Category: MAM

  • Tata’s Trent serves Burnt Toast fresh as fashion for India’s bold youth

    Tata’s Trent serves Burnt Toast fresh as fashion for India’s bold youth

    MUMBAI: Fashion just got toasted and in the best way possible. Tata Group’s Trent Ltd. has launched Burnt Toast, a youth-first fashion label that’s less about fitting in and more about standing out. With its edgy name and vibrant catalogue of apparel, footwear, and accessories, the brand is baking in affordability, creativity, and a dash of rebellion for India’s digital-first generation.

    After making its debut with stores in Bangalore, Thane, and Surat, Burnt Toast is now setting its sights on expanding across more Indian cities. Designed for creators, trendsetters, and the scroll-happy youth, the brand is positioning itself as a community as much as a fashion line, a place where self-expression isn’t optional, it’s the whole point.

    The collection serves up a buffet of playful silhouettes, bold prints, and statement pieces that could just as easily double as wearable art. Whether it’s vibrant tees that pop on Instagram grids or footwear that walks the fine line between comfort and cool, the aesthetic is deliberately unafraid.

    “Burnt Toast is more than just a fashion brand; it is a dynamic lifestyle and a vibrant community crafted to empower India’s expressive youth,” said Trent Ltd managing director P. Venkatesalu. He added that the goal is to make global fashion accessible while fuelling individuality and shared identity.

    With Gen Z and millennials driving India’s fashion market, estimated at over 100 billion dollars, Trent’s youth-focused pivot is as strategic as it is stylish. Burnt Toast joins Trent’s existing retail portfolio which includes Westside and Zudio but carves a niche aimed at energy, confidence, and individuality.

    For a generation allergic to cookie-cutter clothing, Burnt Toast is serving something hotter, crunchier, and unapologetically fresh.

  • The Golden Elixir of Smoke: Hillfort Whisky strikes gold with smoky new campaign

    The Golden Elixir of Smoke: Hillfort Whisky strikes gold with smoky new campaign

    MUMBAI: Raise a glass! Hillfort Whisky has found liquid gold in its latest campaign.

    When the premium spirit joined forces with creative agency Black Cab, the mission was simple yet ambitious: take Hillfort from being just another label on the shelf to a whisky with a story worth savouring.

    Enter “The Golden Elixir of Smoke”, a campaign that promised more than just a drama. It offered discovery, drama, and a dash of heritage. Drawing on imagery of gold, relics, rulers and celebration, the visuals painted Hillfort as a hidden treasure waiting to be unearthed.

    The campaign leaned heavily on visual storytelling, weaving together motifs of gold, relics, rulers and celebration. Seven themes, including “The Discovery,” “The Treasure,” “The Smoky Affair” and “The Celebration”, were used to frame Hillfort’s character as rare, layered and connoisseur-worthy.  

    The results? According to the brand, the campaign reached 1.3 million people, drove over 38,000 engagements and nearly 9,000 link clicks, while also boosting its follower base by 1,600.

    For whisky enthusiasts, it was a smoky revelation. For casual scrollers, it was proof that storytelling still packs a punch in digital marketing. And for Hillfort, it was a golden moment in building a brand legacy that looks set to pour out many more chapters.

    As Black Cab cheekily put it, this isn’t just whisky. Its history, heritage, and a happy ending served neat.
     

  • Johor  to host ASEAN’s biggest digital content summit in 2025

    Johor to host ASEAN’s biggest digital content summit in 2025

    JOHOR BAHRU: Game, set… animation! Johor Bahru gears up to host the ASEAN Digital Content Summit (ADCS 2025) from 2–4 September.

    Organised by the Ministry of Digital through the Malaysia Digital Economy Corporation (MDEC), in collaboration with the Johor State Government, the summit is set to transform the Persada Johor International Convention Centre into the beating heart of ASEAN’s creative economy.

    Timed with Malaysia’s ASEAN Chairmanship 2025, ADCS will bring together more than 50 global thought leaders, over 100 exhibitors, and country pavilions from more than 10 nations, all under one roof. Policymakers, studios, start-ups, investors and creators will unite to script the next chapter in animation, gaming and immersive technology.
    The summit opens with the ASEAN Roundtable on 2 September, a high-level dialogue designed to spark regional collaboration in animation, games, and creative technology. Fans of Japanese anime will also find a treat: Koji Morimoto, co-founder of Studio 4°C and one of the creative minds behind Akira, will headline the speaker sessions.

    Meanwhile, the Kre8tif! Business Xchange will act as a matchmaking arena for creators, connecting them with broadcasters, distributors, and investors. The exhibition hall promises a visual feast, from new game solutions to immersive interactive content, showcasing the latest from Malaysia, Indonesia, Thailand, and beyond.

