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July 05, 2026

Can ITC Crack India's Cola Code? A Sugar-Free Coconut Cola Faces the Ultimate Taste Test

 

For decades, ITC has been steadily transforming itself from being known primarily as a tobacco company into one of India's most diversified FMCG giants. From biscuits and snacks to personal care, hotels, stationery, dairy products, and packaged foods, the company has successfully entered category after category. Now, ITC appears to be setting its sights on one of the most fiercely contested battlegrounds in the FMCG industry, the Indian cola market.

This is no ordinary market. It has long been dominated by giants like Coca-Cola (with Coca-Cola and Thums Up) and PepsiCo. More recently, Reliance Consumer Products shook up the industry by reviving the iconic Campa Cola brand. Its ultra-aggressive pricing strategy, offering a 200 ml bottle for just Rs 10 caught consumers' attention almost overnight. The result was impressive. Campa Cola quickly captured a double-digit market share and reportedly crossed Rs 4,700 crore in sales, proving that even a mature market can be disrupted with the right combination of pricing and distribution.

Now comes ITC with a very different proposition.

Instead of launching another conventional cola, ITC is reportedly developing a sugar-free, coconut-based cola. On paper, it sounds highly innovative. It attempts to combine indulgence with health, bringing together the familiar taste of cola and the natural goodness associated with coconut water. It is certainly a bold idea. But innovation alone does not guarantee success.

The cola market has traditionally been driven by three powerful factors, taste, refreshment, and brand image. Consumers generally do not buy cola because it is healthy. They buy it because they love the taste, the fizz, the refreshment, and the emotional identity attached to the brand.

Take Thums Up, for example. Its appeal has never been about calories or nutrition. It stands for strong taste, masculinity, adventure, and boldness. Consumers choose it because of what it represents. Likewise, Coca-Cola has built its identity around happiness and sharing moments, while Pepsi has long positioned itself as youthful, energetic, and trendy.

This raises an important marketing question. Will cola drinkers really be excited about a sugar-free, coconut-based cola?

Health-conscious consumers may appreciate the reduced sugar content. Coconut also enjoys a positive image as a natural and healthy ingredient. But combining these benefits with cola may create a positioning dilemma. Consumers might wonder whether the product is meant to be a health drink or a soft drink.

This is where ITC faces perhaps its biggest challenge. A successful brand usually owns one clear idea in the consumer's mind.

·         Volvo stands for safety.

·         Nike stands for performance.

·         Red Bull stands for energy.

·         Thums Up stands for strong taste.

If ITC's new cola attempts to stand for great taste, sugar-free, natural ingredients, coconut goodness, and health, all at the same time, the positioning could become blurred. In marketing, trying to communicate too many benefits often results in communicating none effectively.

It is similar to saying one cricketer is simultaneously Sachin Tendulkar, Kapil Dev, and Sunil Gavaskar. While each is legendary, each became famous for a distinct strength. Brands work the same way. Consumers remember one dominant association. Pricing presents another significant hurdle.

The proposed price of around Rs 60 for a 250 ml bottle places the product firmly in the premium segment.

Consider the competition. A regular bottle of Coca-Cola or Pepsi often costs around Rs 40, while smaller packs are available for Rs 10 and Rs 20. Campa Cola has built much of its recent success by aggressively pricing its products to attract value-conscious consumers.

In a highly price-sensitive market like India, asking consumers to pay a 50% premium for a cola could prove difficult unless the perceived value is exceptionally high. Consumers may ask themselves a simple question: Why should I pay Rs 60 when I can buy a trusted cola for Rs 40 or even Rs10? In a supermarket a customer might even get a litre of cola at the price of Rs 60.

Premium pricing works only when the product offers a compelling and easily understood reason to justify the higher price. Despite these challenges, ITC should never be underestimated.

The company has repeatedly demonstrated its ability to build successful brands through deep consumer understanding, excellent distribution, strong retail relationships, and long-term investment. Many of its FMCG brands have become category leaders despite entering crowded markets.

If ITC can simplify its positioning, deliver a genuinely enjoyable taste experience, and convince consumers that its premium price is worth paying, it could create an entirely new sub-category within the carbonated beverage market.

However, if consumers perceive the product as trying to be everything at once: cola, health drink, sugar-free beverage, and coconut water, it risks becoming difficult to understand and even harder to adopt.

