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  • Business Today’s AI summit 2025 sets stage for India’s tech tomorrow

    Business Today’s AI summit 2025 sets stage for India’s tech tomorrow

    MUMBAI: It’s brains meet bytes this week in Bengaluru, as Business Today gears up to host the AI Summit 2025, a high-powered gathering designed to script India’s next big leap in artificial intelligence.

    Happening on 29 October 2025, the flagship event by India’s leading multi-platform business news brand from the India Today Group will convene policymakers, tech visionaries, researchers, and industry leaders under one roof to shape the country’s AI roadmap.

    Arriving at a time when artificial intelligence has shifted from buzzword to backbone of modern economies, the summit, backed by the Indiaai mission, aims to explore how India can lead the charge in responsible, inclusive, and human-centred AI adoption.

    The impressive line-up includes some of the sharpest minds across business, academia, and technology: Infosys chairman & co-founder Kris Gopalakrishnan, Microsoft India & South Asia COO Himani Agrawal, Accenture MD & lead – India business Saurabh Kumar Sahu, Mckinsey & Company partner Aparajita Puri, Kpmg India partner & national leader – industrial manufacturing S Sathish, L&T Construction corporate centre head R Ganesan and Fractal CTO Shashidhar Ramakrishnaiah.

    Through a mix of keynote sessions and power panels, discussions will range from AI-driven manufacturing and data intelligence to smart governance, sustainable innovation, and digital inclusion. The event promises to deliver a panoramic view of how AI is rewriting India’s economic and industrial playbook.

    As one of the most anticipated events in India’s tech calendar, the summit will also be broadcast across Business Today’s vast multi-platform network, spanning print, broadcast, and digital, ensuring that the ideas shaping the nation’s AI future reach millions.

    Register here: https://subscriptions.intoday.in/businesstoday-ai-conference/registration
     

  • Hamara Vinayak takes faith online as God joins the digital revolution

    Hamara Vinayak takes faith online as God joins the digital revolution

    MUMBAI: Some friendships are made in heaven; others are coded in Mumbai. Hamara Vinayak, the first-ever digital original from Siddharth Kumar Tewary’s Swastik Stories, turns the divine into the delightful, serving up a story that’s equal parts start-up hustle and spiritual hustle.

    Some tech start-ups chase unicorns. This one already has a god on board. Hamara Vinayak takes the leap from temple bells to notification pings and it does so with heart, humour and a healthy dose of the divine.
    At its core, the show asks a simple but audacious question: what if God wasn’t up there, but right beside you, maybe even debugging your life over a cup of chai?

    The show’s tagline, “God isn’t distant… He’s your closest friend” perfectly captures its quirky soul. Across its first two episodes, screened exclusively for media in Mumbai, the series proves that enlightenment can come with a good punchline.

    The series follows a group of ambitious young entrepreneurs running a Mumbai-based tech start-up that lets people around the world book exclusive virtual poojas at India’s most revered shrines. But as their app grows, so do their ethical grey zones. Into this chaos walks Vinayak, played with soulful serenity and sly wit by the charming Namit Das, a young man whose calm smile hides something celestial. 

    Tewar extreme left with the caste

    He’s got the peaceful look of a saint but the wit of someone who could out-think your favourite stand-up comic. Around him spins a crew of dream-driven youngsters – Luv Vispute, Arnav Bhasin, Vaidehi Nair and Saloni Daini who run a Mumbai-based tech start-up offering devotees across the world the chance to book “exclusive” poojas at India’s most sacred shrines. It’s a business plan that blends belief and broadband – and, as the story unfolds, also tests the moral compass of its ambitious founders.

    “The first time I read the script, I found the character very pretty,” Namit joked at the post-screening interaction. “It’s a beautiful thought that God isn’t distant, he’s your closest friend. And playing Vinayak, you feel that calm but also his cleverness. He’s the friend who makes you think.”

    The reactions to the series ranged from smiles to sighs of wonder. Viewers were charmed by the show’s sincerity and sparkle, a quality that stems from its creator’s belief that faith can be funny without being frivolous.

    Among the cast, Luv Vispute shines brightest, his comic timing adding sparkle to the show’s more reflective beats. But what keeps Hamara Vinayak engaging is the easy rhythm of its writing – one moment touching, the next teasing, always gently reminding us that spirituality doesn’t have to be solemn.

