Tag: Godrej

  • Godrej redefines ABCD on Children’s Day

    Godrej redefines ABCD on Children’s Day

    Mumbai: Godrej Group has launched a new campaign for Children’s Day that redefines all 26 letters of English. The new-age ABC song was released on the group’s social media pages.

    Sung in the same tune as the traditional ABC, it makes the learning process easy and catchy. The song aims to help little ones grow and live better, thereby promoting a society and nation that thrive. The song aspires to help raise the children to be genuine, well-aware, and streetwise individuals who learned facts and values early in their lives.

    With a vision of replacing the traditional ABC with the new-age ABC, Godrej Group has tied up with Teach For India for an on-ground partnership. They will be posting the video on their social media handles as well as sharing it with their fellows, who will make videos/reels of them reciting this new ABCD song. Going forward, we will be approaching more schools and the Educational Board of India to include ABC in the pre-school curriculum.

    Speaking on the launch of the new ABC song, Godrej Group executive director and chief brand officer Tanya Dubash said, “It is imperative that children learn and inculcate the right attitudes and habits at a tender age. Since Children’s Day is extra special for us at Godrej, we thought of gifting our kids with a song that will help them become better individuals tomorrow, even as they learn the basics of the alphabet. The new ABC song will therefore be an appropriate introduction to learning for the children of today.”

    Speaking about the partnership, Teach For India CEO and founder trustee Shaheen Mistri added, “At Teach For India, we keep children at the centre of everything that we do. We want every child to reach their truest potential by giving them access to an excellent, reimagined education. With the new-age ABCDs, we can start to sow the seeds of what children can truly imagine for themselves, for others, and for India.”

    Creativeland Asia co-founder and creative vice chairman Anu Joseph said, “With so many things changing around us over the last couple of years, we thought kids should have a new set of things to remember and learn. Therefore, this new-age ABC song.

  • Moshi Moshi wins the social media mandate of Godrej Jersey

    Moshi Moshi wins the social media mandate of Godrej Jersey

    Mumbai: Godrej Jersey has assigned its social media mandate to Moshi Moshi, one of India’s leading and fastest-growing communication companies.

    The mandate was won through a competitive pitch process. The directive includes managing the brand presence on social media to create greater awareness, trust and engagement across all customer and segment profiles through strategic brand campaigns and communication.

    Speaking on the appointment of Moshi Moshi, Godrej Jersey assistant general manager of marketing Ajesh Sathyababu said, “We aim to engage consumers and reiterate the message of purity, thickness, and the right blend of nutrition across Godrej Jersey’s product portfolio. To do so, we are glad to partner with Moshi Moshi as they understand the local business climate and correspond with our brand’s values. Through this partnership, we aim to create a space for the cross-pollination of ideas and opportunities for social media collaboration with Moshi Moshi.”

    Adding to it, Moshi Moshi co-founder & creative director Ajay Bothra, said, “Moshi Moshi has always aimed at providing a value proposition to generate relevant, long-lasting, and captivating communication to all our clients. We will continue to deliver with the same zeal and commitment to Godrej Jersey as well. We are delighted to have them on board and look forward to stirring the dairy market with some innovative & creative campaigns.”

  • Godrej Magic hand wash launches new campaign with Madhuri Dixit

    Godrej Magic hand wash launches new campaign with Madhuri Dixit

    Mumbai: Godrej Magic hand wash has announced actress Madhuri Dixit as the brand ambassador for its Godrej Magic Handwash powder-to-liquid handwash.

    The brand also launched a new TVC, conceptualised by Creativeland Asia, that showcases Madhuri highlighting the features of this sustainably viable hygiene product.

    As Bollywood’s reigning diva for a number of years, the actor has a vast and loyal fanbase who look up to her in various aspects. With a new movie in the pipeline, an appearance on a popular dance reality show, and fresh off the success of her OTT debut, Madhuri’s popularity spans across age groups and geographies. This association aims to bring together her legendary charm and Godrej Magic’s brand values to encourage people to prioritise handwashing and make sustainable choices.

