Tag: Nykaa

  • India’s shining stars gear up for CNN-News18’s Indian of the Year

    India’s shining stars gear up for CNN-News18’s Indian of the Year

    MUMBAI: Who runs the world? Indians do and CNN-News18 is here to prove it once again. The news network is rolling out the red carpet for the 15th edition of its flagship awards, Indian of the Year (IOTY), a celebration of the nation’s most inspiring achievers who’ve turned dreams into revolutions and talent into timeless influence.

    Over the years, the IOTY stage has seen everyone from Shah Rukh Khan to Neeraj Chopra and Virat Kohli walk away with the honour. Now, in its 15th year, the awards return with even greater sparkle, ready to spotlight India’s brightest minds and boldest spirits across nine categories like Entertainment, Sports, Rising Sports Star, Business, Youth Icon, Global Indian, Iconic Woman Achiever, Influencer, and Climate Warrior.

    Each category boasts five stellar nominees who’ve left an indelible mark this year. The Sports category is packed with champions like D Gukesh, Shubman Gill, Avinash Sable, Smriti Mandhana, and Manpreet Singh, while the Rising Sports Star segment features up-and-coming powerhouses Suruchi Phogat, Kush Maini, Vaibhav Suryavanshi, Pooja Singh, and Divya Deshmukh.

    In Entertainment, expect a clash of charisma between Rashmika Mandanna, Mohanlal, Laxman Utekar (Chhaava), Arijit Singh, and Jaideep Ahlawat. Meanwhile, the Youth Icon list brims with dynamism from Ananya Panday and Ishaan Khatter to comedian Zakir Khan and naval trailblazers Lt. Cdr Dilna K and Roopa A.

    Online sensations get their due in the Influencer category with Raj Shamani, Kamiya Jani, Khan Sir, Parul Gulati, and Revant Himatsingka leading the charge. The Business nominees include entrepreneurial giants like Falguni Nayar (Nykaa), Albinder Dhindsa (Blinkit), Rajesh Jejurikar (Mahindra & Mahindra), Roshni Nadar Malhotra (HCLTech), and Baba Kalyani (Bharat Forge).

    Fighting the good fight for the planet, the Climate Warrior nominees Garvita Gulhati, Aditya Mukarji, Morningstar Khongthaw, Vidyut Mohan, and Vinay Manchala — are being recognised for turning sustainability into a movement. Meanwhile, the Iconic Woman Achiever list celebrates the grit and grace of Dr Sanghamitra Pati, Ashwini Bhide, Chhonzin Angmo, Radha Bahin Bhatt, and K Kamini Maheshwari.

    And proving that the Indian spirit knows no borders, the Global Indian category shines on the world stage with Payal Kapadia, Leena Nair, Manish Malhotra, Hanumankind, and Chef Vijay Kumar.

    The winners will be chosen by an elite jury panel featuring names as illustrious as Sanjiv Goenka, DY Chandrachud, Indu Malhotra, Prasoon Joshi, Mahesh Jethmalani, Santishree Dhulipudi Pandit, Amitabh Kant, Shefali Shah, Sanjeev Bikhchandani, Gagan Narang, and Lara Dutta, a line-up that’s as stellar as the nominees themselves.

    Reflecting on the milestone Network18 CEO of english & business news Smriti Mehra said, “The 15th edition of CNN-News18 Indian of the Year is a special milestone for all of us. It’s an opportunity to celebrate individuals whose passion, resilience, and creativity inspire millions across the country and beyond.”

    Adding to that, CNN-News18 managing editor Zakka Jacob said, “This year, we’re introducing three new awards to reflect the changing world better whether it’s Indians making a global impact, influencers reshaping conversations, or extraordinary women breaking barriers.”

    Backed by partners including the RPSG Group (Presenting Partner), and Polycab, HDFC Securities, and Reliance (Associate Partners), the grand finale in November 2025 promises a celebration of spirit, strength, and stories that continue to shape modern India.

    Because in a nation bursting with brilliance, choosing one Indian of the Year might just be the toughest job of them all.

  • Credit where it’s due as festive shoppers swipe big this Diwali

    Credit where it’s due as festive shoppers swipe big this Diwali

    MUMBAI: Looks like this Diwali, Indians didn’t just light up their homes, they swiped their way to sparkle too. A new survey by Paisabazaar reveals that over 42 per cent of credit card users spent upwards of Rs 50,000 on festive shopping this year, signalling that big-ticket buying is firmly back in fashion.