    Luv spoke fondly of his long association with Swastik. “Since my first show was with Swastik, this feels like home,” he said. “Every project with them is positive, feel-good, and this one just had such a different vibe. I truly feel blessed.”

    Saloni Daini, who brings infectious warmth to her role, added that she signed up the moment she heard the show was about “Bappa.”

    “We shot during the Ganpati festival,” she recalled. “The energy on set was incredible festive, faithful, and full of laughter. It’s such a relatable story for our generation: chaos, friendship, love, kindness, and faith all mixed together.”

    vinyak

    Vaidehi Nair and Arnav Bhasin complete the ensemble, each representing different shades of ambition and morality in the start-up’s journey. Their camaraderie is easy and believable, a testament to how much the cast connected off-screen as well.

    This clever fusion of mythology and modernity plays to India’s two enduring loves, entertainment and faith. Mythology has long been the comfort zone of Indian storytellers, from the televised epics of the 1980s to the glossy remakes that still command prime-time TRPs. For decades, gods have been our most bankable heroes. But Hamara Vinayak tweaks the formula not by preaching, but by laughing with its characters, and sometimes, at their confusion about where divinity ends and data begins.

    Creator Siddharth Kumar Tewary, long hailed as Indian television’s myth-maker for shows like Mahabharat, Radha Krishn and Porus, explained the show’s intent with characteristic clarity, “This is our first story where we are talking directly to the audience, not through a platform,” he said. “We wanted to connect young people with our culture to say that God isn’t someone you only worship; He’s your friend, walking beside you, even when you take the wrong path. The story may be simple, but the thought is big.”

    That blend of philosophy and playfulness runs through the show. “We had to keep asking ourselves why we’re doing this,” Tewary added. “It’s tricky to make something positive and spiritual for the OTT audience, they’ve changed, they want nuance, not sermons. But when the purpose is clear, everything else aligns.”

    For the creator of some of Indian TV’s most lavish spectacles, Hamara Vinayak marks a refreshing tonal shift. Here, Tewary trades celestial kingdoms for co-working spaces and cosmic battles for office banter. Yet his signature remains: an eye for allegory, a love for faith-infused storytelling, and an understanding that belief is most powerful when it feels personal.

    Hamara Vinayak, after all, feels less like a sermon and more like a conversation over chai about what success means, what faith costs, and why even the gods might be rooting for a start-up’s Series A round.

    As Namit Das reflected during the Q&A, “Life gives us many magical, divine moments we just forget to notice them. Sometimes even through a phone screen, you see something that redirects you. That’s a Vinayak moment.”

    The series also mirrors a larger cultural pivot. As audiences migrate from television to OTT, myth-inspired tales are finding new form and flexibility online. The digital screen lets creators like Tewary reinvent the genre, giving ancient ideas a modern interface, without losing the emotional charge that’s made mythology India’s storytelling backbone for decades.

    In a country where faith trends faster than any hashtag, Hamara Vinayak feels both familiar and refreshingly new, a comedy that’s blessed with heart, humour and just enough philosophy to keep the binge holy.

    For a country where mythology remains the oldest streaming service, Tewary’s move from TV to OTT feels both natural and necessary. Indian storytellers have always turned to gods for drama, guidance and TRPs from Ramayan and Mahabharat on Doordarshan to glossy mytho-dramas on prime time. But digital platforms allow creators to remix reverence with realism, and in Hamara Vinayak, faith gets an interface upgrade.

    The result is a show that feels like a warm chat with destiny, part comedy, part contemplation. And in an age of cynicism, that’s no small miracle.

    As Tewary put it, smiling at his cast, “The message had to be positive. We just wanted to remind people that even in chaos, God hasn’t unfriended you.”

    With 5 episodes planned, Hamara Vinayak promises to keep walking that fine line between laughter and light. It’s mythology with memes, devotion with dialogue, and a digital-age reminder that even the cloud has a silver lining or perhaps, a divine one.

    If the first two episodes are any sign, the show doesn’t just bridge heaven and earth, it gives both a Wi-Fi connection.

