MAM
And a new journey begins…
MUMBAI: In June 2012, two senior executives Sudha Natrajan and Raghav Subramanian quit Lintas Initiative Media to commence a new journey together. The duo had announced the launch of their new venture named TMC Corporation.
The media veterans who have a combined experience of more than 40 years in the media industry have launched two businesses under TMC Corp- The Media Consultancy and The Media Café.
The Media Consultancy is a strategic consultancy specialising in new age consumer research, brand and return on investment (RoI) analytics and modelling, media content and training. The Media Cafe, on the other hand, is the first of its kind media, advertising and marketing hangout. It is where industry professionals can bond, learn, gossip and have fun.
Based in Gurgaon, the two have self-funded the entire venture as they wanted complete control of its operations. They are promoting the businesses through word-of-mouth publicity and there is a dedicated FB page for ‘The Media Café’.
Natrajan and Subramanian write about TMC Corp and the idea behind the birth of an enterprise with a twist…
After spending 20 years each in the industry, we both realised that we were getting a little bored with what we have been doing till now, and that the way forward was to carve out newer challenges for us. Hence was born TMC Corp. While about 80 per cent of our time would go into building our consultancy, which has been constructed in such a way that it addresses the gaps that we have experienced in the media agency product over the years, there was an alter ego that we wanted to satisfy.
The answer lay in The Media Café. The media industry is a people’s industry. The last 20 years we have personally gained the friendship of everyone in the industry. We felt that we needed to give something back, to offer a space that the fraternity can call their own, where they can hangout and feel a sense of belonging. Setting up the Café has also given us the much needed freshness and twist that we needed in the second chapter of our career. We have put this up in nine weeks, a record time for anyone who is familiar with the F&B industry.
Media has come a long way in the last 15 odd years, from a delivery arm within a full service agency to a marketing partner to clients. Primarily because clients realise that media is the biggest cost bucket within marketing. Hence the significance and accountability automatically rises.
This growth has also led to challenges. What started with and 2.5 per cent– 3 per cent is now hovering around 1 per cent to 2 per cent. So, now with just a thru-put offering it has become hard to sustain, more so with global hawks keeping an eye at the numbers. So gradually ‘value added services’ have found a place within media agencies. This ranges from research to analytics to content and so on. This also adds up as a good pitch conversation (though rapidly there is no differentiation here as well).
The next level of challenge for agencies has been delivering this promise and also selling through to clients. Media agencies find it hard to attract specialized talent in these areas both from a scope and learning perspective, as well as pay scale. This becomes a big hurdle to deliver the services. The other big challenge is of objectivity. Especially when it comes to research and analytics, clients are not very convinced of the objectivity. A marketing mix model might always end up saying client needs to spend more or that there is nothing wrong with the current media mix. Marketers like Unilever have a strict code to work with third party companies for their analytics.
TMC has the uniqueness with both its founders, having worked in the industry across functions over two decades. The idea is not to fix things (which are where most start ups come from) but to support and work with both advertisers and agencies to create a better space for the brands.
Our offering is across the line support for the thru-put. A sound strategy needs to be backed by research and analytics and a good brand engagement needs to be enabled through content. Our offering is both composite as well as modular. Outside of this, we will be designing varied training modules for both agencies and media owners. Such an offering from one place does not exist. That should differentiate TMC. What we are not is a media planning and buying agency which executes plans for brands.
We are an offering that is complementary to the way the industry is structured currently, and do not intend to displace any existing entity. So, our potential market is fairly large. The field we are playing in ranges from doing projects on content strategy to on-going research and analytics relationships directly with large to medium sized clients, comprehensive strategic solutions either with clients or for them through their agencies and to retainership relationships with large agency houses. This will entail formulating and putting together pitch strategies, value-add to existing strategic challenges with their clients, content/research/analytics solutions, and training – both on functional strategic skills, as well as grooming leaders/aiding succession planning. There are also analytics assignments we are exploring with clients overseas.
Digital
Eight-year-old coder steals the show at India AI Impact Summit 2026
Ranvir Sachdeva meets Sundar Pichai and Sam Altman, links ancient philosophy to modern AI
DELHI: Amid a sea of global tech chiefs and policy heavyweights, the loudest buzz at Bharat Mandapam this week came from a boy barely tall enough to see over the lectern.
