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OMG India appoints Bharat Malik as its country manager
MUMBAI: Performance marketing company, Online Media Group (OMG), has appointed Bharat Malik as country manager of OMG India.
Malik moves in from travel portal Yatra.com, where he was head of online marketing. He was instrumental in launching the affiliate program for Yatra.com.
His mandate will be to familiarise more Indian clients with the concept of affiliate marketing. According to the company, currently, 80 per cent of Indian travel brands don‘t use affiliate marketing and similar patterns exist across all sectors.
OMG Group CEO Richard Syme said, “Bharat Malik has extensive affiliate experience, particularly in the travel industry. We know over 75 per cent of Indian e-commerce is in the travel sector, but only 20 per cent of these brands currently utilise affiliate marketing – there is a massive potential for growth. Bharat is an extremely important and strategic hire for OMG. We‘re fast expanding in the Asia-Pacific region and we believe he‘ll play an important role in introducing the travel sector and all other sectors to the possibilities open to them with performance marketing at OMG India.”
Malik added, “With the growth of Indian e-commerce, now is the time for industry to harness the power of online performance marketing. Affiliate marketing with its performance driven results, helps online marketers achieve impressive RoI. It‘s been over four years since affiliate marketing started in India – we need to educate the market about the possibilities it opens up to them to increase sales and customer interaction. OMG India has developed robust technology platforms to make powerful affiliate campaigns a fast, affordable and exciting option for every Indian brand.”
MAM
Lego brings Messi, Ronaldo, Mbappé, Vinicius together
Campaign clocks 314 million views ahead of FIFA World Cup 2026 buzz.
MUMBAI: Four legends, one frame and not a single tackle in sight. Lego has pulled off a crossover few thought possible, uniting Lionel Messi, Cristiano Ronaldo, Kylian Mbappé and Vinícius Júnior in a single campaign ahead of the FIFA World Cup 2026 only this time, they’re building dreams brick by brick.
Titled “Everyone wants a piece”, the campaign features the quartet assembling a Lego version of the World Cup trophy, before placing miniature versions of themselves atop it, a playful nod to football’s ultimate prize. Shared widely across social media, the ad carries a pointed disclaimer: it is not AI-generated, a subtle but telling signal in an era where even reality is often questioned.
The numbers tell their own story. The campaign has already crossed 314 million views on Instagram across the players’ accounts, with fans hailing it as a rare, almost nostalgic moment particularly for the reunion of Messi and Ronaldo, whose last shared campaign ahead of the 2022 World Cup became one of the platform’s most-liked posts.
Beyond the film, Lego is extending the play with exclusive, player-themed sets tied to each of the four stars, part of a broader football-led programme designed to ride the global momentum building towards 2026. The idea, as echoed by the players themselves, leans into the parallels between football and play experimentation, creativity, failure, and triumph.
Messi described the sets as a way to bring on-pitch moments into an imaginative, hands-on world, while Ronaldo called the transformation into a Lego figure a rare honour, blending sport with storytelling. Vinícius, meanwhile, struck a more personal note, recalling childhood moments of building with Lego and framing creativity as a universal language that transcends borders.
The timing is no accident. With the 2026 World Cup set to run from June 11 to July 19 across the United States, Canada and Mexico, and featuring an expanded 48-team format, global anticipation is already building. Argentina, led by Messi, will enter as defending champions, adding another layer of intrigue.
For Lego, the campaign does more than celebrate football, it taps into its mythology. Because when icons become figurines and rivalries turn into play, the beautiful game finds a new kind of pitch. one built, quite literally, by hand.






