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How to Advertise in Indian Poultry Review Magazine — Ad Formats, Rates, and Media Kit Guide
The Indian poultry industry crossed a valuation of roughly USD 28 billion and continues to expand at a pace that surprises even seasoned agribusiness professionals — which means the trade media serving this sector is not a niche afterthought but a genuinely competitive advertising battleground. Indian Poultry Review magazine advertising sits at the centre of that battleground, reaching the decision-makers who actually buy feed technology, veterinary inputs, equipment, and processing solutions. What most brands get wrong is treating this channel as a last-resort budget line rather than a primary B2B touchpoint.
Why Should You Advertise in Indian Poultry Review Magazine?
There is a particular kind of trust that builds up over decades of consistent editorial coverage, and Indian Poultry Review has been accumulating that trust since its founding under the vision of agri-journalist G.N. Ghosh, whose editorial philosophy shaped how the Indian poultry trade reads its news. The publication has grown into what is arguably the most authoritative trade magazine in the poultry and livestock sector across South Asia, which means that an ad placement here carries a credibility weight that a digital banner simply cannot replicate in this specific professional community. When a poultry farmer in Andhra Pradesh or a feed miller in Haryana picks up a copy, the act of reading is deliberate and unhurried — unlike the scroll-and-skip behaviour that plagues most digital formats.
What a lot of people miss is that the poultry industry in India is not a monolithic consumer market; it is a tightly networked B2B ecosystem where purchasing decisions are made by a relatively small universe of informed professionals. The Department of Animal Husbandry and Dairying data consistently shows that commercial poultry operations are becoming more consolidated, which means the decision-makers are fewer in number but far higher in individual purchasing authority. Advertising in Indian Poultry Review puts your brand in front of those exact people — poultry breeders, feed millers, veterinarians, equipment buyers, and processing plant managers — during the moments when they are actively seeking product and supplier information.
At SmartAds, we always tell our clients that the question is not whether to advertise in Indian Poultry Review, but how to use the available formats strategically across an issue calendar. We have worked with agribusiness brands that initially allocated their entire print budget to general agriculture magazines and saw modest results; when we shifted a portion of that spend into focused poultry magazine advertising in India, the quality of inbound trade inquiries improved measurably — not because the reach was larger, but because it was precisely right. That precision is the real argument for this channel.
What Are the Available Ad Formats in Indian Poultry Review?
The format menu in Indian Poultry Review is broader than most advertisers expect when they first request the media kit, and understanding the hierarchy of positions is essential before committing to a booking. The back cover ad is universally regarded as the most premium position — it is the face of the magazine when it sits on a desk or is passed between colleagues, which gives it an impression frequency that no inside page can match. The inside front cover and inside back cover follow closely in terms of visibility, and these three positions are typically the first to be reserved by returning advertisers who understand their value; which is why we always advise clients to confirm these positions well in advance, particularly for issues tied to major industry events like the Poultry India Expo at HITEX in Hyderabad.
Beyond the premium cover positions, the magazine offers full page ads, half page ads, and the double spread ad — also called a center spread ad or gatefold in some contexts — which commands attention precisely because it forces the reader to pause and engage with a larger visual canvas. The distinction between a bleed ad and a non-bleed ad matters more than most first-time print advertisers realise; a bleed ad extends the artwork to the very edge of the trimmed page, creating a more immersive visual impact, while a non-bleed ad sits within defined margins and can feel comparatively contained. For product launches and brand awareness campaigns where visual impact is the primary objective, we consistently recommend bleed full page ads or the double spread format.
On top of that, Indian Poultry Review accommodates editorial-style formats including sponsored articles and advertorials, which are particularly effective for agribusiness brands that have a technical story to tell — a new feed additive, a vaccination protocol, or a processing efficiency solution. These formats work because the readership is technically literate and actively seeks detailed product information, not just brand imagery. Newsletter sponsorship and banner ads in the digital edition round out the format offering, which we will address in more detail when discussing digital options; but the point here is that the format range is genuinely versatile, covering everything from a quick brand visibility impression to a deep-dive sponsored content piece.
How Much Does It Cost to Advertise in Indian Poultry Review Magazine?
