Tag: Rishad Tobaccowala

  • GoaFest 2025: Future Tense Rishad Tobaccowla urges leaders to rewrite the rules before AI does  

    GoaFest 2025: Future Tense Rishad Tobaccowla urges leaders to rewrite the rules before AI does  

    GOA: Change sucks, but irrelevance sucks harder. With that disarming one-liner, author and Publicis Groupe senior advisor Rishad Tobaccowala had the GoaFest 2025 crowd hooked. In a sharp and soul-searching fireside chat with Publicis Groupe CEO of  South Asia Anupriya Acharya Tobaccowala offered a crash course in survival and soul in an era increasingly dominated by algorithms, automation and AI anxieties.

    Tobaccowala’s core thesis was clear: AI won’t replace you, someone using AI better will. But the real danger isn’t the technology, it’s complacency. “Too many companies are trying to use AI to make their broken models slightly more efficient,” he warned. “You don’t just want faster printing presses you want a new way to communicate entirely.”

    To prove the point, he spotlighted the New York Times, a legacy media brand that reinvented itself from a print-first paper to a digital-first platform with 12 online subscribers for every print one. Today, 35 per cent of its revenue comes not from news, but from games, recipes, and other lifestyle content. “They don’t call themselves a newspaper anymore, they’re an entertainment brand with a news vertical,” he quipped.

    Referencing Andy Grove’s classic Only the Paranoid Survive, Tobaccowala argued that the age of paranoia has passed. In its place? Dual thinking. “Successful companies must run two business models at once, one for today, and one for tomorrow,” he said.

    His advice: Spend five to 10 per cent of your money and 20–25 per cent of your best talent building the future. “Don’t assign tomorrow’s strategy to the person you don’t know what to do with,” he warned. “That’s like watering your grandfather’s grave instead of feeding your kids.”

    “I worked 37 years in one company, lived 45 years in the same city, and met my wife 53 years ago,” he said. “So when I say I hate change, I mean it. But irrelevance? That’s worse.”

    He dismantled the sugar-coated corporate approach to transformation. “Telling people change is good is a lie. It’s painful. It makes you look stupid. It scrapes your knees like learning to ride a bike.” What works instead? A three-part formula: incentives, training, and personal relevance. “Tell employees what’s in it for them, not just what’s in it for the company,” he urged.

    Tobaccowala didn’t mince words about leadership either. “We’ve entered the age of de-bossi-fication. Nobody wants a boss. They want a leader.”

    Monitoring, allocating, and measuring won’t cut it anymore. Today’s leaders must inspire, create, and mentor. If you’re not spending at least 50 per cent of your time leading instead of managing, he warned, “you’ll be retired by machines or Gen Z sooner than you think.”

    Tobaccowala also had sharp advice for younger professionals: “You’re in a 50-year career. Stop thinking in 6-month cycles.” He urged them to chase growth over glam, pick the right boss, and resist jumping ship just because the grass looks greener. “The grass is greener because it’s fertilised with… well, you know what,” he joked.

    Despite all the AI hype, Tobaccowala believes the machines may help us rediscover what makes us human. In 2023, the most popular AI tools weren’t just about productivity, they were about relationships, purpose, and self-growth.

    “AI will amplify your creativity, but it can’t replace your conviction,” he said. “It’s not about resisting AI. It’s about partnering with it without outsourcing your soul.”

    As he signed off, Tobaccowala reminded the audience of something many forget. “India is not the future. It is the present. Publicis gets 65 per cent of its workforce and a growing chunk of its global revenue from India, China, and the US,” he noted. “You’re not a footnote. You’re a headline.”

    He ended with a final, cheeky mic-drop about his book’s global release: “My publisher didn’t want to launch in India first. Said it wouldn’t sell. Now India is the only place it’s sold out twice.”

  • AI, aye captain – Rishad Tobaccowala  fires up GoaFest with his human touch about artificial intelligence

    AI, aye captain – Rishad Tobaccowala fires up GoaFest with his human touch about artificial intelligence

    GOA:  Who knew a masterclass in artificial intelligence could feel this human?

