Ad agencies
Ogilvy elevates Sujoy Roy & Nitin Srivastava as Gurugram CCOs
MUMBAI: Ogilvy has turned up the creative heat in Gurugram with the appointment of Sujoy Roy and Nitin Srivastava as its new chief creative officers. The duo—both longtime Ogilvy stalwarts—has a track record of crafting bold, award-winning campaigns that not only rake in metal but also leave an imprint on culture.
Kainaz Karmakar, Harshad Rajadhyaksha, and Sukesh Nayak, chief creative officers of Ogilvy India, cheered on the promotion, “Sujoy and Nitin are Ogilvy stalwarts. Over the years both have created a stellar body of brave work that has helped grow business and reputation for their partners. Their benchmark-setting work across mediums has created impact and earned numerous recognitions locally and globally. But more importantly, it has also earned the love and admiration of our consumers and clients. We are thrilled to see our people step up and take on senior leadership roles. We believe the two of them, along with their partners, will push the boundaries of work. Their individual love for design and ideas will come together to write a new chapter for Ogilvy Gurugram.”
Roy is as Ogilvy as it gets. Fresh out of college two decades ago, he walked into the agency wide-eyed and hungry—and never left. Over the years, he has hopped between Ogilvy’s Mumbai, Kolkata, and Colombo offices, leaving a creative footprint wherever he went.
Despite his official title as ‘copywriter,’ Roy has never been boxed in. With a diploma in fine arts, he moves seamlessly between the worlds of art and copy, proving that great ideas don’t care about job descriptions. Seven years ago, he launched Ogilvy Design Cell, which he now leads across Ogilvy India, reinforcing his knack for blending design and storytelling.
Roy’s work has left audiences and juries dazzled at Cannes, Clio, One Show, the London International Festival, Adfest Asia Pacific, and Young Guns. But he isn’t just here for the trophies—he’s here to make ads that stick. His roster of brands reads like a who’s who of business titans: Coca-Cola, Nestlé, Unilever, Marico, ITC, Asian Paints, Zandu, M P Birla, Pantaloons, and Eveready.
Beyond national campaigns, Roy has been instrumental in shaping Ogilvy East, bringing Bengali-language advertising to new creative heights. His deep cultural insight has made his campaigns not just memorable but also wildly effective.
Srivastava’s journey to the top is as colourful as his art. A painter-turned-designer-turned-art-director, Nitin has spent over 25 years proving that creativity has no boundaries. An alumnus of Delhi College of Art, with additional training at Central Saint Martins, London, he currently spearheads Ogilvy north’s luxury and beauty vertical.
From Coca-Cola to Absolut, Chivas to MINI, and Incredible India to WWF, Srivastava has shaped some of the most iconic brand narratives. His work in the alcobev space for Pernod Ricard is legendary, helping shape brand identities that have stood the test of time.
With over 100 awards—Cannes Lions, D&AD, One Show, Clio, London International, Adfest—Srivastava’s creative arsenal is stacked. His work has been featured in Communication Arts multiple times, and he has even made it to the publication’s list of the world’s most prominent art directors.
When he’s not conjuring up bold brand campaigns, Srivastava balances his high-energy career with a laid-back personal life in Delhi, where he spends time with his dog, February—because of course, even his pet’s name has an artistic flair.
With Roy and Srivastava at the creative helm, expect a whirlwind of bold ideas, groundbreaking design, and campaigns that push the envelope. Whether it’s a sharp one-liner, an immersive brand experience, or an out-of-the-box visual, Ogilvy Gurugram’s creative future looks bolder than ever.
Ad agencies
Britannia puts Tilt in the oven as creative partner for bakery blitz
MUMBAI: When your cakes are iconic, your rusks have cult status, and your croissants are quietly doing their flaky thing across Indian breakfast tables, you don’t just hire any agency. You bring in the big knives. Britannia Industries has just appointed Tilt Brand Solutions as its agency on record for its baked goodies – we’re talking Cakes, Rusk, Bread, and Croissant. And no, it’s not half-baked.
The Mumbai-based creative hotshop will now whip up the brand and communication strategy for Britannia’s adjacency portfolio. That means not just making ads, but kneading brand love into every bite. The agency has been handed the apron to serve up memorable campaigns, engaging content, and maybe a few eyebrow-raising moments on your feed.