    Speaking about this association, Godrej Consumer Products Limited chief marketing officer Somashree Bose said, “Godrej Magic Handwash is a first-of-its-kind product that is a leap in innovation and sustainability in the hygiene category. This product has made adopting a hygienic lifestyle easy, affordable, and fun. Godrej Magic has already taken over one-fifth of the Indian hand wash market by volume. We are delighted to have Madhuri Dixit onboard the Magic brand for the journey ahead. This brand affiliation with Madhuri will further help us penetrate deeper into the Indian market, creating accessibility and promoting a germ-free India.”

    Speaking about this collaboration, Madhuri Dixit said, “I am excited to be associated with Godrej Magic Handwash, which is India’s first powder to liquid hand wash and a pioneer in the category. This handwash format is innovative and an affordable solution to address the pressing social issue of hand hygiene. Magic Handwash is an environmentally friendly product as it reduces plastic and fuel consumption.”

    “I am very particular about hygiene myself and follow it diligently with my family. Hand washing and tooth brushing are the two hygiene routines that I require my children to follow at all times. I, along with the team at Godrej, aim to inspire people to create awareness. Eco-friendly products inspire people not just to protect themselves from germs but also to take a step forward towards sustainability,” she added.

  • Amit Dhawan joins Art-E MediaTech as partner & CEO

    Amit Dhawan joins Art-E MediaTech as partner & CEO

    MUMBAI: Art-E MediaTech, a full-service marketing and advertising agency, has announced the appointment of Amit Dhawan as its CEO and the newest partner in the firm.

    An IIM Ahmedabad alumnus, Dhawan was previously with Schbang as the founding partner and business head for their Delhi office, where he was responsible for setting up the business in the North as well as leading the company’s media business. In his eight plus years of experience, he has worked with a diverse set of 200+ brands, including Johnson & Johnson, Panasonic, Godrej, Cipla, Realme, and more.

    “While we empower ourselves to meet the changing marketing landscape, we must have the solid support of people that will propel us forward. Having someone of Amit Dhawan’s calibre join us brings rich expertise in driving our clients to a reputable position in the marketplace, combined with qualitative and admirable leadership skills and knowledge,” said Art-E co-founder Rohit Sakunia. “We are delighted to welcome Amit as our partner as we continue to grow and disrupt the industry.” Art-E was founded by Rohit Sakunia, Tejender Sharma, and Animesh Mukherjee in 2018.

    Amit Dhawan said, “I am excited about becoming a part of Art-E, which has always been at the forefront of delivering meaningful and true solutions to its clients by seamlessly integrating creative, tech, and media. By applying the learning I have had so far, I hope to make a meaningful difference to the business of our clients.”

    Dhawan has also been featured in the ’30 under 30′ list by Agency Reporter as well as amongst the Top 100 smartest digital marketing leaders by the World Digital Marketing Congress, Global Federation of Digital Marketing, World Federation of Marketing Professionals, and CMO Asia.

  • Nadir Godrej felicitated with ‘Exemplary Industrialist of the Nation’ awards

    Nadir Godrej felicitated with ‘Exemplary Industrialist of the Nation’ awards

    Mumbai: Sashakt Bharat 2022 on Friday awarded Godrej Industries chairman and managing director Nadir Godrej with the ‘Exemplary Industrialist of the Nation’ award for his outstanding contributions to the Indian industry and his role in bringing pride to the nation.

    Nadir was named as the winner of this award in recognition of his achievements as a conscientious, well-respected, and prosperous industrialist.

    He was awarded at the coffee table book launch ceremony at the Sashakt Bharat 2022, an initiative by Abhyudaya Vatsyalam to honour the glorious story of India’s development and the stellar personalities associated with it.

    On winning this award, Nadir said, “It is indeed an honour to receive this prestigious award. I believe we at Godrej are privileged to be part of our country’s growth journey by being able to serve our nation through our innovative products and solutions. I wish to thank the esteemed board of guest editors for this recognition.”

    The launch ceremony witnessed the presence of Aditya Birla Centre community initiatives and rural development chairperson Rajashree Birla as the chief guest. HDFC group chairman Deepak Parekh was also the guest of honour, along with Nadir Godrej.

