MAM
Marengo Asia Hospitals appoints Pallavi Mishra as PR head
15 plus years experience; joins from Kaizzen to lead reputation and comms strategy.
MUMBAI: In the business of healing, words matter almost as much as medicine and Pallavi Mishra is stepping in to script the next chapter. Marengo Asia Hospitals has appointed Mishra as head of public relations & communications, bringing on board a communications professional with over 15 years of experience spanning consulting and agency-led mandates. The move signals a sharper focus on narrative-building as the hospital network expands in an increasingly competitive healthcare market.
Mishra joins from Kaizzen, where she served as director – PR. Her previous roles include senior consultant at First Partners and senior manager at Percept India, where she worked across strategy, crisis communications, media relations, and public policy. Her career has largely centred on helping organisations manage reputation while navigating scale, scrutiny, and transition.
In her new role, Mishra will oversee brand reputation across all verticals, with a mandate to strengthen Marengo Asia Hospitals’ public narrative through consistent and meaningful brand-building efforts.
Announcing the move on Linkedin, she noted that the role brings together her interest in healthcare communications, storytelling, and purpose-led branding, adding that she looks forward to contributing to the organisation’s focus on patient-first care, accessibility, affordability, accountability, and innovation.
The appointment comes as Marengo Asia Hospitals continues to scale its presence, with the addition of a seasoned communications leader expected to bring greater coherence to its messaging while aligning closely with its patient-centric positioning.
MAM
Bob Iger joins Thrive Capital as adviser after Disney exit
Former Disney CEO returns to VC firm, stays on as Disney adviser till 2026.
MUMBAI: From castles to capital, Bob Iger isn’t done building just changing the blueprint. Bob Iger has taken on an advisory role at Thrive Capital, marking a return to the New York-based venture firm he briefly joined in 2022. Founded in 2009 by Josh Kushner, Thrive Capital has been positioning itself at the intersection of technology and long-term value creation, an area where Iger’s experience in scaling global entertainment businesses is expected to add weight. Kushner, 40, welcomed Iger back, highlighting his ability to blend technology with human-centric storytelling, particularly in an era increasingly shaped by artificial intelligence.
Iger is no stranger to Thrive. He had earlier joined the firm as a venture partner in September 2022, after stepping down as CEO of The Walt Disney Company and concluding his tenure as executive chairman in 2021. That stint, however, was short-lived. In November 2022, Disney’s board brought him back to steady the ship, replacing Bob Chapek following a turbulent period for the company.
Now, with his latest exit from Disney’s top job last month, Iger appears to be revisiting the venture world, this time with a clearer runway. Still, the Disney chapter isn’t entirely closed. Under his agreement with the company, he will remain until the end of 2026 as a senior adviser to new CEO Josh D’Amaro and will continue to serve on the board for his current term.
The move comes as venture firms increasingly seek operators with deep industry experience to navigate what Kushner described as “the most consequential technology shift” of the era, driven by AI. For Iger, whose career has hinged on blending creativity with scale, the transition from Hollywood to high-growth investing seems less like a pivot and more like a plot twist.








