Tag: Nikhil Taneja

  • Yuvaa bridges Gen Z And finance through roundtable series

    Yuvaa bridges Gen Z And finance through roundtable series

    Mumbai: Gen-Z-driven media platform, Yuvaa, has released the second collaborative roundtable series with Max Life Insurance, aimed at addressing crucial financial themes for Generation Z. This series of four quarterly roundtables serves as a powerful platform for Gen Z artists to engage in meaningful discussions on financial planning, protection, and the insights derived from Max Life Insurance’s India Protection Quotient (IPQ) report.

    Moderated by media entrepreneur and Yuvaa Co-founder, Nikhil Taneja, the roundtable series brought together influential Gen Z voices like Aastha Shah, Ahsaas Channa, Aaditya Kulshreshth aka Kullu and Swastika Rajput to address the financial challenges and opportunities today’s youth face. Designed to resonate with Gen Z’s unique perspectives, these discussions provided valuable insights and tools for navigating their financial futures. The collaboration emerged from Max Life Insurance’s recognition of Yuvaa’s deep understanding of Gen Z trends, concerns, and voices.

    Partnering with Yuvaa enabled Max Life Insurance to effectively communicate their IPQ report findings, which highlight the financial behaviours and needs of India’s youth, leveraging Yuvaa’s role as a key bridge between the brand and the Gen Z demographic. The series features popular digital artists across verticals who share their unique perspectives and experiences on financial planning. These conversations foster trust and relatability with viewers, particularly young adults who often turn to social media for information and guidance.

    Aastha Shah, while commenting on his association with the initiative said, “My dad always taught me one thing – Be financially independent in life so that going forward you do not have to be dependent on anyone, even if the world leaves you behind, you can survive with your own money. This is financial freedom for me. Today’s round table made me aware about so many different life stories where everyone spoke about their own experiences.”

    Aditya Kulshreshth aka Kullu, added, “I had an amazing time being on the round table, everyone was so comfortable and we opened up our hearts, heard so many inspiring stories. My relationship with money has always been good and I value my money a lot. I started earning when I was 18 so money has been with me through thick and thin.”

  • Yuvaa partners with Adobe to support underrepresented stories & storytellers

    Yuvaa partners with Adobe to support underrepresented stories & storytellers

    Mumbai: Yuvaa, India’s first Gen Z-driven youth media, insights and impact organisation, has partnered with international software giant Adobe, as well as the Adobe Foundation, to support and empower underrepresented stories and storytellers from India, as part of the first-ever Adobe Film & TV Fund of $6 million.

    The only South Asian organisation in the cohort, Yuvaa joins some of the world’s most renowned nonprofit and impact organisations like NAACP, The Sundance Institute, Easterseals, Gold House and The Latinx House, to drive greater representation in the film industry by providing resources, community and support to underrepresented creators on-screen and behind the camera, with funding for short and feature films.

    The Adobe Film & TV Fund aims to address the inequity in funding, career and training opportunities across multiple communities in the industry with grants, contributions, and fellowships. In the first year of the Fund, Adobe and the Adobe Foundation committed to $6 million in grants, contributions, and Adobe Creative Cloud product donations with the goal of tracking inclusion in the industry and directly accelerating the careers of thousands of global creators, and ultimately increasing inclusion in film and TV series, that reach millions worldwide.

    The Film & TV Fund Adobe builds on its long-standing collaboration with the Sundance Institute and the continued support and momentum the company has achieved for inclusivity, access, opportunity and creativity for all. The announcement was made at the ongoing 2024 Sundance Film Festival.

    Adobe VP marketing strategy and communications and member of the Adobe Foundation board Stacy Martinet said, “Diversity in front of and behind the camera is key to unlocking more diverse and more inclusive storytelling across TV and film. Through our new Film & TV Fund, Adobe is looking to leverage its leadership position in the creative industry to unlock new opportunities for underrepresented creators.”

