MAM
GUEST COLUMN: What does future hold for PR and communication industry?
Mumbai: The pandemic has impacted nearly everything that we do in our personal and professional lives. But if there’s one thing that it has affected the most, it is undoubtedly the way people interact and communicate. And unsurprisingly, the public relations (PR) and communications industry witnessed significant transformations to that effect.
Businesses felt a need to rethink their communication strategies as consumer behaviour and patterns changed suddenly with the pandemic altering our daily lives and routines. The PR industry had to cope and adapt its approach to helping businesses communicate their messages in a context that’s relevant and meaningful for all stakeholders.
The acceleration in digital adoption has led the PR industry to take an integrated approach as opposed to the traditional approach that was largely in practice. The industry as a whole is up for some new changes and going forward PR agencies would need to adjust to the emerging trends to stay competitive and relevant. By the end of 2025, it is expected that the global PR industry would surpass a value of 129 billion dollars at a CAGR of 7.4 per cent.
Listed below are a few of the key trends that give insights into the road ahead for the industry in the near future.
1. PR to evolve as a holistic marketing function
Gone are the days when PR used to be limited to publishing a few press releases or conducting events. PR has evolved to become a much broader term now as opposed to a few years back and this can be partly attributed to the proliferation of digital platforms. PR agencies today have an arsenal of services under their umbrella that include everything from press releases to advertising and paid/affiliate marketing techniques. A holistic program is more in demand, clients need to see tangible results in the form of numbers and PR agencies have extended their expertise to all areas of communication that would help businesses rise and position themselves above the noise. Relying solely on earned media isn’t practical in today’s competitive age and PR is now shifting towards a blend of earned, paid, and shared media to accommodate the growing needs of result-oriented businesses.
2. PR to cater to added business functions such as HR and investor relations
PR agencies are now expected to cater to added business functions like HR, finance, and investor relations. PR traditionally used to be associated with only marketing and brand building. But it’s high time that PR agencies act as an extension of their client’s business and not a separate entity that solely deals with marketing or brand building. The employees in an organization as well as other stakeholders such as investors play a vital role in building an image. Going forward, PR agencies would become deeply involved wherever communication and reinforcement of company values are required. Right from what employees think and feel about the company to how to maintain a positive, healthy relationship with investors, PR will go on to become more than just a marketing or brand-building tool.
3. Digital PR and content-driven engagement takes center stage
Though digital platforms were quite popular even before the pandemic, it was during the pandemic that its use exploded like never before. Like every other industry, the PR industry too is adapting to this new trend and has shifted focus towards the inclusion of digital in their PR strategies. PR is taking a more focused approach with content-driven engagement at its heart. As consumers are exposed to a plethora of content on a daily basis, cutting through the clutter seems to be a gargantuan task. Moving forward, PR agencies will channel their efforts towards exploring the digital domain and establishing a strong presence with creative, informative, and authentic content. Measuring success and crafting PR communications driven by data would lead the way in 2022. As content consumption patterns of consumers have changed over the past years, there is a growing need for PR agencies to resort to digital tools and techniques.
4. PR agencies become a mouthpiece for ethical positioning of brands
Modern brands are always under scrutiny and consumers cannot be fooled anymore with marketing that isn’t in line with the brand’s values. People expect more than good products/services from a brand. A brand is expected to be socially responsible and take a stand on issues rather than just promote itself on a host of platforms guided purely by profit motives. PR agencies need to craft strategies reflective of the brand’s values and ethics. PR agencies will need to consciously weave the brand’s values so they are evident across every interaction with consumers and stakeholders. Responsible and ethical communication would be a dominant trend ruling the PR landscape.
With pandemic disrupting businesses like never before, PR became a key business communication tool as its role in navigating crisis situations assumed more importance. The PR industry saw several challenges emerging during the pandemic but it has shown remarkable resilience and adapted quickly to fit into the modern expectations of businesses. The industry is evolving faster and the trends discussed above are indicative of the industry’s future ahead. Partnering with the first movers will help you capitalize on these trends and leverage them to your advantage.
(The author is co-founder of Scenic Communication. The views expressed in this column are personal and Indiantelevision.com may not subscribe to them.)
MAM
Never put a ceiling on yourself: Edstead CBO Charu Budhiraja’s bold advice to the next generation of women
Edstead’s CBO on trading the hard sell for human truth, and why ‘let the work do the talking’ is more than just a mantra
MUMBAI: There is a particular kind of storytelling that does not announce itself. It does not interrupt your evening with a jingle, or flash a logo at you every thirty seconds. It simply pulls you in, holds you there, and leaves you thinking long after the screen goes dark. Charu Budhiraja has spent over two decades figuring out how to make that happen, and she will tell you, with the ease of someone who has learned this the hard way, that the secret is disarmingly simple: be real.
