The Business of Media Is Now the Business of Growth
On the latest episode of Media Dialogues With Storyboard18, WPP Media’s India leadership — Shekhar Banerjee, President, Client Solutions, South Asia; Sairam Ranganathan, Head of Commerce, India; Vinit Karnik, Managing Director, Content, Entertainment & Sports, South Asia; and Priti Murthy, President, Client Solutions, South Asia, outlined a view of the media business that is less about media itself and more about something far broader: growth.
What emerged was a portrait of an industry undergoing a structural shift, where artificial intelligence, retail media and fragmented consumer behavior are not isolated disruptions but interconnected forces reshaping how companies think about marketing altogether.
AI Isn’t the Crisis. Growth Is.
Artificial intelligence has been framed as the existential threat to agencies. Yet, in boardrooms, the more immediate anxiety is not automation but acceleration. Brands are grappling with how to grow in an environment where commerce channels are multiplying, decision-making is increasingly data-driven and the traditional boundaries between brand building and performance marketing are dissolving.
Complexity Becomes the New Disruption
The rise of commerce, particularly in its faster and more fragmented forms, has complicated rather than simplified marketing decisions. Advertisers are now forced to navigate trade-offs between long-term brand equity and short-term sales, between platform investments and direct-to-consumer channels, and between scale and precision. This complexity, rather than any single technology, is becoming the defining disruption of the industry.
When Every Impression Becomes a Transaction
At the center of this shift is what executives describe as “connected commerce,” a system in which every consumer interaction has the potential to become a transaction. Exposure is no longer just awareness; it is a trigger. Whether prompted by cultural moments, live sports or algorithmically generated nudges, the path from attention to purchase has shortened dramatically.
The Funnel Is Collapsing
This compression of the consumer journey is eroding one of marketing’s most enduring frameworks: the funnel. The distinction between brand and performance media, once foundational, is increasingly viewed as artificial. Every channel is now expected to deliver measurable outcomes, even as those outcomes vary in immediacy and scale.
Agencies Move From Planning to Outcomes
In this environment, agencies are redefining their role. Media planning, once centered on optimizing channels and budgets, is being subsumed into a broader mandate: driving business outcomes. Media, in this formulation, becomes a means rather than the end.
Automation Frees Up Thinking
Artificial intelligence is accelerating this transition, though not in the way early narratives suggested. Rather than replacing human roles wholesale, AI is shifting the nature of work. Repetitive tasks, data processing and execution-heavy functions are increasingly automated, allowing planners to move up the value chain toward strategy and decision-making.
From Data Overload to Decision Engines
The volume and velocity of data alone make this shift inevitable. The sheer scale of information generated across platforms has outpaced the capacity of human teams to process it manually. AI, in this context, functions less as a disruptor and more as an enabling layer—transforming “information chaos” into actionable insight.
The Rise of Real-Time Marketing
What emerges is a hybrid model: a collaboration between human judgment and machine intelligence. Real-time marketing, once aspirational, is becoming operational. Campaigns can now be adjusted mid-flight based on live data signals, whether that means shifting television spends to match peak purchase windows or deploying creative responses to cultural moments within minutes.
Mass Culture Meets Personalization
This fusion is also reshaping how brands engage with culture. In a fragmented attention economy, mass experiences and hyper-personalized interactions coexist. A live concert, a cricket match or a viral moment can drive collective engagement, while recommendation engines and data-driven targeting deliver individualized experiences at scale.
New Money, New Channels, New Priorities
The commercial implications are significant. India’s advertising market continues to expand, with new categories—from electric vehicles to AI-driven businesses—offsetting declines in others. Retail media, in particular, is attracting disproportionate investment, reflecting its ability to link exposure directly to sales.
The Data Reckoning
Yet this expansion brings new challenges, especially around data governance and regulation. As brands gain access to richer consumer data, questions of consent, transparency and validity become central. The industry is entering a phase of experimentation, where standards around AI-generated content, data usage and measurement are still being defined.
The Agency Model Is Being Rewritten
Underlying all of this is a more fundamental shift: the redefinition of what agencies are expected to deliver. The traditional model of planning and buying media is giving way to a more integrated approach that combines data, technology, content and commerce into a unified system.
From Media Metrics to Business Outcomes
In that system, success is measured less by impressions or reach and more by outcomes—sales, growth and long-term brand equity. The implication is clear. The future of media is not about media at all. It is about orchestrating growth in a world where every touchpoint is both a message and a marketplace.
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