    The board of guest editors for this year’s list includes Shailesh Haribhakti and Associates chairman Shailesh Haribhakti, SEBI, LIC former chairman G. N. Bajpai, IndAsia Fund Advisors chairman Pradip Shah, EdelGive Foundation executive chairperson Vidya Shah, HDFC Mutual Fund MD & CEO Navneet Munot, SUD Life Insurance MD & CEO Abhay Tewari, Oswal Industries director Ravi Doshi and Universal Sompo General Insurance MD & CEO Sharad Mathur, among others.

  • We have addressed inflation concerns by understanding the needs of the consumers: GCPL CMO Somasree Bose Awasthi

    We have addressed inflation concerns by understanding the needs of the consumers: GCPL CMO Somasree Bose Awasthi

    Mumbai: Godrej Consumer Products Ltd (GCPL) on Tuesday unveiled Godrej Magic Bodywash, a ready-to-mix bodywash that aims to offer consumers a bodywash experience at the price of a soap, while ensuring it is eco-friendly by encouraging the habit of “reuse and reduce.” Actor Shah Rukh Khan has been roped in as the brand ambassador for the product and will feature in a mass awareness campaign.

    In 2018, under the ‘Magic’ portfolio, the Godrej Group’s FMCG arm launched its powder-to-liquid handwash, Godrej Magic Handwash. The bodywash is the second addition to the ready-to-mix category with which the brand hopes to empower people to make a sustainable choice for their daily life activities.

    The company also pledged Rs 100 crore to be spent over the next three years towards mass awareness initiatives endorsing the message of an environment-conscious lifestyle along with social initiatives.

    On the sidelines of the event held at Mumbai, IndianTelevision.com had an exclusive interaction with Godrej Consumer Products Ltd (GCPL) India chief marketing officer Somasree Bose Awasthi to know more about the FMCG’s sustainable initiative and what it hoped to achieve through it, both in the short as well as long terms. Awasthi also highlights the company’s plans to extend the concept of the ready-to-mix format across its other product categories, such as liquid detergent.

    A Godrej group veteran, Awasthi completes two decades at the conglomerate, having joined as a management trainee in 2003 and working her way up. She was appointed as GCPL associate vice president-marketing (personal care) & aircare in 2014 and elevated as the chief marketing officer (India) in October 2021.

    She also discusses the steps Godrej Consumer is taking to mitigate the effects of soaring inflation on the FMCG sector as a whole, as well as its marketing strategy and whether the company has reduced its AdEx and/or marketing spends to protect its bottom line in the current uncertain market conditions.

    Edited excerpts…

    On launching a new product category at a time when most FMCG companies are cost-cutting and postponing or putting on hold new launches due to rising inflation.

    Awasthi: Actually, the timing itself was an inspiration for us to launch this product. As you rightly pointed out, because of inflation, prices are only going up. Today, a 200 ml body wash would cost anywhere between Rs 100 and Rs 200, and people are possibly dropping the category. This was the time when we thought that if we cut down on the “low-utility items” (of the product), can we bring down the cost? It may sound like an oxymoron that at a time like this, we talk about reducing costs. But we realised that there was this formulation which allowed us to reduce plastic to only 16 per cent, reduce fuel to less than half, and reduce energy to just 19 per cent compared to the current body wash. Then we went right to the root and put in our margin, etc., and we realised that we could actually give it to the consumers at one-third of the cost (of a bodywash) and actually at the cost of a soap!

    So, for someone who wants to upgrade from soap to bodywash for a better experience (because it is usually softer on the skin than soap), but is unable to do so due to the inflationary pressure of rising prices, we are offering this at the price of soap.

    Thus, the timing was just right in terms of both the inflationary pressure, which we handled, while also making it environmentally sustainable.

    On whether the FMCG company hopes to target the youth and form a connection with the youth consumer segment through this “sustainable” outreach.

