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Hitachi gives Bharat Kaushal the top job to power India’s next big leap

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MUMBAI: There are power moves, and then there are power-grid-level promotions. In a strategic reshuffle that signals its intent to double down on India, Hitachi Ltd. has elevated Bharat Kaushal to a triple-threat role: Executive chairman, acting managing director of Hitachi India, and corporate officer in charge of regional strategies (India). Effective 1 April 2025, this marks a milestone not just for the company, but for Indian corporate leadership.

The announcement, made on 9 April 2025, cements Kaushal’s place as a central architect of Hitachi’s Indian ambitions. Already the first Indian MD of Hitachi India since FY2017, Kaushal now commands a wider brief to steer the tech giant’s India game plan, from urban mobility to financial inclusion.

“I am truly honored and overwhelmed on the trust and confidence placed upon me in steering the future growth for Hitachi in India… Hitachi India is evolving and offering an unparalleled opportunity to further advance its vision of delivering cutting-edge, sustainable solutions…” etched Kaushal

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Kaushal has been no passenger in Hitachi’s Indian journey. Under his watch, the company expanded its presence in energy, infrastructure, healthcare, e-education, and urban mobility, building strong government and public sector alliances.

Now, with India galloping toward its digital destiny, Kaushal’s elevation reads less like succession and more like strategic ignition. As corporate officer in charge of regional strategy, he’ll design Hitachi’s playbook for a market that’s already a tech titan in the making.

And let’s face it—Hitachi is no stranger to Indian soil. It’s been around for over nine decades, partnering in everything from railway tech to rural empowerment. But this move signals a new tempo: local leadership for local impact.

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As Kaushal put it, the focus now is on last-mile delivery and solutions that create a “socially empowered society”. That’s not just corporate-speak. That’s policy-aligned, purpose-led growth.

Hitachi is betting that innovation rooted in India, led by Indians, is the secret to not just surviving the future, but building it.

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India’s M&E engine accelerates to Rs 2.78 trillion as digital dominance deepens

FICCI–EY flags structural shifts in consumption, with digital ads at 63 per cent, AI reshaping content, and the sector set to cross Rs 3 trillion by 2027

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MUMBAI: India’s media and entertainment (M&E) industry has crossed a defining threshold, expanding not just in size but in structure, as digital consumption, data-led monetisation and shifting audience behaviour redraw the contours of the business. The sector grew 9 per cent in 2025 to reach Rs 2.78 trillion, signalling a deeper transformation underway, according to the latest FICCI–EY report Stories, scale and impact.

What was once a broadcast-led ecosystem is now decisively digital-first. Growth is being powered by online platforms across advertising, subscriptions and content consumption, even as traditional formats struggle to keep pace.

“Media and entertainment are no longer discretionary pursuits; they have become essential frameworks through which people interpret the world,” said Ashish Pherwani, M&E sector leader at EY India.

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Digital becomes the centre of gravity

The most significant inflection point is the rise of digital media as the industry’s largest segment, overtaking television in 2025, a shift widely seen as irreversible. Digital media crossed Rs 1 trillion in revenues, growing over 30 per cent year-on-year, driven by both advertising and subscriptions.

Digital advertising alone rose 26 per cent to Rs 94,700 crore, accounting for 63 per cent of total ad revenues, up sharply from 56 per cent a year earlier. E-commerce and point-of-sale advertising surged 50 per cent to Rs 22,000 crore, underscoring a pivot towards performance-led marketing.

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India’s overall advertising market grew 13.5 per cent to Rs 1.5 trillion, nearly twice the pace of GDP growth, with digital contributing more than the entirety of incremental gains as traditional segments declined.

Screens multiply, attention fragments

Consumption trends reveal the scale of change. Indians spent 1.2 trillion hours on mobile devices in 2025, with nearly 60 per cent of that time devoted to media and entertainment. Video audiences climbed to 572 million, while social media users approached 500 million, reflecting a vast and expanding digital user base.