As chief business officer at Edstead, a Mumbai-based purpose-first content studio, Budhiraja sits at the intersection of creative instinct and commercial strategy. It is a position she has built towards across a career that winds through Ogilvy, Endemol, and Warner Bros. Discovery, and one that has seen her make films for Unilever and PepsiCo, shepherd long-form documentary partnerships, and watch the entire language of branded content change around her. She has sat in rooms where the brief was to sell, and in rooms where the brief was to mean something. Her life’s work, in a sense, has been making the case that those two rooms are the same room.
Ask Budhiraja what two decades in the industry have actually taught her, and she does not reach for the expected answer about strategy or scale. She reaches for empathy. “Over the last two decades, one thing I’ve learnt clearly is that storytelling works best when it connects with real human insights,” she says. “As a woman leader, I believe empathy naturally becomes a stronger part of the process. It helps you listen more carefully to people, experiences, and emotions behind a story.” This, she argues, is not a personality trait dressed up as a professional skill. It is a craft advantage, one that shapes how you enter a story, what you choose to stay with, and how you decide what a brand should and should not say.
That perspective, she says, is what allows a narrative to feel both authentic and commercially purposeful at once. “When storytelling balances both human insight and brand intent, that’s when it truly resonates.” The balance sounds elegant in theory. Getting there, as anyone who has ever tried to align a marketing department with a documentary filmmaker will know, is rather less tidy in practice. But Budhiraja makes it sound like something you can actually plan for, which is perhaps the most useful thing about the way she thinks.
She sees this same quality reflected in how women leaders more broadly approach the documentary space. There is, she observes, a natural inclination among them to look beyond the surface of a story and into its emotional and social architecture. “This lens helps brands tell stories that are not only strategically relevant but also authentic and impactful,” she explains. “When purpose-led storytelling is rooted in real experiences and voices, the narrative aligns more organically with a brand’s larger values and purpose.” It is not that men cannot do this, she is too careful a thinker to make that argument. It is that women in leadership have often had more practice doing it, and that the results tend to show.
The story of how branded content got to where it is today is one Budhiraja has watched from the inside, and in some stretches helped to write. The early days of the format were campaign-driven and product-led. Films for brands like Unilever and PepsiCo were, by her own account, “creatively exciting” but built around a marketing message and measured in short cycles. The audience, in that model, was a target. The story was a vehicle. The logo was the destination.
That model has not aged well. “Audiences are far more aware and selective about what they watch,” Budhiraja says plainly. “They engage with content that feels meaningful rather than promotional.” The shift is not simply aesthetic. It reflects a deeper change in the relationship between audiences and the media they consume, one accelerated by streaming, by social platforms, and by a general collapse of patience for anything that feels like it is wasting your time. Brands that have not adapted to this are finding out the hard way that money spent on content people skip is not really money spent at all.
What has replaced the old model, at least in the work Edstead does, is something considerably more ambitious. “Research-led, purpose-driven documentaries and series allow brands to participate in larger conversations and tell stories that feel authentic, relevant, and culturally grounded,” Budhiraja explains. The word ‘participate’ is doing a lot of work in that sentence. Not dominate. Not sponsor. Participate. It implies a certain humility about where the brand sits in the story, and a willingness to let the story be bigger than the brand. That is, it turns out, exactly the point.
“It’s less about advertising and more about creating stories people genuinely want to engage with.”
At Edstead, the philosophy takes shape as a very specific way of working. Partnerships are built not around visibility or reach, but around shared purpose, and the process begins not with a client brief but with culture itself. “The process begins with identifying stories that already exist within culture and society, and then collaborating with brands whose values naturally align with those narratives,” Budhiraja explains. The idea is that a brand should never feel grafted onto a story. It should feel like it was always part of the landscape the story is set in.
Long-form storytelling is central to this. A documentary or a branded series gives a brand the room to breathe inside a narrative, to become part of it rather than an interruption of it. “We rely heavily on research and long-form storytelling formats, which allow brands to integrate into the narrative more organically rather than feeling like an add-on,” she says. “When a partnership is genuinely aligned with the story, it creates a far deeper connection with audiences while delivering meaningful value for the brand.”