    The festive cheer wasn’t limited to diyas and discounts, it spread right across credit limits. About 22 per cent of respondents spent between Rs 50,000 and Rs 1 lakh, while one in five splurged over Rs 1 lakh on their cards during Diwali. The survey, which covered over 2,300 users, paints a clear picture of India’s growing comfort with credit as a strategic spending tool.

    When it came to what they bought, home appliances topped the wishlist at 25 per cent, followed by mobiles, gadgets and accessories at 23 per cent, and apparel at 22 per cent. Furniture and décor made up 18 per cent of spends, while gold and jewellery accounted for 12 per cent proof that both sparkle and substance drove shopping choices this season.

    But it wasn’t all impulse. The study revealed that 91 per cent of shoppers planned their purchases around card-specific offers and festive deals. Less than 10 per cent relied solely on their card’s standard cashback or reward structure. Clearly, today’s consumers are not just shopping, they’re strategising.

    “Consumers are using credit cards more intelligently, timing their high-value purchases with festive offers and card-linked deals,” said Paisabazaar CEO Santosh Agarwal. “This growing financial awareness shows how value and convenience are driving credit card use.”

    The benefits are paying off too. Nearly 71 per cent of respondents owned shopping-specific credit cards that offered cashback or festive rewards, while 15 per cent received seasonal deals even without such cards. For many, cashback remained the biggest draw chosen by 20 per cent of users followed closely by co-branded offers (19 per cent) and accelerated reward points (18 per cent).

    Among those opting for EMIs, No-Cost EMI emerged as the clear winner, attracting 56 per cent of users, while 29 per cent chose EMIs to unlock extra discounts and 10 per cent used them simply to spread payments more comfortably.

    Interestingly, shoppers were equally at home online and offline 48 per cent said they preferred a mix of both. The hunt for better deals drove most of them to e-commerce giants, with 83 per cent claiming they found the best discounts on platforms like Amazon and Flipkart. Together, the two dominated with a 43 per cent preference rate, followed by Myntra (15 per cent), Meesho (10 per cent), and other platforms such as Ajio, Nykaa, Zepto and Tata Cliq accounting for 32 per cent collectively.

    Paisabazaar, head of credit cards Rohit Chhibbar summed it up aptly: “This festive season marked the rise of the value-savvy shopper, one who plans, compares, and capitalises on every offer. Cashback, rewards, and no-cost EMIs have made credit cards indispensable for festive spending.”

    In short, this Diwali, shoppers didn’t just chase lights, they chased the right swipes.

     

  • YouTube adds Nykaa and Purplle to shopping affiliate programme as beauty commerce booms

    YouTube adds Nykaa and Purplle to shopping affiliate programme as beauty commerce booms

    MU7MBAI: YouTube is turning beauty tutorials into storefronts. The video platform has added Nykaa and Purplle to its shopping affiliate programme, expanding creators’ ability to monetise content as shopping-related watch time in India jumps 250 per cent year-on-year.

    The move doubles down on beauty and lifestyle, a category where 89 per cent of Indian shoppers say YouTube helps them make confident purchase decisions. Creators enrolled in the programme can now tag products from Nykaa and Purplle alongside existing partners Flipkart and Myntra, earning commissions when viewers buy.

    More than 40 per cent of eligible creators in India have signed up since the programme launched a year ago, tagging products in over three million videos. Over 200 million logged-in users in India have made shopping-related searches on YouTube, creating what the platform calls a “complete monetisation ecosystem”.

    “The next era of video commerce is already being defined by India’s vibrant creator economy on YouTube,” says YouTube India managing director Gunjan Soni. “We are scaling content-driven shopping from a successful programme to a complete monetisation ecosystem.”

    YouTube is sweetening the deal with artificial intelligence tools that automatically tag products the moment they’re mentioned in videos, capturing viewer interest at its peak. The platform will also test automatic product identification later this year.

    Flipkart vice president of growth and marketing Pratik Arun Shetty, frames the partnership as commerce meeting creativity. “India’s creator economy is transforming how people engage with brands,” he says. Myntra reports creator collaborations have grown threefold in the past year, whilst Nykaa positions itself as a pioneer in content-led commerce.

    YouTube is also rolling out tools to make brand deals more lucrative: a flexible format for inserting and replacing sponsored segments, links to brand sites in Shorts, and a Creator Partnerships Hub inside Google Ads to connect advertisers with influencers.