    Yuvaa co-founder and chief Nikhil Taneja, “Over the last 5 years, Yuvaa has worked with several marginalized communities, including women and the LGBTQIA+ community in India, to leverage the power of storytelling and the internet, to co-create stories that must be heard and that must be told. With an incredible partner like Adobe, who are committed to creating meaningful opportunities for representation, we are looking to scale our impact with long-form storytelling, so we can, at once, collaborate with an eclectic mix of talent and creatives from diverse backgrounds, and work towards telling a story that deeply matters to us as individuals, and us as a society.”
     

  • “Yuvaa was envisioned as a safe space for all genders and young people from all backgrounds” Yuvaa’s Nikhil Taneja

    “Yuvaa was envisioned as a safe space for all genders and young people from all backgrounds” Yuvaa’s Nikhil Taneja

    Mumbai: Yuvaa is India’s leading Gen Z-driven youth media, research and impact organisation. With the mission of empowering the youth by ‘making important things interesting’ for them by talking about urgent issues like youth empowerment, mental health, gender, sexuality, internet safety, misinformation, climate change and many more and have found great success in creating impact-driven content and entertainment.

    This year Yuvaa celebrated its fifth year anniversary by hosting its first business of Gen Z event, The Collab, that brought  together industry experts, change makers, influencers and key opinion leaders like Guneet Monga, Rohini Nilekani, Sameer Nair (Applause Entertainment), Divya Reddy Shah (L’Oreal India), Chandrasekhar Samiappan (YouTube India), S Venkatesh (RPG), Navya Naveli Nanda, Niharika NM, among others, to participate in conversations around Gen-Z issues. At the event, Yuvaa also gave its audience a sneak peek into their upcoming properties like India’s first chat series on masculinity ‘Be A Man, Yaar’ (feat. Vicky Kaushal, Nakuul Mehta, Naseeruddin Shah, Zakir Khan, among others); The ‘You Grow Girl’ Yuvaa Roadshow with Navya Nanda and L’Oreal Paris India, and Yuvaa’s flagship LGBTQ+ event, The Pride Class 2023.

    The organisation envisions facilitating meaningful conversations and impactful initiatives through their work in digital content and campus spaces. For the same, prominent youth icon and entrepreneur Navya Naveli Nanda and L’Oréal Paris have collaborated for an exciting pan India roadshow – You Grow, Girl. The roadshow, which aims at empowering and engaging the youth, will traverse 25 prestigious colleges across 8 cities, leaving an indelible impact on the lives of thousands of young individuals.

    They also released a first-of-its kind Gen Z insights report- ‘Not All Gen Z’, that provides insights based on responses from over 900 Gen Z participants, spanning over 20+ cities across T1, T2 and T3 India. This #NotAllGenZ report is an attempt to comprehend this misunderstood but distinctive group of individuals and to understand the Gen Z trends brands, organisations and parents need to pay more attention to.

    Indiantelevision.com caught up with Yuvaa co-founder & chief Nikhil Taneja, where he discusses some key issues which Gen Z faces and also some trending topics like internet safety, depression, mental health etc…

    Edited excerpts

    On what is Yuvaa all about and its main USP

    We like to call Yuvaa India’s first (and arguably most loved) Gen Z-driven youth media organisation. We work at the intersection of what is ‘important’ and what is ‘interesting’ to create impact in the lives of young people. In India, where over 65% of the population is under 35, which forms the world’s largest youth workforce, and where 1 in every 5 young people is affected by mental health issues, there was hardly any meaningful youth representation in politics, in policy-making or decision-making, or even in content and entertainment around urgent youth issues. Yuvaa has today become the rare organisation uses the power of mass and social media to work on social good, social justice and social impact.Today, it gives me great pride to say that we are a unique company that’s managed to do that through our work in content, campuses, events, research and social impact, and count among our partners, some of India’s biggest brands and non profits including Amazon Prime, Instagram, YouTube, Spotify, Tinder, IBM, L’oreal Paris, Rohini Nilekani Foundation, UNICEF India, The Bill & Melinda Gates Foundation, Save the Children and many more.