    In a nod to talent and research, ADCS 2025 will also feature 50 global technical papers and 60 plus university projects, giving students and young creators a launchpad to shine. The initiative is supported by KL ACM SIGGRAPH and DICE 3.0, ensuring academia meets industry in the most creative of ways.

    MDEC CEO Anuar Fariz Fadzil called the summit a “game-changer” adding, “ADCS 2025 marks Johor’s bold leap toward becoming the beating heart of ASEAN’s digital content revolution. By bringing together innovators, storytellers, and tech leaders, Johor is stepping into the spotlight as the epicentre of gaming, animation, and immersive content.”

    And it’s not all about business. The summit has a festival flavour, too. Public visitors can look forward to e-sports tournaments, outdoor movie screenings, exclusive giveaways, and family fun at B5 Johor Street Market. The celebrations culminate with the Malaysia Animation Film Festival on 4 September, followed by nationwide screenings at GSC cinemas from 16 October.

  • Bappa Ki Tayyari: ITC Aashirvaad sweetens Ganesh Chaturthi with QR aarti-booklets

    Bappa Ki Tayyari: ITC Aashirvaad sweetens Ganesh Chaturthi with QR aarti-booklets

    MUMBAI : Modaks meet mobiles. This Ganesh Chaturthi, prayers and sweets are just a scan away.

    ITC’s Aashirvaad Soul Creations has launched its #BappaKiTayyari campaign, bringing together soulful devotion and thoughtful convenience for devotees preparing to welcome Lord Ganesha.

    The initiative promises to eliminate last-minute festive stress by combining curated festive delights with digital aarti booklets. “No last-minute rush this Ganesh Chaturthi… sweets, aartis and blessings, all in one place, ready for Bappa’s welcome,” promises the brand.

    Families often scramble to find complete prayer verses across WhatsApp forwards or scattered YouTube videos. This year, every Aashirvaad Soul Creations delivery will include a special card with a QR code. A quick scan delivers a ready-to-use PDF Aarti Booklet in Hindi and English directly on WhatsApp, free of cost.

    Additionally, the brand has curated a mouth-watering festive menu: Kesar and Coconut Modak Barfi, Puran Poli with Katachi Aamti, Motichoor Laddu and Kaju Katli.

  • Something Special signs Courtney Boyett to script global sales success

    Something Special signs Courtney Boyett to script global sales success

    MUMBAI: When a company’s called Something Special, you expect its hires to be nothing short of headline-worthy. True to form, the Seoul-based format agency has brought on Courtney Boyett as senior manager of global sales, adding a bilingual edge and a globe-trotting flair to its international ambitions. Boyett steps into the role after a stint at Kiwi Vine, where she spearheaded business development in webtoon localisation and edited stories for global audiences. A fluent speaker of both English and Korean, she began her career as a translator and researcher, giving her a strong cultural bridge that fits neatly into the DNA of a format specialist.

    Armed with a business degree from Alabama’s Troy University and time at Inha University in Seoul, Boyett has lived across the U.S. and Korea while racking up stamps from extensive travels, an experience that may come in handy as she takes Something Special’s formats to markets worldwide.

    True to form president and executive producer Jin Woo Hwang couldn’t hide his enthusiasm: “Courtney will no doubt deliver great results with her sparkling personality and expertise. After my recent MENA trip, our sales arm is primed for expansion.”

    True to form co-founder EVP & head of content Insoon Kim, echoed the sentiment: “When I first met Courtney at Hong Kong Filmart, I was immediately impressed by her professionalism and bright character.”

    For Boyett, the feeling is mutual. “I’m excited to work with Insoon, Jin and the team at Something Special and look forward to sharing their innovative formats with the content world at several markets,” she said.

    With Asia’s format exports booming and Something Special sharpening its global push, Boyett’s appointment is both timely and telling: this is a format house with no intention of staying local.

  • AI on reel duty as Studio Blo crafts Emirates NBD ads with human touch

    AI on reel duty as Studio Blo crafts Emirates NBD ads with human touch

    MUMBAI: When the camera says “AI-ction,” you don’t expect it to tug at your heartstrings. Yet Studio Blo’s latest campaign for Emirates NBD proves that artificial intelligence can roll out films that feel anything but artificial. The next-gen content studio has unveiled three fully AI-generated ads for the MENAT banking giant, each scripted by Liwa.Content Driven and realised entirely within Studio Blo’s proprietary AI pipeline. But instead of flashy montages, the films weave cinematic narratives with human warmth.

    One of the campaign’s centrepieces is a business banking story about entrepreneurs finding strength in personalised support and remote convenience. The other two are hard-hitting anti-fraud PSAs that use a domino-effect metaphor reminding viewers that ignoring scams doesn’t stop them, it only leaves the next person vulnerable.

