Tag: Diwan Arun Nanda

  • Adman Diwan Arun Nanda gave India a marketing conscience

    Adman Diwan Arun Nanda gave India a marketing conscience

    MUMBAI: Diwan Arun Nanda who passed away this week was one of the founding fathers of independent Indian advertising and co-founder of the agency Rdiffusion.  Over half a century, Nanda transformed the way Indians understood brands, and equally, how brands understood Indians. His legacy lies not just in memorable campaigns but in the rare conviction that advertising should win trust, not merely attention.

    Born in Mumbai in 1948, Nanda belonged to the pioneering first batch of the Indian Institute of Management, Ahmedabad, where he graduated with a gold medal for academic excellence. He joined Hindustan Lever as part of its celebrated management trainee programme, a finishing school for the country’s future business leaders.

    At Lever, Nanda’s intuitive grasp of consumer recall and semiotics surfaced quickly. He was instrumental in introducing Rin’s lightning-bolt symbol, a clean graphic that turned detergent into iconography. Household recognition was instantaneous, and so was the reputation of a young executive whose instincts straddled both commerce and creativity.

    In 1973, tired of working within large corporate structures and spotting an opening in India’s communication landscape, Nanda teamed up with Ajit Balakrishnan and Mohammed Khan to found Rediffusion. Their move came at a time when multinational agencies dominated the client rosters. A truly Indian firm challenging the giants was seen as audacious.

    The gamble paid off spectacularly. Their win of the Eveready batteries account, with the deceptively simple line “The chosen one. For your transistor,” established Rediffusion as a creative force that could shape consumer culture. For the first time, Indian advertising talent was asserting that local creativity did not have to play second fiddle to imported gloss.

    Over the next decades, Nanda marshalled Rediffusion into one of the country’s great agencies, winning clients across telecom, consumer goods, airlines and banking. Its campaigns became pop-culture staples. Rediffusion was cheeky, self-assured and intensely Indian—and at its helm was a leader who prized rigour as much as wit.
    If Nanda delighted in bold slogans, he was equally defined by what he refused to sell. When a magazine failed to live up to readership claims touted in Rediffusion’s ads, Nanda chose to resign the account, believing his agency had, however inadvertently, misled consumers. Few contemporaries would have walked away. He did so without fanfare, only with the conviction that trust was more valuable in the long run than billings.

    This rare streak of principle separated him from peers in an industry where sleight of hand often outpaces substance. To Nanda, advertising was about persuasion, not deception; about clarity, not cleverness for its own sake.

    Nanda’s influence stretched beyond the confines of the ad world. In the 1980s he advised prime minister Rajiv Gandhi on communications, contributing to the narrative of a youthful, reform-minded leadership. He struck a joint venture with global player Young & Rubicam, strengthening Rediffusion’s international profile without sacrificing its independence.

    Corporate India also sought his judgement. He served as a director on the boards of Air India, Eveready, Kingfisher Airlines and Yes Bank, his counsel valued for its mix of marketing acumen, strategic vision and clean governance.

    Colleagues fondly recall Nanda’s insistence on discipline and clarity. He was a mentor who disdained jargon and demanded that ideas shine through in the simplest possible way. In an age when advertising was becoming increasingly performative, he grounded his protégés in first principles: honesty, insight, storytelling.

    He often reflected with pride on Rediffusion’s long journey, which he described as “a dream run”. It was one of the few Indian-founded agencies to achieve scale, reputation and global stature without being absorbed by a multinational. That sense of independence mirrored Nanda’s own personality—ambitious, exacting, yet unfailingly proud of domestic creativity.

    With his passing, Indian advertising loses not only a giant but also a moral compass. Nanda represented a generation that carved out space for Indian talent at a time of foreign dominance, that proved ideas from Mumbai could rival Madison Avenue, and that insisted commercial success meant little if not grounded in integrity.

    Today’s industry, beset by algorithms, influencer culture and data-driven messaging, may seem far from the world of transistors and detergents in which Nanda first honed his craft. But the central lessons he preached—that a brand must earn trust, that persuasion must be rooted in truth—remain as urgent as ever.