    As for our USP, in a world where every young person has something to say, Yuvaa was founded to be a platform that listens. Over the last five years, Yuvaa has visited over 150 campuses across India offline, and made over 10,000 pieces of content online, to create safe spaces where Young Indians could express without judgement. India has the largest youth workforce in the world, so it was a natural progression of our mission to also create safe, inclusive, empathetic and happy spaces at the workplace.

    On Yuvaa managing to resonate with Gen Z and effectively connect with them on various important subjects like mental health

    It again comes back to the idea of ‘listening’  to young people. We don’t talk down to young people, we don’t look down on them, we don’t treat them as a ‘demographic’ or an ‘audience’, but we treat them as equals, and as our partners in everything we are doing. We create content and communication through community engagement. The Gen Z are active participants in our decision making process, and the listening – and sharing – loop that we create with them is the reason they think they have a stake in Yuvaa too.

    We also ensure that everything we do is in a language accessible to young people – we are not trying to preach to them, we are talking as friends to them in a relatable vocabulary they speak as well. Young people, who do not get safe spaces in their homes or communities, find that in us, and that’s why we have managed to resonate with them. And we are so grateful about this.

    On sharing insights on the significance of Yuvaa’s fifth-year anniversary celebration

    When you are building your first ever startup, every day you have not failed feels like a milestone :). So I’ve been proud of each and every single day the team worked together to create impact with what we do at Yuvaa. From our first viral video to our first chat show to our first Spotify Original Podcast (Dear Teenage Me) to our first two Yuvaa Original Short Films with Amazon Mini TV (Gray and Tasalli Se) to our multiple roadshows, open mics, offline events, researches, content pieces, dev sector and brand partnerships, to reaching half a million followers on Instagram to giving students free therapy through The Yuvaa Therapy Project, it’s been such a gratifying journey. But if I had to pick two key moments that were personally significant I’d say:

    The Yuvaa Volunteers Programme: During the devastating second wave in India, we started a volunteer programme called Yuvaa Volunteers, where he led a rotating team of over 500 volunteers in over 40 Indian cities. Over 3 months, the team worked 24/7 to help connect people to available hospitals, oxygen cylinders, medical support, mental health counseling, and ended by helping over 2500 families in 8 regions of India. During the time, Yuvaa also partnered with Inner Hour to hold Twitter spaces to talk about grief and mental health, with Dharma Productions to scale our reach, and also held sharing circles for young Indians to express themselves. Yuvaa Volunteers led to the formation of the UNICEF-Yuwaah Content Creator Coalition, through which 110 content creators created 1650 pieces of content on COVID misinformation awareness and vaccine awareness, to a cumulative reach of 150 million+. To be able to actually help people during a tough time as a country, was one of the reasons Yuvaa was founded, and I feel so proud that we could step up when it mattered.

    The Leadership Transition: In June, I officially transitioned out of the CEO role to take on a ‘Chief’ role, moving from captain to coach, to appoint a young team to lead the company into the future. When I started Yuvaa, I had always believed that if 5 years down the line, Yuvaa was successful in what it did, a ‘Yuvaa’ should be leading it. So it was one of my life’s proudest moments that I could hand over the reigns of the company to our new CEO, Yuvaa, who has helped make Yuvaa what it is over the last 4 years in an Editor-in-Chief capacity. The other two members of the leadership team include Anusha Shetty and Yash Pise, both of whom, like Kevin, have shown up every day to build Yuvaa as their own company. I truly believe, in the hands of these young leaders, Yuvaa will be able to be one of the most significant youth media companies in the country over the next 5 years.

    On ‘The Pride Class 2023’, organised by Yuvaa, its objectives and outcomes

    Yuvaa was envisioned as a safe space for all genders and young people from all backgrounds. I have always noticed that content or conversations that cater to progressive audiences, or that talks about progressive issues, has a sassiness to it that comes in the way of including people who are ignorant bout these conversations. There have also been some very popular channels or content pieces that choose to ‘clap back’ or ‘shut down’ people who aren’t progressive enough. But at Yuvaa, we’ve felt that the only way we can make a real difference is by bringing in people, versus shutting them out. By being empathetic and ‘wholesome’, we have a much greater chance of getting folks who may be a bit more conservative, to be a part of the conversation.