The battle ahead will not be easy. ITC is entering one of India's most competitive beverage categories, facing global giants and an aggressive domestic challenger. Success will depend not only on product innovation but also on answering one fundamental question that every marketer should ask:

When consumers think of ITC Cola, what is the one word they should immediately associate with it?  Until that answer is crystal clear, the journey from an innovative idea to a winning brand may be more challenging than expected.

Keywords: Colas, ITC sugar free cola, coconut based cola, ITC beverages, Indian cola market, cola wars India, Coca-Cola India, Thums Up, Pepsi India, Campa Cola, Reliance Campa Cola, FMCG marketing, beverage marketing strategy, brand positioning, product positioning, premium pricing strategy, consumer behaviour, soft drinks India, carbonated beverages, new product launch, FMCG innovation, healthy soft drinks, sugar free beverages, marketing case study, branding strategy, Indian FMCG industry, cola market competition, disruptive pricing, marketing analysis, marketing musings

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July 04, 2026

When Advertisements Came Alive: Long Before Gen Z Called It Immersive Marketing!!

My dear friend, Dr. Madhusudan Kota, recently shared an interesting LinkedIn post on sensory advertising, advertisements that go beyond merely being seen. They can be touched, smelled, or experienced, making the reader an active participant rather than a passive observer.

Dr. Kota referred to two memorable examples from The Times of India. Today on the occasion of world Biryani Day, Daawat Biryani Rice came out with an advertisement that made the newspaper itself smell like freshly cooked biryani. Another edition carried the fragrance of a fabric whitener Comfort, allowing readers to literally experience the freshness being advertised.

Many from Gen Z and Gen Alpha may consider this a breakthrough innovation. While it certainly feels modern, the idea itself is far from new. Back in the mid-1980s, Hindustan Lever Limited (then HLL, now HUL) created one of the most memorable sensory print campaigns I have ever seen.

On one page of a newspaper advertisement, a small piece of cloth was stapled to the page. The copy suggested that it had been washed using "the detergent that claims to be the best value for money" an obvious reference to Nirma. The cloth appeared reasonably clean, but it lacked brightness and sparkling whiteness.

Turn the page, and another piece of cloth was attached. This one was sparkling white. The message simply stated that this cloth had been washed with Surf Excel. The advertisement ended with a brilliant line: "Do you need any further proof?". And the Surf washed cloth appeared soft when touched.

The product demonstration was literally in your hands. Instead of making a claim, the advertisement invited readers to verify it themselves. It transformed advertising into evidence. There were many other examples as well.

Several glossy international lifestyle magazines used to infuse pages with perfume samples. As youngsters, we would eagerly visit the magazine stalls in Abids, gently rub those scented pages with our fingers, and carry the fragrance with us long after putting the magazine back. It was a delightful experience that no television commercial could ever replicate.

Closer home, Telugu magazines that brought out their special Deepavali annual editions often infused their pages with the unmistakable fragrance of Punugu. That aroma blended beautifully with the festive mood, complementing the sounds of crackers, the glow of oil lamps, and the spiritual atmosphere of India's most celebrated festival. Even before reading a single article, the festival had already begun.

Today's marketers speak of immersive experiences, multi-sensory branding, and experiential marketing. The terminology may be new, but the thinking is decades old. Great advertisers have always understood a simple truth: the more senses an advertisement engages, the stronger the memory it creates.

People may forget what they read. They may even forget what they saw. But they rarely forget what they experienced. Perhaps that is the timeless lesson from these remarkable campaigns.

The best advertisements don't merely communicate. They create memories that linger, sometimes in the mind, and sometimes, quite literally, in the air.

Keywords: Sensory advertising, experiential marketing, immersive marketing, print advertising, newspaper advertising, Daawat Biryani Rice campaign, aroma advertising, scented newspaper, fragrance marketing, tactile advertising, touch and feel advertising, Surf detergent advertisement, HUL advertising history, Hindustan Unilever advertising, Hindustan Lever vintage ads, 1980s advertising campaigns, nostalgic advertising, innovative print ads, magazine perfume samples, Punugu fragrance, Deepavali magazine editions, marketing innovation, advertising creativity, consumer experience, multisensory branding, brand engagement, marketing memories, advertising history, traditional advertising, memorable advertising campaigns, newspaper marketing, marketing case study, branding strategy, consumer psychology, Dr. Madhusudan Kota, marketing insights, advertising evolution, marketing communication, brand storytelling, Indian advertising legends.