    Awasthi: Today, right from the youth to everyone, talks about wanting a better earth. Everybody’s aware of the climatic conditions, global warming, etc. Without a doubt, the youth enters the picture because they have strong opinions and questions about everything. This is something that they care about, so yes. But is youth the only target? No! Our TG is the changing mindset of every consumer group. Hence, this product that uses less plastic, energy, and fuel is for all those who believe that this behaviour change is critical.

    On whether the brand would look to expand the ready-to-mix concept across its other product categories, like liquid detergents.

    Awasthi: So, we have done this in the handwash category in 2018 with the powder-to-liquid handwash. Now, three to four years after that, we have incorporated it into the body wash category. And more is coming, but for that we’ll have to wait and watch.

    On addressing the challenges posed by soaring inflation in the FMCG sector, such as increase in input costs, fuel price increase, shipping costs, and so on.

    Awasthi: What we have done is try and keep the consumer at the heart of our efforts to tackle inflationary pressures. And that’s how this new product development happened. If I talk about other categories, like hair colour, for instance, we realised that people want to use the better quality of hair colour with the crème, but are unable to do so because it comes at a price of Rs 30 plus. So we launched a smaller sachet priced at Rs 15. Thus, in this inflationary environment, the smaller packet helped retain consumption behaviour without denting the pocket.

    Similarly, in other categories like soaps, we have been careful to not completely pass on the inflation to the consumer. We have also taken a hit, but we have ensured that we do not tamper with the quality of the soap.

    Thus, we have addressed the inflation concerns by understanding consumer needs at such a time. Firstly, by reducing the price, or by coming up with smaller sachets, or else by passing on some part of the inflation but not the full burden of it onto the consumer and by launching innovations like this. So there are a plethora of activities that we have undertaken to ensure that people can still afford and access our products. And this is the reason why we have been able to sustain our market leadership and also the consumer’s goodwill.

    On the overall market outlook on the FMCG sector currently- have the market conditions improved in the face of macro uncertainty and inflation?

    Awasthi: Inflationary pressures continue, and that is making us, the marketers, think differently. In the boardroom, the discussions are always around how we can ensure consumption continues. And that’s where these strategies are coming from. In such an environment where people are being very careful about what they spend, how do you ensure that your share in that pocket doesn’t come down? Hence, strategies like those spelled out earlier—reducing the product quantity, making it affordable, not touching the quality but absorbing some of the pressure, and hoping that consumers are not negatively impacted and are still able to get access to them. That’s what we are trying to do.

    On the effect on Adex, has there been a dip in the resources allocated towards advertising & marketing spends

    Awasthi: We are proud to say that we have continued launching our products and have been repositioning our advertisements. In fact, we have been adding to our advertising expenses by investing in newer products. For example, we recently shifted our Goodknight positioning from efficacy-led campaigns to a “full night’s sleep” campaign. The highlight of that campaign is the amazing bond that the father and child share and how he tries to ensure that the baby’s sleep is not disturbed. It has made it to some of the top ads recently.

    We also invested in a new category altogether. We used to advertise the toilet variant. Now we have started advertising for the aer-matic, the automatic fragrance diffuser. We are the first brand to start advertising in mass media for this premium product category (priced at Rs 570). Because even in today’s uncertain environment, there’s a certain kind of lifestyle that people want to have. It’s for those premium consumers’ benefit-seeking campaigns that we have launched this campaign.

    We are also advertising the smaller sized sachets of hair dye through Anoushka Sharma. Thus, we have relaunched, launched new products, and started new campaigns. So overall, the ATL expenditure has only gone up for us. What we believe is that at this point in time, the consumer is super-conscious of where he’s putting his money. So, if our brand is the one that is present-giving the right, relevant message to the consumers, we will get picked up. And we are seeing the fruits of that.

    On optimising the company’s advertising expenditure, which medium sees the major portion of the advertisement pie? Also, have there been any changes in ad spend allocation in the last two years since the pandemic?

    Awasti: We are chasing the consumer where they are. So we are present across 360-degree media, whether it is television, whether it is increasing investment in digital, whether it is going on print or on outdoor media. What we’re doing is segmenting the market by consumer profile and investing where we can reach the most relevant consumers. And that’s the whole strategy because every product is different.