    We have been a LGBTQIA+ positive company and space online and offline from the very beginning, and have been creating content around it since we started in 2018. In fact, our first chat show was called Edugaytion, and its intent was to have conversations with well known folks from the LGBTQIA+ community to ‘edu-gay-te’ people who were interested in knowing more about queer issues. We also did a 26 part reel series called the A to Z of LGBTQIA+, where we explained every term associated with queer inclusivity. In 2022, we first launched The Pride Class, as a way of carrying the empathetic and wholesome vibe of our queer conversations into an offline space and event, with the intent being not just felicitation but celebration.

    YouTube Shorts has partnered with us on Pride Class in both 2022 and 2023, and the event has now become a flagship for Yuvaa every year, in which we identify queer young folks who use their voices for expression, advocacy or awareness. We do a ‘graduation ceremony’ for these creators, where they get masterclasses from queer icons, certificates and gifts from Yuvaa and its partners, and an evening of joy, along with queer comedians and musicians. It’s one of the happiest days of the year for everyone at Yuvaa, and we hope that in supporting young queer voices, we are making them feel seen, so that they may feel empowered to continue using them to normalize queer conversations.

    On the “Not All Gen Z” report seeking to address the common misunderstandings surrounding Gen Z

    At Yuvaa, we’ve championed Gen Z for 5 years now, and it’s great to see more brands and industries taking note of this generation as they enter the workforce and become more significant spenders and consumers. One thing that we’ve noticed, however, is that in the attempt to understand Gen Z better, society at large tends to try to put them in boxes or assign labels to them based on a few interactions or experiences. Our #NotAllGenZ Report is an attempt to correct some of these misconceptions, or at least explain where certain misconceptions come from.

    The report looks at Gen Z’s relationships with five themes – parenting, gender, sex, brands and content consumption – to try to help brands and organisations better understand Gen Z. While it is often assumed that women tend to prefer watching romcoms and ‘soft’ content, we actually found that Gen Z women are 10 per cent more interested in thrillers rather than romcoms. While Gen Z is seen as a ‘woke’ generation and women are accused of having a ‘feminist agenda’, out study shows that 74 per cent of Gen Z women think that men actually have it harder than they do – and by the way, nearly 70 per cent of Gen Z men believe that women have it harder than they do. While influencer marketing is all the rage and the creator economy is booming, our study shows that Gen Z consumers are 50 per cent more likely to buy something on the recommendation of a friend, rather than the recommendation of an influencer or content creator.

    Hence, the report lays out some surprising findings on Gen Z’s behaviour, consumption patterns and thinking – we at Yuvaa have always strived to make young people feel less alone, and we feel like helping brands and organisations better understand Gen Z is a big step to making them feel more heard, seen and represented.

    On Yuvaa’s role in promoting internet safety and combating misinformation among the youth

    Yuvaa has always been committed to creating safe spaces for young people, and since the internet is a space that so many young people spend so much time in, that commitment is as much to online spaces as it is to offline ones.

    Over the last three years, we’ve worked on multiple campaigns to do with online safety and combating misinformation – during the peak of the first wave of Covid, we tied up with UNICEF YuWaah and trained 110 creators to create over 1500 pieces of content around Covid misinformation, reaching 200 million people across Instagram and Takatak (now Moj). We also worked on the UN Verified campaign and created a music video talking about Covid misinformation featuring celebrities like Nakuul Mehta, Saba Azad, Akash Bannerjee and journalists like Raghu Karnad, Shereen Bhan and Meghnad S. We consulted with Dharma Productions to fact check and create content around awareness of misinformation at this time as well.

    We have a long-term association with Meta wherein we’ve spoken about the different facets of internet safety over the last 4 years – including content pieces that have amassed millions of views, conversations with prominent content creators and actors like Prajakta Koli, Rohit Saraf, Ahsaas Channa, Navya Nanda, Dolly Singh, Sejal Kumar and more, and workshops and trainings for cohorts of young creators under the #366DaysOfKindness and #YuvaaKindnessChampions campaigns aimed at making the internet a kinder place.

