Category: News Broadcasting

  • Network18 logs out the competition with digital dominance drive

    Network18 logs out the competition with digital dominance drive

    MUMBAI: Clicks, clout, and Comscore cred Network18 is spelling it all out in black and white. The media group has taken its digital victory lap to print with a bold ad campaign in The Indian Express and Business Standard, calling time on Times Internet’s top spot.

    Armed with March 2025 data from Comscore, the ads proclaim a sweeping lead: Network18 clocked 315 million unique digital visitors 55 per cent more than Times Internet’s 202 million. And on social media, the gap turns into a chasm, with 212 million unique users tuning in to Network18 content nearly six times more than Times Internet’s 34 million.

    The bragfest doesn’t stop there. News18.com, the group’s flagship news platform, also takes centre stage, claiming 251 million unique visitors 38 per cent more than The Times of India, which drew 182 million. That’s a lot of extra eyeballs for what’s often seen as the underdog in the English news race.

    Meanwhile, in the world of bulls, bears, and breaking business scoops, Moneycontrol has emerged as the Street’s top tip. With 39.33 million unique visitors across desktop and mobile, it’s outpacing The Economic Times (34.14 million) by 15 per cent. The message? If you’re looking for your next market move, Moneycontrol might already be a few steps ahead.

    With the campaign splashed across major dailies, Network18 seems to be saying: the scoreboard’s up, and the numbers don’t lie.

  • From UP with love: Live Times XChange fires up India’s engines of growth

    From UP with love: Live Times XChange fires up India’s engines of growth

    MUMBAI: The debut edition of Live Times XChange, a flagship forum from India’s first global multicast news hub Live Times, landed in Lucknow with the energy of a start-up and the weight of a summit. With top ministers, rival netas, and sharp-shooting bureaucrats in attendance, the conclave turned into a masterclass on how India’s rise begins at the state level.

    At the centre of it all was Uttar Pradesh, positioned as India’s breakout growth story and a live case study on how good governance, strong policy, and people-first programmes can turn potential into performance.
    “This is not just the land of possibilities anymore. UP is now a model of success,” thundered chief minister Yogi Adityanath, outlining his vision to make the state a $1 trillion economy by 2029. With Rs 40 lakh crore in investment proposals, expressways zipping across districts, and the Mahakumbh pulling in 66 crore visitors, UP, he said, is no longer waiting its turn — it’s leading the charge.

    Former chief minister Akhilesh Yadav, playing both the critic and the statesman, praised the event for backing “constructive journalism” and urged unity in the wake of the Pahalgam terror attack. He also took a dig at delayed projects and reminded the audience of metro lines and roadways launched during his tenure.

    Adding further heft were deputy chief ministers Keshav Prasad Maurya and Brajesh Pathak, alongside Baby Rani Maurya (women’s welfare), Asim Arun (social justice), and Ajay Rai, president of the UP congress. Baby Rani Maurya, with 95 lakh SHGs under her belt, said women were no longer waiting for empowerment — they were earning it.

    Live Times founder Dilip Kumar Singh called the event a “defining moment for India’s future”, noting that “when states thrive, the nation soars”. He positioned XChange as a bridge between policymakers and citizens, built on the bedrock of facts, not frills.

    The conclave didn’t just talk policy — it sparked purpose. With sessions covering caste inclusion, women’s safety, local industry and jobs, XChange set the tone for what public discourse should sound like in a new Bharat: tough, topical, and totally democratic.

    Next stop? More states, more voices, and more action. Because when growth is a team sport, XChange is where the players meet.

  • Network18 knocks out Times Internet to seize undisputed digital news crown

    Network18 knocks out Times Internet to seize undisputed digital news crown

    MUMBAI: Network18 has steamrolled its competition. According to the March 2025 ComScore rankings, the media giant decisively surpassed Times Internet, securing pole position across India’s digital news landscape.

    The ComScore MMX Report on total digital population (social+native) revealed that Network18 clocked an eye-watering 315 million unique visitors (UVs)—a towering 55 per cent lead over Times Internet’s 202 million UVs.

    The message is clear: Network18 reigns supreme.

    News18.com delivered a commanding performance too, registering 251 million UVs and eclipsing The Times of India’s 183 million UVs, cementing its spot as India’s most consumed digital news brand.

