Brand Building Through Advertising: Data-Driven Insights And Indian Case Studies
Brand Building Through Advertising: Data-Driven Insights And Indian Case Studies
Brand Building Through Advertising: Data-Driven Insights And Indian Case Studies
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<p>Building a strong brand in today’s competitive market requires more than a logo and a slogan – it demands <strong>strategic advertising</strong> that boosts awareness, recall, and preference among target customers. Advertising is not merely about pushing products; it is about telling a compelling story that resonates with audiences and embeds the brand in their minds. By leveraging multiple channels (TV, digital, print, out-of-home, etc.) and consistent messaging, brands can <strong>maximise exposure and trust</strong> . In India, where the advertising industry is booming, marketers are increasingly recognizing that integrated campaigns across both traditional and innovative media are essential for long-term brand equity.</p><p><br></p><p>Over the past few years, India’s advertising spend has surged. According to industry forecasts, total ad expenditure (AdEx) in India reached roughly 1.08 lakh crore (USD13.4 billion) in 2024, growing about 9% year-on-year. Notably, <strong>digital advertising</strong> has claimed the largest share of this spend – about <strong>42%</strong> in 2024 – reflecting explosive growth in online channels. Out-of-Home (OOH) media also saw robust growth (+12% in 2024), as brands poured resources into building facades, transit ads, and billboards. Traditional TV and print are growing more slowly (~5%), underscoring a major shift toward <strong>data-driven and digital formats.</strong> The chart below illustrates the 2024 growth rates across media: digital and OOH clearly lead, while TV and print growth lag.</p><p><br></p><p><br></p><p><br></p><p><br></p><blockquote><strong>SmartAds Insight:</strong> <em>“We advise clients that modern brand-building requires consistent, integrated advertising across channels. A billboard campaign alone is powerful, but its impact multiplies when supported by TV or social media, ensuring the brand message sticks,”</em> notes the SmartAds.in strategy team.</blockquote><p><br></p><p><br></p><p><br></p><p><br></p><h2><strong>Why Advertising Is Key to Brand Building</strong></h2><p><br></p><p>At its core, <strong>brand building</strong> is about embedding a brand in consumers’ minds and hearts. Advertising fuels this by <strong>increasing brand awareness and recall.</strong> Research shows that when people encounter an ad, what really drives “brand lift” (improved perception and intent) is <strong>brand recall</strong> – the ability to remember the brand later. For example, a Nielsen study found that in emerging media channels (podcasts, influencer content, etc.), brand recall accounted for <strong>38.7% of overall brand lift,</strong> more than any other factor. In other words, effective ads are those that make viewers <em>think of the brand later.</em></p><p><br></p><p>Consistent advertising across multiple touchpoints also builds <strong>familiarity and trust.</strong> Data indicates that strong, consistent branding can significantly boost sales: one analysis found it can raise revenue by up to <strong>23%.</strong> Moreover, consumers are far more likely to buy from brands they recognize; studies suggest people are <strong>80% more likely</strong> to choose a familiar brand over an unknown one. In India’s crowded market, where options abound, this familiarity edge is crucial.</p><p><br></p><p>Advertising also helps shape the <em>story and personality</em> of a brand. By showcasing core values, product benefits, or cultural narratives, ads <strong>differentiate</strong> a brand from competitors. For instance, campaigns that highlight innovation or family values can reposition a product in consumers’ minds. OOH ads (billboards, building wraps, etc.) are particularly effective at creating bold visual associations. One industry report notes that <strong>building facade advertising</strong> in India – wrapping skyscrapers or historic buildings with brand graphics – offers “unparalleled visibility” and leaves a lasting impression in busy city centers. Such large-format ads can make a brand seem iconic by associating it with prominent landmarks.</p><p><br></p><p>Importantly, advertising also complements other marketing: while <strong>performance campaigns</strong> (click-based, ROI-tracked ads) drive immediate sales, <strong>brand campaigns</strong> (broad-awareness ads) secure the future. As one business analysis pointed out, modern data-driven marketers still grapple with the old wisdom of John Wanamaker – “Half the money I spend on advertising is wasted; the trouble is I don’t know which half”. The solution is balance: use precise metrics for performance ads, but also invest in creative brand ads (on TV, OOH, etc.) that may not have immediate tracked ROI but build long-term equity. In practice, the smartest strategies <strong>blend both:</strong> trackable campaigns for conversions, plus high-impact branding for recall.