    Yuvaa is also a founding member of the Misinformation Combat Alliance, India’s first collection of media organisations and independent experts founded specifically to fight misinformation. We’re currently working with the US Consulate on a campaign to train a cohort of young aspiring misinformation warriors from Western India in the run-up to the elections.

    On plans to continue researching and releasing more insights about Gen Z or other important youth-related topics in the future

    Yes, absolutely. Listening to, caring about and deeply, and authentically understanding what the Gen Z think, feel, hope for, aspire to, need, want, is all at the very core of what makes Yuvaa what it is today. As an election year approaches, we are excited about putting together a plan about voting awareness, and hope to be fundamental in helping young people be more aware about their rights in our thriving democracy. We will also certainly keep publishing our flagship #NotAllGenZ report at The Collab each year, and hope to put out specific reports on binge-ing habits of young people, on gender, on mental health and more, periodically too.

  • Digital storytellers and content creators Amritpal Bindra, Anand Tiwari and Nikhil Taneja lauch ‘Yuvaa’

    Digital storytellers and content creators Amritpal Bindra, Anand Tiwari and Nikhil Taneja lauch ‘Yuvaa’

    MUMBAI: Amritpal Bindra, Anand Tiwari and Nikhil Taneja, the producers and content creators behind shows on the digital space – Bang Baaja Baaraat (40 million+ views), Sex Chat with Pappu and Papa (55 million+ views), Girl in the City (50 million+ views), Chukiyagiri (30 million+ views) and the first original Bollywood Netflix movie, Love Per Square Foot – have come together to form a youth media company for purpose-driven content, “Yuvaa.”

    It will be a platform that listens to, engages with and shares the stories that bring young India together, to create a community of empowered ‘yuvaa’. It will create and curate original, accessible and entertaining stories of, for and by the youth of India across genres of non-fiction and fiction web series, docu-series, talk shows, podcasts and short-format on all digital and social media: YouTube, Instagram, Facebook and Twitter.

    In year one, Yuvaa will put out over 1000 minutes and 100+ pieces of original content for free, focusing on some of the most pressing issues, struggles, challenges, aspirations and dreams of young India. From mental health and self-care to gender equality and LGBTQ inclusivity to identity and self-expression, the platform will tell emotional, empathetic, enriching, empowering and entertaining stories of young people that haven’t yet been told in mainstream media. It believes that ‘Every Story Matters’ and its tagline explains its inherent philosophy: ‘We, The Stories’.

    The stories that it will produce, share and tell will come from insight mined from a pan-India road-show, where the young team behind Yuvaa is traveling across 30 cities including Shimla, Port Blair and Guwahati to meet, hear and talk to students in 100+ colleges and understand their stories in their own words.

    Taneja said, “By 2020, India will be the world’s youngest country with 65 per cent of its population under 35, and an average age of 29. A new generation of young Indians will take our country into the future, but their stories are largely untold, unheard and under-represented in our media, and we have very little understanding of the identity and mental health issues they are going through. We have formed Yuvaa to be a mental health positive platform and community that listens to and shares authentic stories of young Indians so they feel more represented and less alone. Because their stories matter.”

    Bindra said, “It’s an extremely proud and grateful moment for all of us at Yuvaa to have embarked on this journey which has been filled with learnings, experiences and real impact. The idea of creating entertaining and engaging content that deals with issues like mental health, body positivity and identity is fascinating and challenging in equal measures. Yuvaa is an opportunity to create a community that unites young India in a way that has never been done before. This also brings a huge amount of responsibility on us to create a positive equal and conscious community. “

    Tiwari said, “The content of Yuvaa will be by, for and from the youth themselves. We aren’t coming from a 'preachy' place, where we will tell the audience and they will listen. Yuvaa is a platform where we are the listeners too and every young Indian is a storyteller.”