    It’s a bet that authenticity converts. Whether creators cash in or merely chase clicks will depend on whether viewers trust recommendations—or just skip to the comments.

  • Colors Queen unveils festive glow collection

    Colors Queen unveils festive glow collection

    MUMBAI: Colors Queen Cosmetics has rolled out its festive collection, promising beauty lovers a season of radiance. The homegrown brand, known for its cruelty-free and skin-friendly formulas, is serving up sparkle with a line-up that blends innovation, affordability and flair.

    The showstopper is the cushion foundation, designed for a natural, buildable glow that lasts all day. Adding drama are the liquid metallic eyeshadows, while the glass bomb stick and lip gloss bring shimmer and shine to cheeks, lips and eyes. Completing the look are illuminating primers and highlighters that make festival lights look dim in comparison.

    Speaking on the launch, co-founder Nitin Panjwani said the range was crafted to deliver luxury beauty at accessible prices, with products that not only look stunning but also feel good on the skin.

    Available on Amazon, Flipkart, Nykaa, Myntra, Purplle, Meesho, and the official website www.colorsqueen.com , along with offline counters across India, the collection invites beauty lovers to shine brighter and bolder this festive season.

    Colors Queen, founded in 2014, has built its name on blending quality, affordability and inclusivity, and with this launch, it hopes to crown itself the go-to brand for festive glamour.
     

  • AI storm brews as Studio Blo films fashion in a whole new dimension

    AI storm brews as Studio Blo films fashion in a whole new dimension

    MUMBAI: When fashion meets philosophy in the middle of a sandstorm, you know something otherworldly is at play. Studio Blo, the next-gen content studio pushing the limits of AI-driven filmmaking, has dropped a 100 per cent AI-generated film for the Almost Gods × Fila collection blurring lines between fantasy, sport, and storytelling.

    The high-concept short, live on Youtube and Instagram, unfolds during a rare celestial event where three cloaked figures summon a sweeping sandstorm. Each figure wears pieces from the new collection, which reimagines Fila’s clay-court tennis heritage through Almost Gods’ brutalist aesthetic, laced with mysticism and elemental power.

    In a striking industry first, real fashion models were digitally cloned, with every garment and accessory rendered entirely in AI, no physical shoot, no stitched seams, just crafted pixels with the gravitas of a full-scale cinematic production. Months of prep went into the project, with seasoned cinematographers, creative directors, and AI artists at the helm.

    Studio Blo co-founder & CEO Dipankar Mukherjee set the record straight: “AI films aren’t quick and cheap. This took months, not minutes, because pedigree demands time, talent, and vision. Almost Gods treated us as true creative partners, and that made all the difference.”

    Studio Blo Co-Founder & CCO Rishabh Suri added: “AI gave us the canvas to make a metaphysical thriller in fashion form. Traditional production would’ve struggled with the sheer scale and spectacle. Here, we created something immersive and emotionally resonant, where philosophy and symbolism flow seamlessly into couture.”

    Studio Blo, staffed by veterans from VFX giants like Dneg and MPC, has already delivered showstoppers for Warner Music, YRF Films, Dentsu, and Nykaa. This film cements its mission: AI is not a shortcut, but a collaborator expanding fashion’s stage into realms once thought impossible.

    With the Almost Gods × Fila collection, sport-luxury isn’t just walking the runway; it’s conjuring storms.

  • Amorepacific turns 80, marks milestone with mega celebration

    Amorepacific turns 80, marks milestone with mega celebration

    MUMBAI: Glow-rious at 80! It’s not every day a beauty giant hits the big 8-0 but when it does, it glows big. Amorepacific, the South Korean powerhouse behind cult-favourite brands like Laneige, Innisfree, Etude and Sulwhasoo, is celebrating 80 radiant years with the launch of Amorepacific Day: a three-day K-beauty carnival from 5-7 September 2025.

    For the first time ever, this celebratory splash is going live across all major beauty platforms such as Nykaa, Sephora, Tira, Myntra, Amazon plus offline stores nationwide. Shoppers can snag up to 30 per cent off on bestselling skincare icons and makeup must-haves from Amorepacific’s legendary labels.

    “Turning 80 is not just about looking back, it’s about celebrating the beauty we’ve built together,” said Amorepacific India, managing director & country head, Paul Lee.

