e-commerce
Amazon revives ‘Aur Dikhao’ with new integrated campaign
Targets everyday shopping with IPL, regional and digital-first strategy.
MUMBAI: If India loves asking for more, Amazon is more than happy to show it. Amazon India has rolled out a new chapter of its ‘Aur Dikhao’ platform, partnering with WPP to reposition itself as the go-to destination for everyday shopping, where choice, trend and value collide. The integrated campaign, led by WPP OpenDoor along with WPP Creative and WPP Production, is designed to shift perceptions around affordability while reinforcing the platform’s breadth of selection.
At its core is a simple behavioural truth: shoppers rarely stop at the first option. By turning the phrase ‘Aur Dikhao’ into a cultural and commerce cue, Amazon is attempting to tap into the joy of discovery particularly across high-frequency categories such as fashion, beauty, home and kitchen, and wireless accessories.
But this isn’t just a creative refresh, it’s a full-stack media and commerce play.
The campaign is heavily anchored around IPL 2026, where Amazon has secured prominent visibility across both linear and connected TV, including a co-powered sponsorship on CTV. It also integrates into match narratives through a branded segment, ‘Game Changing Moments Aur Dikhao’, ensuring the brand rides on high-attention moments rather than sitting on the sidelines.
Beyond cricket, the strategy stretches into emerging content formats. A ‘ShopTheScene’ approach embeds products within short-form storytelling, turning entertainment into a shoppable experience. Influencer-led content, timed with the IPL season, is expected to further amplify the idea of “option overload” in culturally relevant ways.
Regional depth is another key lever. The campaign has been localised across six languages Hindi, Tamil, Telugu, Kannada, Marathi and Bengali supported by on-ground activations, cinema and out-of-home partnerships in markets such as Maharashtra and Andhra Pradesh. The aim is clear: push relevance beyond metros into Tier 2 and Tier 3 audiences.
For Amazon, the ambition goes beyond awareness. The campaign is structured to create repeated touchpoints across consumer journeys, nudging new and infrequent users to turn to the platform for everyday purchases.
As e-commerce competition intensifies, ‘Aur Dikhao’ signals a strategic shift from being a place people visit occasionally, to one they instinctively return to. Because in the battle for daily habits, sometimes the winning move is simply to show more.
e-commerce
Visa report tracks rise of India’s affluent, experience-led spending
Affluent base doubles to 130 lakh, travel 58 per cent of elite spends.
MUMBAI: In India’s new luxury playbook, it’s less about owning more and more about living better. A new whitepaper by Visa Consulting and Analytics (VCA) maps a decisive shift in India’s affluent economy, where spending is becoming more intentional, experience-led, and closely tied to personal identity rather than pure income growth.
Titled India’s Affluent Economy 2025–2026, the report draws on a Visa-commissioned Yougov study and VisaNet data across travel, dining, retail and lifestyle categories. The headline number is hard to miss: individuals earning over Rs 10 lakh annually have nearly doubled from 69 lakh to 130 lakh, significantly expanding the country’s discretionary spending base.
But it’s not just about scale, it’s about behaviour. As consumers move up the affluence ladder, discretionary categories are taking a larger share of credit card spends, positioning cards as key enablers of premium, lifestyle-driven consumption.
The geography of wealth is shifting too. Affluence is no longer confined to metros such as Mumbai, Delhi and Bengaluru, with cities like Ahmedabad, Surat, Jaipur and Lucknow increasingly mirroring metro consumption patterns.
The report highlights a clear pivot from ownership to access. More than 50 per cent of affluent consumers now use cards for elite memberships, while 7 in 10 are drawn to limited-edition drops and curated collections. Increasingly, luxury is defined by seamless access be it concierge-led travel or curated dining where time saved is as valuable as money spent.
Spending patterns reinforce this shift. Among the ultra-elite, travel accounts for 58 per cent of discretionary spends, far outpacing retail and luxury combined at 28 per cent. Cross-border spending penetration stands at 63 per cent, signalling a growing global outlook among India’s affluent.
Closer home, indulgence is becoming routine. Nearly 4 in 5 affluent consumers dine at premium establishments at least three times a year, while 1 in 4 visit luxury venues more than five times annually. Dining spends are also climbing, with Rs 20,000 emerging as a new entry-level benchmark per experience and Rs 50,000 marking premium territory.
Retail, meanwhile, is becoming more selective. Three in four affluent consumers make a high-end purchase at least once a quarter, while one in four shops premium every two weeks. Luxury retail intensity is also rising, with 2 in 5 consumers spending over Rs 5 lakh annually, and a smaller but significant segment exceeding Rs 10 lakh.
Technology and wellness are carving out new roles in this ecosystem. High-end gadgets now see average spends of Rs 60,000 or more per purchase, while ultra-elite consumers are eight times more likely to visit spas and show five times higher engagement with cosmetic stores than non-affluent groups.
The broader takeaway is structural. Affluent consumers are no longer buying products, they are buying ecosystems. Integrated experiences across travel, dining, wellness and payments are becoming central to how this segment lives and spends.
As India’s affluent base expands beyond metros and aligns more closely with global consumption patterns, the real opportunity lies not just in size, but in speed. For brands, the message is clear: relevance will be defined by how early and how seamlessly, they plug into this evolving lifestyle economy.