</p><p><br></p><p><br></p><p><br></p><p><br></p><blockquote><strong>SmartAds Insight:</strong> <em>“Our experience shows that brand metrics like recall and preference only improve when we maintain a unified message across channels. For example, running a metro-shelter ad and a Facebook video with the same theme greatly boosts overall brand recognition. This synergy is what ultimately converts casual viewers into loyal customers,”</em> says SmartAds.in’s creative lead.</blockquote><p><br></p><p><br></p><p><br></p><p><br></p><h3><strong>Advertising Channels & Formats for Brand Building</strong></h3><p><br></p><p>No single medium can build a brand alone. Instead, <strong>omnichannel advertising</strong> ensures a brand stays top-of-mind. Below we review the major formats and how they contribute to brand building.</p><p><br></p><p><strong>Out-of-Home (OOH) and Building Advertising</strong></p><p>OOH media (billboards, transit ads, street furniture, etc.) offer <strong>mass reach and visual impact.</strong> Unlike digital ads, which viewers can skip or ignore, a giant billboard or building wrap is hard to miss. In dense Indian cities, OOH can <strong>reach commuters and pedestrians repeatedly,</strong> embedding the message through frequency. Modern technologies – like digital billboards and programmatic OOH – allow even more targeted, data-driven campaigns outdoors.</p><p><br></p><p>Building advertising (or “building facade advertising”) is a striking sub-category: entire building sides or rooftops are turned into ad canvases. According to industry analysis, India’s facade advertising industry was valued at about $2.8 billion in 2023 and is projected to nearly double by 2032. From Mumbai skyscrapers to Delhi heritage sites, building wraps draw attention simply by their scale. As one report notes, such ads are virtually impossible to ignore, granting “enhanced brand visibility in urban landscapes”. This format is ideal for reinforcing a brand’s prominence in a market. For example, during movie releases or festival seasons, brands often plaster iconic buildings with eye-catching graphics – a stunt that garners social media buzz on top of street-level impact.</p><p><br></p><p>Creative OOH campaigns in India have gone viral in recent years. For instance, a well-known example involved witty billboard banter between two app brands: one displayed “Ask for milk, we’ll deliver it,” while the adjacent billboard quipped, “Ask for dessert, we’ll deliver that.” This playful exchange – by Blinkit and Zomato – not only grabbed attention but also ended up trending online. Similarly, <strong>experiential installations</strong> are on the rise. A recent promotional campaign for a Hollywood film in Mumbai erected a full-size biplane installation on a major highway to build anticipation. These kinds of spectacles show that bold OOH ideas can create memories and conversations that no banner ad online can match.</p><p><br></p><p><strong>Focus on Data/Statistics:</strong> The strength of OOH is also backed by data. India’s OOH market is growing steadily. In 2024, out-of-home spending grew <strong>12%,</strong> outpacing TV or print. Brands are leveraging this growth: major FMCG, tech, and retail advertisers now allocate significant budget to outdoor media. Transit campaigns – such as branded buses, autos, and metro cars – ensure repeated exposure on daily commutes. As one case study shows, a home-appliance brand wrapped hundreds of city buses in three metros, bringing its “trusted products” directly into people’s routines. By saturating the visual environment (bus shelters, highways, markets) with consistent imagery, such campaigns strengthen brand presence across target markets.</p><p><br></p><p><strong>Television, Radio, and Print</strong></p><p>Traditional media still has a role in brand building, especially for broad reach. TVC (television commercials) remain effective for mass-market brands, as TV continues to reach a huge rural and urban audience. In India’s 2025 AdEx, TV (including connected TV and OTT) still accounts for a large share (over 37% of total AdEx). A well-crafted TV campaign can humanize a brand (via storytelling) and provide visual cues that consumers remember. Similarly, radio jingles and print ads (newspapers, magazines) can reinforce brand messages in specific segments or demographics. While their growth is slower, they complement digital and OOH by covering different moments (e.g., morning newspaper readers or evening drivers listening to radio).