    On changes in adspend post-pandemic, I would say, yes, there’s been a rise in the way we spend beyond television. Digital obviously has been a rightful candidate because more and more people have shifted to digital quite a bit during the pandemic, and that’s one place where we have raised our investment. Apart from that, we are doing quite a bit of print, quite a bit of outdoors etc. As I said, wherever we are getting maximum reach for our TG we are there.

    On tackling emerging competition from D2C brands in the personal care sector and marketing strategies to enhance penetration.

    Awasthi: The marketing strategy is very simple. It’s like the basics of marketing: understand the consumer’s needs in each of the categories that we are present in and, possibly, even not present in but seeing a trend. And enter the newer markets with products that are differentiated and relevant to consumers. That would be our objective. And for products where we are already leaders and doing well, that’s where we would be investing very hard to maintain our leadership.

    The emerging D2C brands are still in a very niche space, I would say, with the economy today still limited to a few. Of course, it’s growing and we have to take cognisance of it. But having said that, at the moment it’s still the general trade which is ruling the roost and that’s where Godrej has the power of distribution.

    The majority of Indian consumers still prefer to interact with their friendly neighbourhood kirana and to touch & feel a product before purchasing it. So as of now, we still have that strength. But yes, D2Cs are an emerging segment, and as and when we see fit, we will adapt our strategy to the changing environment.

  • Inflation bites FMCG consumption, demand remains low

    Inflation bites FMCG consumption, demand remains low

    Mumbai: The major players in the FMCG sector, Marico and Godrej Consumer Products Ltd, hint that inflation continued to ‘hit hard’ FMCG industry and demand remained soft in the June quarter.

    According to Marico, current trends indicate that consumers “titrated consumption” in some non-essential categories and either “downtraded among brands or switched to smaller packs” in the essential categories.

    In its quarterly update for Q1 FY23 Marico said, “In the given context, India business volumes declined in mid-single digits. The performance was particularly dragged by a sharp drop in Saffola Oils. Excluding Saffola Oils, the India business posted marginal volume growth. Parachute Coconut Oil recorded a minor volume decline.”

    Marico said it maintains its aspiration of “delivering sustainable and profitable volume-led growth over the medium term”.

    According to Godrej Consumer Products Ltd (GCPL), the country’s FMCG industry continued to be “hit hard by inflation levels” leading to successive price hikes as well as impacting volumes during the three months ended June.

    A recent update revealed that in the first quarter of the current fiscal, the leading FMCG player said that the rural markets witnessed slower growth compared to urban markets during the period.

    GCPL expects to deliver early double-digit sales growth on a high base in India and the growth will be mostly “price-driven”. The company would have “mid-single-digit volumes drop on a high base, with a three-year volume compound annual growth rate (CAGR) close to mid-single digits,” in the domestic market.

    “The Indian FMCG industry continued to remain soft during the quarter. It continued to be hit hard by inflation levels aggravating due to geopolitical tensions, leading to successive price increases and impacting volumes,” GCPL said.

    Inflation impacts markets worldwide

    In recent months, inflation has been on the rise in most markets worldwide.

    Among the international markets, GCPL said that Indonesia, which is the company’s second-largest market after India, also faced an impact on consumption and margins.

    “In Indonesia, with hygiene performance waning after COVID-19 and a large hygiene comparator in base, we expect a high single-digit sales decline. The sales performance excluding hygiene was largely flat,” it said.

    GCPL said that it is putting building blocks in place to drive category development and general trade distribution to ensure gradual recovery in the medium term.

    “In Godrej Africa, USA, and the Middle East, we continued our growth momentum across most of our key countries of operations. We expect to deliver double-digit sales growth, with a continued focus on driving sustainable, profitable sales growth,” it said.

    Further, it expects constant currency sales growth in the high teens in Latin America business.

    “At a consolidated level, we continue to leverage our category and geographic portfolio. We expect to deliver high single-digit sales growth and a three-year CAGR in double-digits,” the company said.