    At the 2025 edition of GoaFest, held at Taj Cidade de Goa Horizon, marketing sage and Publicis Groupe senior advisor Rishad Tobaccowala kicked off the event with a keynote that was equal parts wake-up call and soul-stirring sermon. In a session titled Ignite, Tobaccowala didn’t just warn the ad world about AI, he challenged it to rekindle its human spark.

    The thesis? 

    AI isn’t just the next big thing, it’s already bigger than we think. “AI in 2025 is still underhyped,” he declared, noting that many businesses still haven’t grasped how deeply it’s reshaping the fundamentals. And he came bearing receipts.

    Forty years ago, a desktop computer cost 5,000 dollars and ran on 1.5 million transistors. Today, your smartphone is 10 times cheaper and runs on 1.5 billion transistors. “The cost of computing has dropped by a factor of 10 million,” he said, with the drop in information distribution costs also approaching zero. “And now, the cost of knowledge and experience is heading the same way.”

    But here’s the kicker: that doesn’t make AI a differentiator, it makes it infrastructure. 

    “Saying you have AI is like saying you use electricity,” Tobaccowala quipped. “You won’t survive without it. But it’s not what will set you apart.”

    What will? HI — Human Ingenuity, Intuition, Interaction, and Inspiration.
     

    Rishad Tobaccowala

    In a world where machines are smarter, faster, and cheaper, he argued, what remains irreplaceable is human originality. “When AI gives everyone the same data and tools, storytelling, creativity and trust become your only real edge,” he said, reaffirming marketers’ role as custodians of emotion and meaning.

    Peppered with zingers, analogies, and a 220-second cheese brand startup powered by GPT-4, the session also made serious points about leadership in a rapidly shifting world. “If you’re planning to retire after 2026, think again,” he warned. “Most people won’t be replaced by AI, they’ll be replaced by other people using AI better.”

    He also tore into the cult of corporate scale. “You’ll see billion-dollar companies with less than 100 employees,” said Tobaccowala, who himself pays $225 every month month to access top AI models from eight platforms, outperforming Fortune 500 firms stuck in bureaucratic inertia.

    His call to action? 

    Rethink everything. “If you were starting your company today, would it look like it does now? No. Then why are you still running it that way?” From burning outdated mental models to embracing immigrant thinking (outsider mindset, underdog innovation), his message was clear: adapt or become obsolete.

    Rishad Tobaccowala

    He concluded with his signature “six Cs” for survival in the AI age: Cognition, Creativity, Curiosity, Communication, Collaboration, and Convincing, a new operating system for human relevance.

    As for jobs? “Work will change more between 2019 and 2029 than it has in the past 50 years,” he said, forecasting a rise in gig-style, goal-focused work over traditional employment. “The future of work is about getting things done, not filling jobs.”

    In a festival famous for its flair, Rishad Tobaccowala delivered a rare thing, a lecture that didn’t just ignite the mind, but lit a fire in the heart.

  • The comic & Webtoon app ‘Toonsutra’ is now live on Android & iOS

    The comic & Webtoon app ‘Toonsutra’ is now live on Android & iOS

    Mumbai: Toonsutra has launched the country’s biggest webtoon app that can be accessed and enjoyed by all Indian Android & iOS users. Webtoon platforms have become an explosive phenomenon across the world growing to US$4.7 billion in 2021 and projected to exceed US$60 billion a year by 2030. The digital media startup spun out last year from Graphic India – the country’s leading original character entertainment company. Validating the timing and the potential this opportunity presents for the Indian webtoon market, Sony Innovation Fund recently became an investor in Toonsutra.

    Through the Toonsutra app, comic fans can consume some of the best global and local comic content and stories in Hindi, Tamil, Telegu and English languages in an easy-to-read vertical scroll format optimized for mobile. Content in Bengali, Marathi, Malayalam and Kannada will also be available soon. Breaking the mould of traditional comic reading, Toonsutra provides readers with comics in bite-sized snackable episodes, each of which delivers an enticing narrative leaving the hooked reader anticipating the next thrilling episode.