  • Cinépolis and Fanta brew up a spooky treat for halloween movie nights

    Cinépolis and Fanta brew up a spooky treat for halloween movie nights

    MUMBAI: Who says chills only come from the big screen? This Halloween, Cinépolis India and Fanta are serving up a frightfully fun experience that’s equal parts spooky and sippable.

    From 24 October to 6 November, moviegoers can enjoy a halloween combo featuring nachos and unlimited Fanta refills, all wrapped up in specially designed, Halloween-themed cups. The offer, aptly themed “Sip the spook. snack the fun”, brings a playful fizz to the season of frights.

    Cinépolis India managing director Devang Sampat said, “At Cinépolis, we believe in turning every visit to the cinema into an experience that connects with our audiences. Collaborations like this with Fanta allow us to engage with our younger patrons in ways that are playful yet experiential. As India’s festive calendar becomes more diverse, we see growing interest in global cultural moments like Halloween, and we are excited to bring that spirit alive within our cinemas.”

    As the world of cinema meets the world of candy corn and cobwebs, this collaboration promises a refreshing twist for the Halloween-curious crowd. Available across Cinépolis cinemas nationwide, except at Cinépolis ireo, Cinépolis savitri, and Cinépolis Vip, the offer lets you sip, snack, and spook your way through your favourite films.

  • Jabali.ai levels up with AI game studio launch

    Jabali.ai levels up with AI game studio launch

    MUMBAI: Move over, joysticks,  it’s time for genius sticks. Jabali.ai has rolled out Jabali Studio, a groundbreaking AI-powered platform that turns anyone with a spark of imagination into a game creator. Whether you fancy yourself the next Hideo Kojima or just want to dabble in digital storytelling, this platform promises to make game creation as easy as playing one.

    Launched on 29 October 2025 in Mumbai, Jabali Studio blends art and algorithm, allowing users to design, build, and publish 2D and 3D games without wrestling with lines of code. The platform’s mission? To make game-making a playground for everyone, from pro developers to first-time creators.

    Built around the belief that “everyone can be a game maker,” Jabali Studio offers two creative routes: vibe code for those who like to think in logic and mechanics, and design mode for the visually driven storytellers. What’s more, it plays nice with leading AI systems like Openai, Gemini, Claude, and Grok: meaning creators can collaborate with their favourite digital co-pilot.

    “Game creation has long been limited by the complexity of tools and the need for large technical teams,” said Jabali.ai founder and CEO Vatsal Bhardwaj. “Jabali Studio changes that by combining AI, creativity, and accessibility in one environment. This is a step towards a future where game development is open, intuitive, and limitless.”

    The platform also boasts smart features such as self-healing projects that fix broken builds automatically, AI-powered debugging, and intelligent publishing to Jabali.ai. Users can even choose how hands-on they want their AI assistant to be, with modes like Autonomous, Collaborative, Cautious, or Creative.

    Compatible with engines like Godot and Phaser (and soon Unity and Unreal), Jabali Studio gives creators complete source code access, ensuring they maintain ownership while learning and experimenting freely.

    Backed by 5 million dollars in seed funding from Bitkraft Ventures, Sapphire Ventures, and the Sony Innovation Fund, Jabali.ai is staking its claim as a global pioneer in AI-driven game creation.

  • Fevicol sticks it to the Louvre heist with witty real-time masterstroke

    Fevicol sticks it to the Louvre heist with witty real-time masterstroke

    MUMBAI: Paris lost a jewel, but Fevicol stole the moment! In a stroke of sticky brilliance, Fevicol turned the recent Louvre Museum jewel heist into a marketing masterpiece, proving once again that no global moment escapes its famously “mazboot jod” (strong bond).

    As social media buzzed with Dhoom 2 and Mission Impossible references after the theft, Fevicol, crafted by Schbang, slid smoothly into the conversation. Their cheeky post read, “Ab Dhoom machane ki hamari baari” (Now it’s our turn to make an impact), suggesting that if the display case had been sealed with Fevicol, the heist would’ve been, quite literally, impossible.

    The tongue-in-cheek ad glued together global pop culture and local wit, making audiences chuckle while subtly flexing the brand’s promise of unbreakable bonds. And the numbers spoke louder than any art critic, over 41 million views, 73,000 shares, and 165,000 interactions in just five days.

    Fevicol’s vice president of marketing Rajiv Subramanian, put it best, “Every global moment is a canvas for creativity and we love adding Fevicol’s sticky twist.”

