioneering guidelines on influencer conduct, cryptocurrency, green claims and gender stereotyping, earning two global awards for leadership in self-regulation.

    Looking ahead, Vats said Asci will “strengthen global partnerships and knowledge exchange with peer bodies worldwide, and invest in research, innovation and frameworks that respond to the realities of digital-first advertising.”

    For a voluntary body that began as a modest industry code, the next chapter promises to be anything but quiet.

  • CMOs court AI but still swear by human touch in Dentsu’s 2025 report

    CMOs court AI but still swear by human touch in Dentsu’s 2025 report

    MUMBAI: In the age of algorithms, it seems imagination still has the final word. Dentsu Creative’s freshly released CMO Report 2025 reveals that while artificial intelligence is now deeply woven into marketing practice, senior marketers insist human creativity, empathy and cultural intelligence remain irreplaceable.

    The study, titled Agents of Reinvention: Marketing at the Intersection of AI and Human Ingenuity, draws insights from 1,950 plus CMOs across 14 markets from India and the US to Japan and Brazil. Its central paradox? In a world governed by AI, humanity becomes the most valuable differentiator.

    Key findings highlight the balancing act CMOs face:

    . 30 per cent plus use AI daily, but 78 per cent agree AI can never replace human imagination, up 13 points from 2024.

    .  87 per cent say strategy now demands more empathy and creativity, not less.

    . 71 per cent fear invisibility without “winning the algorithm”, yet 79 per cent worry optimisation breeds sameness.

    .  84 per cent believe brands must win share of culture, not just share of voice.

    .  90 per cent see social and influencer content as outperforming traditional ads, while 91 per cent believe brands are built through creator collaborations (though 82 per cent fret about losing control).

       Innovation budgets are rising too 70 per cent plus plan to allocate over 20 per cent of spend to innovation in 2026 and beyond.

    The report also flags a striking shift in Connected AI adoption: 89 per cent expect “agentic AI” where digital agents curate travel, shopping and more to reshape business, but the same proportion say trust and taste will matter more than ever.

    Global dentsu leaders underscored this duality. Global CCO Yasu Sasaki noted that AI “is exceptional at prediction, but creativity is unpredictable by nature,” while CSO Patricia McDonald warned that “if every brand chases the same signals with the same tools, we’re just running harder to stand still.”

    For India Dentsu CEO of creative & media brands Amit Wadhwa summed it up neatly: “Algorithms may shape what we see, but imagination, empathy and culture shape what we remember.”

    In other words, CMOs in 2025 aren’t just coding for clicks, they’re betting that the brands which out-human the algorithm will be the ones that endure.