    With Laneige’s water sleeping mask and Sulwhasoo’s first care activating serum, Amorepacific has been setting K-beauty benchmarks since 1945. And now, with Amorepacific Day, it’s throwing open its beauty vaults for fans old and new to explore, indulge and glow-up.

    Whether you’re a sheet mask stan, a skincare minimalist, or just browsing for your next beauty fix, Amorepacific Day promises something for everyone: minus the guilt, plus the glow!

    So, mark your calendars, clear your carts, and get ready to join the celebration. Because 80 never looked so goo and your skincare shelf is about to thank you.

  • AI on reel duty as Studio Blo crafts Emirates NBD ads with human touch

    AI on reel duty as Studio Blo crafts Emirates NBD ads with human touch

    MUMBAI: When the camera says “AI-ction,” you don’t expect it to tug at your heartstrings. Yet Studio Blo’s latest campaign for Emirates NBD proves that artificial intelligence can roll out films that feel anything but artificial. The next-gen content studio has unveiled three fully AI-generated ads for the MENAT banking giant, each scripted by Liwa.Content Driven and realised entirely within Studio Blo’s proprietary AI pipeline. But instead of flashy montages, the films weave cinematic narratives with human warmth.

    One of the campaign’s centrepieces is a business banking story about entrepreneurs finding strength in personalised support and remote convenience. The other two are hard-hitting anti-fraud PSAs that use a domino-effect metaphor reminding viewers that ignoring scams doesn’t stop them, it only leaves the next person vulnerable.

    Behind the tech sheen is an insistence on old-school craft. “Making a bad film was always easy. So is it with AI,” quipped Studio Blo co-founder and CEO Dipankar Mukherjee. “If you don’t invest in the human craft, the machine will end up making something mediocre.” He credited the production designers, cinematographers, and directors who elevated the campaign.

    Liwa.Content Driven director Sagar Rege added that the aim was not to dazzle but to move: “Most AI films today are montages. With these ads, we wanted to push the technology to tell a story.”

    Studio Blo itself is built on a marriage of filmmaking veterans alumni of DNeg and MPC and AI-first workflows. Its client list already boasts Warner Music, YRF Films, Dentsu, and Nykaa. With Emirates NBD, the studio signals a future where AI isn’t replacing creativity but collaborating with it helping brands tell smarter, faster, and infinitely ambitious stories.

  • From Chai Breaks to AI Breaks: How Indian Marketers Are Letting Robots Handle the Hustle

    From Chai Breaks to AI Breaks: How Indian Marketers Are Letting Robots Handle the Hustle

    MUMBAI: There is a huge change happening in India’s digital marketing scene. 73 per cent of marketing teams worldwide now use AI tools for jobs that used to take up 40 per cent of their workday. However, Indian marketers are at a crucial point right now. Most people are not using AI solutions appropriately; therefore, they miss out on smart automation’s life-changing power.

    The Task Delegation Revolution: A Chance Worth Rs 4 Lakh Crore

    The Indian digital marketing business, worth more than Rs 4 lakh crore, is experiencing what experts call “the productivity revolution.” AI tools are no longer just ideas for the future; they are real tools that are changing the way marketing teams work at advertising agencies in Mumbai, IT startups in Bengaluru, and e-commerce giants in Delhi.

    What AI Tools Do Best for Digital Marketers

    Content Scheduling and Localisation: The fashion store Myntra has successfully used AI tools to manage content scheduling in 12 Indian languages. These agents automatically change campaign messages for regional festivals like Durga Puja in Bengal and Onam in Kerala. Their AI systems currently take care of 80 per cent of social media scheduling, allowing creative teams to concentrate on campaign planning.

    Lead Scoring and Customer Segmentation: Bengaluru’s B2B SaaS business Freshworks used AI tools for lead scoring, which led to a 45 per cent increase in conversion rates. The system looks at how Indian businesses act during certain times, such as when they get budget clearances at the end of the fiscal year and when they buy things during festivals.

    A/B Testing at Scale: Paytm, a Delhi-based finance firm, employs AI tools to conduct large-scale A/B tests across diverse demographics. They evaluate everything from colour preferences (green vs. saffron themes around Independence Day) to messages that work for people with different income levels. Their AI-based testing method has increased click-through rates by 35 per cent and cut campaign setup time by 60 per cent.

    Real Numbers of Impact: During the 2024 holiday season, a well-known e-commerce firm based in Mumbai that sells ethnic clothing cut campaign management time by 40 per cent and increased Return on Ad Spend (ROAS) by 25 per cent. The AI tool changed how much to bid on Google Ads and Facebook campaigns on its own, based on changes in demand in real time during the busiest buying times of Diwali.

