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Titan Raga campaign urges women to make time for themselves

New film reframes ‘being busy’ as choosing joy without guilt or permission.

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MUMBAI: For many women, the busiest thing on the to do list is often… everyone else. Titan Raga’s latest campaign turns that idea on its head, urging women to reclaim moments for themselves without the quiet guilt that often shadows leisure. Instead of glorifying rest, the brand’s new film celebrates the conscious choice to claim joy, without waiting for permission or feeling the need to “earn” it first.

At the heart of the campaign lies a familiar yet rarely spoken truth. Many women instinctively feel that personal time must come only after every responsibility has been ticked off. Leisure becomes something to justify, and joy is postponed until the to do list runs out. Titan Raga’s message is simple: perhaps it never needed permission in the first place.

The film brings this idea alive through everyday scenes rather than dramatic gestures. A working professional, a mother and a film director move through their daily routines, each quietly negotiating that familiar internal voice that questions whether they deserve a moment to themselves. Instead of waiting for the right moment, they simply choose it.

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These moments are small and deeply relatable. A pause in the middle of a hectic day, a quiet personal indulgence, or a few minutes reclaimed from the chaos of everyday life. Individually they appear ordinary, but together they carry a quietly rebellious energy.

The narrative is stitched together by a playful track that flips a common refrain on its head: “Haan hoon main busy… making some time for me.” What once sounded like an apologetic explanation becomes a confident declaration.

Titan Company Ltd. chief marketing officer Ranjani Krishnaswamy said the campaign was shaped by a recurring emotional insight.

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“What we kept hearing underneath everything was guilt. Not because anyone was asking women to be constantly available, but because they were asking it of themselves. It is not a rule someone handed them, it is something they carry quietly and instinctively. With this campaign we wanted to speak to that moment when a woman realises she has always had the agency to choose differently,” she said.

Ogilvy Bangalore executive creative director Aarti Nichlani added that the team aimed to spotlight everyday decisions that rarely receive attention.

“The idea was to capture moments women seldom see celebrated, those brief pauses where they choose themselves in the middle of everything else. We wanted the film to feel light, relatable and real because sometimes the smallest choices can feel the most liberating,” she said.

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The campaign concludes with a simple thought that neatly sums up its spirit: let’s get busy making time for ourselves.

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Brands

BuyBuyCart launches smart vending machines in retail push

Firm plans up to 400 automated units across high footfall locations

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NEW DELHI: BuyBuyCart is betting on convenience at the tap of a screen with the launch of its smart vending machines, marking its entry into India’s fast-evolving automated retail space.

Designed for speed and simplicity, the machines aim to bring everyday essentials closer to consumers who are increasingly short on time but high on expectations. From packaged snacks and beverages to ready-to-eat meals, personal care items and even healthier options like makhanas and dry fruits, the offering is built around daily needs with a dash of impulse buying.

Each unit comes equipped with an interactive touchscreen and supports multiple payment modes, including upi, qr code scanning, debit and credit cards, and digital wallets, making the entire purchase journey quick and contactless.

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Founder Ashish Pandey said the move reflects a broader shift in consumer behaviour. “Convenience, speed and accessibility are now central to retail. Our vending machines are designed to deliver essentials round the clock while strengthening a technology-led retail ecosystem,” he noted.

The company plans to roll out between 300 and 400 machines in the first phase, targeting high footfall locations such as offices, IT parks, colleges, hospitals, fuel stations and residential complexes. It is also exploring partnerships with educational institutions to deepen its reach.

Beyond convenience, the machines double up as miniature storefronts for brands, offering a new channel for product visibility and promotions.

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To scale operations, BuyBuyCart will adopt both FOCO and COCO models, allowing entrepreneurs to plug into the network while the company retains operational control in select locations.

As urban lifestyles grow busier, retail is quietly stepping out of stores and into corridors, campuses and corners, one vending machine at a time.

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