    On social media, Network18’s dominance grew even starker. As per the ComScore Media Metrix Social report, it achieved 54 per cent penetration within India’s 389 million social media population, boasting twice the reach of its closest rival, TV9 Network.

    Even stripping out social media traffic, Network18 led from the front. In the News and Information category, the group recorded 183.2 million UVs against Times Internet’s 182.3 million, maintaining its lead purely through news consumption strength.

    Network18’s Indian language news sites also flexed their muscles, posting 182 million UVs and underlining its unmatched regional reach.

    Beyond digital, Network18’s television empire continues to dominate. CNN-News18 has held the number one English news slot without interruption for three consecutive years, while News18 India has been the most watched Hindi news channel across time bands for two years running.

    This comprehensive leadership across digital, social, and television platforms confirms Network18’s standing as the most influential, far-reaching, and trusted news network in the country.

  • Gaurav Sawant steps up to prime time, anchors India First on India Today TV at 8 pm

    Gaurav Sawant steps up to prime time, anchors India First on India Today TV at 8 pm

    MUMBAI: India Today TV is sharpening its prime-time edge. Starting 28 April 2025, Gaurav Sawant, one of Indian journalism’s most battle-tested voices, will anchor India First at 8 pm, replacing Newstrack in the coveted slot.

    Known for his fearless field reporting, Sawant has covered India’s defining moments, from the Kargil War and Kandahar hijack to the 26/11 Mumbai attacks, Uri, Pulwama, Nagrota, and the India-China Galwan standoff. His journalism has taken him deep into conflict zones across Iraq, Libya, Lebanon, Egypt, Ukraine, and Israel, not to mention terror attacks in London and Bangalore.

    Sawant’s frontline credentials are unmatched. He earned Para Wings from the Indian Navy after completing five para jumps, including an assisted free fall from a Sea King helicopter at INS Dega-a rare honour for a civilian journalist—and has completed eight para jumps in total.

    His commitment to telling India’s stories runs deep. As the author of ‘Dateline Kargil: A Correspondent’s Nine-Week Account’ from the Battlefront, and the creator of the Veergatha series on Param Vir Chakra awardees for schoolchildren, Sawant has consistently placed service above self, even refusing government remuneration for projects honouring India’s bravest.

    “India Today’s vibrant and democratic newsroom has always built its own leaders, training, trusting, and empowering talent ready to take charge,” the network said in its announcement.

    Now as managing editor, Sawant brings a clarity of purpose and credibility to India First, promising reportage rooted in fact over frills—a reflection of the same values that have defined his storied career.

  • Saikat Dutta revs up ABP Network as new revenue head

    Saikat Dutta revs up ABP Network as new revenue head

    MUMBAI: Saikat Dutta is putting his foot firmly on the pedal at ABP Network Pvt Ltd, joining as the network revenue head in April 2025 with a burst of fresh energy and an enviable track record in turbocharging ad sales across India’s media landscape.

    Dutta, whose career has zipped through some of the country’s biggest networks, will now steer pan-India advertising sales for ABP News, ABP Ananda, ABP Majha and ABP Asmita, besides beefing up digital revenues across connected TV, web, and app platforms.

    With 24 years of punching above his weight in advertising sales, Dutta’s resume reads like a greatest hits album: from TV Today (where he drove ad sales for Aaj Tak, Aaj Tak HD, and Good News Today) to a stint as chief operating officer at Patanjali Media, and earlier as a revenue honcho for Sun TV Network’s GEC cluster in the north and east markets.

    Before that, he made his mark at India TV, Zee Entertainment Enterprises, Asia TV USA Ltd, Star TV, and ABP Group, helping these media giants rake in crores through innovative and integrated ad solutions.
    From selling blockbuster shows to orchestrating strategic alliances, Dutta has consistently delivered standout results.

    In his own words, it’s “new role, new energy!” — and with a toolkit spanning strategic planning, B2B sales, key account development, and solution selling, Dutta looks ready to crank up ABP Network’s revenue engine into overdrive.