Frankly speaking, the absence of a publicly listed rate card for Indian Poultry Review is one of the most common frustrations we hear from media planners who are comparing poultry magazine ad rates across titles. The rates are not secret — they are simply not published in a format that allows easy online comparison, which is a gap we can help address with the context we have gathered through actual booking experience. For a full page colour ad in a standard inside position, the rate works out to somewhere in the ballpark of ₹15,000 to ₹25,000 per insertion, which is a number that tends to surprise clients who are used to paying multiples of that for a single day's digital spend with far less audience precision.
Premium positions carry a meaningful premium — the back cover ad is typically priced at roughly one and a half to two times the standard full page rate, while the inside front cover and inside back cover sit somewhere between those two benchmarks. A half page ad, depending on whether it is a horizontal strip or a vertical half, generally works out to around 55 to 65 percent of the full page rate, which makes it an efficient entry point for brands testing the publication for the first time. The double spread ad or center spread ad commands the highest absolute investment among display formats, but when you divide that cost by the dwell time and the visual real estate it occupies, the effective CPM is actually quite competitive relative to other B2B print options in the agriculture and farming segment.
What we tell our clients at SmartAds is that the rate card is only the starting point — the real value in magazine advertising rates in India comes from negotiating multi-insertion packages and annual contracts, which can bring the effective per-insertion cost down by anywhere from 15 to 30 percent depending on the commitment level. A brand that commits to, say, six insertions across a year is not just saving money; it is building a consistent presence that compounds in the reader's mind, which is how brand recall actually works in a trade publication context. We have seen advertisers spend more per insertion on a one-off booking and achieve less brand visibility than a competitor who booked a smaller format consistently across the full editorial calendar.
Who Reads Indian Poultry Review — Understanding the Audience Profile
The readership of Indian Poultry Review is not a general farming audience; it is a highly specific professional community, and understanding its composition is the first thing any serious media planner should do before approving a booking. The core reader base spans poultry farmers running commercial layer and broiler operations, poultry breeders managing hatchery and grandparent stock programmes, veterinarians and animal health professionals serving the poultry sector, feed millers and poultry nutrition specialists, equipment manufacturers and dealers, and the agribusiness professionals who manage input supply chains across the value chain. This is, in the truest sense of the term, a community of decision-makers — people who are actively evaluating products and suppliers as part of their professional responsibilities.
Geographically, the readership mirrors the concentration of India's commercial poultry industry, which means states like Andhra Pradesh, Telangana, Maharashtra, Punjab, Haryana, West Bengal, and Tamil Nadu account for a disproportionate share of the circulation — which aligns well with the distribution of major poultry operations documented in Department of Animal Husbandry and Dairying reports. The magazine also reaches institutional readers including members of IPEMA (Indian Poultry Equipment Manufacturers Association), NECC (National Egg Coordination Committee), the Poultry Federation of India, and CLFMA (Compound Livestock Feed Manufacturers Association), which means a single issue can reach both the manufacturer and the industry body representative simultaneously. That institutional penetration is something no digital targeting algorithm can reliably replicate.
One thing our experience at SmartAds has consistently confirmed is that the professional seniority of the Indian Poultry Review readership is unusually high for a print publication at this price point. We are not talking about junior farm workers; we are talking about farm owners, operations managers, procurement heads, and technical directors — the people who sign purchase orders. A campaign we ran for a veterinary nutrition brand found that the quality of trade show conversations and distributor inquiries improved noticeably in the months following a sustained run of print magazine advertising in IPR, compared to the same brand's digital-only phase. The audience was already reading the magazine; the advertising simply placed the brand inside a trusted editorial environment.
What Makes Indian Poultry Review India's Most Trusted Poultry Trade Publication?
The IPR Group's editorial history is not incidental to its advertising value — it is the foundation of it. Publications that have maintained consistent editorial standards over decades develop what researchers studying media credibility call "halo transfer," which means the trust readers have in the editorial content extends to the advertising that surrounds it; and in a B2B context, that transferred credibility can meaningfully influence purchase consideration in ways that are difficult to achieve through interruptive digital formats. Indian Poultry Review has been the record of the Indian poultry industry for long enough that its archives are treated as reference material by researchers and industry bodies alike.
The sister publication Poultry Jagat, which serves the Hindi-language poultry readership, extends the IPR Group's reach into markets where vernacular content is the primary consumption mode — which matters enormously for brands trying to reach poultry farmers in UP, MP, Rajasthan, and Bihar, where commercial poultry operations are growing rapidly but English-language trade media penetration remains limited. Together, the two publications give the IPR Group a South Asia poultry media footprint that no single competing title can match on its own. Advertisers who run coordinated campaigns across both titles effectively double their professional audience reach within the same media buying relationship.