    Diwan Arun Nanda’s journey—from a meticulous trainee at Hindustan Lever to a mentor of agencies, CEOs and politicians—was, as he himself would admit, a testament to ambition without compromise. His campaigns lit up households, but it was his conscience that set him apart.

  • Adman Diwan Arun Nanda, co-founder of Rediffusion, passes away

    Adman Diwan Arun Nanda, co-founder of Rediffusion, passes away

    MUMBAI: Diwan Arun Nanda, one of Indian advertising’s towering figures and co-founder of the agency Rediffusion, passed away this week in Mumbai. He was 76.

    Born in 1948, Nanda cut his teeth at Hindustan Lever after graduating as a gold medallist from the Indian Institute of Management, Ahmedabad. His early work included the lightning-bolt logo for Rin detergent, which seared itself into household memory.

    In 1973, with Ajit Balakrishnan and Mohammed Khan, he set up Rediffusion, thumbing his nose at the global giants then ruling the market. A coup soon came with Eveready’s transistor-battery campaign—“The chosen one”—that announced the firm’s creative muscle.

    Over the next decades Nanda steered Rediffusion into the premier league, wooing clients from telecoms to fast-moving consumer goods. His fame rested not just on catchy slogans but on fierce integrity. When a magazine failed to deliver on claims hyped in its ads, he promptly gave up the account, unwilling to mislead.

    Nanda’s reach went well beyond Madison Avenue. He advised prime minister Rajiv Gandhi in the 1980s, forged a tie-up with Young & Rubicam, and sat on the boards of Air India, Eveready, Kingfisher Airlines and Yes Bank. Colleagues remember him as a demanding mentor who valued clarity and principles as much as creativity.

    “Rediffusion’s journey was a dream run,” he once said. His death marks the close of an era in Indian advertising—an era of audacity, pride in home-grown talent, and the rare refusal to compromise.

  • Rediffusion throws open consumer research wing Red Lab

    Rediffusion throws open consumer research wing Red Lab

    MUMBAI: Rediffusion Brand Solutions has launched its specialised consumer research and analysis wing called Rediffusion Consumer Lab (Red Lab).

    This unit will specialise in consumer understanding, consumer behaviour and trend spotting to come up with actionable business intelligence which can then lead to brand solutions. Red Lab will be reporting to Rediffusion joint president Navonil Chatterjee.

    Rediffusion Group chairman Diwan Arun Nanda said, “I have always believed in the power of brands, and brand building is all about looking beyond the short term and focussing on the long term. It involves understanding consumer behaviour and sometimes, even changing consumer habits. That’s possible only through actionable, data-backed intelligence and not lose assumptions and vague gut feelings. And Red Lab will be that voice of wise counsel for our client partners and prospects.”

    Rediffusion Brand Solutions managing director Sandeep Goyal added, “This was a clear priority area so far as I was concerned. In the olden days, sailors looked at stars and constellations to navigate their way around in the high seas. To tide over the choppy waters of a hypercompetitive market, brands too need guiding stars and accurate category, market and consumer information can be those guide-marks for brands. Besides right from my Airtel and Mogae days, I have been a strong advocate of data-based marketing and this is a step in that direction from Rediffusion.”

    Chatterjee said, “Think of it as a first step towards brand consultancy. We already had some fantastic brand workshopping and creative ideation tools and techniques. Coupled with that, this consumer intelligence gathering wing will help us further in spotting trends and insight mining, and we sincerely hope that we end up mining gold here.”

  • Sandeep Goyal to take over as the managing director of Rediffusion

    Sandeep Goyal to take over as the managing director of Rediffusion

    New Delhi: Advertising agency Rediffusion founders Diwan Arun Nanda and Ajit Balakrishnan on Monday announced their decision to step back from the day-to-day management of the ad agency.

    Mogae Media founder and chairman and industry veteran Sandeep Goyal, who served as president of Rediffusion  from 1997 to 2001, will take over as the managing director.