    “Toonsutra plans to spark a new wave of pop-culture entertainment across India connecting millions and building the largest community of fandom across comics, webtoons, animation, genre and fiction,” commented  Graphic India co-founder and CEO Sharad Devarajan. “Just as we saw with the streaming video revolution, India’s entertainment audience is excited to experience and experiment with a wide variety of the best content from across the world, and also groundbreaking local originals from homegrown creators. Comics and webtoons are the next big visual storytelling medium for the country and Toonsutra is bringing the highest quality comic stories by the greatest global creators to India’s vernacular languages for the first time.”

    The app will offer episodes from different genres including fantasy, romance, mythology, superhero, sci-fi, action and more. Toonsutra’s new storytelling home will showcase the highest quality web-toon and comic stories from top Indian and global creators, including stories from icons Stan Lee, Grant Morrison, Ryan Pagelow, Shekhar Kapur, Jeevan J. Kang, Mounica Tata, Rohan Chakravarty, Alicia Souza. The platform will also promote emerging rising star creators from across India giving them a home to tell their stories.

    “The webtoon mobile comic space has taken off globally and is projected to exceed US$60 Billion a year by 2030. India’s massive 700 million youth market is looking for new, engaging, snackable, high-quality experiences. Toonsutra’s web-toon bite-sized format will appeal to this young consumer who consumes entertainment very differently today. A convenient vertical scroll is native to where everyone is on their phones 24×7!” said veteran mobile and media startup leader, Vishal Anand who recently joined as Toonsutra’s co-founder and chief operating officer. “With India’s media and entertainment market expected to grow from $23 billion to $100 billion by 2030, we believe web-toon comics are perfectly positioned to be one of the largest accelerants for that growth,” he added. Previously, as Chief Product Officer and part of the core initial team at Dailyhunt, Anand helped scale one of India’s most successful media platforms to over 100M active users and build and manage their product and tech teams. Most recently Anand was part of the product leadership team at Amazon Web Services.

    As readers dive deeper into webtoons, they will earn coins, unlock rewards, and discover hidden bonus surprises and community features. The more they read, the more they are rewarded, enhancing the excitement of their storytelling journey. Readers can seamlessly enjoy their daily dose of entertainment without having to pinch, zoom or scale pages, unlike other normal comic reader PDF apps. In addition to free daily content, fans can also purchase and binge on episodes for as low as INR 5, making comics finally accessible to everyone.

    The vast library available on Toonsutra includes exclusive content with numerous global partners, including:

    Graphic India’s leading Indian comic stories such as 18 Days, Devi, Shadow Tiger, Dragonfly, The Mighty Yeti and Chakra The Invincible; the epic comics based on Baahubali: The Lost Legends and more.

    The vast Archie Comics library will be made available in vernacular languages for the first time, featuring stories about Archie, Betty, Veronica, Jughead and the gang from Riverdale. Just in time to catch up on the original comics that inspired the upcoming ‘The Archies’ film coming in December to Netflix.  

    Superhero lovers in India can finally enter the world of Valiant Comics, one of the world’s largest superhero universes, and enjoy hit titles like X-O Manowar, Bloodshot, Harbinger, Ninjak and dozens more.

    Cinema lovers can experience the Liquid Comics library with original comics made by some of the world’s most iconic filmmakers including Wes Craven’s ‘Coming of Rage’; Barry Sonnenfeld’s ‘Dinosaurs vs. Aliens’; Guy Ritchie’s ‘The Gamekeeper; and John Woo’s ‘Seven Brothers’ to name a few.

    Manga fans can enjoy, stories from Kenaz, a leading South Korean-based studio that specializes in vertical manga series in popular categories such as love, romance, fantasy, and action with acclaimed titles such as Evil Hunter, Blood Type Love, The Distance between Us, The Scent of Love and more.