</p><p><br></p><p><strong>Digital and Social Media</strong></p><p>Digital advertising’s data-rich precision makes it crucial for both brand building and performance. Online video ads, social media campaigns, search marketing, and influencer content can target specific age groups, interests, or regions. For brand building, platforms like YouTube, Instagram, and TikTok allow engaging story-driven ads (30-second videos, interactive posts) that reach younger, urban audiences. Digital ads also provide immediate feedback (views, shares, likes), which can guide creative iteration. According to India’s 2024 forecasts, the digital ad market is expected to keep growing by around 23% annually, as more consumption shifts online. High-impact formats include:</p><p><br></p><p><br></p><p><br></p><p><br></p><ul><li><strong>Video advertising:</strong> Indian consumers overwhelmingly prefer video content. Surveys show ~72% of consumers prefer learning about products via video. Engaging branded videos (on YouTube, Instagram Reels, etc.) can significantly boost awareness. Nielsen found that podcast ads alone raised awareness by up to 13 percentage points among listeners – similar logic applies to social video ads.</li><li><strong>Social media and influencer marketing:</strong> Most Indian internet users are active on platforms like Facebook and Instagram. Effective use of influencers and branded content can give social proof to a brand’s message. For example, campaigns with celebrity endorsements (like Shah Rukh Khan for a rice brand) create aspirational value and are widely shared. A recent rice brand campaign used large-scale outdoor ads featuring a Bollywood star, generating buzz in cities. The same content was amplified online via social posts, exponentially increasing reach.</li><li><strong>Search and Programmatic Ads:</strong> While search ads target immediate needs, banner and programmatic ads (including programmatic DOOH) help reinforce branding. The Neutrogena case (below) illustrates how airport DOOH plus online DSP targeting can work together for a product launch.</li></ul><p><br></p><p><br></p><p><br></p><blockquote><strong>SmartAds Insight:</strong> <em>“Data-driven targeting is powerful, but we always pair it with creativity. For a consumer brand, running a Facebook video ad alongside a nearby billboard with matching art and tagline can double brand retention. Our campaigns marry real-time analytics with creative consistency,”</em> emphasizes SmartAds.in’s media head.</blockquote><p><br></p><p><br></p><p><br></p><p><br></p><h4><strong>Indian Brand Case Studies: Advertising in Action</strong></h4><p><br></p><p>To see how these principles play out, let’s look at some recent Indian campaigns where advertising directly fueled brand building.</p><p><br></p><p><br></p><p><br></p><p><br></p><ul><li><strong>Daawat Basmati Rice –</strong> <strong>“Bring Out Your Finest” OOH Campaign</strong> : Daawat (a leading rice brand) launched an eye-catching outdoor campaign featuring Bollywood icon Shah Rukh Khan. Across Mumbai’s busiest intersections, the brand erected a large OOH installation: a life-size cut-out of SRK next to a lit-up biryani scene. The display had <strong>sequentially lighting elements</strong> (moving coriander leaves, steam effects) that brought the rice and biryani imagery to life. Beyond the creative feat, this campaign was massive in scale: 125 OOH sites across metro and non-metro cities (Mumbai, Delhi NCR, Bengaluru, Kolkata, Pune, Ahmedabad, Jaipur). By aligning these installations in high-traffic areas, Daawat reinforced its premium positioning and made a striking emotional connection. The senior brand manager noted it <strong>“driving meaningful visibility and deep engagement”</strong> with consumers. <em>Key takeaway:</em> Bold, high-visibility OOH can elevate a brand image. Here, innovative billboards and digital wraps turned a commodity (rice) into a cultural experience, and the brand’s message of “finest quality” resonated in every crowded location.</li><li><strong>Sujata Home Appliances – City-Wide Bus Wraps:</strong> Sujata, an Indian appliance maker, extended its urban footprint by branding public transit. In Mumbai (and rolling out in Delhi and Pune), Sujata plastered city buses with vivid blue wraps showcasing its mixers, fans and cooktops. Each bus prominently displayed the tagline <strong>“House of Sujata – Trusted Fans and Cooktops”.</strong> This campaign integrated Sujata’s products into the daily commute of millions. The effect was twofold: (a) <strong>frequency –</strong> repeated exposure as the same commuters saw these wrapped buses routinely; (b) <strong>context –</strong> positioning Sujata as a reliable, everyday brand (fans and appliances) in the heart of homes across the city. By turning public buses into mobile billboards, Sujata achieved saturation and reinforced its legacy claim (“trusted expert”) in a crowded appliance market. Key takeaway: Transit and bus wraps provide high-frequency impressions in local markets, building brand familiarity even without celebrity endorsements.