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June 13, 2026

The Pepsi 2001 ad that is Still Remembered After 25 Years: Beckham, a Juventus Fan, and the Battle for the Mind!


Great advertisements don't merely entertain; they occupy permanent real estate in our minds. As Al Ries and Jack Trout famously wrote in Positioning: The Battle for Your Mind, powerful brands sit like sumo wrestlers in the mind, making them incredibly difficult to dislodge.

With the FIFA World Cup upon us and football fever gripping the globe, I found myself thinking about the greatest football advertisement that still enjoys top-of-mind (TOM) recall for me. Instantly, one commercial came rushing back, the unforgettable 2001 Pepsi ad featuring David Beckham and a young Juventus supporter.

At the time, Beckham was the undisputed superstar of Manchester United and one of the biggest names in world football. The commercial opens inside a stadium tunnel. On one side stands Beckham, Still trying to overcome the disappointment of being substituted  by the coach. Opposite him is a young boy, calmly holding a Pepsi can. The boy stares at Beckham with an almost expressionless face.

Slightly puzzled, Beckham asks if he can have a sip of the Pepsi. The boy casually hands him the can and watches as the football icon takes a long drink. The youngster's expression hardly changes, perhaps a hint of curiosity, maybe even the slightest frown.

Bewildered, Beckham returns the can and begins to walk away. Suddenly, the boy says: "Excuse me, can I have your shirt, please?"

Beckham lights up instantly. At last, he thinks, the youngster has recognized that he is one of the biggest football stars on the planet. With a broad grin, Beckham removes his jersey and proudly hands it over. The boy takes the prized shirt, carefully wipes the spot on the Pepsi can where Beckham had drunk from, hands the jersey back and simply says: "Thanks, mate."

Then he walks away. A stunned Beckham can only watch. The camera then reveals the back of the boy's shirt. It reads Juventus. Brilliant.

At his peak, a Beckham's jersey could have fetched a small fortune. Today, such memorabilia might command an even higher price. But the young fan has no interest in keeping it. His loyalty belongs elsewhere. He wanted the can, not the shirt. And once Beckham's lips had touched his Pepsi, the jersey had served its purpose.

The ad brilliantly captures something every football fan understands instinctively: club loyalty borders on religion. Fans don't merely support their teams; they identify with them. Their allegiance transcends money, celebrity, and even common sense. And that's what makes the commercial so extraordinary.

Pepsi managed to make both Manchester United and Juventus supporters smile. Nobody loses. Nobody is mocked. Beckham emerges as the good sport, while the boy embodies the fierce devotion that makes football the world's greatest game.

Twenty-five years later, I still remember every frame. That, to me, is the hallmark of great advertising. Because the best ads are not the ones we remember. They are the ones we never forget.

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Hashtags: #FIFA2026 #WorldCup2026 #GreatestFootballAd #DavidBeckham #Pepsi #FootballAds #SoccerAds #SportsMarketing #Marketing #Advertising #Juventus #ManchesterUnited #Branding #Storytelling #FootballFans #MarketingMusings #TopOfMind #FIFAWorldCup #AdClassic #Football.

 


61,400 readers on 12-06-2026.








 

June 12, 2026

From 50,000 Readers in Three Years to 50,000 in a Day: The FIFA Effect (12-06-2026)

 

Today posted an article on the FIFA World Cup on our blog, dranil-marketingmusings.blogspot.com, and the readership simply rocketed. Encouraged by the response, I plan to publish one article a day and see where this journey leads.

On a good day, the blog attracts around 3,000 readers. On a great day, the numbers touch 10,000. On exceptional days, we cross 15,000. But today has been something altogether different. As I write this, we have already crossed 44,000 page views for the day, and the numbers are still climbing.

To put things in perspective, it took nearly three years for the blog to accumulate its first 50,000 page views. Today, we are approaching that figure in a single day. The scale and speed of this growth are simply mind-boggling.

June has been equally remarkable. In just the first 11 days of the month, we have already clocked 1,40,000 page views. During the same period, the blog's cumulative readership has jumped from 17,00,000 to 18,30,000 page views, adding an entire lakh and thirty thousand views in less than two weeks.

These numbers are far beyond anything I had imagined when I started writing. They reaffirm the power of timely content and, more importantly, the incredible reach of the internet, which allows a niche blog to find readers across continents.

A heartfelt thank you to readers from all over the world. Your curiosity, engagement, and encouragement make this journey worthwhile. Here's to many more stories, insights, and conversations in the days ahead.