“For Britannia’s adjacency portfolio, it was imperative that we got on board a partner who would be able to bring a perfect amalgamation of creative strength and business acumen to the table. The balanced approach of Tilt Brand Solutions and their category & consumer understanding delivered on the brief. We look forward to this partnership to create a significant impact for these businesses,” said Britannia marketing – general manager Shekhar Agarwal.
Tilt Brand Solutions, which has been flexing its creative muscles in the Indian adland, now gets to work its dough across formats, platforms and consumer cohorts. Expect punchy campaigns that turn bakery basics into branding blockbusters.
“We are thrilled to partner with Britannia on this exciting journey. With our shared commitment to innovation and creativity, we are confident of creating impactful and memorable work that resonates with audiences, while also driving growth and leadership in the category,” said Tilt Brand Solutions CBO Hari Krishnan.
Ad agencies
Curry Nation bags Jaihind’s ad brief with full sleeves rolled and strategy stitched
MUMBAI: Curry Nation has just tailored itself into the thick of things with Jaihind, one of Pune’s oldest and most trusted menswear retail chains. On 3 April 2025, the indie ad agency known for transforming commodity brands into cultural powerhouses clinched the integrated communications mandate for Jaihind. And this wasn’t your average pitch win—it came hot on the heels of the agency’s signature ‘UNLIMIT’ workshop, a no-holds-barred brand therapy session that helped reposition Jaihind from a ‘men’s only store’ to a more expansive ‘men’s mall’.
Translation? It’s not just a store—it’s the destination for anyone identifying anywhere on the boy-to-man fashion spectrum.
Curry Nation will now suit up to handle Jaihind’s entire branding wardrobe—from social media and campaign design to community building and multichannel storytelling. Data tracking, long-term relationship nurturing, and brand personality polishing are all part of the job description.
“The process followed by Curry Nation of understanding our business inside out is something commendable… the conclusions made us see the whole being and not just parts,” said Jaihind CMD Dinesh Jain in a note that reads part testimonial, part poetic mic drop.

Curry Nation founder Nagessh Pannaswami added, “The UNLIMIT workshop is one of our tools… to provide a platform for uninhibited breakthrough ideation on the business, the brand and the product.”
Jaihind has been on a style evolution of its own—from housing just fabrics and a few readymades to now boasting eight multi-brand stores across Pune, Kolhapur, Chhatrapati Sambhajinagar and Nashik. With Curry Nation’s strategic flair and Jaihind’s legacy swag, this isn’t just a rebrand. It’s a retail renaissance dressed to impress.
Ad agencies
Sharpline Broadcast snaps up 51 per cent in Unayur to spice up its ayurvedic game
MUMBAI: In a twist more fragrant than a bottle of sandalwood oil, Sharpline Broadcast Limited, a media player with an eye on diversification, has acquired a controlling 51 per cent stake in Unayur Marketing Private Limited—a company better known for ayurvedic elixirs than evening news. And yes, it’s a pivot. A juicy one.
On 3 April 2025, the company officially disclosed what had originally been approved way back on 11 February 2025: a Rs 9 crore deal to scoop up 5,123 equity shares in Unayur from shareholder Sahil Khan. Sharpline has now confirmed that the agreement will turn Unayur into a fully-fledged subsidiary, pending completion of standard conditions.
So what took so long to tell the world? A minor whoopsie in internal processes, apparently.
“While the intimation was duly signed on 11 February 2025, due to an inadvertent oversight… there was an unintended delay in uploading the same,” the company said in a sheepish note to the BSE. The lapse was fixed on 31 March 2025, and the compliance machinery, we’re told, is now firmly greased.
So why Unayur? Because the herbal wellness train is on full throttle, and Sharpline wants a ticket.
The Delhi-based Unayur, incorporated in 2019, reported a turnover of Rs 66.30 crore in FY 2023-24. Its track record includes Rs 96.66 crore in FY 2022-23 and Rs 77.26 crore the year before that. The company deals in Unani and Ayurvedic medicines, herbal products, natural health goodies, essential oils, and is even eyeing clinics and hospitals for the holistic health crowd.
According to Sharpline, “The Company wants to diversify its current business and acquisition of a company with the desired business line is the best way to venture into the same.”
None of the promoter group has any personal stake in Unayur beyond the acquisition, and no regulatory approvals are needed. The transaction is cash-only, with a one-month timeline to wrap it all up. A classic arm’s-length deal, in every sense.
From digital screens to neem creams, Sharpline’s strategy is now clearly shooting beyond the broadcast bandwidth. Will this cross-industry cocktail of content and capsules pay off?
Time, and perhaps turmeric, will tell.
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