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BBH India MD Arvind Krishnan moves on

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Mumbai: The managing director of BBH India, a Publicis Groupe company, Arvind Krishnan has decided to put in his papers. A BBH India spokesperson confirmed the news of his exit to IndianTelevision.com on Friday.

“Arvind has been a strong member of our team at BBH India for 13 years, ever since we started the company in 2009. He has contributed immensely to the growth and success of our organisation and we shall miss his energy & passion,” said BBH India and PWW India CEO Subhash Kamath on Krishnan’s exit.

“He has decided to become an entrepreneur now and start his own venture,” Kamath further said. “We wish him the very best in his future endeavours.”

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Krishnan joined BBH in 2009 as a brand partner in Mumbai. He moved on to helm BBH London in 2012 before taking over as managing director of BBH India. Prior to BBH, he had a three-year stint at Leo Burnett.

“Over the past 17 years, I have steered businesses small, big, local, international, early-stage and mature across markets,” Krishnan’s LinkedIn bio reads. “I identify the key levers of growth and guide businesses in building those levers into ownable brand assets that deliver over time (and sometimes, in very little time).”

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Brands

Jubilant Foodworks to end Dunkin’ franchise in India

Pizza chain operator will not renew agreement when it expires at end of 2026.

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MUMBAI: When the doughnuts stop turning and the coffee goes cold, even a global giant like Dunkin’ can find the Indian market a tough brew to crack. Jubilant Foodworks has decided not to renew its franchise agreement with Dunkin’ when the pact expires on 31 December 2026, according to a Reuters report. The operator, best known for running Domino’s outlets in India, said it would evaluate options for its existing Dunkin’ stores, including a potential sale or transfer of franchise rights, in consultation with the US-based brand.

The decision follows years of underperformance in a market where local tastes and intense competition have made it difficult for international coffee-and-doughnut formats to gain traction. Jubilant, which has increasingly focused on its core pizza business and newer bets like Popeyes, indicated that the exit would not materially affect its financial or operational position.

Dunkin’ accounted for just 0.61 per cent of Jubilant’s revenue in the fiscal year ending 2025 and recorded a loss of approximately Rs 191 million, according to a regulatory filing. The company operated 27 outlets as of December 2025, having shuttered seven stores over the preceding year.

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The retreat comes even as Jubilant’s broader business shows signs of momentum. The company reported a 65 per cent rise in quarterly profit for the October to December period, reaching Rs 70.9 crore, up from Rs 42.91 crore a year earlier.

For Jubilant, the exit reflects a sharpening strategic focus. For Dunkin’, it marks another setback in a market that has proven resistant to imported café concepts without significant localisation.

In the cut-throat world of Indian quick-service restaurants, sometimes the sweetest deals are the ones you quietly walk away from leaving more room for the brands that truly rise to the occasion.

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