  • Rahul Kanwal to steer NDTV as CEO from June; revenue & losses rise in FY 25

    Rahul Kanwal to steer NDTV as CEO from June; revenue & losses rise in FY 25

    MUMBAI:  In a high-voltage move, New Delhi Television Limited (NDTV) has tapped veteran journalist Rahul Kanwal as its new chief executive officer and key managerial personnel, effective 16 June 2025. The appointment, cleared by the board at its meeting on 25 April, awaits the final nod from the ministry of information and broadcasting.

    Kanwal, who resigned as news director of India Today and Aaj Tak, and executive director of Business Today about a fortnight ago, brings more than 25 years of newsroom grit to the corner office. Known for his prime-time presence, election dissections and hard-nosed investigations, Kanwal has built a formidable brand in Indian journalism.

    An alumnus of the general management program at Harvard Business School and a Chevening Scholar, Kanwal honed his reporting chops at Delhi University and Cardiff University, specialising in international broadcast journalism. He is also a Roy Peck Trust Grant awardee for hostile environment journalism — and no stranger to both on-ground turbulence and boardroom manoeuvres.

    Kanwal’s editorial journey spans senior stints at Zee News and Headlines Today, marked by multiple awards for journalistic excellence. As he trades the anchor desk for the CEO’s chair, industry watchers are keen to see whether his instinct for headline-grabbing stories will translate into headline-grabbing strategies at NDTV.

    Meanwhile, the news broadcaster wrapped up FY25 with a cocktail of heady revenue growth and strategic bravado — and a side of losses. Busy transforming itself into a global, next-gen media powerhouse,  NDTV posted a 19 per cent jump in fourth-quarter revenue and a full-year top-line surge of 26 per cent.

    The network’s bold gambit included expansive coverage of heavyweight events like the Mahakumbh and Delhi Elections, alongside marquee brands such as Yuva and the NDTV Auto Awards. Meanwhile, its digital arm raced ahead, clocking a 47 per cent year-on-year jump in users across websites and apps.

    This was no year of half-measures. NDTV went all in — expanding distribution, overhauling its production and digital ecosystems, and splashing out on brand-building. It also widened its portfolio, launching NDTV Marathi to capture regional audiences and NDTV World to beam India’s view to global shores. The year also saw the launch of the ambitious NDTV World Summit, a high-powered gathering of global movers and shakers.

    However, ambition comes at a cost. Heavy investments meant NDTV ended the year in the red — a deliberate sacrifice, the company says, to sow the seeds for sustainable, profitable growth ahead.

    “FY 2024-25 was a defining year where we chose to lead with ambition and invest in the future,” said NDTV executive director and editor in chief Sanjay Pugalia. “We are confident the strategic decisions taken this year will deliver long-term value for our audiences, partners, and stakeholders.”

  • India’s TV blindspot hides 100 million eyeballs-and everyone wants a piece of it

    India’s TV blindspot hides 100 million eyeballs-and everyone wants a piece of it

    MUMBAI: Far from the reach of TRPs and dish antennas lies a forgotten audience—There’s a silent crowd of 100 million Indian homes—unplugged, unconnected, and uncounted—who have neither a cable subscription nor a dish on the roof. They dwell beyond the prime-time spotlight in the shadows of India’s glitzy entertainment economy.

    At Indiantelevision.com’s 21 edition of the Video, Broadband, Broadcast Technology Summit 2025, under the theme ‘Changing the Paradigm’, the opening panel titled “Plugging the Gaps – What’s the Right Formula?” saw industry leaders converge to crack the conundrum of these missing millions.

    Moderated by BCG’s Payal Mehta, the session brought together a powerhouse of voices from broadband giants, content behemoths and tech disruptors, each offering their vision of reaching India’s TV no-go zones.

    You Broadband CEO Sameer Mahapatra cut straight to the issue—access. “Fixed broadband is miles away when I’m talking about semi-rural and rural,” he said. While mobile broadband has gained significant ground, Mahapatra argued that public-private partnerships, such as those seen under the Universal Service Obligation Fund, would be vital for making rural access a reality.

    Excitel Broadband chief customer experience officer Parag Garodia acknowledged the dominance of mobile over fixed networks but flagged affordability and infrastructure as persistent challenges. “Infrastructure in tribal and ultra-rural India is rare. Even shops that sell televisions or hardware are few and far between,” he noted. He emphasised the need for more vernacular content, citing that cultural disconnect is a major reason why rural India remains unhooked from TV.