    Toonsutra will also be putting the spotlight on home-grown creators from India such as the inimitable Alicia Souza whose designs and comics have brought joy to millions; the amazing Mounica Tata who portrays life in India through an intelligent, satirical, and comic lens; and Rohan Chakravarty whose Green Humor comics highlight important environmental topics with hilarious wit; and new Indian creators being constantly added.

    Toonsutra’s early backers include some of the biggest names in tech and media such as entrepreneurs, Rotten Tomatoes co-founder Patrick Lee; Twitch co-founder Kevin Lin; Crunchyroll co-founder Kun Gao; Jeremy Liew partner Lightspeed Venture Partners; Rishad Tobaccowala, Fmr. chief growth officer, Publicis Group; Michael Maher, founder, Start Media; Benjamin Grubbs, co-founder, CreatorPlus; Holly Lui, co-founder, Kabam; Ray Chan, co-founder, 9GAG; Sandeep Kumar Sood, co-Founder, Junglee Games; and others.  

  • ML & AI to play a key role for marketers in the third connected age: Rishad Tobaccowala

    ML & AI to play a key role for marketers in the third connected age: Rishad Tobaccowala

    MUMBAI: The world is now entering the third connected age and it is going to have a huge impact on various areas of advertising and marketing. Shifts are happening including data connecting to data, which is machine learning. Artificial Intelligence is fuelling everything including marketing, advertising services, and biotech.

    Advisor, speaker, and educator Rishad Tobaccowala who is also an author spoke at the MMA India seminar called ‘Impact India: The Future of Modern Marketing’ recently. While addressing at the event, he noted that the first shift going on in the third connected age is machine learning. The second shift going on in the third connected age besides machine learning is that there are much faster ways of connecting like Jio which has had a massive impact. “In the next few years, India will move faster and faster to 5G. It is very resilient and one can download a high definition movie in seven seconds or less. It will open up more things,” added Tobaccowala during his talks at the event.

    He also highlighted that mobility will not just be about the mobile device. It could be things like glasses, and headphones because the third shift will be about new ways of connecting. He gives the example of ‘Voice’ and this will continue as devices become smaller and more powerful. Also, augmented reality technology will become important. Virtual reality will also happen though it is in its early days. It will have a big impact on areas like gaming which is already bigger than movies and gambling. The fourth shift will be new trust currencies emerging and blockchain will be the key factor. This third connected age will build on the first and second connected ages and will change the way the world of marketing exists.

    He noted that 1993 was the first connected age with the world wide web where people connected to interact. That gave birth to businesses like search and e-commerce and to companies like Google and Amazon. In 2007 there was the second connected age which was about being connected all the time and it gave rise to mobile, and social media. Today, most traffic in the US comes from mobile and unlikely from the desktop. These three ages build on each other and they will not replace each other.

    He noted that Audience, Brands, Content, Data and Enterprise are now significantly shifting. Every marketer recognises that they do not just send messages to audiences. Increasingly, customers are becoming active rather than passive.

    He also spoke about the move towards re-aggregated rather than segmented marketing. In the latter, you take large audiences and make them smaller audiences like TV, newspapers including others. In the former, you are able to thrive in the digital age.  You start with an audience of one and re-aggregate him/her through things like decision engines.

    He mentioned three trends that will grow when one talks about brands. The first is that brands will increasingly become experiences. That is important as a great experience will result in people speaking about it and becoming loyal. Second, the brand’s purpose will become important. What does a company stand for? The third new trend is branding as employees. In the future, no company will survive without its employees and suppliers. “The most important advocate for brands even more than happy customers is happy employees,” he added.

    In terms of content, he noted that it is impossible to put content into a bucket. He gave the example of seeing an ad on Tiktok while travelling in a car resulting in him buying a product at a store. Is it ATL or BTL? Is it offline or online? Is it mobile e-commerce or social? Is it analogue or digital? It was all those. Content is morphing and so is marketing. Also, new content creators are changing pretty dramatically.

