CoBB | Conversations on the Business of Brands

Sudeep Chawla & Sharavana Raghavan

On the show, the hosts, Sudeep Chawla & Sharavana Raghavan, leverage their collective industry experience of over 30 years to deconstruct and simplify aspects of brand and marketing strategies to enable emerging businesses to build and serve remarkable brands. In each episode, the hosts take turns interviewing each other, on a specific topic of their choice. Listeners will see their passion for brands, brand strategies and marketing fill the conversations in the form of candour, debates and even disagreements at times.

  1. JAN 8

    149) The Meaning of Marketing - Decoding What Makes a Brand Matter

    In this insight-packed episode of CoBB, