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TAM AdEx: TV ads for consumer durables surge, print drops by six per cent in H1 2024
Mumbai: TAM AdEx’s latest report for Jan-Jun 2024 reveals significant growth in TV ad volumes for the consumer durables/home appliances category, showing a 2.9 times increase compared to the same period in 2022, and 11 per cent higher than H1 2023. In contrast, print ad space for the category continued its downward trend, falling by six per cent compared to the first half of 2023.
Godrej & Boyce Mfg Co led the category on TV, holding a 33 per cent share of ad volumes, while Usha International and Voltas joined as exclusive top advertisers in 2024. Print advertising saw TTK Prestige India and Stovekraft maintain their top spots with 41 per cent and 21 per cent share of ad space, respectively. The South Zone dominated print ads, accounting for 33 per cent of ad space, closely followed by the North Zone.
On Radio, ad volumes dropped 52 per cent in 2024 compared to 2023, but Samsung India Electronics led with 28 per cent of ad volumes. Digital ad impressions grew by five per cent in H1 2024, with Samsung again topping the list at 25 per cent share of impressions. Programmatic advertising accounted for 81 per cent of digital impressions.
The report highlights that the consumer durables/home appliances category continues to prioritise TV advertising, with prime time being the preferred slot. The news and GEC (general entertainment channels) genres captured 65 per cent of ad volumes.
In the print sector, Hindi and English publications together contributed over 64 per cent of the ad space. The preference for promotional offers remains strong, comprising 81 per cent of total print ads, with multiple promotions being the most utilised form.
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IICT partners with Gativedhi to bring studio production tools to students
New MoU lets students explore AI-driven production pipelines for AVGC-XR
MUMBAI: The Indian Institute of Creative Technologies (IICT) has teamed up with Gativedhi Technologies to give students a front-row seat to modern studio production. The collaboration will integrate Gativedhi’s AI-powered production intelligence platform, Shotrack, into academic programmes, letting students experience the workflow systems used by animation, VFX and gaming studios.
Under the MoU, faculty, students and researchers will get hands-on access to Shotrack through beta programmes, pilot deployments and academic evaluations. This will allow them to explore simulated production pipelines, understand asset management, track tasks and monitor schedules, essentially seeing how complex projects come together behind the scenes.
Shotrack is designed to tackle a key industry challenge: when multiple studios work on the same project, differing internal systems often create bottlenecks, slow approvals and complicate version control. The platform provides a unified production environment, enabling smoother collaboration across distributed teams while generating operational insights and predictive analytics to optimise crew allocation, forecast schedule risks and manage costs.
The collaboration also opens doors to Gativedhi’s wider ecosystem. Upcoming tools include StudioTrack, for studio operations management covering budgeting, recruitment and IT infrastructure, and WorkTrack, which measures workflow efficiency and team productivity across industries.
IICT plans to embed these tools into programmes covering animation pipelines, VFX workflows, gaming production and media project management. Students will also benefit from guest lectures, masterclasses, workshops, internships and research projects that connect academic learning with real-world studio practices.
IICT CEO Vishwas Deoskar, said the partnership provides “An environment where production pipeline tools can be explored, tested and refined while students gain insight into how large-scale productions are organised.”
Gativedhi Technologies founder & CEO Senthil Kumar added, “This collaboration introduces students to real-world studio management tools and helps us improve our platform with academic feedback.”
With Shotrack in classrooms, India’s future animators, VFX artists and gaming producers will get a taste of studio life long before they step into one.