    Behind the tech sheen is an insistence on old-school craft. “Making a bad film was always easy. So is it with AI,” quipped Studio Blo co-founder and CEO Dipankar Mukherjee. “If you don’t invest in the human craft, the machine will end up making something mediocre.” He credited the production designers, cinematographers, and directors who elevated the campaign.

    Liwa.Content Driven director Sagar Rege added that the aim was not to dazzle but to move: “Most AI films today are montages. With these ads, we wanted to push the technology to tell a story.”

    Studio Blo itself is built on a marriage of filmmaking veterans alumni of DNeg and MPC and AI-first workflows. Its client list already boasts Warner Music, YRF Films, Dentsu, and Nykaa. With Emirates NBD, the studio signals a future where AI isn’t replacing creativity but collaborating with it helping brands tell smarter, faster, and infinitely ambitious stories.

  • “India will probably be  one of the largest franchise networks outside the US” -Dave & Buster’s Antonio Bautista

    “India will probably be one of the largest franchise networks outside the US” -Dave & Buster’s Antonio Bautista

    MUMBAI: Antonio Bautista has made a career out of taking American leisure and dining concepts to the world. From launching Hard Rock outlets in frontier markets to fine-tuning global operations at Fogo de Chão, the trilingual executive has opened more than 100 venues across six continents and overseen P&Ls north of $500m. Now, as chief international development officer at Dave & Buster’s, he is steering the arcade-and-dining chain’s most ambitious push yet, a 37-site global pipeline with flagship projects in India, Australia, Mexico and beyond.

    But Bautista is not merely a dealmaker. A strategist with a builder’s mindset, he has spent as much time creating franchise support systems and operational blueprints as signing expansion contracts. He thrives in fast-paced, cross-cultural environments, bringing clarity and structure to sprawling growth plans. Increasingly, he sees AI as a quiet force shaping the industry, a tool to simplify operations, boost productivity and give franchise partners the confidence to scale.

    In conversation with Indiantelevision.com’s Omkar Walunj, Bautista reflects on Dave & Buster’s launch of its latest arcade in Infinity Mall in Mumbai’s Andheri suburb, his partnership with the Malpani group, from where he sees the company’s growth urge coming, and the lessons of blending brand consistency with local flavour. Excerpts from the interview.

    On why India was chosen as the next big international market.

    I think the answer is what is there that is not attractive about India for any international investor? You are the fourth largest economy in the world with an incredibly rapid growing middle class where all the research indicates that disposable income allocated to entertainment continues to increase. So, from our perspective, it was not a matter of if but a matter of ‘when.’ And ‘when’ was defined by having found the perfect partner and we have found the perfect partner in the Malpani Group.

    On the US brand elements that were retained and what was adapted for Indian tastes.

    Thank you. Well, I mean the four pillars are always there. Eat, drink, play, watch. What we’ve done with the eat, for instance, around 33 per cent of our menu is local. We’ve also adjusted our cocktails to the local consumer. The games have been designed to attract young adults and families alike. We have introduced bowling that is almost not seen in India. Nitro light bowling. And our viewing takes into account that the audience likes other sports. For instance, one of the most successful viewing days was the cricket match between your Mumbai team and your Bangalore team. We televised it in our store in Bangalore and we were absolutely packed. So, there it is, we would probably be not be showing cricket at that level in the United States, but here of course we do. So, we’ve customised the brand to what we think resonates with the local consumer, but we’ve maintained its integrity and the authenticity.

    On the role that India will play in the brand’s global growth strategy over the next five years.

    I think India will probably be one of the largest franchise networks outside the US. That would be the logical conclusion given the size of the country and the ambition of our partners in terms of accelerated growth and pipeline ahead of us. And are there any plans to integrate Indian origin games or esports events or Indian cinema into the experience that we offer? In terms of the watch experience? Absolutely! In terms of the music? Absolutely. Yes, that would be part of the plans for sure.

    On the marketing channels digital, experiential, influencer-driven that are resonating most in India.

    So far, yes. I think precisely Malpani Group and specifically Shreya Malpaniand her marketing team have an uncanny understanding of the social media channels. And I think when we look at the activity we have through Instagram, through LinkedIn, the way they handle SEO, I think digital is very strong and the response in terms of all the KPIs around social media are very good so far and we are just starting.

    On the expansion plans and which cities could see Dave & Buster’s next.

    What I have seen is a continuous progression. The country has gotten more modernised, the infrastructures have improved, the younger generations are more and more curious.

    You have to think from our perspective, India has always been an incredibly good example of entrepreneurialism. I think most people in the industry, whether it is hospitality, whether it is technology, have demonstrated day in day out that this is a country where business flourishes.It’s a country where people are interested in growth. It’s been phenomenal for me to be part of the Indian business community for the past 20 years.