    The 48-year-old agency has been acquired by Goyal led Integrated marketing and communications agency Mogae Media which was set up in 2012. The deal also includes sibling agency Everest Brand Solutions.

    While Nanda will continue to mentor the agency and will stay on as chairman, Balakrishnan will step back from all day-to-day operations here. “He will focus his attention on Rediff.com, the technology world and public service and will be always available to Rediffusion for any guidance it may need going forward,” said the agency in a statement issued on Monday.

    One of the largest independent full service ad agencies, Rediffusion was set up in July, 1973 by Diwan Arun Nanda, Ajit Balkrishnan, and Mohammed Khan. In 1994, agency holding network WPP had acquired Rediffusion and merged it with US agency Young & Rubicam (Y&R) to form Rediffusion Y&R. In 2018, Nanda and Balakrishnan gained 100 per cent control of the agency to become an independent entity once again.

    Over the years, it has created some of India’s most iconic and memorable advertising for brands like Jenson & Nicholson, Eveready, Parle, Garden Vareli, Godfrey Phillips, Tata Tea, Lakmé, Telco (Tata Motors), Colgate Palmolive, Citibank and Maruti Suzuki.

    It was also credited for launching the brand Airtel in 1995. The agency currently works with Tata Sons, Parle, Tata Trusts, Tata Motors, State Bank of India, Liebherr, Larsen & Toubro, Brookfield, PGIM, Orra, Eveready, Dey’s Medical, Sulekha, Danone, Sun Pharma, Dr. Reddy’s, Audi India and many more.

    “Rediffusion has been known over the years for ‘advertising that became famous and part of the language and the culture of the people’, and helped brands build long term, and lasting equity with consumers”, said Rediffusion chairman Diwan Arun Nanda on Monday.

    ‘Whenever you see colour, think of us’ for Jenson & Nicholson was a path breaking campaign. So was ‘Hum Red & White peene walon ki baat hi kuchh aur hai’ for Red & White cigarettes, ‘Annu taazgi de de’ for Tata Tea, ‘Gimme Red!’ for Eveready and the recent ‘Isko laga dala, toh life jhingalala’ for Tata Sky. Rediffusion was also responsible for creating the cult ad film featuring AR Rahman, with the very memorable Airtel brand tune that has had the highest number of downloads in history.

  • MTS awards creative duties to Rediffusion-Y&R

    MTS awards creative duties to Rediffusion-Y&R

    MUMBAI: Telecom services provider MTS has awarded its creative duties to Rediffusion-Y&R after a multi agency pitch. Saatchi & Saatchi was the incumbent agency.

    The account size is pegged at Rs 2 billion. Rediffusion-Y&R will start work on the account from its Gurgaon office with immediate effect, the company said.

    Rediffusion-Y&R chairman and managing director Diwan Arun Nanda says, “We are delighted to be chosen to partner MTS to make them an iconic future generation telecom brand in India.”

    MTS is present in 12 telecom circles – Kolkata, West Bengal & Sikkim, Rajasthan, Chennai & Tamil Nadu, Kerala, Bihar & Jharkhand, Mumbai, Maharashtra & Goa, Delhi & NCR, Haryana, Karnataka and Andhra Pradesh. Its parent company Sistema Shyam TeleServices (SSTL) has been allocated spectrum to provide mobile telephony services in all the 22 circles across the country.

    SSTL is a joint venture between Sistema of Russia and the Shyam Group of India. Sistema is the majority shareholder in this JV with a 74 per cent equity stake; the Shyam Group holds a 23.5 per cent and the remaining 2.5 per cent is publicly held.

    SSTL chief marketing officer Leonid Musatov said, “We are glad to have Rediffusion-Y&R on board. We have found an ideal partner in them, knowing their exceptional track record in the telecom space in the past, and the zeal and passion shown by their team. I believe we will be able to take MTS to great heights with this partnership.”

    MTS claims it has over seven million subscribers in the 12 telecom circles it is operating at present. Also, MBlaze, the data service of MTS, offered in 84 towns of India, has over 0.25 million subscribers so far since its launch in November 2009.