</li><li><strong>Neutrogena (Johnson & Johnson) – DOOH Launch at Mumbai Airport:</strong> For its new skincare line, Neutrogena targeted <strong>affluent travelers</strong> via premium airport advertising. It activated 38 large digital screens in the Mumbai airport terminal (a prime “high-dwell” environment). The campaign ran a programmatic DOOH buy, using audience data to maximize reach at the optimal times. The result: <strong>2.45 million impressions in just 15 days</strong> – far exceeding initial projections. Notably, young adults (16-34) made up 55% of the audience, matching Neutrogena’s target. This case highlights the modern data-driven OOH approach: combining DOOH space with digital planning ensures brand messages reach the right demo. Key takeaway: DOOH can greatly amplify a product launch’s impact. By placing ads in strategic real-world locations and measuring impressions, brands get the scale of outdoor with the precision of digital.</li><li><strong>Blinkit vs Zomato – Billboard Banter:</strong> Blinkit (a quick-commerce startup) and its parent brand Zomato (food delivery) engaged in a clever OOH duel. They put up adjacent billboards that riffed on everyday phrases: one said “Ask for milk, we’ll deliver it,” and the other “Ask for dessert, we’ll deliver it.” This witty back-and-forth not only caught commuters’ eyes but also went viral online as a case of billboard humor. Both brands reinforced their core message (fast delivery of groceries/food) while creating buzz. <em>Key takeaway:</em> Humor and cultural references in OOH can supercharge brand recall. Even digital-age consumers are impressed by smart real-world ads, proving that OOH still has a “viral potential” when done right.</li><li><strong>PUMA India – Olympic Hero OOH Campaign:</strong> In a sports-centric campaign ahead of the 2024 Olympics, PUMA (footwear and apparel) used OOH to inspire patriotism and alignment with athletic excellence. Billboards and even local trains in Mumbai featured Indian Olympians like PV Sindhu and PR Sreejesh performing signature athletic moves. This linked PUMA’s brand with national pride and performance. The campaign ran across Mumbai’s urban landscape, ensuring that everyday commuters associated PUMA with India’s sporting success. <em>Key takeaway:</em> Aligning brand identity with cultural moments (like Olympics) via outdoor ads can deeply embed a brand in the national conversation.</li></ul><p><br></p><p>These case studies illustrate how <strong>Indian brands are creatively using advertising to build their brands.</strong> From highway stunts to mass-transit media and digital-outdoor combos, the campaigns share some common themes: bold visuals, targeted reach, and consistent messaging. Crucially, they also demonstrate ROI in brand terms: higher recall, stronger perceptions, and even sales lift (e.g., Neutrogena saw far-reaching impressions, and PUMA’s campaign likely boosted sneaker sales among sports fans).</p><p><br></p><p><br></p><p><br></p><p><br></p><h5><strong>Data and Trends Driving Future Advertising</strong></h5><p><br></p><p>Looking ahead, <strong>data analytics and technology</strong> are further empowering brand builders. The use of programmatic buying, AI targeting, and integrated metrics allows marketers to optimize their spend for brand outcomes. Some key trends to watch:</p><p><br></p><p><br></p><p><br></p><p><br></p><ul><li><strong>Programmatic OOH:</strong> Just as digital ads became automated, OOH is following suit. Brands can now book billboards or digital screens in real time, targeting ads geographically and by time of day. This means billboard campaigns can be more agile and accountable, attracting brands that previously shunned OOH for its inflexibility.</li><li><strong>Integrated Brand Metrics:</strong> Tools that measure “brand lift” (via surveys or passive audio/video measurement) help quantify the impact of advertising on awareness and perception. As Nielsen reports, tracking aided and unaided recall after campaigns is becoming standard practice. Marketers can thus justify brand ad budgets with data (e.g., “This DOOH campaign raised our ad recall by X points”).</li><li><strong>Media Mix Optimization:</strong> New analytics are guiding how much to spend on brand vs. performance ads. The HBR insight on Wanamaker’s problem suggests the need for “the right metrics” to optimize both. Many experts recommend a 60:40 split (60% brand, 40% performance) or similar frameworks, but the exact mix depends on category and goals. The point is: <strong>brand building is recognized as an investment,</strong> not a sunk cost.</li><li><strong>Out-of-Home Goes Digital:</strong> Screens are replacing static posters. India’s DOOH (digital-outdoor) market is forecast to grow rapidly – one research firm projects it will reach about $6.3 billion by 2033 at ~11.9% CAGR. Digital OOH allows dynamic content and dayparting (different ads at different times), making outdoor ads more engaging (live sports scores, interactive polls, etc.). Brands embracing this trend (like sportswear brands during live events) will likely see even stronger branding effects.