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Better Body Bombay: A premium personal care brand focusing on Indian skin type

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Mumbai: Better Body Bombay, a personal care brand is set to redefine the industry with its innovative range of clean, sustainable, and gender-neutral products.

Inspired by the vibrant city of Bombay, the brand ensures that its products are free from harmful chemicals, toxins, and artificial additives. Better Body Bombay aims to provide consumers with a sensorial experience while ensuring the utmost safety for both people and the environment.

The brand offers a range of exotic ingredient collections designed to meet specific needs. One of these collections is the Blood Orange collection, which includes moisturisers, body wash, hand wash, and lip balm that harnesses the power of the citrus fruit to brighten, renew, and repair the skin. The Tea Tree and Kaffir Lime collection, on the other hand, consists of hand wash, anti-dandruff scalp rub, lip balm, and anti-dandruff shampoo. Another collection offered by BBB is the Onion Seed extract range, which includes anti-dandruff shampoo, conditioners, anti-dandruff scalp rub, and hair growth elixir. These collections are just a few examples of the diverse product offerings from Better Body Bombay.

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With each product, BBB aims to inspire individuals to embrace a healthier, more conscious approach to personal care.

Currently, the products are available at Wellness Forever, Nykaa, Flipkart, Amazon, and  PharmEasy.

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Brands

Workday unveils Sana, a new AI tool for businesses

New conversational interface, 300+ skills and deep integrations aim to turn AI from sidekick to operator

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CALIFORNIA: Workday has fired a fresh salvo in the enterprise AI race, rolling out “Sana”, a system it touts as “superintelligence for work”, designed not merely to assist, but to act. The pitch is blunt: stop dabbling with disconnected copilots and start letting AI run the plumbing of business.

Unveiled globally on March 20, Sana arrives as a three-part stack, Sana for Workday, a conversational interface; a self-service agent with more than 300 skills; and Sana Enterprise, which plugs into tools from Gmail and Outlook to Salesforce and Slack. The aim is to collapse the sprawl of enterprise software into a single AI-led workflow engine.

At its core, Sana promises four things: find, act, build and automate. Employees can query internal data, execute tasks such as updating records or contracts, generate dashboards, and trigger multi-step workflows, all within the same interface. The twist is where it sits, inside Workday’s existing systems, inheriting their permissions, compliance rules and audit trails.

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“AI only works in the enterprise when it’s connected to trusted, deterministic systems,” said Aneel Bhusri, co-founder and chief executive. “Sana is what brings it all together… a powerful way for people to search, reason and orchestrate work across the enterprise.”

The critique of current AI deployments is familiar, flashy pilots, little real impact. Workday’s answer is to embed intelligence where decisions are made and actions executed. Gerrit Kazmaier, president, product and technology, framed it as a shift from suggestion to execution: “AI agents take action using trusted context, not just provide suggestions… a single experience where AI is embedded directly in the flow of work.”

Early adopters suggest traction. Berner claims 90 per cent adoption within 40 days, scrapping 400 ChatGPT licences. Cheffelo calls Sana its “AI backbone”, while Telavox says the conversation has shifted from automating tasks to reimagining entire processes.

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Analysts, too, see a broader play. Josh Bersin described the integration as “a major milestone”, arguing it could reshape both customer and employee experience by making AI-native workflows the default.

Sana is being bundled via Workday’s Flex Credits, no separate licence, no added paywall, a move that lowers friction and speeds adoption. Meanwhile, Sana Enterprise extends the system beyond Workday, allowing users to search documents, schedule meetings or track project tickets across multiple platforms in one conversation.

The bet is clear: whoever controls the workflow, controls the future of enterprise software. With Sana, Workday is trying to move AI from a helpful assistant to an invisible operator. If it works, the software menus may vanish, and with them, the way work itself is done.

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