    Senior creative strategist Sanyukta Jamkhedkar revealed that the idea came naturally, “When the team saw the news, someone joked, ‘Fevicol laga diya hota!’ That’s how seamlessly it began.”

    By blending topical humour with desi flair, Fevicol once again proved that it doesn’t just join conversations, it cements them. From furniture to fandoms, if it’s trending, Fevicol’s got it stuck.
     

  • Saksham Kohli hops over to FCB India as president of new venture

    Saksham Kohli hops over to FCB India as president of new venture

    GURGAON: Saksham Kohli has landed at FCB India as president of FCB NEO, marking the end of a nearly seven-year stint at Cheil Worldwide where he shepherded Samsung’s flagship mobile campaigns.

    The move, announced this month, sees Kohli swapping his associate vice-president perch at Cheil—where he orchestrated integrated campaigns for Samsung’s mobile portfolio and ecosystem products—for the top job at FCB’s new venture.

    At Cheil since 2019, Kohli climbed from director of client services to associate vice-president, spending his final months managing full-funnel marketing strategies that blended creative, digital and media. Before that, he put in three years at Ogilvy, steering brands including Perfetti Van Melle, Pernod Ricard India, BMW Mini and Dupont through 40-odd large-scale integrated campaigns.

    His advertising pedigree includes a two-and-a-half-year spell at FCB Global (2013-2016) handling Whirlpool’s India operations, plus stints at McCann on Aircel, Ogilvy & Mather on KFC India, Publicis on Beam Global Spirits & Wine, and BBDO India on Wrigley’s and Hewlett Packard.

    Kohli’s pitch: marketing that starts with understanding people and ends with measurable impact. Whether FCB Neo delivers on that promise remains to be seen—but with a Samsung-sized portfolio under his belt, he’s certainly had the practice.

  • Gallant serves up a smash with padel complex

    Gallant serves up a smash with padel complex

    MUMBAI: Game, set, match! Gallant Sports has just scored big. The sports infrastructure pioneer has unveiled one of India’s largest four-court padel complexes at the Jindal Steel Plant in Angul, giving the country’s fastest-growing racquet sport a grand new stage.

    Spanning nearly 10,000 square feet, the all-weather facility sets a new benchmark in design and quality. Built to international standards, each panoramic court features galvanised steel framing, 12mm tempered glass for crystal-clear visibility and high-performance artificial turf for that perfect bounce. The complex is illuminated by advanced LED lighting, ensuring the rallies don’t stop when the sun goes down.

    Awarded in May 2025 and completed by September, the project reflects Gallant’s signature precision and speed. “Delivering a project of this scale and quality for a prestigious client like Jindal is a moment of immense pride,” said Gallant Sports & Infra founder and CEO Nasir Ali. “Padel is the fastest-growing racquet sport globally, and this complex puts Jindal’s township on the map as a premier sporting destination.”

    More than a showcase of engineering excellence, the facility aims to bring communities together through sport, fitness and friendly competition. With playability ensured year-round and courts that meet every international specification, this padel paradise is ready to rally the region.

    From steel to serves, Jindal’s latest addition proves that when it comes to passion and precision, Gallant Sports always plays to win.

     

  • Radcliffe Schools reimagine learning with 2.0

    Radcliffe Schools reimagine learning with 2.0

    MUMBAI: Education just got an upgrade. The Radcliffe Group of Schools has rolled out Radcliffe 2.0, a bold new chapter in schooling that promises to prepare children not just for exams, but for life itself.

    With 20 campuses across India and more on the way, Radcliffe’s transformation marks a shift from traditional classrooms to future-ready learning spaces that spark curiosity, creativity and character in equal measure.

    For over 15 years, Radcliffe has been synonymous with quality education and academic excellence. Now, through its Radspark framework, the school is setting a fresh benchmark with five learning pillars, skill development, personalised pathways, applied learning & agency, relationships & values, and keystone attributes. Together, they power the spark score, a unique index tracking every learner’s academic, emotional and creative growth.

    Adding to the mix are flagship programmes such as Reach (language and communication skills), Raise (life skills and leadership), and Spa (sports and performing arts). From immersive labs to hands-on learning, Radcliffe 2.0 is designed to connect knowledge with the real world, and to make learning a lived experience rather than a race for marks.