Keywords: Blogging, Page Views, Global Readership, Viral Content, FIFA World Cup, Marketing Musings, Audience Growth, Digital Publishing, International Readers, Blog Milestone

Hashtags: #Blogging #PageViews #GlobalReaders #FIFA2026 #ContentMarketing #DigitalPublishing #AudienceGrowth #MarketingMusings #ViralContent #BlogMilestone

 


FIFA World Cup 2026: Zee5 Could Turn a Rs 333 Crore Gamble (35 million US dollars) into a Rs 500-Crore Marketing Masterstroke.

The FIFA World Cup 2026 has kicked off in style, and the opening day itself reminded fans why football is the world's biggest sporting spectacle. But beyond the action on the field lies an equally fascinating business story: How does Zee5, the official Indian streaming partner, make money from the tournament after paying such a massive rights fee?.

The Rs 333 Crore Question: FIFA sold the Indian broadcast and streaming rights for the 2026 FIFA World Cup to Zee5 for around US$35 million. At current exchange rates, that translates to approximately Rs 333 croreAt first glance, Rs 333 crore appears to be an enormous investment. But sports broadcasting economics rarely depend on one revenue stream alone.

The Subscription Math: During the Korea vs Czech Republic match, which is neither a marquee fixture nor played in prime time, the Zee5 app displayed around 11.33 lakh viewers. Matches involving football giants like Argentina and Brazil are expected to attract significantly larger audiences, possibly touching 30 lakh viewers. If subscriptions reach 40 lakh users, revenue rises to: 40 lakh × Rs 799 = nearly  Rs 320 crore In other words, Zee5 could potentially recover almost the entire rights cost through subscriptions alone.

Advertising: The Bigger Revenue Engine: However, subscriptions are only one part of the equation. Industry estimates suggest that Zee could generate anywhere between Rs 150 crore and Rs 200 crore in advertising revenues during the tournament. With the expanded 48-team format and 104 matches, monetization is being driven more by sponsorship packages than by individual match sales

Advertising Rates: Advertisers are reportedly paying Rs 2.25 lakh– Rs 2.75 lakh for a 10-second commercial spot during live matches.

Available Inventory: Every match provides advertising opportunities through:

  • 5–6 minutes of pre-match inventory
  • 9–12 minutes during half-time
  • 6–8 minutes post-match

Integrated Sponsorship Packages: Rather than selling isolated ad spots, Zee is marketing comprehensive packages valued at up to Rs 20 crore, combining:

  • Television broadcasting
  • Connected TV (CTV)
  • Digital streaming on Zee5
  • Branded content integrations
  • On-screen sponsorship assets

This integrated approach enables brands to reach viewers across multiple screens and maximize campaign impact.

More Than Revenue: Building a Sports Brand: The real prize for Zee may not be immediate profits. Even if Zee earns around Rs 250 crore– Rs 500 crore during the 39-day tournament through subscriptions and advertising, the World Cup offers something even more valuable: brand positioning.

For years, Indian sports streaming has been dominated by players such as:

  • Jio-Hotstar
  • Sony LIV Sports
  • FanCode

The FIFA World Cup gives Zee5 an opportunity to enter that elite league and establish itself in the minds of sports fans as a credible destination for premium sporting events. Brand associations created during mega-events often outlast the tournament itself. Millions of viewers who come to Zee5 for football may stay for other sports and entertainment content, creating long-term customer value.

The Bigger Picture: Sports rights are not merely expenses; they are investments in audience acquisition and brand equity. If Zee5 manages to:

  • Recover a substantial portion of its Rs 333-crore rights fee through subscriptions,
  • Generate Rs 150 Rs 200 crore from advertising,
  • Acquire millions of new users, and
  • Strengthen its image as a sports platform, then the FIFA World Cup 2026 could prove to be far more than a broadcasting deal. It could become a strategic branding exercise worth hundreds of crores.

As millions of Indian football fans tune in over the next 39 days, Zee5 isn't just streaming football, it is attempting to score perhaps its biggest brand goal yet.

Keywords: FIFA World Cup 2026, Zee5, sports streaming, FIFA rights, 333 crore investment, football marketing, subscription revenue, advertising revenue, sports broadcasting, brand positioning, digital streaming, sports business, media rights, sponsorship packages, India football fans

Hashtags:  #FIFAWorldCup2026 #Zee5 #SportsBusiness #FootballMarketing #StreamingWars #SportsStreaming #BrandBuilding #MediaRights #Advertising #FootballFans #DigitalMedia #MarketingStrategy #SportsEconomics #FIFA2026 #India

 


June 10, 2026

Can You Eat Wisdom? A Reflection on Britannia Milk Bikis and the Thirukkural Challenge

 

Britannia Milk Bikis has recently launched the Thirukkural Challenge, a campaign that incorporates words from the Thirukkural onto select biscuits sold in Tamil Nadu.

