MAM
TV industry may lose Rs 500-600 cr due to demonetisation
MUMBAI: The government’s move to not accept Rs 500 and Rs 1000 currency notes as legal tender may affect the TV industry in a big way.
A recent media report has estimated that the Indian television industry is to suffer a loss of Rs 500 to Rs 600 crore in advertising revenue as fallout of PM Modi’s decision to demonetise close to 86 per cent of liquid cash in the economy.
This is because several advertisers are postponing their campaigns scheduled to air in November and December due to a slowdown in consumer spending, a media buyer informed livemint.com.
As Colors TV CEO Raj Nayak puts it, “There is disruption in off-take of consumer goods & FMCG (fast moving consumer goods) products.” According to a press statement shared by Nayak, the situation is also affecting new businesses as most advertisers are “clueless as to how the market will evolve and respond.”
Dentsu Aegis Network South Asia chairman and CEO Ashish Bhasin feels that the reason for the cut back on the marketing spends could be the impact on sales that the demonetisation has had on the FMCG products.
Typically, the October-December quarter is the most active quarter accounting for almost 30 to 40 percent of annual billing in terms of advertising spends. With how things are, that is unlikely to be the case this year, a worried Bhasin said.
ALSO READ: Demonetisation: Housing, online payment gung-ho; others find solace in India’s larger interest
MAM
Ad:tech honours 2026: Full list of winners announced
Expanded awards spotlight winners across 22 categories as industry doubles down on intelligent automation
NEW DELHI: Marketing’s tech elite took the spotlight as the ad:tech honours 2026 returned with a sharper focus on AI, data and immersive media, signalling how deeply technology now underpins brand strategy. Held at Yashobhoomi on March 17, the second edition drew industry leaders to celebrate innovation that is reshaping engagement and performance.
Presented with the International Advertising Association India chapter and new partner Huella, the awards expanded from 8 to 22 categories, tracking the rapid convergence of creativity, automation and analytics.
The winners’ list reads like a snapshot of marketing’s future. In affiliate and partner marketing, Lyxel & Flamingo – Boat and Paytm Ads – Giva took silver. Mobavenue Media Private Limited struck gold in AI-driven dynamic creative optimisation, alongside a silver for Laqshya Media Limited.
Creative AI collaboration saw Rediffusion Brand Solutions Private Limited win gold, with Saltinc Consulting Private Limited securing silver. Laqshya Media Limited continued its strong run, taking gold in AI conversation agents and adding multiple wins across categories, including silver in GenAI-led creative and both gold and silver in interactive DOOH campaigns for Tanishq and Tata Coffee.
Predictive AI honours went to Strong Metrics and Tyroo, both silver, while Orient Bell Limited picked up silver in immersive retail tech. In GenAI-led creative, Laqshya Media Limited, Salt – Kotak and Sumimoto each secured silver, reflecting the crowded race in generative creativity.
Publicis bagged silver in influencer management and gold in performance marketing, where it shared the stage with Arm Worldwide and The Trade Desk, both silver. Glad U Came Private Limited stood out with gold in influencer measurement and analytics.
Marketing automation saw CereOne Media Pvt. Ltd. and Globale Media win silver, while ADMOTT Private Limited claimed silver in OTT innovation.
Programmatic media categories highlighted the shift to advanced targeting and connected screens. Mobavenue Media Private Limited clinched gold in connected TV advertising, with Animmoov Digital Media Pvt Ltd – Asus and Lyxel and Flamingo taking silver. Cheggout Services Private Limited won silver in retail media advertising, while Paytm Ads – Versuni secured gold.
On social platforms, Vayner Media India took gold in community and UGC engagement, with Under 25 – Oppo winning silver. Segumento rounded off the list with silver in the innovation category.
Jaswant Singh, country managing director at ad:tech India, underscored the momentum, saying generative AI and data-driven decision-making are now central to marketing impact. Neena Dasgupta, IAA mancom member and chief executive and founder at The Salt Inc Consulting, added that the awards celebrate not just technology, but “the people, the creativity, and the relentless effort behind it.”
Backed by Comexposium Group, ad:tech New Delhi has long tracked digital disruption. Now, with the honours, it is rewarding those who are not just adapting to change but engineering it.
In an industry racing towards automation, the message from 2026 is unmistakable. The future of marketing will be written not just in ideas, but in algorithms.