    “Radcliffe 2.0 is more than a rebranding; it’s a reimagining of education in India,” said Radcliffe Schools CEO Himanshu Yagnik. “Our aim is to nurture learners who are rooted in values, ready for the future, and resilient in spirit.”

    With its refreshed identity and renewed purpose, Radcliffe 2.0 brings together innovation, empathy and excellence, lighting the way for a generation of students ready to lead with heart and head in harmony.

     

  • Business Today powers up with AI Summit 2025

    Business Today powers up with AI Summit 2025

    MUMBAI: When intelligence meets innovation, the future takes shape. Business Today, India’s leading business news platform from the India Today Group, is bringing together the brightest minds under one roof for the Business Today AI Summit 2025, being held today in Bengaluru.

    At a time when Artificial Intelligence has leapt from buzzword to boardroom, the summit aims to decode how India can harness its power responsibly, inclusively and at scale. Backed by the India AI Mission, the event marks a key milestone in India’s journey to becoming a global hub for ethical AI innovation.

    The summit’s power-packed line-up features some of the biggest names across technology, policy and industry, including Infosys co-founder and chairman Kris Gopalakrishnan; Microsoft India & South Asia COO Himani Agrawal; Accenture managing director & lead India business Saurabh Kumar Sahu; McKinsey & Company partner Aparajita Puri; and Fractal CTO Shashidhar Ramakrishnaiah. Also joining them are L&T Construction’s R. Ganesan and KPMG’s Sathish in India.

    Through a series of keynotes and panel discussions, the Business Today AI Summit 2025 will explore how artificial intelligence is transforming industries, from manufacturing and finance to healthcare, education and sustainability. It will also examine how India can lead the global conversation on ethical and human-centric AI deployment.

    As the buzz around AI continues to grow, this summit promises to cut through the hype and focus on what truly matters: how intelligence, both human and artificial, can power progress.

     

  • 1702 Digital taps Vishal Dhar to lead digital charge

    1702 Digital taps Vishal Dhar to lead digital charge

    MUMBAI: 1702 Digital is betting on experience to fuel its next growth spurt. The Mumbai-based consultancy, which bills itself as one of India’s fastest-growing full-service digital transformation shops, has appointed Vishal Dhar as vice president of digital—a move designed to muscle up its strategic firepower in an increasingly crowded market.

    Dhar will lead digital strategy, performance marketing and innovation initiatives, working alongside the leadership team to sharpen the agency’s integrated offerings. His brief: drive large-scale campaigns that marry data-driven insights with creativity whilst delivering measurable results.

    The appointment comes as 1702 Digital pushes to redefine how brands connect with audiences through what it calls a blend of creativity, technology and measurable impact. Translation: no fluff, all outcomes.

    “I’m thrilled to join 1702 Digital at a time when the digital space is evolving faster than ever,” said Dhar. “The agency’s bold approach, creative agility and focus on impact-driven results resonate deeply with my own vision. I look forward to contributing to the next phase of 1702’s growth and driving success for our clients.”

    1702 Digital co-founder Mihir Joshi welcomed the hire as a strategic upgrade. “Vishal’s experience and strategic mindset will further elevate our digital capabilities and strengthen our position as a leading partner for brands looking to achieve transformative growth through digital innovation.”

    Founder & managing director Aanchal Arora doubled down on the sentiment. “His experience and understanding of the evolving digital landscape make him a perfect fit for our next phase of growth. As we continue to expand our digital ecosystem, Vishal’s leadership and strategic insight will play a pivotal role in elevating our capabilities and reinforcing 1702 Digital’s position as a creative powerhouse.”

    The hire marks a key milestone in 1702 Digital’s expansion trajectory, signalling ambitions to move beyond fast-growing upstart status into established player territory. Dhar brings extensive experience across marketing, digital transformation and business growth—credentials the agency clearly believes will help it punch above its weight in pitches and delivery.

    Whether 1702 Digital’s bet on seasoned leadership translates into the transformative growth its founders promise remains to be seen. But in an industry where digital expertise is currency and results are king, hiring someone who’s driven large-scale campaigns before is a sensible play. Now Dhar just needs to prove he can do it again—this time with 1702’s name on the work.