For those unfamiliar with it, the Thirukkural is one of the greatest treasures of Tamil literature. Authored by the sage Thiruvalluvar and widely dated between the 2nd century BCE and the 5th century CE, it contains 1,330 couplets comprising just seven words each.

These verses cover morality, ethics, governance, friendship, learning, perseverance, and love. For generations, the Thirukkural has served not merely as literature but as a guide to righteous living. It occupies a place of immense cultural and emotional significance in the hearts of Tamils across the world.

Britannia's campaign is undoubtedly creative. Special-edition Milk Bikis packs contain biscuits printed with individual Kural words. Consumers are encouraged to collect words from multiple packs and arrange them to form complete Kurals centred on themes such as friendship, learning, and perseverance. A genuine Thirukkural consists of a complete couplet of seven words in each line

The campaign extends into the digital world through a dedicated website where participants can enter the words they have collected, assemble complete verses, and compete for hourly prizes.

From a marketing standpoint, one has to admire the ingenuity behind the idea. The humble biscuit has been transformed into an interactive learning tool. The campaign gamifies learning, encourages family participation, and creates repeat purchases because consumers need multiple packs to complete the verses. In terms of consumer engagement, it is undoubtedly an impressive piece of work. So far, so good.

But then the marketing teacher in me raises his head. Perhaps I am old-fashioned, but something about the execution makes me uncomfortable.

The Thirukkural, for many people, is not merely a collection of words. It is revered. While not a religious scripture in the conventional sense, it possesses a sanctity that transcends literature. In Indian culture, words themselves often carry sacred meaning. We touch books to our forehead as a mark of respect. We apologise when our feet accidentally touch a book. Knowledge is treated with reverence.

Against this backdrop, the idea of printing revered verses on something meant to be bitten, chewed, and consumed feels slightly odd and somewhat unsettling. The issue is not the message; the issue is the medium. Marshall McLuhan famously said, "The medium is the message." Britannia had a wonderful message, but perhaps it chose the wrong medium.

Not everyone will agree with me, of course. Many younger consumers may see nothing objectionable in the campaign and may simply regard it as an innovative and enjoyable educational exercise. Cultural sensitivities are subjective, and there is no universal response. I do not believe Britannia intended any disrespect whatsoever. Their objective was clearly to promote learning and cultural appreciation.

Nevertheless, I believe an even stronger campaign was possible. Instead of printing the Kural words on the biscuits themselves, Britannia could have printed them on the inside of the wrappers. Consumers purchasing three or five packets could have been given a beautifully designed art paper poster with spaces to paste completed Kurals. Children could collect the words, paste them in the appropriate places, and gradually create a set of complete Thirukkural panels.

Such a collectible approach would have transformed the campaign from a consumable experience into a keepsake. Children could then take a photograph with their completed poster and submit it, along with their name and phone number, through the campaign website. They could even be encouraged to write a slogan inspired by the Kural. Winning slogans and photographs could subsequently appear on future packaging or on Britannia's social media channels.

This approach would have achieved several objectives simultaneously:


  • It would have increased repeat purchases.
  • It would have preserved the dignity and sanctity associated with the Thirukkural.
  • It would have encouraged creativity among children.
  • It would have generated valuable user-generated content.
  • It would have strengthened emotional connections with the brand.
  • Most importantly, it would have left families with something tangible to treasure.

In marketing terms, Britannia could have transformed a consumable medium into a collectible medium. Collectibles create memories. Memories create emotional attachment. Emotional attachment creates brands.

Therefore, my observations should not be interpreted as criticism of the campaign's intentions. On the contrary, the idea itself is brilliant. My concern lies only with the choice of medium. As marketers, we often become so fascinated with innovation that we forget a simple truth: context matters. The same message delivered through a different medium can evoke completely different emotions.

Britannia deserves applause for attempting to bring the Thirukkural closer to younger generations. That objective is noble and commendable. Yet one cannot help feeling that a wonderful opportunity was missed. Sometimes, preserving the sanctity of wisdom while making it accessible requires not a different message, but simply a different medium.

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