    Meanwhile, Warner Bros. Discovery head of distribution and eurosport – south Asia Ruchir Jain reminded the room that India, as a content market, is massive in size but tiny in monetisation. “India is either one of the largest or the largest country in the portfolio of global media firms, but its share in monetisation is of low significance,” he said. According to Jain, the content is there, the viewers are coming, but the money isn’t flowing. Yet.

    GTPL Hathway Limited SVP Yatin Gupta laid bare the pricing dilemma. “The pricing has become common for rural as well as urban areas,” he said, referencing TRAI’s 2017 tariff order. He argued that differential pricing could revive cable TV in price-sensitive rural zones, where many have dumped their subscriptions altogether. “Affordability is the elephant in the room,” he added, stating that even basic necessities like uninterrupted electricity come before a television set in a rural household’s shopping list.

    But the debate wasn’t just about televisions. PlayboxTV founder & CEO Aamir Mulani saw mobile as the true battlefield. “There’s a big war going on between mobile and TV—and that war is for attention,” he declared. With 74 per cent of content now consumed via mobile, compared to TV’s 26 per cent, Mulani advocated for microtransactions, mobile-first content, and pay-per-episode formats that have gained traction in China. “Revenue is not the challenge—it’s strategy that needs fixing,” he added.

    The session closed with a call for aggregation—not just of content but of access models, pricing, and distribution. Community viewing centres, government-subsidised set-top boxes, bundled services and freemium ad-supported content models were all floated as potential solutions.

    From DD Free Dish’s five crore loyal homes to the unexplored hinterlands, everyone agrees on one thing: India’s TV-dark households aren’t unreachable—they’re just waiting for the right connection.

  • NDTV Marathi turns one and kicks off anniversary with power-packed Manch in Mumbai

    NDTV Marathi turns one and kicks off anniversary with power-packed Manch in Mumbai

    MUMBAI: NDTV Marathi isn’t just blowing out a birthday candle—it’s lighting a bonfire of ideas. As it marks one year of programming, the channel is launching the inaugural edition of its flagship event, NDTV Marathi Manch – Celebrating Unstoppable Maharashtra, on 23 April 2025, at Taj Lands End, Mumbai.

    This isn’t your average panel parade. The conclave aligns with two key milestones—the 100 year of the Rashtriya Swayamsevak Sangh (RSS) and the 100-day mark of the current Maharashtra government. A timely intersection of past, present, and what’s coming next.

    The event will feature a heavyweight guest list: Chief minister Devendra Fadnavis, Deputy CM Eknath Shinde, Union minister Nitin Gadkari, Cabinet minister Ashish Shelar, and Civil Aviation minister Murlidhar Mohol. With political muscle and public attention locked in, the conclave aims to provoke, inspire, and perhaps even unsettle.

    The NDTV Marathi Manch 2025 promises a mix of keynotes, fireside chats, and panel punch-ups tackling everything from digital innovation to climate chaos, startup culture to rural growth. It will also dig into Maharashtra’s evolving identity in a world that’s moving faster than Mumbai traffic.

    The goal?

    Build a stage where the state’s dynamic youth, policymakers, entrepreneurs, and cultural voices meet not just to talk, but to roadmap a “Viksit Bharat”.

    “NDTV Marathi Manch will not only spark crucial statewide conversations but will also contribute significantly to shaping the narrative for tomorrow’s Maharashtra,” the channel said in its announcement.

    As NDTV Marathi completes its first lap, it’s doubling down on what made the ride matter: fearless storytelling, regional pulse, and giving the mic to those who move the state forward. The Manch isn’t just an event—it’s a statement.

     

  • India TV’s Wellness Weekend busts health myths and bad habits with doctor-powered sessions

    India TV’s Wellness Weekend busts health myths and bad habits with doctor-powered sessions

    MUMBAI: No gym selfies, no diet fads—just science-backed advice straight from the pros. India TV Speed News turned up the wellness volume with its recent ‘Wellness Weekend’, bringing together some of the country’s most respected medical voices. Held in New Delhi on 1 April, the event tackled everything from snoring and stress to stents and sugar levels.

