Blogs

Witty, slightly sarcastic takes on all things AI — from buzzwords to buyer’s guides, hallucinating chatbots to agentic assistants. If you’re a marketer wondering what LLMs have to do with ROI (and chai), you’re in the right place.

Collage of still frames from Anthropic's Claude 'Keep Thinking' advertising campaign showing diverse professionals working, problem-solving, and creating, with campaign tagline 'Keep thinking' prominently displayed

The Claude Conundrum: Deconstructing Anthropic’s Bold “Keep Thinking” Gambit

Anthropic’s debut “Keep Thinking” campaign demonstrates sophisticated emotional intelligence by acknowledging AI anxiety before positioning Claude as collaborative partner. Whilst the opening paradox brilliantly validates professional concerns about AI disruption, execution gaps in visual differentiation and technical capability communication reveal missed opportunities. This analysis dissects what works, what doesn’t, and how strategic refinements could elevate the campaign from competent to compelling—plus alternative approaches for future AI marketing success.

The Claude Conundrum: Deconstructing Anthropic’s Bold “Keep Thinking” Gambit Read More »

Mark Zuckerberg presents Meta smart glasses marketing strategy at Connect 2025, demonstrating viral capability while accessibility advocacy remains neglected

Meta’s Marketing Paradox: Viral Success That Exposes Strategic Malpractice

Meta just proved they can make accessibility content go viral—their Display announcement hit 237K views in 22 hours. So why does their dedicated accessibility video languish at 8,600 views whilst completely ignoring interface safety challenges that could turn independence machines into hazards? With 69.9K subscribers and 290 videos proving viral mastery, Meta’s strategic neglect of accessibility advocacy and safety education represents malpractice on an unprecedented scale.

Meta’s Marketing Paradox: Viral Success That Exposes Strategic Malpractice Read More »

Meta Ray-Ban smart glasses showcasing accessibility features including in-lens display technology, neural band wristband, voice commands, environmental awareness, and hands-free operation for users with disabilities

Meta’s Smart Glasses Empire: The Accessibility Revolution Nobody’s Talking About

Meta has accidentally created the world’s most sophisticated accessibility device whilst marketing it as a lifestyle gadget. For 1.4 billion people with disabilities globally, these aren’t just smart glasses—they’re independence machines wrapped in Italian design sensibility that could revolutionise assistive technology forever.

Meta’s Smart Glasses Empire: The Accessibility Revolution Nobody’s Talking About Read More »

A dramatic before-and-after collage showing Royal Enfield's pristine campaign imagery in the top frame—featuring smooth highways, aerial traffic shots, and polished motorcycle details—contrasted with the harsh reality of Indian roads in the bottom frame, displaying massive potholes, waterlogged streets, broken pavements, and chaotic traffic conditions

Royal Enfield’s ‘Take It Easy’: When Marketing Dreams Collide with Indian Road Reality

When Royal Enfield’s latest Meteor 350 campaign whispers sweet nothings about “unhurried journeys and undemanding motorcycling,” it’s rather like suggesting a leisurely spa day in the middle of a construction site. Here’s a brand crafting poetry about “perfect geometry, ample torque, and a whole lot of horizon” whilst the rest of us are performing daily gymnastics over Mumbai’s 8,000 documented craters.

This fascinating collision between aspirational marketing and comedic reality reveals everything wrong with campaigns that choose poetic abstraction over practical acknowledgement. From a digital marketing perspective that ignores AI personalisation opportunities to UX writing that assumes road conditions existing only in creative imagination, Royal Enfield’s campaign becomes unintentionally satirical when comedians are getting standing ovations for GPS jokes about “turning right at the truck stuck in the crater.”

Royal Enfield’s ‘Take It Easy’: When Marketing Dreams Collide with Indian Road Reality Read More »

Excited crowd capturing a Spotify Premium live event with their phones, highlighting the exclusive fan experience.

Spotify’s Premium Theatre: When Exclusive Events Meet Strategic Reality

Spotify India is upping the ante with exclusive, premium-only fan experiences—think intimate gigs featuring stars like Anirudh Ravichander and Karan Aujla, just as the platform raises subscription prices. But do these high-gloss events actually address India’s music streaming dilemma, or do they simply serve as marketing theatre for a product still struggling to convince most users to pay? This deep-dive unpacks the campaign through the eyes of marketers, writers, AI evangelists, and the elusive Indian end-user, weighing the sizzle against the substance.