    With respect to profitability in the June quarter, GCPL expects lower year-on-year EBITDA (Earnings Before Interest Tax Depreciation and Amortisation) margins.

    “This is due to input inflation, upfront marketing investments to drive category development and weak performance in Indonesia,” GCPL said.

    On the other hand, Marico’s international business maintained “strong momentum, delivering high-teen constant currency growth.” It experienced growth in all markets and managed to remain on the path of sustained profitable growth.

    The company expects “consolidated revenue in the quarter ended marginally higher on a year-on-year basis.”

    Dabur’s international business is expected to register a “high single-digit revenue growth” during the April-June quarter in constant currency.

    “Overall, the consolidated revenue is expected to grow in the mid to high single digits. We continue to grow ahead of category growths and gain market share in most of our segments,” Dabur said.

    Mixed performance in the domestic market

    In the domestic market, GCPL witnessed a mixed performance in its personal care and home care categories.

    “Personal care sustained its strong double-digit growth trajectory with a two-year CAGR also in double-digits, led by both personal wash and hair colours. Home care witnessed a low single-digit sales drop on a high base. However, the two-year CAGR remained at a high single-digit figure,” it said.

  • TCH 2022: The art of telling authentic brand stories using content

    TCH 2022: The art of telling authentic brand stories using content

    Mumbai: There’s a lot of content available to consumers that is vying for their attention. Brands are finding it difficult to leave a deeper mark on the consumers’ minds with plain vanilla advertising. The mode of brand storytelling has evolved from 30 seconders and one-minute advertisements to creating owned media platforms and content to form an association with the consumer which lasts.

    Brands cannot jump blindly into the content-making exercise. First, one has to identify the brand purpose and where the brand is standing with its content. Content is a powerful way to increase the mind share of the brand but if executed poorly it can also go wrong.

    At the sixth edition of Viacom18 presents Indiantelevision.com’s The Content Hub Summit 2022 held on Wednesday leading marketers spoke about the role of content in their brand strategy. The session was joined by Dentu international The Story Lab country head Deepak, Godrej Industries and Associate Companies AVP corporate brand and communications Michelle Francis, GroupM India head – branded content and Wavemaker India chief content officer Karthik Nagarajan, Tata Consumer Products head shoppers and customer marketing Sagar Boke, PhonePe director and head of brand marketing Ramesh Srinivasan and OPPO India chief marketing officer Damyant Singh Khanoria. The session was moderated by Viacom18 head branded content Vivek Mohan Sharma.  

    The industry event is co-powered by Applause Entertainment and IN10 Media Network. Aaj Tak Connected Stream is the association partner. Industry partners are Fremantle India, Hill+Knowlton Strategies, One Take Media, Pratilipi, Pocket FM and The Viral Fever. The Indian Motion Pictures Producers’ Association (IMPPA) is our community partner.  

    “We have a smartphone launch every second week. When you need to make the consumer realise the unique features of each product there’s a lot of content creation that needs to happen,” remarked OPPO’s Damyant Singh Khanoria. “We solved this problem by enabling creation in the larger community of creators and influencers.”

    Another aspect that OPPO realised was to stop looking at its brand ambassadors as celebrities who are endorsing a product but rather as actors to leverage in a storytelling narrative.

    “I think it is important to have a healthy appetite for risk as a brand. We started commissioning projects that break the artificial boundaries of how we advertise,” said Khanoria.

    OPPO had partnered with the infotainment channel National Geographic to create a series called OPPO Superfactories that turned out to be an excellent piece of branded content, he added. “We want content to be natural and authentic to our brand. An ad is no longer about showing a consumer visiting a store, asking about a product in a three-minute film.”

    When Godrej wanted to change its perception to be associated with lifestyle, the challenge, observed Godrej’s Michelle Francis, was that it was perceived as a legacy brand that had been around for many decades. “We thought that we needed to build a community that would advocate for the lifestyle brands of the Godrej group. That’s how we came up with Godrej L’affaire.”