Edstead’s role in all of this, as Budhiraja frames it, is that of a bridge. On one side sits brand intent, which arrives with commercial objectives, a communications strategy, and a board that wants to see results. On the other sits authentic storytelling, which arrives with a subject, a point of view, and an audience that can smell inauthenticity from the other side of a streaming platform. Bringing those two sides together without either losing its integrity is the studio’s founding proposition. “In many ways, our role is to bridge that gap between brand intent and authentic storytelling, ensuring that the narrative remains culturally relevant and impactful,” she says.
Making meaningful content is, of course, only half the challenge. The other half is making sure it actually reaches people. Edstead approaches this by designing content to travel from the outset, building stories that can move across platforms and formats and find different kinds of audiences along the way. “The idea is to create stories that are culturally relevant and emotionally engaging, so audiences feel invested in them,” Budhiraja says. “When a story connects on that level, it naturally sparks conversation.” That conversation is ultimately what converts emotional engagement into brand value. It cannot be bought. It can only be earned by getting the story right in the first place.
On the question of what authentic narrative does for a brand, Budhiraja is at her most direct, and her answer cuts through a good deal of industry noise in a single breath. Years of watching what sticks and what does not have given her a clear view on the matter, and it has very little to do with production values or the size of the media buy behind a campaign. “I can tell you with certainty that the content that stayed with people was never about the biggest budget or the most perfect execution. It was about truth,” she says. “When a brand has the courage to step back and let an authentic story lead, audiences feel it immediately. That shift from watching to feeling is what no media plan can engineer. It has to be earned. And in my experience, the only way to earn it is to be real.”
“That shift from watching to feeling is what no media plan can engineer. It has to be earned.”
Looking ahead, Budhiraja sees the trajectory of branded storytelling continuing to move away from the world of campaigns and into the world of culture. The most impactful branded content, she argues, is already indistinguishable from meaningful storytelling, and the gap between the two will only narrow further. “Branded storytelling today is moving beyond campaigns and entering the realm of culture,” she says. “The most impactful branded content doesn’t feel like marketing at all, it feels like meaningful storytelling.”
The implication for marketers is significant. The skills that built careers in traditional advertising are not the same skills that will build the next generation of brand stories. Budhiraja is direct about this shift. “Going forward, marketers will need to think more like creators and storytellers rather than traditional advertisers,” she says. “Purpose-led narratives, creative collaborations, and platform-native content will shape the future, especially as audiences expect more personalised and culturally relevant stories.” The industry, she suggests, is not quite there yet. But it is moving, and the direction is clear.
Budhiraja’s own journey through this industry has not been without friction. Across media networks, agencies, and now a purpose-first studio, she has encountered the quiet, persistent scepticism that can follow women into leadership roles, moments where being a woman meant being questioned more than the work warranted. She does not dramatise this, but she does not skip past it either. “There have definitely been moments where you feel questioned more because you are a woman,” she says. “Those experiences are not uncommon in leadership roles across industries.”
Her response has been consistent, and it is, characteristically, a storyteller’s response. Do not get louder. Get better. Let the work make the argument you cannot make in a meeting room. “Over time, I realised that the strongest response is not louder words but stronger work,” she says. “When a story connects and creates impact, it speaks for itself. My approach has always been simple: let the storytelling and your work do the talking.” It is advice she has lived by long enough that it no longer sounds like advice. It sounds like fact.
For the next generation of women trying to build careers at the intersection of creativity, strategy, and business growth in purpose-driven media, Budhiraja has a lot to say, and none of it is soft. She is not interested in offering comfort. She is interested in offering clarity. “Experiment relentlessly, and never let anyone, including yourself, put a ceiling on what you can do,” she begins. “Ask questions, and make sure they’re the right ones. Say yes to learning, say yes to adapting, and always learn beyond the boundaries of your current role, because the moment you stop, you limit yourself.”
The women who thrive at this intersection, she believes, are the ones who understand all three disciplines deeply and are not afraid to move fluidly between them. Specialism has its place, but it is versatility paired with conviction that builds careers with staying power. “The women who thrive at the intersection of creativity, strategy, and partnerships are the ones who understand all three deeply and aren’t afraid to move between them,” she says. Then she adds what is, perhaps, the most personal piece of counsel she offers: “And above everything: trust your instincts, hold your opinions, and own your perspective.”
It sounds simple. It is not. But then, most of the truest things about storytelling are like that. They look obvious from the outside and turn out, on closer inspection, to be the product of a great deal of practice, patience, and a willingness to keep asking whether the story you are telling is the one that actually needs to be told. Budhiraja has been asking that question for over two decades. The industry, catching up slowly but surely, is beginning to understand why it matters.