The magazine's consistent presence at and coverage of Poultry India Expo — the industry's flagship event held at HITEX in Hyderabad — further cements its position as the publication of record for the sector. We have observed that advertisers who align their Indian Poultry Review magazine advertising with the pre-event and event issue of the magazine tend to see significantly stronger response rates, because readers are in an active purchasing and evaluation mindset during that period. The editorial calendar, which we will discuss in the context of the media kit, is designed around exactly these industry moments.
How to Book Your Ad in Indian Poultry Review Step by Step
The advertising booking process for Indian Poultry Review is more straightforward than many first-time print media buyers expect, though it does require attention to a few critical timelines that, if missed, can push a campaign back by a full issue cycle. The first step is confirming the issue you want to target and the format you intend to run — which sounds obvious, but we have seen clients lose premium positions like the back cover and inside front cover because they delayed the format decision while waiting for creative approvals. Premium positions are offered to returning advertisers first, and the window for new advertisers to claim them can be surprisingly short.
Once the format and issue are confirmed, the ad insertion order is placed — either directly with the IPR Group's advertising team or through a registered media buying agency like SmartAds, which handles the booking, rate negotiation, and artwork submission on the client's behalf. The artwork specifications matter enormously at this stage; a full page bleed ad typically requires a PDF at 300 DPI with 3mm bleed on all sides, and the colour profile should be CMYK rather than RGB to ensure accurate print reproduction. Submitting artwork in the wrong format is one of the most common and entirely avoidable causes of ad quality issues in print magazine advertising, and we always brief our clients on these specifications before the creative team begins production.
The lead time for ad booking in Indian Poultry Review is generally in the range of two to three weeks before the issue's print date, though for special issues tied to events like Poultry India Expo, that lead time can extend to four or five weeks given the higher demand for space. Our recommendation at SmartAds is to plan the advertising booking at least six weeks out for any issue where a premium position is desired, which gives enough buffer for creative development, client approvals, and any revisions without risking a missed deadline. The cost of missing a high-value issue — particularly the Poultry India Expo issue — is not just the lost impression; it is the competitive visibility that a rival brand gains by being present when you are not.
What Are the Benefits of Print Magazine Advertising for Poultry Brands in India?
There is a persistent myth in media planning circles that print is dying, which is worth addressing directly: in B2B trade publishing, the dynamics are fundamentally different from consumer magazines, and the Indian Poultry Review readership is not shrinking. The FICCI-EY Media and Entertainment Report has consistently noted that niche trade publications in agriculture and allied sectors maintain stable readership because they serve a functional professional need — readers are not consuming this content for entertainment; they are reading it to make better business decisions. That functional reading behaviour is precisely what makes poultry magazine advertising in India so effective for B2B brands.
Print magazine advertising in a trade context offers what we call "shelf life advantage" — a full page ad in Indian Poultry Review may be seen multiple times as the issue circulates through a farm office, is passed to a colleague, or sits in a waiting area at a veterinary clinic. The pass-along readership in trade publications is typically estimated at three to five additional readers per copy, which means the effective reach of a given circulation figure is meaningfully higher than the print run alone suggests. On top of that, the absence of ad clutter — compared to the twenty-plus ads a user might scroll past in a single digital session — means that each ad placement in a print magazine receives a more focused share of the reader's attention.
For agribusiness brands specifically, the credibility dimension of print magazine advertising is difficult to overstate. We worked with a feed technology company that was launching a new enzyme-based additive into the Indian market; they had a strong digital presence but found that their conversion rates at trade shows and distributor meetings improved significantly after they ran a series of sponsored articles and full page ads in Indian Poultry Review over a four-month period. The feedback from their sales team was consistent — potential buyers were arriving at conversations having already read about the product, which compressed the sales cycle and reduced the educational burden on field representatives. That is the kind of ROI advertising that does not always show up in click-through reports but is very real in B2B sales outcomes.
How Does Indian Poultry Review Compare to Other Poultry Magazines in India?
