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Eves steal the show at indiantelevision.com’s fourth Wonder Women Awards 2025

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MUMBAI: India’s marketing, entertainment and corporate elite gathered at the Westin in Mumbai’s Malad suburb on the evening of 30 May for Indiantelevision.com’s fourth  annual Wonder Women Awards—and what a charming and awe-inspiring do it was. The cream of India’s women executive, corporate and entertainment crop proved once again that when it comes to flogging products, entertaining, communicating and winning hearts, they  are absolutely brilliant.

The evening was less stuffy boardroom, more rollicking celebration of the queens of conversion who know how to sell ice to Eskimos—and make them happy  about it too. Around 100 executives and professionals walked away with glistening trophies, decided through rigorous jury judging and editorial picks that would make even the stuffiest exec crack a smile.

Sunny Leone with Anil Wanvari and Alok JalanFrom campaigns that hit harder than monsoon rain to digital wizardry that would make Silicon Valley blush, the winners showcased excellence nous that’s frankly enough to make Don Draper and Marilyn Monroe weep with envy. Whether it was Volvo’s inclusive campaigns featuring persons with disabilities or Eastern Condiments’ Valentine’s Day blitz, the evening proved that creativity and commerce make splendid bedfellows.

Hindi cinema and TV  royalty added star power to proceedings, with Sunny Leone and Nushrratt Bharuccha among the main winners, proving that entertainment and entrepreneurship go together like gin and tonic. The awards spanned everything from automotive to e-commerce, with special recognition for organisations championing women’s empowerment—because breaking glass ceilings is rather the point, isn’t it?

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Here is the list of winners: 
Campaign Awards
* Automobile | Best use of visuals (video): Volvo Group | Pink Lemonade Communications (inclusion of persons with disabilities campaign)
* FMCG | Most innovative use of content marketing: Eastern Condiments | Pink Lemonade Communications (Valentine’s Day campaign)
* Gaming & e-sports | Most innovative use of content marketing: Ampverse India | AlphaZegus Marketing (College Rivals Season 1)
* Manufacturing | Best new product launch: AVPL International | AITMC Ventures (Viraj UAS)
* Media & entertainment | Best use of event: The Mainstream | Mercadeo Multiventures (EmergeTech roadshow)
* Media & entertainment | Best use of influencers: Bubble Communication (Navabharat Influencers Awards)
* Media & entertainment | Most innovative use of digital/social media: Shemaroo Entertainment (Shamshaan Champa launch)
* Media & entertainment | Best use of visuals (video): Jagran New Media (Jagran Manthan)
* Retail & e-commerce | Best use of creativity and innovation: Clovia | 80 dB Communications (performance marketing illustrations)
* Retail & e-commerce | Best use of influencers: Pilgrim (The Secret is in the Mix campaign)
* Retail & e-commerce | Most innovative use of digital/social media: Clovia | 80 dB Communications (meme & trend marketing)

Elizabeth Venkatraman, Sririam FinanceSpecial Awards – Individual Winners
* Education | Innovative leader: Hemali Dalal (JBCN Education), Monica Malhotra Kandhari (AASOKA), Devyani Jaipuria (DPS International Gurgaon)
* Advertising | Marketing personality: Renu Singh (Dentsu X), Nisha Didwania (Spark Foundry)
* Art & culture | Entrepreneur: Arushi Agrawal (Seva Home)
* Banking & financial services | Innovative leader: Tanu Bhargava Goenka
* Banking & financial services | Young achiever: Sakshi Uniyal (HSBC)
* Consumer durables | Marketing personality: Pooja Baid (Versuni)
* Food & beverage | Marketing personality: Divya Aggarwal (Impresario Entertainment & Hospitality)
* Fashion & lifestyle | Young achiever: Himadri Garg
* Health & wellness | Innovative leader: Arushi Verma (FITPASS)
* Hospitality | Marketing personality: Pragya Rathore (Fairmont & Raffles Jaipur)
* Hospitality | F&B leader: Shahnaaz Anjum (Fairmont Jaipur)
* IT & technology | Entrepreneur: Snigdha Singh (Ink In Caps)
* IT & technology | Innovative leader: Anjali Dutta (Tech Mahindra)
* IT & technology | Marketing personality: Soundarya Shrivastava (PTC)
* IT & technology | Young achiever: Saloni Jain (Plus91Labs)
* Manufacturing | Communication personality: Sandhya Malik (Vedanta Sesa Goa)
* Manufacturing | HR personality: Aparna Sharma (Rossari Biotech)
* Manufacturing | Innovative leader: Kavita Desai
* Media & entertainment | CEO: Shruti Mahajan (SMCO)
* Media & entertainment | Communication personality: Kanika Chhabra (V Spark Communications)
* Media & entertainment | HR personality: Priyanka Chhokra (ITW Universe), Shiza Ansari Khan (Shemaroo Entertainment)
* Media & entertainment | Innovative leader: Anisha Roy (Sony Pictures Networks India), Angelin Diana (Pratilipi Comics)
* Media & entertainment | Marketing personality: Vidhi Vora (U and I Resources), Sukriti Datta (Chatterbox Technologies)

Mayuri Pitale (left) * Media & entertainment | Young achiever: Dimpy Khera (One Take Media Co)
* Public relations | CEO: Heeta Parikh (Silver Spun Brand Solutions)
* Public relations | Entrepreneur: Neha Bajaj (Scroll Mantra), Nikky Gupta (Teamwork Communications)
* Public relations | Innovative leader: Jagriti Motwani (Cha-Chi Communications), Aakriti Bhargava (Wizikey Software)
* Public relations | PR personality: Vidhi Shah (Synapse PR), Neha Agarwal (Percept Limited), Kajal Kamal (ZEISS India)
* Public relations | Young achiever: Ritika Garg (Avance PR), Priya Saini (Veritas Reputation PR)
* Real estate & infrastructure | HR personality: Dimple Bakshi (Table Space)
* Real estate & infrastructure | Innovative leader: Devi Shankar (Anarock Capital)
* Real estate & infrastructure | Young achiever: Megha Agarwal (Table Space)
* Retail & e-commerce | Young achiever: Richa Phogat (USHA International)
* Sports & adventure | Innovative leader: Mayuri Pitale (Mandala India)
* Startups | Communication personality: Raksha Hegde (Pilgrim)
* Startups | Innovative leader: Jyoti Singh (Plus91Labs)
* Startups | Young achiever: Diksha Seth (Moove)
* Travel & tourism | Communication personality: Prasidha Menon (Airbnb)
Special Awards – Organisations
* Advertising | Agency: Voix Digital
* Art & culture | Best organisation for women empowerment: Seva Home
* Education | Best organisation for women empowerment: Fortune Institute of International Business (FIIB)
* Public relations | Best organisation for women empowerment: Stanley Communications, Veritas Reputation PR
* Public relations | Agency: ID8 Media Solutions

Aloke Jalan and Satyabrata DasEditorial Choice Awards 
Darshana Shah (Aditya Birla Capital), 
Pooja Asar (Tata Motors), 
Deepti Sampat (Air India), 
Aruna Daryanani (Amazon MX Player), 
Aatika Ehsan Ansari (Pernod Ricard India), 
Shwetal Basu (Polycab India), 
Riya Joseph (Britannia Industries), 
Mitali Maheshwari (Starbucks India), 
Kavita Chaturvedi (ITC Foods), 
Ruchira Jaitly (Diageo India), 
Shilpa Dureja Puri (Samsung India), 
Manjari Upadhye (Mahindra & Mahindra), 
Jennifer Pandya (Skoda Auto India), 
Priyanka Malhotra Sethi (Haier Appliances India), 
Apeksha Gupta (Aditya Birla Fashion and Retail), 
Dharini Mishra (Suzlon Group), 
Shaifali Gautam (CaratLane),
 Ranjani Krishnaswamy (Titan Company), 
Sangeeta Pujari (JioStar Sports),
 Ranjana Mangla (SonyLIV),
 Ananta Das (Prime Video),
 Riddhi Adlakha (Tata Consultancy Services), 
Ahana Ganguly (Times Network), 
Surbhi Gupta (Birla Opus),