    He mentions the fact that more views and interactions are happening for Instagram, and Youtube creators than those who watch the Superbowl. New kinds of content will emerge. In terms of data, he said marketers must recognise that data alone is not the way brands are built. It is about how you extract meaning from data, and how you tell stories utilising data. The big mistake people make is thinking that data by itself is the differentiator. Connecting data to other things in a company is what will make the difference. Less than half a dozen companies have special data. So, it is how you use, and leverage data to tell stories. That is important because human beings choose with their hearts to make purchases. Then they use data to justify what they just did. That is what happens 7 out of 10 times.

    The future is about data-driven storytelling, not data-driven marketing. Marketers cannot be only driven by data numbers otherwise they will be out of a job, he warned.

    He stressed that marketing is about stories & insights and not just about data and algorithms. Pure numbers are not the answer.

    Enterprise, he said, is rethinking the way an organisation is set up for the future. The future, he cautions cannot fit into the containers of the past. The best marketing companies, he said, revolve around people speaking up freely and challenging each other. That is how ideas are born. Also, the best companies constantly reinvent themselves.

    So, how does one do this? First, constantly learn, he said and added that if marketers do not then they will fake it and will become irrelevant as individuals, marketers and businesspersons. Marketers must set aside an hour a day to learn new things.

    Also, marketers must build a case for the exact opposite of what they believe. That will strengthen an argument. Third, learn new technologies by doing things. “Learn, do, build the case for the opposite” he concluded.

  • Publicis ropes in Saatchi’s Chris Foster as SVP global clients

    Publicis ropes in Saatchi’s Chris Foster as SVP global clients

    MUMBAI: Publicis Groupe has appointed Saatchi & Saatchi worldwide chief operating officer Chris Foster to the newly created role of senior vice president global clients.

     

    “Our clients are facing serious challenges due to technology and innovation in this ever changing world. Chris Foster will help our clients to extract the best from our talents and our formidable assets through integrated solutions. Chris has been deeply involved in the strategy and operations of several Groupe clients. His track record for growth and collaboration has defined his tenure and makes him perfectly suited for this role at this time,” said Publicis Groupe chairman and CEO Maurice Lévy.

     

    Foster will report to Publicis Groupe chief strategist Rishad Tobaccowala and will begin in his Paris-based role on 1 September, 2015.

     

    Currently responsible for the performance and operations for seven of the top 10 countries in the Saatchi & Saatchi network, and for significant global client relationships and management. He has been a senior leader at Saatchi & Saatchi since 1999 in North America, Asia Pacific and Greater China, as CEO of Fallon USA 2008-11, and as a member of the Global Leadership Team since 2011. He is an economics and philosophy graduate from the University of Western Ontario.

     

  • After setting up ROAR, Publicis Groupe acquires Crown Partners

    After setting up ROAR, Publicis Groupe acquires Crown Partners

    MUMBAI: It was last week when Publicis Groupe, the French holding company had announced the launch of ROAR, an agency of hand-picked talent drawn from across the digital resources within the group.

     

    To scale up its digital side of the business, the group has acquired Crown Partners, a full service firm that drives commerce and content solutions, based in the United States.

     

    According to WSJ, the group is aiming at generating at least half of its revenue by 2018 from digital. Publicis reported that its digital revenue rose 14 per cent on an organic basis in 2013, with digital representing 38 per cent of the company’s revenue.

     

    Crown Partners will be aligned with Razorfish, to further accelerate the agency’s strong leadership and growth in commerce, marketing and content technology platform-related services.

     

    Founded in 2001 by CEO Richard Hearn and president Mark Kennedy, Crown Partners currently has 150 employees based at its headquarters in Dayton, Ohio and across US offices in New York, Dallas and Denver.

     

    The firm offers technology solutions to Global 2000, Fortune 500 and emerging enterprises, ensuring clients—which include Lands’ End, ASICS, Keurig-Green Mountain, GlaxoSmithKline, St. Jude, United Technologies and David Yurman—achieve their digital goals.

