Tag: personalised marketing

  • Personalisation gets a makeover at Media Investment Summit 2025: Brands speak human in the digital age

    Personalisation gets a makeover at Media Investment Summit 2025: Brands speak human in the digital age

    MUMBAI: It was anything but business as usual at Indiantelevision.com’s Media Investment Summit 2025. The curtain rose with a compelling session titled ‘Panel 1: Building Personalised Brands in the Digital Age’, where marketing mavericks laid bare the future of branding—minus the fluff, minus the spam, and all about relevance.

    Moderated by Giri Digital Solutions director of content & new media Abhishek Prakash the panel saw brand leaders unpack the hard truth: personalisation is not a “nice to have”—it’s the survival toolkit in an age of shrinking attention spans and overflowing feeds.

    “Personalisation has evolved beyond just calling someone by their first name”, opened Prakash. “In our YouTube MCN, we work with creators and brands to develop narratives that reflect emotional resonance, not robotic targeting”.

    Cipla director & head of growth & omnichannel marketing Aditya Das stressed the human side of data. “For Cipla, hyper-personalisation begins with understanding pain points, not just segments. The focus is on emotional connection across every patient touchpoint, and data is only as good as the insight it brings to the doctor’s table—or app”, said he.

    Table Space CMO Megha Agarwal believes workspace personalisation is not just physical but deeply experiential. “Data without empathy is surveillance. Empathy without data is guesswork. For us, the coffee machine remembers the CEO’s latte, not the advertising copy”, she said. Agarwal laid out how real estate branding is not just pre-sale persuasion but post-sale retention, with employee satisfaction now a key conversion metric.

    “Attention is the currency today”, said Bharti AXA Life Insurance deputy VP marketing Harshita Hemnani. In a life-decision industry like insurance, relevance and purpose matter more than ever. “We’re not just selling policies—we’re helping customers meet life aspirations”, she added. Hemnani outlined four pillars of personalisation—technology, empathy, intelligence, and creativity—highlighting that only when all four converge does a brand message land meaningfully.

    Mahindra Holidays & Resorts VP – customer operations Shweta Srivastava stressed the role of immersive content and brand storytelling. “It has to be emotional”, she said, citing Google’s viral 2021 ad on partition reunions as a case study in storytelling with soul. She also touched on the power of augmented reality (AR) in helping customers visualise their dream holidays, saying, “It’s not fiction. It’s functional”.

    Tata Realty marketing head – west & south zone Kiran Bhambani argued that in commercial real estate, brands are not just selling square footage but a daily experience. “Our job is to reduce attrition, not just sell walls”, she said. Using virtual tours, voice-led campaigns, and CRM automation, Tata Realty now offers clients an office that listens before it speaks.

    Business Standard VP – marketing head Moneesh Chakravarty warned against drowning in dashboards. “If spreadsheets could make decisions, we’d all be billionaires”, he joked. His mantra: marry intuition with insight. “You need to treat media not as traditional or digital—but as responsive”.

    In their final remarks, panellists urged marketers to stay human in their automation. As Prakash put it: “Don’t just personalise—empathise. Make the algorithm feel like a friend, not a stalker”.

    Srivastava summarised it with flair: “Personalisation is no longer about inserting names in emails. It’s about making people feel seen and heard—consistently, contextually, and with care”.

    With that, the panel set the tone for the summit—personalised branding is not about shouting louder. It’s about speaking clearer and closer to the consumer’s heart.

  • AiVanta expands to Dubai, bringing AI-powered personalised video tech

    AiVanta expands to Dubai, bringing AI-powered personalised video tech

    MUMBAI: Mumbai-based MarTech disruptor, AiVanta is setting up shop in the UAE, bringing its AI-powered personalised video solutions to the region’s top BFSI, healthcare, and telecom enterprises. If you thought customer engagement was already high-tech, think again—because AiVanta is here to redefine how brands connect with their audiences.

    Founded in 2023 by Karan Ahuja, Rupak Shah, Rajesh Grover, and Rajat Tyagi, AiVanta has built a reputation for delivering hyper-personalised, multilingual video experiences that feel less like marketing and more like a one-on-one conversation. With seamless integration into CRMs, marketing automation tools, and CPaaS platforms, AiVanta enables businesses to scale customer communication effortlessly while keeping it engaging, relevant, and conversion-driven.

    The UAE is racing ahead with digital transformation, making it the perfect launchpad for AiVanta’s next big leap. The company has already made waves in the region, securing partnerships with BFSI giant Al-Wathba and one of Dubai’s largest healthcare chains, Aster Healthcare. Clearly, the demand for personalised, AI-driven communication is growing—and AiVanta is delivering.

    “We are excited to bring AiVanta to Dubai, a city known for embracing innovation and fostering global business excellence,” said Ahuja. “This expansion allows us to collaborate with companies in a dynamic market and demonstrate how AI-powered videos can transform customer engagement. Since we are building in India but building for the world, Dubai was our natural extension from India. Plus, its multi-ethnicity allows us to expand our multilingual offerings that we built in India.”

    With hyper-personalised videos, AiVanta is helping brands create customer interactions that actually matter.

    Banks? They use AiVanta to send customers tailored financial insights.

     Insurance companies? They personalise policy updates.

    Healthcare providers? They educate patients with easy-to-digest video explainers.

    Telecom giants? They enhance customer experiences with dynamic, interactive content.

    It’s not just about flashy AI—it’s about making communication feel human, even when it’s digital.

    AiVanta’s UAE move is backed by an impressive client roster, including ICICI Bank, Bajaj Allianz, Canara-HSBC, Tata Mutual Funds, Ajax Engineering, and Aster Healthcare. With its cutting-edge technology and a proven track record, the company is well-positioned to support the UAE’s digital transformation goals—and redefine how businesses engage, retain, and delight customers worldwide.