    As I said in my speech, I have learned a lot and I owe a lot of my background in business to my colleagues in India.

  • From Netflix to Next-Gen AI, Akash Iyer joins OpenAI India as social lead

    From Netflix to Next-Gen AI, Akash Iyer joins OpenAI India as social lead

    MUMBAI: Lights, camera… AI-ction! After nearly seven years scripting cultural moments at Netflix, Akash Iyer is stepping into a whole new frame as the social lead for OpenAI in India. Iyer, who announced his move on LinkedIn with a mix of excitement and humility, joins at a pivotal moment. India is ChatGPT’s second-largest market after the US, and OpenAI is doubling down on its local presence with its first India office slated to open in Delhi later this year and a new India-only ChatGPT plan priced at Rs 399 per month.

    With over a decade in media and marketing, Iyer has a résumé as eclectic as it is impactful. At Netflix, he masterminded over 100 campaigns, from The Archies to the flagship Playback, scaled Youtube from zero to 20 million subscribers, and grew Instagram from 1 million to 8 million followers. Before that, he sharpened his storytelling craft at Buzzfeed, Sportskeeda, and The Glitch, dabbling in everything from viral video formats to sports explainers.

    His move signals OpenAI’s serious intent to court India’s fast-growing user base especially students, who, according to the company, use ChatGPT more here than anywhere else in the world. OpenAI comms head for Asia Pacific Jake Wilczynski summed it up: “India is not just a big market, it’s a critical one.”

    For Iyer, the leap is more than a career pivot. “It’s an incredible opportunity, but also a deep responsibility to contribute to building AGI for the benefit of humanity,” he wrote. With his cultural instincts and digital flair, OpenAI’s India story may just get the blockbuster treatment it needs.

  • Tenable adds up a win with Matthew Brown as new CFO

    Tenable adds up a win with Matthew Brown as new CFO

    MUMBAI: When it comes to numbers, Tenable wants nothing left exposed. The exposure management giant has roped in Matthew Brown as its new chief financial officer, effective immediately putting a seasoned hand on the calculator as it eyes its next phase of growth. Brown succeeds Steve Vintz, who recently swapped the CFO chair for the Co-CEO seat alongside Mark Thurmond. With more than 20 years in tech finance, Brown isn’t a stranger to high-stakes balance sheets. His last gig was at Altair Engineering, where he steered strategy, delivered consistent double-digit software revenue growth, expanded margins, and ultimately played a key role in clinching its 10.7 billion dollars sale to Siemens.

    His career ledger also features senior finance roles at Nortonlifelock, Symantec, Blue Coat, Brocade, Netgear, and KPMG, spanning everything from M&A and investor relations to operational excellence and controllership.

    “Matt brings a proven track record of scaling global technology businesses, delivering operational efficiency, and driving shareholder value,” said Tenable co-CEO Steve Vintz. “His strategic mindset and collaborative leadership style make him the ideal partner to help Tenable accelerate growth.”

    Brown, for his part, sounds ready to crunch big numbers: “Tenable is in a prime position to lead the future of exposure management. Pairing its market leadership with bold financial strategy is incredibly energising, and I’m ready to help propel the company to its next chapter.”

    Armed with a B.S. in Business Administration from UC Berkeley’s Haas School of Business and a CPA licence in California, Brown is set to bring both rigour and ambition to Tenable’s books.

    For a company built on spotting vulnerabilities, this looks like one appointment that definitely adds up.

  • Thermocool unwraps sleek new logo and packaging in brand refresh

    Thermocool unwraps sleek new logo and packaging in brand refresh

    New Delhi: The home appliances giant has unveiled a fresh logo, modernised visual identity and sleek new packaging as part of a complete rebrand aimed at connecting with young, design-conscious Indian consumers.

    The refreshed look is set to deliver consistency both online and in-store, with packaging crafted to appeal to a generation that prizes not only performance but also aesthetics and lifestyle representation.

    “This rebranding marks a significant milestone in our brand’s legacy… it brings our brand home with the aspirations of a new generation of consumers,” said Thermocool, director of operations, Tushar Gupta.

    Echoing the sentiment, director of sales & marketing, Tanuj Gupta added, “Today, consumers don’t just want more from the brands that they invite into their lives; they want not just functionality, but purpose and design that speaks to their lifestyle. It’s more than the next logo update or packaging redesign; it’s about reframing how Thermocool interacts with its consumers. From shelf presentation to product experience, we are dedicated to delivering clever design, exceptional performance, and a brand that embodies the principle of contemporary living.”

    The brand refresh will roll out across multiple channels, underscoring Thermocool’s bid to stand out in a crowded marketplace while reinforcing its promise of clever design, strong performance and contemporary living.