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July 02, 2026

African Hearts Broken, Europe Bleeds Again: Day 4 Delivers More FIFA World Cup 2026 Drama.

 

Day 4 of the Round of 32 produced two breathtaking contests, two heartbreaking exits for Africa, and yet another European nation shown the door. If the first three days had already demonstrated that there are no easy matches in this World Cup, Day 4 reinforced that message in spectacular fashion. The African teams may have lost, but they certainly won the admiration of millions of football fans across the globe.

 

England 2 – DR Congo 0: Lions vs Lions: DR Congo fought like lions against the English Lions. For 75 long minutes they frustrated England with disciplined defending, relentless running and fearless tackling. Every English attack was met with courage and determination. The African side looked destined to move to the round of 16.

 

But when your opponent has Harry Kane, concentration can never lapse. Kane once again proved why he is one of the world's deadliest strikers. Just when DR Congo thought they had weathered the storm, England's captain found space and struck twice in quick succession. His clinical brace finally broke the resistance and England marched on.  The scoreline may read 2-1, but it hardly reflects how fiercely DR Congo fought. They leave the tournament with their heads held high.

 

Belgium vs Senegal – A Match That Had Everything: If England's victory was hard fought, Belgium's win was nothing short of unbelievable. Belgium, once ranked No. 1 in the world and currently ranked No. 9, faced Senegal, ranked 18th and the highest-ranked African nation remaining in the Round of 32. For most of the match, Senegal looked every bit like the better team.

 

They were quick, composed and wonderfully fluid in attack. Every move carried purpose. Every counterattack threatened Belgium. As the minutes ticked away, Senegal looked destined for one of the biggest victories of the tournament. Then football reminded us why it is called the beautiful game. Belgium refused to surrender.

 

Goals in the 86th and 89th minutes stunned Senegal and completely transformed the contest. But the drama was still not over. Deep into extra time, Belgium was awarded a penalty in stoppage time of the additional 30 minutes. For Senegal, it was unimaginable heartbreak. Think about it.

 

They were literally within minutes of reaching the Round of 16. Ninety minutes had almost been conquered. Extra time had almost been survived. Yet, in the final moments, their World Cup dream disappeared. That is the cruelty. That is the beauty. That is football.

 

USA Cruise Past Bosnia and Herzegovina: The third match of the day produced a far more comfortable result. The USA outplayed Bosnia and Herzegovina from start to finish, producing one of their most convincing performances of the tournament to comfortably book their place in the Round of 16. Bosnia simply had no answer to the pace, movement and confidence of the American side.

 

The Continental Casualty List Keeps Growing: After four days of the Round of 32, the casualty list is becoming increasingly interesting.

 

Africa have now lost three teams: South Africa, Senegal and DR Congo

 

Europe have already seen four teams eliminated: Germany, Netherlands, Sweden  and Bosnia and Herzegovina.

 

The biggest losses so far are clearly coming from the African and European continents. Ironically, England and Belgium both survived only after being pushed to the absolute limit by African opposition. Had DR Congo and Senegal managed to hold on for just a few more minutes, Africa would have been the undisputed toast of the FIFA World Cup today.

 

Instead, football once again showed that success and heartbreak can be separated by just a single moment. The margins at this World Cup are becoming thinner with every passing match. And if the Round of 32 has taught us anything, it is this: rankings mean very little once the referee blows the whistle.

 

Watch this space for more exciting news, statistics and fascinating stories as the FIFA World Cup 2026 continues to produce one unforgettable chapter after another.

Keywords: FIFA World Cup 2026, Round of 32, England vs DR Congo, Belgium vs Senegal, USA vs Bosnia, World Cup analysis, football drama, knockout stage, football statistics

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June 30, 2026

10 Mind-Blowing Facts from Day 2 (29-06-2026) of the FIFA World Cup 2026 Round of 32

1. Three Matches. Three Epics: Every match on Day 2 went right down to the wire. Brazil needed a winner in stoppage time, while Germany and the Netherlands were both dragged into penalty shootouts. There wasn't a comfortable victory anywhere.

2. Brazil Left It Until the Very End: Five-time champions Brazil looked destined for extra time before Gabriel Martinelli struck in the dying moments to eliminate a superb Japanese side. Japan were just minutes away from one of the greatest upsets in World Cup history.

3. Germany Lose a World Cup Penalty Shootout for the First Time: Germany had never been beaten in a FIFA World Cup penalty shootout. That incredible record finally ended as Paraguay held their nerve to script one of the tournament's biggest shocks.

