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Pitchfork Partners appointed communication strategy advisor for Jaycee

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New Delhi:  Jaycee, the company dealing with processing, marketing and export of high-quality coal combustion products has appointed Pitchfork Partners Strategic Consulting LLP as its communication strategy advisor.

Pitchfork Partners will drive communication for Jaycee, supporting business growth and strengthening the brand narrative, the company said on Thursday.

Jaycee, director, Rishit Dalal said: “India is the world’s second largest ash producer. With the government aiming to boost the domestic coal mining sector, and the fact that coal power will remain an integral part of our economy for the next two decades at least, it is an exciting phase for us and building our brand narrative will play a crucial role in business. That’s where Pitchfork Partners comes in. It has the credentials and track record to make our brand even more relevant to all stakeholders.”

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Pitchfork Partners co-founder, Jaideep Shergill said: “We are delighted to partner with Jaycee. We understand the transformation and the repositioning taking place in the coal combustion products industry. It’s a privilege to partner with the leader in this sector and be part of its sustainable change journey in India.”

Founded in 1986, Jaycee exports to more than 30 countries across five continents. The company has operations in Maharashtra, Gujarat, Tamil Nadu and Andhra Pradesh, and is expanding to other states soon.

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Brands

IPL franchises look beyond reach to monetise fan relationships

Study maps a Rs 45–50 crore annual upside from digital fan ecosystems

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MUMBAI: After 18 seasons of relentless growth, the Indian Premier League has become one of the world’s most powerful sporting brands. Its franchises, however, are being told that reach alone is no longer enough.

A new analysis argues that the next phase of IPL franchise economics will be defined by how effectively teams convert broadcast audiences into long-term, owned fan relationships. The shift, it says, is from mass visibility to structured digital ecosystems that treat fandom as a compounding asset rather than a seasonal spike.

The central idea is simple: broadcast reach should be seen as the top of a longer value funnel. Digital engagement, in this model, is not a marketing afterthought but a system designed to turn anonymous viewers into known, monetisable users. Franchises that offer distinctive, personalised experiences can unlock direct revenues from fans and indirect gains through richer sponsorship propositions.

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The study suggests that future media rights cycles will increasingly focus on yield per fan rather than raw viewership, reflecting a move from passive consumption to active participation. This places pressure on franchises to invest in digital infrastructure that goes beyond scale and focuses instead on repeatable outcomes: registrations, behavioural insight and personalised activation across platforms.

First-party fan data sits at the heart of this strategy. When identity, preferences, engagement history and transaction signals are unified and operationalised, franchises can segment audiences more precisely, improve retention and lift lifetime value. Without such a digital engine, fan monetisation remains episodic and hard to scale.

Done well, the report estimates, this approach could compound value of up to Rs 45 crore annually for a franchise over time, while also deepening long-term fan relationships.

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The underlying opportunity, pegged at roughly Rs 50 crore a year, is broken into four levers: data-led sponsorship and advertising uplift (35 per cent, or Rs 16–18 crore); direct-to-fan commerce and experiences (30 per cent, or Rs 11–14 crore); memberships and recurring fan revenue (20 per cent, or Rs 7–9 crore); and efficiency gains that free up capital for reinvestment (15 per cent, or Rs 5–7 crore).

Actual outcomes will vary by market size, fan base and execution capability. But the direction is clear. The future economics of IPL franchises, the analysis concludes, will hinge less on how many fans they reach and more on how many relationships they own.

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