    The Human-AI Partnership Model: Changing the Roles of Marketers

    The best Indian marketing teams aren’t using AI instead of people; they’re making strong partnerships that use AI’s speed and human inventiveness.

    What People Are Still Best At

    Cultural Intelligence: AI can digest data, but human marketers are better at identifying cultural differences. A Chennai-based agency’s human team recently stopped a big cultural mistake when its AI proposed utilising beef images in a campaign aimed at South Indian vegetarians.

    Strategic Interpretation: AI tools give information, and people give it meaning. During COVID-19, Flipkart’s AI algorithms showed strange purchase habits. Human strategists saw this as a sign that people wanted more home exercise equipment and kitchen appliances, which led to successful pivot campaigns.

    Crisis Management: During the farmer demonstrations in 2024, human marketers at different companies made quick judgments to stop or change advertisements. AI tools couldn’t do this without human help.

    What AI tools Are Good At

    AI tools monitor social media sentiment in regional languages 24 hours a day, seven days a week, and inform human teams about possible problems before they get worse.

    Predictive Analytics: Zomato’s AI tools can predict when people will want more food during cricket matches and immediately change marketing budgets and inventory suggestions.

    Personalisation at Scale: Hotstar, a streaming service, employs AI tools to make content recommendations for 400 million customers, making it feasible to create unique marketing experiences that would be difficult for human teams to handle.

    A 3-Step Process That Works for Implementation Reality Check

    Step 1: Start small and learn quickly

    Start with easy automated chores, such as scheduling social media posts or sending out basic email marketing. Urbanclap, an Indian startup now called Urban Company, started by automating appointment confirmations and then added more complicated customer journey mapping. Many Indian businesses rush through this phase, making AI work poorly, and teams do not want to work.

    Step 2: Smart Scaling

    Add increasingly difficult duties, such as assessing leads and personalising basic content. Nykaa, an e-commerce site, grew by focusing on one group of customers (urban women aged 25–35) before branching out to other groups. Ensure AI knows how Indians shop, like the importance of wedding and festival seasons and regional preferences.

    Step 3: Strategic Integration

    Use AI tools for strategic tasks like optimising campaigns and performing predictive analytics. Swiggy, a big food delivery company, reached this point by adding AI tools to all of its marketing tools, from acquiring new customers to keeping them.

    How to Avoid Common Mistakes

    The Problem: AI tools often have trouble maintaining a consistent brand voice across Indian languages and cultural settings.

    The Answer: Ogilvy India, an advertising agency located in Mumbai, produced thorough brand voice standards in Hindi, English, and regional languages, with examples for distinct cultural settings.

    Worries About Data Privacy

    The Truth: Marketers need to be extra careful about how they use data now that India has a Personal Data Protection Act.

    Best Practice: Use AI solutions that put privacy first and follow local rules while still being useful.

    Risks of Too Much Automation

    Warning Signs: Customer satisfaction generally goes down when all human touchpoints go away.

    Example from India: A luxury firm based in Delhi first automated all of its customer care responses, which led to complaints about how impersonal they were. They were able to employ AI for early responses while making sure that humans handled more complicated questions.

    Important Success Metrics

    Effect on Revenue: There is a direct link between using AI and sales growth.

    Customer Satisfaction: Keeping high NPS scores even while more work is being done by machines
    Market Share Growth: Having better AI implementation gives you a competitive edge.
    Cultural Relevance Score: How well AI keeps a brand relevant in different Indian marketplaces

    Role Change vs. Role Loss

    Changing Roles:
    Digital Marketing Managers → AI Marketing Strategists
    Content Creators → AI Content Managers
    Performance Marketers → AI Performance Boosters

    New Roles:
    Trainers for AI Marketing
    Experts in Cultural AI
    Managers of Human-AI Collaboration
    The Competitive Edge of Being First

    Indian businesses that employ AI tools early are realising big benefits:

    . Cost Efficiency: Marketing operations costs go down by 30 per cent to 50 per cent

    . Market Responsiveness: the ability to quickly adjust to changes in how customers act

    . Scalability: the ability to grow more quickly in India’s many markets

    Looking Ahead: The Future of AI Marketing in India

    AI tools will be very important for marketers in India as the country progresses toward becoming a 5 trillion dollars economy. India has the most varied market in the world. In the next ten years of Indian digital marketing, the organisations that can find the right mix between AI efficiency and human innovation will be the most successful.
    The transformation isn’t about replacing marketers with AI; it’s about giving Indian marketers the tools they need to make ads that are more culturally relevant, effective, and impactful. It’s not a question of whether to use AI tools; it’s a question of how quickly and effectively you can do it while still keeping the personal touch that Indian customers love.