    The platform launched a nine-episode web series with actor and comedian Jamie Lever with a seamless integration of Godrej brands. “The content was so authentic that it did not look at branded content in terms of integration,” said Francis.

    Whether a brand decides to create its own content is not an either, or question, explained Tata Consumer Products Sagar Boke. He believes it depends on the object and life cycle of the brand. There are advantages to branded content which takes a bit more time to build but connects deeply with the audience. “If you want to build a community around your brand, there’s nothing better than building your own content,” he said. “If you use someone else’s content or a celebrity, it is not going to work.”

    Boke further said that if data is part of a brand strategy, then building your own platforms makes a lot of sense to gather first party data on your consumer.  This helps the brand create more targeted and sharper advertising communication.  

    PhonePe’s Ramesh Srinivasan concurred with Boke stating “As a brand we’re trying to cater to India at large. That means we need to be placed where India is in terms of culture. Branded content captures the consumers’ mind space when they want to consume communication. It creates the right context which is key.”

  • Godrej Consumer Products elevates Somasree Bose Awasthi to CMO

    Godrej Consumer Products elevates Somasree Bose Awasthi to CMO

    Mumbai: Godrej Consumer Products Ltd (GCPL) has elevated Somasree Bose Awasthi to chief marketing officer. previously, she was the head of marketing, homecare Clcategory.

     Somasree has been with GCPL for nearly two decades, having joined the company as a management trainee in 2003, initially as part of Sara Lee business.

    In her previous role at GCPL, she led the marketing for homecare category which includes well-known brands like Good Knight, Hit in household insecticides segment, Godrej Aer in air fresheners segment, Godrej Ezee and Genteel in fabric detergents category. Her job responsibility included building strategy for homecare category, the long term vision on the brands and leading strategic marketing initiatives.

    She led the product innovation launches like Godrej aer pocket in air-freshener space, Cinthol deostick, Hit anti-roach gel, the male grooming range under Cinthol and the powder-to-liquid handwash under Godrej Protekt, Mr Magic, Good Knight Gold Flash, among others. More recently she launched home hygiene brand Godrej ProClean.

  • Adi Godrej steps down from GPCL board

    Adi Godrej steps down from GPCL board

    Mumbai: FMCG major Godrej Consumer Products Ltd (GCPL) on Wednesday announced that Adi Godrej will step down from the board of directors of the company, effective 30 September. He will continue to remain chairman emeritus of the company.

    “It has been a privilege to serve Godrej Consumer Products. I am grateful to our Board for their continued guidance; to all our team members for their passion for Godrej and helping build a company that we can all be proud of; and to our customers, business partners, shareholders, investors, and communities, for their deep partnership over the years,” he said. 

    Adi Godrej further said that the company’s foundations are very strong. “I am very confident that Nisa and our leadership team will continue to build forward and create even more sustainable, long-term value for all our stakeholders,” he added.

    In 2017, Adi Godrej passed on the reins of the company to his daughter Nisaba. He had then moved on to the role of chairman emeritus of the company.

    Nisaba Godrej thanked her father for his vision and guidance that has helped shape and transform GCPL. The GCPL chairperson and MD added, “The values that he has taught us, combined with his disciplined, results-driven, and humble approach, will always be the core of our DNA. Our leadership team will continue to draw from this as we drive Godrej Consumer Products forward with a strong sense of purpose and ambition.”

    The company also announced its CFO succession plan. Sameer Shah, GPCL’s current head of finance and investor relations has been promoted to the role of chief financial officer (CFO) of the company, effective 1 September. Shah succeeds V Srinivasan who has moved on as CFO and company secretary to pursue opportunities outside Godrej.

    Shah has been associated with GCPL for 15 years. He has held a number of key leadership roles including as CFO of GPCL’s largest business, the India & SAARC cluster. He has also led diverse priorities across its global portfolio – investor relations, financial controlling, ERP implementation, global financial planning and analytics, and integrating inorganic businesses like Africa.

    A chartered accountant by profession, Shah has specialised in Treasury Management from The Institute of Chartered Financial Analysts. Before joining GCPL, Shah worked at PepsiCo and General Mills.