iWorld
Covid2019 boosts digital influence on consumers
NEW DELHI: Over the course of the last three months, consumers attitude and behaviour has gone through some very fundamental changes, shared Nimisha Jain, managing director and partner, Boston Consulting Group, while releasing the latest Facebook India-BCG findings. The novel SarsCov2 crisis has given a major boost to digital influence on consumers in the country.
The findings were revealed during a virtual event and panel discussion attended by several leaders of India Inc, and saw businesses such as Samsung India, Mondelez India and Big Bazaar, all of which have deep offline retail networks, throw light on how they’ve leveraged digital in these times.
“If you go back in history, SARS in 2003 was a tipping point for e-commerce in China. We believe that this [the pandemic and lockdown] is an important time when we could have a similar shift in India as well,” Jain added.
A key takeaway from the reports is that 70 per cent of urban consumers for mobile and 55-60 per cent for apparel will be digitally influenced. It’s critical that brands amp up their digital engagement and customise their proposition to win in the new normal.
The report says that the online share for mobile phones is likely to reach 45 per cent in the coming two years; up from 38 per cent in the pre-crisis days.
The report has highlighted smartphones as an ‘essential’ category in consumer’s daily life, consumer spending sentiment for mobile phones continues to garner mixed responses. Around 29 per cent of the respondents to the BCG survey said they are more likely to decrease spending in the next six months; 40 per cent of which might buy a cheaper variant of a mobile phone, while 15 per cent of them might look at a cheaper brand altogether.
The report says that three kinds of consumer trends have made the smartphone even more central to our lives—a reversal of past trends such as bringing the outside in-home through virtual experiences, acceleration of past trends leading to stronger adoption of digital and online, and the formation of new habits such as DIY. No wonder that 55 per cent of those surveyed said that they intend to increase spends on mobile phone via an online channel in the next six months.
“We know that digital influence has significantly increased across the path-to-purchase – up to 70 per cent for some categories. We are now seeing businesses convert this increased digital influence into tangible business outcomes. A significant digital acceleration has happened on the back of social media, and with 400 million + Indians connected on the Facebook family of apps in India, we play a consequential role in the consumer journey. The opportunity for businesses now is to adopt new solutions that are now available, across the funnel – replicate in-person experiences by bringing alive virtual experiences, focus on efficiency and truly incremental outcomes by platform, and leverage friction-less ways of staying in touch with the consumer in times of physical distancing," shared Facebook India director and head global marketing solutions Sandeep Bhushan.
90 per cent of consumers who have purchased apparel online during the lockdown has shown a willingness to continue. Within CPG, this figure is 80 per cent for food-related sub-categories, and 84 per cent for non-food-related sub-categories, these trends might follow beyond the pandemic, says the report.
Futurebrands consulting MD and CEO Santosh Desai, one of the panellists, shared that the pandemic has made us adapt to new habits for instance online education, cooking etc. “Today we are forced to think of things in a new way and what will remain are the opportunities. Marketers should not be complacent, they should dig deep to challenge the current trends.”
Furthermore, the report reveals that people intend to explore online channels a lot more for purchasing smartphones, consumer packaged goods, and apparel in the coming six months. For instance, 55 per cent intend to increase online spends on mobile phones in the next six months.
iWorld
Mastercard expands concert series with comedy and music format
Vir Das, Zakir Khan and Papon headline multi-city shows across India.
MUMBAI: From punchlines to power chords, the stage is getting a genre upgrade. Mastercard has unveiled the next phase of its multi-city concert series in India, blending stand-up comedy with live music in a format that mirrors the country’s evolving entertainment tastes. The new line-up brings together a diverse mix of performers, including comedians Vir Das and Zakir Khan, alongside singer Papon. The shift marks a departure from earlier editions that were primarily music-led, featuring global and Indian acts such as Enrique Iglesias, A. R. Rahman and Sunidhi Chauhan.
Curated in collaboration with Tribe Vibe and EVA Live, the expanded series is designed to create a broader cultural platform that brings humour, storytelling and music into a single live experience.
Vir Das will kick off the comedy segment in New Delhi with four shows across two days at Yashobhoomi on 9 and 10 May. Meanwhile, Zakir Khan is set for an extended run in Mumbai, with nine shows scheduled at Dome SVP Stadium across 12, 13, 14, 19 and 20 June, with additional dates expected.
On the music front, Papon will headline a six-city tour, beginning in Chandigarh on 16 May, followed by Ahmedabad on 29 May and Lucknow on 30 May. The tour will then move to Bengaluru on 6 June, Hyderabad on 7 June, and conclude in Indore on 14 June.
The series continues to offer exclusive benefits for Mastercard cardholders, including priority ticket access and premium lounge experiences at venues positioning the platform as both an entertainment and lifestyle proposition.
Beyond the spotlight, the initiative carries a social dimension. Through its partnership with Learning Links Foundation, Mastercard has enabled nearly 90 students from underserved communities across cities such as Delhi, Mumbai, Ahmedabad, Bengaluru, Hyderabad, Jaipur and Chandigarh to experience live events often for the first time aiming to spark interest in careers within the experience economy.
As live entertainment becomes increasingly hybrid and experiential, Mastercard’s latest move signals a simple insight: today’s audience doesn’t just want a show, they want a story, a laugh and a memory, all rolled into one.