4. From One Miss to Three: One of football's most remarkable statistics was shattered. Before this match, Germany had missed only one penalty in FIFA World Cup shootouts used to decide knockout ties. Against Paraguay, they missed three in a single shootout.

5. Paraguay's Greatest World Cup Victory?: Paraguay eliminated four-time world champions Germany—a victory that ranks among the greatest in the nation's football history and sends them into the Round of 16 against all expectations.

6. Morocco Add Another Giant to Their Growing List: After their historic run in 2022, Morocco have shown that it was no fluke. They have now eliminated another European heavyweight by knocking out three-time finalists the Netherlands in a dramatic penalty shootout.

7. Two Former Finalists Sent Packing in One Day: Germany (4 titles) and the Netherlands (three-time runners-up) both exited the tournament on the same day, proving once again that reputation means very little once the knockout stage begins.

8. Asia Came Within Seconds of History: Japan produced one of the performances of the tournament and were moments away from forcing extra time—or perhaps penalties—against Brazil. Instead, their dream ended with one late goal.

9. The World Cup Is Becoming More Global: After six Round of 32 matches, the teams eliminated are:

  • Europe: Germany, Netherlands
  • Asia: Japan
  • Africa: South Africa

That leaves every confederation still strongly represented in the competition, highlighting how competitive world football has become.

10. The Era of Guaranteed Giants Is Over: In just two days of knockout football, the tournament has already lost:

  • A four-time world champion (Germany)
  • A five-time finalist (Netherlands)
  • One of Asia's strongest teams (Japan)
  • One of Africa's 9 representatives,  South Africa

Every remaining favourite has now been put on notice: there are no easy matches left at FIFA World Cup 2026.

Keywords:  FIFA World Cup 2026, Round of 32, Brazil vs Japan, Germany vs Paraguay, Netherlands vs Morocco, World Cup stats, football records, knockout stage, FIFA analysis

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June 29, 2026

Delulu, Trululu, Solulu… or Just Confusulu? - Zepto Banner Ad.

"The only Trululu is we have the Solulus." I opened my Zepto app and this was the first thing staring at me. I read it once. Then again. Then a third time.

Only after a few seconds did I realize what the copywriter probably meant: Zepto has all the solutions ("Solulus") to my everyday problems.

Unfortunately, by then the moment had passed. The slogan makes the reader pause not because it's clever, but because it takes effort to decode. Good advertising should make people think about the brand, not about what the sentence is trying to say.

I understand where this is coming from. Words like Delulu have become part of internet culture, especially among Gen Z. Once a slang term becomes popular, marketers naturally want to ride the wave. But that doesn't mean every campaign needs to manufacture new cousins like Trululu and Solulu.

Sometimes, creativity crosses the thin line into confusion. There's another interesting angle. For Telugu speakers, Solulu sounds uncomfortably close to Sollu.

In Telugu, sollu has negative connotations. It can refer to saliva dripping when someone is infatuated, and the expression sollu maatalu refers to cheap, sleazy or vulgar talk. While Zepto obviously didn't intend this association, language is full of cultural nuances. A word that sounds trendy in one context may sound awkward or even embarrassing in another.

This is where marketing becomes fascinating. India isn't one audience. It is hundreds of audiences speaking different languages, carrying different cultural references and interpreting the same message differently. A slogan that delights one segment may completely puzzle another.

I have no problem with brands being playful, youthful or even a little quirky. In fact, I enjoy clever advertising. But cleverness should never come at the cost of clarity.

Today's marketers have access to incredible analytics, audience segmentation and AI-powered insights. Use them wisely. Target campaigns to audiences who appreciate this style of communication instead of broadcasting them to everyone.

After all, the goal of communication is not to make consumers stop and decode the message. The goal is to make them instantly understand the value.

Here's my simple test: if I need to mentally translate a slogan before I understand what you're selling, you've already made me work too hard. And that's the irony.

Marketing should reduce cognitive load, not increase it. If your audience spends more time decoding the slogan than understanding the value proposition, the creativity has defeated its purpose.

Sometimes the smartest advertising doesn't make us say, "Wow, that's clever." It simply makes us say, "I get it."

Keywords: Zepto marketing, Gen Z slang, Delulu, Solulu, Trululu, advertising, branding, Telugu language, marketing communication, cognitive load, consumer behaviour, viral marketing, Miscommunication, Different meaning in another language, translation errors

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