</li></ul><p><br></p><p>Throughout all these changes, the fundamentals of brand building hold: <strong>frequency, relevance, and creativity</strong> . Marketers must still ensure that the right message reaches the right audience at the right times. Data tells us what, but storytelling tells consumers why they should care.</p><p><br></p><p><br></p><p><br></p><p><br></p><blockquote><strong>SmartAds Insight:</strong> <em>“We’re seeing brands shift towards ‘total branding’ campaigns. For example, a recent project integrated TVC, social media, OOH, and in-store visuals all around one theme. This repetitive exposure – both online and in the real world – created a synergy that dramatically lifted the brand’s recall scores. It’s a clear validation that coordinated branding across chan nels pays off,”</em> comments a SmartAds.in senior planner.</blockquote><p><br></p><p>By combining <strong>data-driven strategy</strong> with <strong>creative execution,</strong> advertisers can turn each campaign into a brand-building opportunity. The examples above – from airport screens to playful billboards – demonstrate that an integrated mix of modern and traditional media is the path to stronger brands. As SmartAds.in and industry research highlight, focusing on <strong>brand recall, consistency, and multi-channel reach is key.</strong> SmartAds.in experts emphasize tailoring campaigns to brand goals: <em>“We work closely with brands to identify the touchpoints that matter most to their audiences – whether it’s a YouTube video, a popular metro station ad, or a prime-time TVC – and ensure every ad drives the same core message home.”</em></p><p><br></p><p>In today’s fast-evolving market, advertising remains an indispensable tool for brand builders. By leveraging the latest trends (DOOH, social, etc.) and timeless tactics (memorable storytelling, visual impact), marketers can build brands that not only capture attention today but stay memorable tomorrow.</p>
FAQ's
What is brand building and why is it important?
Brand building is the process of creating awareness, trust, and a positive image in consumers’ minds. It matters because strong brands enjoy customer loyalty, premium pricing power, and easier new product acceptance. Advertising builds brands by making consumers aware of the brand’s existence and values, which influences their buying decisions down the line.
How does advertising contribute to brand awareness and recall?
Advertising exposes a large audience to your brand’s message repeatedly. Key metrics show that ads that are memorable (high recall) drive brand lift most significantly. For example, a creative billboard or TV spot that catches attention will be mentally stored by viewers, making it more likely they remember the brand later. Over time, this repeated exposure ensures the brand is top-of-mind.
Which advertising channels are best for brand building?
A combination is best. Out-of-home (OOH) like billboards and building wraps offers broad visibility and impact, especially in local markets. Television and video ads reach mass audiences with storytelling potential. Digital media (social, search, online video) allow targeted reach and measurable engagement. The optimal mix depends on the brand’s budget and audience. Smart campaigns align messages across all these media so the brand voice is consistent everywhere.
Is building advertising (billboards on buildings) effective for branding?
Yes. Building advertising is extremely high-impact because it turns an entire structure into a brand canvas. In cities like Mumbai or Delhi, a building wrap can be seen by thousands daily. Industry data notes that India’s facade advertising sector is growing quickly, as brands tap into its “unparalleled visibility”. These large-format ads can dramatically boost awareness, especially for local/regional branding.
How can small or local brands use advertising to build their brand?
Even small brands can build brand equity with smart local advertising. They can use targeted OOH (bus shelters, vehicle branding in one city), regional TV spots, or geo-targeted digital ads to reach their core audience. The key is frequency and relevance: pick media where the audience frequently sees the ad. For example, a local food brand might use food truck wraps and social media ads centered around local cuisine to build familiarity in its city.
How do we measure the success of brand-building advertising?
Unlike click metrics, brand impact is measured through brand lift studies and surveys. Marketers track metrics like aided and unaided brand awareness, recall, preference, and consideration before and after campaigns. Tools like Nielsen’s Brand Lift can quantify how much awareness increased. Consistent metrics (e.g. survey-based brand health scores) help gauge the long-term effect of branding ads. Ultimately, an increase in market share or sales growth after a major campaign is a strong indicator of brand-building success.