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Connected TV is emerging as a crucial bridge between traditional and digital ecosystems. Time spent on connected TVs surged to 85 hours per month for OTT viewing, while connected TV households reached around 40 million weekly active homes.

Yet this explosion in consumption is not translating evenly into revenues. Online news platforms saw reach decline by 9 per cent, with AI-driven summaries and search reshaping how audiences access information.

Subscriptions rise, but monetisation remains uneven

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Digital subscriptions are gaining traction as premium content moves behind paywalls. Subscription revenues rose 60 per cent to Rs 16,300 crore, with 216 million paid video subscriptions across 143 million households.

Still, monetisation challenges persist. Much of India’s digital consumption remains ad-supported, particularly in music streaming, where 178 million users generated 5.98 trillion streams but limited subscription uptake continues to weigh on revenues.

Television declines, but adapts

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Television remains deeply embedded, reaching around 745 million viewers weekly, but its economic model is under strain. Advertising revenues fell by more than 10 per cent, while subscription revenues declined 8 per cent, with the loss of 11 million pay-TV households.

Rather than disappearing, television is evolving into a hybrid model, increasingly bundled with digital offerings as the lines between linear and streaming blur.

Advertising and experiences drive growth

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Two engines powered industry expansion in 2025, advertising and live experiences. While digital advertising surged, live events emerged as the fastest-growing segment, expanding 44 per cent.

Concerts, large-scale events, weddings and religious gatherings are driving demand for shared, in-person experiences, creating a counterbalance to rising digital consumption. Industry executives increasingly view this duality as complementary rather than contradictory.

Films, music and print show mixed fortunes

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The film industry delivered record revenues of Rs 20,500 crore, with over 1,900 releases and 37 films crossing Rs 100 crore at the box office. However, digital and satellite rights values softened as platforms tightened spending.

Music revenues grew 10 per cent, aided by live events and licensing, though streaming economics remain challenging. Print held steady, with advertising revenues rising around 2 per cent, even as circulation declined among younger audiences.

Radio, by contrast, continued to contract, with revenues falling 7 per cent amid declining listenership and advertiser migration to digital platforms.

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Gaming, AI and the creator economy reshape the future

Gaming is emerging as a structural growth driver, with Indian developers generating over $1.5 billion in export revenuesand global revenues from India-made games expected to grow 20 to 30 per cent annually.

Artificial intelligence is rapidly embedding itself across the value chain, from content creation to distribution and personalisation. At the same time, audiences are shifting from passive consumption to active participation, increasingly acting as creators, curators and distributors of content.

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Three forces, information, escapism and digital self-expression, are reshaping demand, pushing companies towards data-driven, outcome-based monetisation models.

Consolidation and capital flows intensify

The structural shift is mirrored in deal activity. The sector recorded 105 transactions in 2025, up 8 per cent year-on-year, with 73 per cent of deals concentrated in digital and sports segments. Public markets accounted for 35 per cent of deal value, reflecting investor confidence in scalable, tech-led media businesses.

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At the same time, content production has entered what executives describe as a “buyer’s market”, with studios cutting back on high-cost projects and focusing on efficiency.

The road to Rs 3 trillion

Looking ahead, the industry is projected to cross Rs 3 trillion by 2027 and reach Rs 3.3 trillion by 2028. Digital advertising alone is expected to contribute an additional Rs 44,600 crore in incremental revenue, while digital subscriptions continue to expand as OTT adoption deepens.

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By 2028, new media, including digital platforms and gaming, is expected to account for 53 per cent of total revenues, overtaking traditional formats for the first time. Live events are also set to expand beyond metros into more than 20 cities, reinforcing the rise of experiential consumption.

FICCI president Anant Goenka described the sector as “a powerful driver of innovation, employment, cultural influence and economic growth”, underlining its central role in India’s digital transformation.

The message from the report is unambiguous. This is not a cyclical upswing but a structural reset. Scale is no longer the differentiator. The future of India’s media economy will be defined by precision in targeting, monetisation and engagement, as a converged, multi-platform ecosystem takes shape.

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