Tag: Mahima Mathur

  • Hot flashes, cool conversations as i-Know sparks menopause talk

    Hot flashes, cool conversations as i-Know sparks menopause talk

    MUMBAI: It’s getting hot in here and this time, it’s not just the weather. On World Menopause Day, i-Know, the women’s health brand from Piramal Pharma, has launched a thought-provoking campaign titled #OwnYourMenopause, conceptualised by DDB Mudra Group, to help women put words and warmth to what they’re feeling.

    For far too long, menopause has been the silent chapter in a woman’s story. Its symptoms, confusing, invisible, and often indescribable can leave many feeling isolated. The campaign tackles that silence head-on, giving women a new language to express their experiences and encouraging open dialogue about a life stage too often brushed under the carpet.

    At the heart of #OwnYourMenopause are stories drawn from real women navigating perimenopause and menopause. Using clever, metaphor-led storytelling, the films translate the unspoken: brain fog becomes the moment one forgets where the salt container is, while hot flashes are likened to “global warming” inside one’s body. These vivid visuals bring to life the humour, confusion, and humanity of the experience reminding women that they’re not alone, and that what they feel has a name, a reason, and help at hand.

    As part of this initiative, i-Know spotlights its Menopause Testing Kit, a simple, home-based urine test that detects elevated Follicle Stimulating Hormone (FSH) levels, a key indicator of menopause onset. It’s a small but powerful step towards helping women take control of their health with confidence and clarity.

    “True healthcare goes beyond products; it starts with awareness and empathy,” said Piramal Consumer Healthcare VP marketing Abhishek Kr. Srivastava. “With i-Know, we want to normalise a conversation that has been silent for far too long.”

    Adding to that DDB Mudra Group creative director Mahima Mathur shared, “Most women we spoke to began their menopause journey in confusion, not conversation. These stories inspired by real testimonials are meant to make it easier to talk, to understand, and to turn a lonely journey into a shared one.”

    The campaign, produced by Boathouse Media and directed by Taaha Quadri, features contributions from creatives Mahima Mathur, Shalmali Sawant, Rhea Kumar, Harshada Shinde, and Payel Pramanik, with strategy led by Menaka Menon, Sanjana Chetan, and Navya Anil.

    With #OwnYourMenopause, i-Know continues its mission to empower women with knowledge across every phase of life from fertility to menopause and beyond. Because sometimes, owning your story starts with finding the words to tell it.

     

  • Meta AI taps desi curiosity with DDB Mudra’s ‘Aaj kya karoge?’ nudge

    Meta AI taps desi curiosity with DDB Mudra’s ‘Aaj kya karoge?’ nudge

    MUMBAI: Not your average tech launch, Meta’s new AI tool just dropped in India with a desi twist, thanks to DDB Mudra’s latest campaign that turns into a lazy-day question—’Aaj kya karoge?‘—into a call to dream bigger.

    Meta AI, now seamlessly baked into WhatsApp, Facebook and Instagram, is being pitched not as a cold, complex tool but as a warm, witty sidekick that helps elevate the everyday. The campaign tackles a key perception problem head-on: that AI is all brains, no soul.

    Enter six short films, each telling a hyper-local, delightfully ordinary story—from different cities and age groups—that flips the mundane into the magical with a little help from Meta AI. From unlocking creative hobbies to simply streamlining chaos, the message is clear: this isn’t AI for coders, it’s for chai-sippers and chat-typers alike.

    The blitz didn’t stop at screens. Contextual billboards in Delhi and Lucknow spoke in local dialects, while YouTube ads served up prompts mid-search, making the experience feel uncannily personal. Throw in a dozen influencers across cities, each giving Meta AI their own local flavour, and the result is a campaign that doesn’t feel like a launch—it feels like life.

    DDB Mudra creative director Mahima Mathur, talking about the creative process and the approach to the campaign, said, “We didn’t want to introduce Meta AI with the usual fanfare. We wanted India to find it in its own way – in places we already live and love. In a WhatsApp chat. While scrolling through Facebook. In an Instagram group. ‘Aaj kya karoge?’ isn’t just a line. It’s a friendly nudge. An invitation to think a little bigger, try something new, and let Meta AI make it all a little easier, one day at a time.”

    With this effort, Meta positions its AI not as an upgrade—but as an invitation. One that turns routine into play, and every scroll into possibility.