Spotify’s Premium Theatre: When Exclusive Events Meet Strategic Reality Read More »

Collage of Spotify India's 'It Gets You' campaign featuring Kareena Kapoor and Saif Ali Khan in intimate home settings, showing smartphone interface, couple interactions, and campaign tagline

It Gets You, But Does It Get Us? A Critical Deep-Dive into Spotify’s Star Strategy

Spotify India’s latest celebrity campaign featuring Kareena Kapoor and Saif Ali Khan delivers polished Bollywood charm but misses crucial opportunities for user education and conversion. This comprehensive analysis examines the “It Gets You” campaign through digital marketing, UX writing, AI evangelism, and end-user perspectives, revealing why celebrity chemistry alone isn’t enough in today’s competitive streaming landscape. From missed micro-moments to algorithmic storytelling gaps, discover what this campaign gets right, where it stumbles, and how strategic thinking could have elevated it beyond comfortable celebrity comfort food.

It Gets You, But Does It Get Us? A Critical Deep-Dive into Spotify’s Star Strategy Read More »

Collage of Apple's September 2025 product lineup including iPhone models, A19 Pro chip, Apple Watch interfaces, AirPods Pro 3, live translation features, and diverse users demonstrating health and lifestyle applications

Apple’s September 2025 Marketing Symphony: Deconstructing Five Videos That Rewrote the Tech Playbook

Apple’s September 2025 event wasn’t merely a product launch—it was a masterclass in modern marketing orchestration that fundamentally challenged how tech companies communicate with consumers. Five meticulously crafted videos blur the traditional boundaries between specification sheets, emotional narratives, and technical demonstrations, creating what can only be described as convergent content strategy at its most sophisticated.

From the rapid-fire “awe-dropping” event recap to the deeply personal “Dear Apple” testimonials, each piece reveals as much about contemporary marketing psychology as it does about titanium frames and vapour chambers. Yet beneath Apple’s characteristic polish lies a fascinating paradox: a campaign that demonstrates both visionary strategic thinking and surprising tactical blindspots.

The iPhone Air’s 5.6mm profile exemplifies this tension perfectly. Apple’s marketing treats ultra-thinness as revolutionary innovation, yet consumer research consistently shows users prioritise battery life, durability, and features over aesthetic minimalism. As Steve Jobs once noted, “Start with the customer experience and work backwards to the technology”—but the Air appears to invert this philosophy, starting with impressive engineering and searching for market justification.

This comprehensive analysis examines how Apple’s five-video symphony succeeds brilliantly at emotional engagement whilst potentially misreading fundamental market priorities—offering crucial insights for digital marketers, UX writers, AI evangelists, and anyone fascinated by the intersection of human psychology and technological capability in our increasingly complex media landscape.

Apple’s September 2025 Marketing Symphony: Deconstructing Five Videos That Rewrote the Tech Playbook Read More »

Collage of diverse athletes in motion, framed by Nike orange borders, overlaid with the Swoosh and a bold pull-quote transforming hesitation into purpose

Why “Why Do It?” Is Nike’s Most Intriguing Invitation to Date

In this feature, Nike’s “Why Do It?” campaign emerges as a reflective evolution of the iconic “Just Do It” mantra, weaving empathetic storytelling with data-driven precision and global co-creation. Through intimate slow-motion vignettes that spotlight moments of hesitation, user-generated social-media activations and immersive AR experiences, Nike flips doubt into purpose—raising the bar for empathy-led digital marketing.

Why “Why Do It?” Is Nike’s Most Intriguing Invitation to Date Read More »

Collage of diverse smartphone launch and marketing campaign images from brands like Apple, Samsung, Google Pixel, Xiaomi, Vivo, and Motorola, centred around a glowing Apple logo.

The September Siege: When Smartphone Brands Lost Their Collective Sanity in the Marketing Melee

In September 2025, global smartphone marketing lost its collective cool as Apple’s iPhone 17 launch set off a frenetic cascade of competing product releases, marketing stunts, AI hyperbole, and glittering distractions—most memorably Motorola’s Swarovski-studded Razr. Through the lens of a digital marketer and consumer, this article dissects the spectacle, exposing the chasm between flashy launches and genuine innovation, and reveals the real risk of brands mistaking vanity metrics for genuine value in India’s and the world’s digital bazaar.

The September Siege: When Smartphone Brands Lost Their Collective Sanity in the Marketing Melee Read More »

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