MAM
Nishad Ramachandran joins Hansa Cequity as Digital Experience head
MUMBAAI: RK Swamy Hansa Group‘s integrated customer marketing technology services company, Hansa Cequity, has appointed Nishad Ramachandran as vice president and head of digital experience.
Ramachandaran has 20 years experience and has handled senior leadership roles the most recent one being with iContract (part of Contract Advertising(I) Ltd. He has worked with brands like HSBC, Shoppers‘ Stop, Asian Paints etc. and has been part of Cannes Direct Jury in 2008.
Hansa Cequity CEO S Swaminathan said, “We are pleased to have Nishad lead this new and strategic initiative at Cequity. Our integrated customer marketing and analytics service has seen strong growth over the past year. For our growing roster of blue-chip clients we enhance customer relationships and build customer value by applying data, analytics and insight-driven campaigns to every interaction. Nishad unique blend of digital strategy, creative and technology thinking for brands will help us enhance our digital solutions.”
Ramachandaran said, “Hansa Cequity has invested in building a quality team of data scientists, customer strategists and marketing technologists. With the Digital Experience practice, we will truly leverage our promise of Customer Integrated Marketing (CIM) using digital data, mobile apps and analytics with powerful campaign ideas.”
AD Agencies
WPP and Ogilvy top the global charts as India joins the creative elite: Warc rankings
A record five-year streak for Ogilvy while India secures a top five global spot
MUMBAI: The global advertising world has a familiar king, but a new powerhouse is gatecrashing the palace. In the latest Warc Creative 100 rankings, the industry’s definitive audit of excellence, WPP has once again been crowned the top holding company. Not to be outdone, its crown jewel, Ogilvy, has secured the top network spot for a staggering fifth consecutive year.
It is a “five-peat” that proves Ogilvy’s creative engine is not just running but purring. While many networks rely on one or two superstar offices to carry the load, Ogilvy’s dominance is a team effort across the globe. Hot on their heels is sister agency VML, which took the silver medal for networks, ensuring a WPP clean sweep at the very top of the podium.
The biggest noise, however, is coming from the East. India has officially vaulted into the top five most creative nations on Earth. Once viewed primarily as a back-office for production, the country is now a front-row leader in imagination. Driven by the brilliance of agencies like Ogilvy Mumbai and Leo Burnett India, the nation is proving that its work does more than just look good on a trophy shelf. In a market where every rupee must work twice as hard, Indian campaigns are blending high-concept artistry with ruthless commercial effectiveness.
The individual accolades saw Heineken toast to success as the top brand, finally knocking Apple off its perch. Unilever remains the world’s most awarded advertiser, proving that big business can still have a big heart through its work for Dove and Vaseline.
The title of the world’s most creative campaign went to Publicis Conseil Paris for their AXA “Three Words” initiative. By subtly adding “and domestic violence” to insurance policies to provide immediate relocation cover, the agency proved that the best advertising doesn’t just sell a service, it provides one.
The 2026 rankings also signal a shift in the industry’s DNA. The era of boring business-to-business marketing is dead, with B2B campaigns cracking the top ten for the first time. Meanwhile, artificial intelligence has moved past the gimmick stage. The winners this year used tech not for the sake of a trend, but to drive genuine human emotion.
Whether it is Paris providing a safety net for the vulnerable or India redefining the global creative order, the message from this year’s Warc rankings is clear. The best work in the world is no longer just about catching the eye, it is about changing the world.