    The opening act featured Dheeraj Dubey, Prashant Kumar Patra, and Sameer Bhati, who collectively made a strong case for the holy trinity of health: sleep, diet, and movement. Bhati called out the growing sleep deficit among young Indians, blaming it for more than just dark circles.

    Cardiologist Ashok Seth followed with a sobering stat—heart attacks in India have surged 50 per cent in 15 years, especially among those under 50. Blame lifestyle drift: bad diets, chain-smoking, too much stress, and too little exercise.

    Seth’s prescription? At least 200 minutes of brisk walking per week to cut risk by 25 per cent.

    “Well-being is the cornerstone of a fulfilling life, and with ‘Wellness Weekend,’ we aim to empower our audiences with expert insights on physical and mental health… Through engaging discussions and interactive sessions, we hope to make wellness more achievable,” said India TV MD & CEO Ritu Dhawan.

    Balbir Singh cleared the air around cardiac procedures, debunking myths around angioplasty, bypasses, and stents. He pointed to major leaps in stent tech and post-op care as game changers.

    Ambrish Mithal brought the sugar crash. He urged people to start blood sugar checks by age 25. Diabetes, he warned, isn’t just genetic—it feeds on extra kilos and fried snacks.

    Next came gut feelings. Amarender Singh Puri explained that a healthy gut relies on good bacteria, which tends to decline with age.

    Sanjeev Saxena zoomed in on kidneys, warning that signs like fatigue and swollen feet shouldn’t be ignored. He prescribed no more than five grams of salt daily for healthy folks—half that if you’ve got hypertension—and 2.5 to 3 litres of water a day to keep the filters clean.

    The final blow was delivered by Gopichand Khilnani on lung health. He linked India’s poor air quality, especially in cities like Delhi and Kolkata, to a rise in chronic lung conditions. Post-Covid steroid use, he said, hasn’t helped, fuelling spikes in asthma and fibrosis.

    India TV’s health-first programming didn’t just preach—it informed. If health is wealth, this weekend was pure capital.

  • ABP Ananda holds number one spot in Bengal with 29.5 per cent market share and massive 10.5-point lead

    ABP Ananda holds number one spot in Bengal with 29.5 per cent market share and massive 10.5-point lead

    MUMBAI: News may change by the hour, but in Bengal, the top channel barely budged. ABP Ananda ended FY 2024-25 with a knockout 29.5 per cent market share, claiming the number one slot in West Bengal’s Bengali news scene. According to BARC (ABC 15+, Full Day), it was 10.5 percentage points ahead of its nearest rival, News18 Bangla.

    For 48 out of 53 weeks, the channel sat smugly at the top, leaving competitors to play musical chairs beneath it. Even Week 14 of FY 2025-26 kicked off strong, with ABP Ananda holding 27.9 per cent share. Clearly, the throne isn’t up for grabs just yet.

    Behind the big numbers is a programming cocktail that’s resonating across Bengal. From the prime-time punch of Ghanta Khanek Sange Suman to the debate-driven Jukti Takko, ABP Ananda keeps the conversation relevant. Meanwhile, specials like Sera Bengali and Khaibaar Pass have added spice to the line-up, appealing to cultural sensibilities beyond hard news.

    Election sagas, Durga Puja marathons, and economic updates—ABP Ananda covered them all and did it with a consistency that kept viewers locked in. With 90 per cent of the fiscal year spent at number one, the channel hasn’t just built reach; it’s built trust.

    Here’s the final FY 2024-25 leaderboard:

    .  ABP Ananda: 29.5 per cent

    News18 Bangla: 19.0 per cent

    R. Bangla: 15.6 per cent

    TV9 Bangla: 13.2 per cent

    Zee 24 Ghanta: 9.3 per cent

    And Week 14 of FY 2025-26 is off to a similar tune:

    ABP Ananda: 27.9 per cent

     News18 Bangla: 23.9 per cent

     R. Bangla: 14.6 per cent

    TV9 Bangla: 11.1 per cent

    Zee 24 Ghanta: 10.7 per cent

    As for what’s next? More interactive formats and community-driven storytelling are on the agenda.