The competitive landscape of poultry magazine advertising in India is more varied than most advertisers realise, and choosing the right title — or combination of titles — requires an honest assessment of what each publication actually delivers. Indian Poultry Review is generally positioned as the premium English-language trade title with the broadest national and South Asia reach; Poultry Jagat, as mentioned, serves the Hindi-language market and is the natural companion for brands targeting northern and central Indian markets. Poultry Planner Magazine, Poultry Times of India, and Hind Poultry each have their own regional and segment strengths, which means the choice is rarely binary.
What we tell clients who ask us to compare these titles is that the decision should be driven by audience geography, language preference of the target reader, and the editorial environment in which the brand wants to be seen. Indian Poultry Review's association with major industry bodies including IPEMA, NECC, and the Poultry Federation of India gives it an institutional credibility that newer or more regionally focused titles have not yet accumulated; which translates directly into the seniority level of the readership and, by extension, the purchasing authority of the people seeing the ad. For a brand targeting national distribution or export-oriented buyers, IPR is typically the anchor title in the media plan.
To be fair, there are scenarios where a regional or vernacular title delivers better ROI for a specific campaign objective — a brand launching a product specifically in the Telangana or Karnataka market, for instance, might find that a regional title with deep local penetration outperforms a national title on a cost-per-relevant-impression basis. Our approach at SmartAds is to model the audience overlap and cost efficiency across available titles before making a recommendation, rather than defaulting to the most prestigious title by habit. The right answer for agriculture magazine advertising in India is almost always a combination strategy, with IPR as the brand credibility anchor and regional titles driving local market activation.
Indian Poultry Review Media Kit — Circulation, Readership, and Editorial Calendar
The media kit for Indian Poultry Review is the document that serious advertisers should request before committing any budget, and it contains more strategic value than most clients initially expect. The circulation figures — which, while not independently audited by the Audit Bureau of Circulations in the same way that major consumer titles are, are reported by the publication and broadly validated by industry observers — place Indian Poultry Review among the highest-circulated English-language poultry trade publications in South Asia. The readership, factoring in the pass-along rate typical of trade publications, is estimated to be meaningfully higher than the print run, which makes the effective CPM quite attractive when benchmarked against other B2B print media buying options in the agriculture and farming segment.
The editorial calendar is perhaps the most practically useful element of the media kit for campaign planning purposes, and it is something that many advertisers overlook. Issues are typically themed around the major cycles of the poultry industry — vaccination and biosecurity, feed and nutrition, processing and packaging, export markets, and the flagship Poultry India Expo issue — which means an advertiser can align their ad placement with the editorial context most relevant to their product category. A veterinary brand advertising in the biosecurity-themed issue, for instance, is not just buying a position; it is buying relevance, because the reader is already in a mindset oriented toward animal health solutions when they encounter the ad.
Digital edition advertising and newsletter sponsorship options are increasingly part of the Indian Poultry Review media kit conversation, which reflects a broader shift in how trade publications are extending their reach beyond the print run. Banner ads in the digital edition, sponsored content in email newsletters, and website display placements offer advertisers the ability to reach the same professional audience through a second touchpoint — which compounds the brand visibility effect of the print campaign rather than replacing it. We have found that campaigns which combine print magazine advertising with digital edition placements tend to generate stronger brand recall scores than either channel alone, a finding that aligns with the multi-touch attribution thinking that has become standard in media planning.
Customised Advertising Packages and Multi-Insertion Discounts
One of the most consistently underutilised opportunities in Indian Poultry Review magazine advertising is the multi-insertion discount structure, which rewards advertisers who commit to consistent presence over a campaign period rather than testing the water with a single insertion. The effective rate reduction for a six-insertion annual contract, compared to six individual single-insertion bookings, works out to somewhere in the range of 20 to 30 percent — which, on a full page colour ad, represents a saving that can fund an additional two or three insertions, effectively extending the campaign at no incremental cost. Customised advertising packages that bundle print positions with digital edition placements and newsletter sponsorship are also available and represent genuinely good value for brands with a sustained presence objective.
The strategic case for annual booking commitments goes beyond the financial saving, though that is real and significant. Consistent presence across twelve months of issues creates a brand familiarity effect in the readership that a one-off insertion, however well-designed, simply cannot achieve; which is a point that is well-supported by the advertising frequency research that has been replicated across B2B media contexts for decades. We have seen this dynamic play out clearly with a poultry equipment brand we managed — their single-insertion test generated modest inquiry volume, but when they committed to a six-insertion run across a calendar year, the cumulative brand awareness effect produced a step-change in the quality and volume of distributor inquiries they received at the following Poultry India Expo.