Ranvir Sachdeva, eight, became the youngest keynote speaker at the India AI Impact Summit 2026 in New Delhi, elbowing his way into a line-up dominated by chief executives, founders and ministers. Calm, bespectacled and fiercely articulate, he declared himself a technologist — and spoke like one.
“I’m here as the youngest keynote speaker at the India AI Impact Summit. I’m talking about how I’m linking ancient Indian philosophies to modern-day technologies. I’m also covering the different approaches which the rest of the nations are building AI,” he told news agency ANI.
He added: “I’m talking about how India is building AI with. I’m sharing my own use case of an Indian AI model just released and how I’m contributing to India’s GDP and driving AI literacy with it.”
The summit, held from February 16 to 21 in New Delhi, has drawn global names. Ranvir met Google chief executive Sundar Pichai and OpenAI chief executive Sam Altman on the sidelines, sharing photographs of the encounters. He has previously met Salesforce chief executive Marc Benioff and Doreen Bogdan-Martin, secretary-general of the International Telecommunication Union, at the AI for Good Global Summit in Geneva.
In 2024, he met António Guterres, United Nations secretary-general.
His most high-profile brush with corporate royalty came earlier. In 2023, during the opening of Apple’s Delhi store, Ranvir demonstrated his Swift coding skills to Apple chief executive Tim Cook in a one-on-one session. Cook later posted: “What an incredible reception, Delhi, thank you! We’re delighted to welcome our customers to our newest store—Apple Saket!”
What an incredible reception, Delhi, thank you! We’re delighted to welcome our customers to our newest store—Apple Saket! pic.twitter.com/5Jmi79ixzl— Tim Cook (@tim_cook) April 20, 2023
Ranvir replied publicly: “Thank you so much, @tim_cook! It was great meeting you today and showcasing my Apple Swift coding skills! You are an inspiration and I so want to meet you at #WWDC2023!”
Thank you so much, Tim! You are an inspiration and I so want to meet you at #WWDC2023 ! 🙂 https://t.co/BVthznLjD8— Ranvir Singh Sachdeva (@ranvirsachdeva) April 20, 2023
The invitation followed. Cook extended a personal call for Ranvir to attend the Worldwide Developers Conference 2023 at Apple Park in Cupertino.
This is not Ranvir’s first turn on the global stage. In 2025, aged seven, he addressed the United Nations’ AI for Good Global Summit in Geneva as its youngest keynote speaker. He spoke for 20 minutes on “Agents of Change: A 7-Year-Old’s Lens on Generation AI for Good”, in front of more than 10,000 attendees from over 180 countries and 53 UN partner organisations.
He shared the broader stage with Geoffrey Hinton, Nobel laureate and Turing Award winner, alongside senior figures from Amazon, Meta and Salesforce. According to a LinkedIn post by the Ardee School, Ranvir argued that “Generation AI are the true changemakers”, highlighting healthcare breakthroughs from bionic solutions and exoskeletons to assistive devices for ALS patients. He called for the democratisation of such tools to bridge the digital divide.
The precocity runs deep. At six, he became the world’s youngest TEDx speaker, speaking on technology and innovation. At five, he won a gold medal as a “Super Presenter” in the 2022 Global Reading Challenge. Media reports say that in 2021 he built a prototype rocket aimed at supporting NASA’s Mars exploration, earning recognition from the Jet Propulsion Laboratory.
In 2023, he became the youngest recipient of a robotics and AI certification from IIT Delhi after a summer workshop at the I-HUB Foundation for Robotics.
He began coding at three.
At an event otherwise obsessed with trillion-dollar valuations, sovereign AI stacks and regulatory guardrails, it was a small voice that cut through. Linking Sanskrit thought to silicon chips, GDP to generative models, Ranvir Sachdeva did more than make history. He made the grown-ups listen.
#WATCH | Delhi: At #IndiaAIImpactSummit2026, Ranvir Sachdeva, Child Prodigy, Technologist, Global Author says, "I'm here as the youngest keynote speaker at the India AI Impact Summit. I'm talking about how I'm linking ancient Indian philosophies to modern-day technologies. I'm… pic.twitter.com/e3OGgtxyDK— ANI (@ANI) February 19, 2026