     

    The acquisition supports Razorfish’s commitment to identifying opportunities for business transformation that have commerce at their core. Crown Partner’s healthy business, combined with Razorfish’s approach to creating superior integrated customer experiences on behalf of their clients, will amplify the agency’s ability to provide exceptional services to its clients.

     

    The Crown Partners’ team will join Razorfish Technology Platform Services. Hearn will assume the position of executive lead and president of Razorfish Technology Platform Services, and will report to Razorfish North America CEO Shannon Denton.

     

    “We believe this is a time of great opportunity for businesses that are willing to embrace transformation. The businesses with the best and most consistent customer experience will come out on top, and the only way to win is to effectively leverage technology and data,” mentioned Razorfish global CEO Pete Stein in a statement.

     

    “The integration of Crown Partners within Razorfish reinforces the agency’s technology capabilities in the commerce and retail space and offers increased capitalization on growth opportunities, while ensuring continued talent development and delivery of the highest quality client work,” added Razorfish chairman Rishad Tobaccowala.

     

    Hearn continued, “For the past 13 years Crown Partners has empowered companies to use digital technologies to expedite growth, drive new business and minimize costs. Joining forces with Razorfish will give our shared clients access to unmatched innovation, depth of expertise and balance in platform enabled professional services.”

     

    Razorfish and Crown Partners will also be able to expand an already long list of successful platform implementations with mutual key partners hybris, a SAP company, and Adobe.

     

    hybris president and co-founder Carsten Thoma said, “Crown Partners has been a dynamic force in realising omni-channel commerce solutions leveraging the hybris and SAP platforms. Together with Razorfish, we have a valued partner in the market with the innovation, experience and ambition to change the face of commerce.”

     

     “It’s exciting to think about the potential that will result from an innovative partner like Crown Partners joining forces with a powerful Adobe global partner like Razorfish. This acquisition will further extend Razorfish’s current success with providing customers the value and benefit of Adobe Marketing Cloud solutions by growing their web experience and experience-driven commerce practice,” concluded Adobe vice president, global alliances Jim Sink.

  • AdAsia: Droga, Charan & Tobaccowala are key speakers

    AdAsia: Droga, Charan & Tobaccowala are key speakers

    MUMBAI: AdAsia 2011 has said that David Droga, Dr Ram Charan and Rishad Tobaccowala will be the key speakers for the congress to be held in New Delhi from 31 October to 3 November.

    The three speakers will share their perspective on the evolving dynamics in business management, marketing and communications at AdAsia 2011.

    PepsiCo chairperson and CEO Indra Nooyi will be the Keynote Speaker at the congress.
     
    David Droga, who founded an independent advertising agency Droga5, has also worked as worldwide CCO of the Publicis network, ECD of Saatchi & Saatchi London, and regional creative director of Saatchi & Saatchi Asia.

    A business advisor with more than 30 years of experience, Dr. Charan has worked with companies such as GE, Verizon, Novartis, Dupont, Thomson Corporation, Honeywell, KLM, Bank of America, and MeadWestvaco.
     
    Rishad Tobaccowala helps guide strategy and serves as a catalyst to innovation efforts across Vivaki – a Publicis Groupe entity. He has also served as the chief innovation officer of Publicis Groupe Media and was the founder and president of SMG Next.

    Chairman of the organising committee AdAsia 2011 and Group CEO and MD – Mudra Group Madhukar Kamath said, “AdAsia2011 is honoured to welcome David Droga, Ram Charan andRashid Tobaccowala to AdAsia 2011. Their varied experience and expertise in different fields of management, marketing and communications will add immeasurable value to the entire conference and will provide it a holistic view.” 
     
    AdAsia returns to India after eight years. In 2003, the AdAsia congress was hosted in Jaipur and was widely regarded as a landmark in the history of the Congress. AdAsia seeks to comprehensively explore all aspects of the theme ‘Uncertainty: The New Certainty‘.