For brands that are new to print media buying in the poultry sector, we recommend starting with a three-insertion package that allows enough frequency to establish brand recognition while limiting the initial commitment. The three-insertion window also allows for creative testing — running different ad messages or product focuses across successive issues to identify which narrative resonates most strongly with the Indian Poultry Review readership before scaling up to an annual commitment. At SmartAds, we manage this kind of iterative campaign optimisation as part of our standard media planning process, which means clients are not just buying space; they are building a data-informed advertising strategy.
FAQ: Everything You Need to Know Before Booking
Q: What are the advertising rates for Indian Poultry Review magazine?
The rate card for Indian Poultry Review is not published as a fixed public document, which is a source of frustration for media planners doing initial budget comparisons — but the rates we have worked with through our booking experience at SmartAds place a standard full page colour ad somewhere in the range of ₹15,000 to ₹25,000 per insertion for inside page positions. Premium positions command a meaningful premium over this base rate; the back cover ad typically runs at roughly one and a half to two times the standard full page rate, while the inside front cover and inside back cover sit between those benchmarks. Half page ads generally work out to around 55 to 65 percent of the full page rate, and the double spread or center spread ad is priced at the top of the display format range. These figures are indicative and subject to change based on the issue, the booking volume, and any promotional packages in effect at the time of booking; which is why we always recommend requesting a current rate card directly or working through an agency that has an active booking relationship with the publication.
Q: What ad formats are available in Indian Poultry Review magazine?
The format range covers the full spectrum of print display advertising — from the back cover ad and inside front cover at the premium end, through full page ads, half page ads, quarter page ads, and the double spread or center spread ad for maximum visual impact. The distinction between bleed ads and non-bleed ads applies across most display formats; a bleed ad extends artwork to the trimmed page edge, while a non-bleed ad sits within defined margins. Beyond standard display, the magazine offers sponsored articles and advertorials, which are editorial-style formats that allow brands to present technical content in a credible, reader-friendly format. Banner ads in the digital edition and newsletter sponsorship options extend the format range into digital touchpoints, which are increasingly part of the standard media kit offering.
Q: Who is the target audience of Indian Poultry Review magazine?
The readership is a professional B2B audience centred on the Indian poultry industry value chain — poultry farmers running commercial layer and broiler operations, poultry breeders managing hatchery programmes, veterinarians and animal health professionals, feed millers and poultry nutrition specialists, equipment manufacturers and dealers, agribusiness professionals in input supply and distribution, and institutional members of bodies including IPEMA, NECC, the Poultry Federation of India, and CLFMA. Geographically, the readership is concentrated in the major poultry-producing states — Andhra Pradesh, Telangana, Maharashtra, Punjab, Haryana, West Bengal, and Tamil Nadu — though the national distribution means the publication reaches decision-makers across the full geography of Indian commercial poultry production.
Q: How do I book an advertisement in Indian Poultry Review?
Advertising booking can be done directly through the IPR Group's advertising team or through a registered media buying agency. The process involves confirming the target issue and format, placing an insertion order, and submitting artwork by the publication's specified deadline. Working through an agency like SmartAds has the practical advantage of consolidated rate negotiation, artwork specification guidance, and deadline management — which reduces the administrative burden on the advertiser's marketing team and reduces the risk of errors that can affect print quality or cause a missed issue.
Q: What is the circulation and readership of Indian Poultry Review magazine?
The publication's circulation figures are reported by the IPR Group and place Indian Poultry Review among the leading English-language poultry trade publications in South Asia. The effective readership, accounting for the pass-along rate typical of trade publications — generally estimated at three to five additional readers per copy — is meaningfully higher than the print run alone. The institutional distribution through industry bodies and trade associations further extends the reach of each issue into professional networks that are difficult to reach through other media channels.
Q: What are the artwork specifications and submission deadlines for Indian Poultry Review ads?
Standard specifications for a full page bleed ad require artwork supplied as a high-resolution PDF at 300 DPI, with a 3mm bleed on all sides and colour profile set to CMYK for accurate print reproduction. Non-bleed ads should be supplied at the same resolution within the defined safe area margins. The submission deadline is typically two to three weeks before the issue's print date for standard issues, and up to four to five weeks for high-demand special issues like the Poultry India Expo edition. We always recommend confirming the exact specifications and deadline with the publication or your media buying agency at the time of booking, as these can vary by issue and format.
