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thebusinessstories.com > Economics > Startup > Marketing in India Is No Longer One-Size-Fits-All: x-panzaa Co-Founder Rishabh Singh Chauuhan Decodes the New-Age Playbook
Startup

Marketing in India Is No Longer One-Size-Fits-All: x-panzaa Co-Founder Rishabh Singh Chauuhan Decodes the New-Age Playbook

Puneet Yadav
Last updated: December 30, 2025 10:20 am
Puneet Yadav 1 month ago
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From convincing to connecting—Indian marketing is quietly rewriting its own rules.

Contents
The Indian Audience Mindset Has ChangedFrom Mass Advertising to Mindset MarketingData, Culture, and Emotion Drive the New StrategyWhat the Future Looks Like

India’s marketing landscape is undergoing a silent but powerful transformation. What once worked for a mass audience is no longer enough in a country where three generations—Gen X, Millennials, and Gen Z—coexist, consume, and decide very differently. Sharing sharp insights on this shift, Rishabh Singh Chauuhan, Co-Founder of brand growth firm XPANZAA, highlighted how marketing in India is moving from broad persuasion to deep, mindset-led targeting.

According to Chauuhan, Indian marketing has entered an era where brands are no longer just “selling products” but decoding human behaviour across generations.

“Earlier, ads were designed to convince everyone. Today, marketing is designed to understand everyone—differently,” he shared.

The Indian Audience Mindset Has Changed

India is unique. A single household may include a Gen X decision-maker, a Millennial influencer, and a Gen Z validator. Chauuhan explains that brands can no longer rely on one message to influence all three.

  • Gen X still values trust, stability, proof, and authority. They respond to credibility, legacy, and reassurance.
  • Millennials look for value, aspiration, and relatability. They want brands that “get” their lifestyle and struggles.
  • Gen Z, the fastest-growing consumer force, seeks authenticity, speed, humour, and cultural relevance. They don’t want ads—they want conversations.

This generational split has forced marketers to rethink not just what they say, but how, where, and why they say it.

From Mass Advertising to Mindset Marketing

Chauuhan points out that Indian marketing is no longer platform-first—it is mindset-first.

Earlier:

  • TV and print dominated
  • One campaign fit all
  • Focus was on reach and repetition

Now:

  • Instagram, YouTube, WhatsApp, podcasts, and regional platforms coexist
  • Messaging changes by age, behaviour, and intent
  • Focus is on relevance, retention, and recall

“Today’s marketing depends less on shouting louder and more on speaking smarter,” Chauuhan noted.

Data, Culture, and Emotion Drive the New Strategy

Modern Indian marketing is increasingly dependent on:

  • Behavioural data (what people watch, skip, save, or share)
  • Cultural context (memes, festivals, regional language cues)
  • Emotional triggers (fear, pride, belonging, aspiration)

Chauuhan emphasizes that successful brands are those that balance data with desi intuition—combining analytics with an understanding of Indian emotions.

What the Future Looks Like

According to x-panzaa’s leadership, the future of Indian marketing will be:

  • Hyper-personalised, not hyper-promotional
  • Story-led, not script-led
  • Community-driven, not celebrity-dependent

Brands that fail to adapt risk sounding “outdated” to Gen Z and “untrustworthy” to Gen X—losing both ends of the spectrum.

India is not just a market; it’s a mix of mindsets. As Rishabh Singh Chauuhan sums it up:

“Marketing in India is no longer about convincing people to buy. It’s about aligning with how different generations think, feel, and decide.”

In this evolving landscape, only those brands that understand who they are talking to—and why—will truly win attention, trust, and loyalty.

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