Prerna Wanvari (Left) Minakshi Handa (ITC Personal Care), 
Ruchika Gupta (Indigo), 
Mrinalini Jain (Banijay Asia & EndemolShine India), 
Nidhi Rastogi (Uniqlo India), 
Preetha Athrey (The Trade Desk), 
Ekta Mehta (JioStar), 
Aditi Chakravarty (Moët Hennessy India), 
Saakshi Verma Menon (PepsiCo), 
Neha Sethi (NDTV), 
Janani Srinivas (Adobe), 
Aparajita Biswas (The Hindu Group), 
Serena Menon (Netflix), 
Gazal Bajaj (Nestlé), 
Mandvi Gayatri Sharma (Tree-Shul Media Solutions), 
Jaya Saha (Collective Artists Network), 
Kim Sharma (DCA – Dharma Cornerstone Agency), 
Sapna Malhotra (Alchemy Films),
 Elizabeth Venkatraman (Shriram Finance), 
Sheena Kapoor (ICICI Lombard), 
Nushrratt Bharuccha (outstanding performer, Chhorii 2), 
Sunny Leone (powerhouse performer and entrepreneur, CEO/founder Starstruck),
Sanchita Trivedi (Idhyah Media), 
Riddhima Pandit (excellence on screen, actor – Sikandar Ka Muqaddar), 
Anisha Anand (Aurum Foods), 
Neha Mehta (AnimationXpress).

The evening proved that when it comes to professional and marketing mastery, these women don’t just break the mould—they’ve gone and invented entirely new ones.

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Brands

Godrej clarifies ‘GI’ identifier after logo similarity debate

Says GI is not a logo, will not replace Godrej signature across products.

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MUMBAI: In a branding storm where shapes did the talking, Godrej is now spelling things out. Godrej Industries Group (GIG) has issued a clarification on its newly introduced ‘GI’ identifier, addressing questions around its purpose and design following a wave of online criticism. At the centre of the debate were two concerns: whether the new mark replaces the long-standing Godrej logo, and whether its geometric design mirrors other corporate identities.

The company has drawn a clear line. The Godrej signature logo, it said, remains unchanged and continues to be the sole logo across all consumer-facing products and services. The ‘GI’ mark, by contrast, is not a logo but a corporate group identifier intended for use alongside the Godrej signature or company name, and aimed at stakeholders such as investors, media and talent rather than consumers.

The need for such a distinction stems from the 2024 restructuring of the broader Godrej Group into two separate business entities. With both continuing to operate under the same Godrej name and signature, the identifier is positioned as a way to differentiate the Godrej Industries Group at a corporate level.

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The rollout, however, triggered a broader conversation on design originality. Critics pointed to similarities between the GI mark’s geometric composition and logos used by companies globally, raising questions about distinctiveness.

Responding to this, GIG said its intellectual property and legal review found that such overlaps are common in minimalist, geometry-led design systems. Basic forms such as circles and rectangles appear across dozens of brand identities worldwide, the company noted.

It added that the identifier emerged from an extensive design process and was chosen for its simplicity, allowing it to sit alongside the Godrej signature without competing visually. While acknowledging that elemental shapes may appear less distinctive in isolation, the group emphasised that the mark is part of a broader identity system that includes a custom typeface, sonic branding and other proprietary elements.

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Following legal and ethical assessments, the company said it found no impediment to using the identifier, reiterating that the GI mark is a corporate tool not a consumer-facing symbol.

In short, the logo isn’t changing but the conversation around it certainly has.

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