    The future of Indian marketers belongs to those who can successfully use artificial intelligence and human understanding to create marketing experiences that appeal to a wide range of people and achieve measurable business goals.

    The writer is a digital marketing specialist with extensive experience using AI in Indian markets. His company, C Com Digital, has worked with top companies to successfully add AI tools to their marketing operations while still remaining culturally relevant and connecting with people.    By Chandan Bagwe – Founder/Director of C Com Digital 

  • K-skin wins again as Anua touches down on Nykaa’s beauty shelf

    K-skin wins again as Anua touches down on Nykaa’s beauty shelf

    MUMBAI: From Seoul to serum shelf, Anua the Korean skincare sensation with a minimalist soul has officially made its Indian debut, courtesy of Nykaa. With cult-favourite toners, gentle pore-cleansing oils and spot-busting serums, the brand promises skin that’s not just glowing but also grateful. Known for its “less is more” philosophy and a clean, calming approach to skincare, Anua lands as Nykaa’s latest K-beauty exclusive, reinforcing the platform’s first-mover status in bringing South Korea’s finest skin solutions to Indian beauty bags.

    Whether you’re battling breakouts or just looking for balance, Anua’s star lineup brings together natural ingredients with scientific sensibility:

    . Heartleaf 77 per cent Soothing Toner: Cult-favourite calming toner to soothe inflamed, sensitive skin

    .  Niacinamide 10 per cent + TXA 4 per cent Serum: Skin-brightening booster that targets dark spots and dullness

    .  Heartleaf Pore Control Cleansing Oil: Melts makeup and excess sebum without disrupting the skin barrier

    .  Heartleaf 77 Clear Pads: Pre-soaked toner pads that exfoliate, clarify and calm in one swipe

    “We’re thrilled to introduce Anua to the Indian market through our exclusive partnership with Nykaa,” said Founders Inc. CEO Ryan Lee, brand owner of Anua. “This marks a new milestone in our global journey and we’re here not just to launch, but to build a meaningful skincare community.”

    With Nykaa Beauty’s executive director & CEO Anchit Nayar calling it “clean, calming, and results-driven,” Anua joins an elite K-beauty club already represented on the platform including Dr. Jart+, COSRX, Etude, Aestura, and Laneige.

    Nykaa, which first mainstreamed Korean skincare in India, continues to lead the wave, offering Anua exclusively on its website, app, and across 230 plus retail stores.

    As India’s beauty buffs grow more conscious and curious about ingredients, textures and routines, Anua’s entry is a timely ode to gentler formulations that work hard without trying too hard. It’s glow time, minus the guesswork.
     

  • Saumya Agarwal is appointed as vice president – Madison Media Plus

    Saumya Agarwal is appointed as vice president – Madison Media Plus

    MUMBAI: Madison Media Plus, a unit of Madison World, is delighted to announce the appointment of Saumya Agarwal as vice president. He will report to Madison Media Plus COO Mimi Deb.

    Saumya brings over 18 years of diverse experience in Integrated Marketing Communications. He has previously held leadership roles across GroupM, Dentsu and Publicis Groupe, and has worked with marquee brands such as Nykaa, HUL, Jaguar Land Rover, ICICI Group, HDFC Bank, Louis Vuitton Moët Hennessy, Allied Blenders and Spotify. Prior to joining Madison Media, he served as AVP at Starcom. Along with his deep brand-building expertise, Saumya brings a strong passion for new business initiatives, nurturing talent and crafting purpose-driven narratives.

    “As our client portfolio continues to expand and brand needs evolve, we are realigning our team structure to stay agile, strategic, and future-ready. Saumya’s addition to the leadership team marks a significant step in this direction, strengthening our capabilities to deliver impactful solutions and drive sustained business growth,” said Deb.

    Sharing his excitement, Agarwal said, “I’m excited to join Madison Media Plus at such a dynamic time of growth and transformation. The energy of the team is truly inspiring. I look forward to contributing meaningfully to our clients.”