Q: Does Indian Poultry Review offer digital or online advertising options?
Yes — the digital edition of Indian Poultry Review carries banner ads and display placements that reach the same professional readership through a second touchpoint, and the publication's email newsletter offers sponsorship positions that deliver brand visibility directly to subscribers' inboxes. Website display placements are also part of the digital advertising portfolio. These digital options are increasingly being packaged with print placements as part of customised advertising packages, which offer a more cost-effective entry point for brands that want multi-channel presence within the IPR Group's media ecosystem.
Q: How far in advance should I book my ad in Indian Poultry Review?
For standard inside page positions, a lead time of two to three weeks before the issue's print date is generally sufficient. For premium positions — back cover, inside front cover, inside back cover — we recommend booking at least four to six weeks in advance, and for special issues tied to major industry events, the booking window can close even earlier due to high demand. Our standing advice at SmartAds is to plan the full year's insertion schedule at the beginning of the financial year, which secures preferred positions and typically qualifies for multi-insertion discount rates.
Q: Are there discounts available for multiple insertions or annual bookings in Indian Poultry Review?
Multi-insertion discounts are available and represent one of the most financially meaningful optimisations available in print media buying for this title. A six-insertion annual commitment typically yields a rate reduction in the range of 20 to 30 percent compared to individual insertion rates, and annual contracts that include digital edition placements or newsletter sponsorship may carry additional value. Customised advertising packages that bundle multiple formats and touchpoints are negotiable and represent the best overall value for brands with a sustained presence objective.
Q: How does advertising in Indian Poultry Review compare to other poultry magazines in India?
Indian Poultry Review is generally the anchor title for national B2B campaigns targeting the English-language professional readership of the Indian poultry industry, with the strongest institutional credibility and the broadest South Asia reach. Poultry Jagat serves the Hindi-language market and is the natural complement for northern and central India reach. Poultry Planner, Poultry Times of India, and Hind Poultry each have regional and segment strengths that make them relevant for specific geographic or audience objectives. The optimal media plan for most national agribusiness brands combines Indian Poultry Review as the brand credibility anchor with selective regional title placements for market-specific activation — a strategy we model and recommend based on each client's specific distribution footprint and audience profile.
Making the Case for Indian Poultry Review Advertising — A Closing Perspective
The poultry industry in India is not a sector that is standing still; it is one of the fastest-growing segments of Indian agriculture, backed by rising protein consumption, organised retail expansion, and the kind of infrastructure investment that the Department of Animal Husbandry and Dairying has been tracking with increasing optimism. Brands that want to be taken seriously in this market need to be visible in the places where its decision-makers actually pay attention — and Indian Poultry Review magazine advertising has been one of those places for longer than most of the brands currently advertising there have been in existence.
The case for print magazine advertising in a trade context is not nostalgic; it is practical. The readership is real, the professional seniority is high, the ad clutter is low, and the credibility transfer from a trusted editorial environment is measurable in the quality of the commercial conversations that follow. We have seen this play out across multiple campaigns — from a veterinary nutrition launch that compressed its distributor sales cycle, to an equipment brand that arrived at Poultry India Expo in Hyderabad with a readership that already knew its name, to a feed technology company whose sponsored articles in IPR became reference material that prospects shared with colleagues. These are not coincidences; they are the predictable outcomes of placing the right message in front of the right professional audience through a medium they trust.
The thing is, the brands that get the most out of Indian Poultry Review magazine advertising are not the ones with the biggest budgets — they are the ones that plan their insertions around the editorial calendar, commit to enough frequency to build genuine brand recognition, and use the full format range intelligently rather than defaulting to a single half page ad and hoping for the best. That kind of strategic thinking is exactly what the SmartAds media planning team brings to every agribusiness advertising campaign we manage, and it is the difference between a media spend that generates measurable trade response and one that simply occupies a page.
If you are evaluating Indian Poultry Review magazine advertising as part of your next campaign — whether for a product launch, a brand awareness push, or a sustained presence strategy — the SmartAds team is available to provide a customised media plan with current rate benchmarks, format recommendations, and insertion scheduling tailored to your specific audience and budget. Visit SmartAds.in to connect with our agriculture and agribusiness media planning specialists, and let us help you make the most of what this channel genuinely has to offer.

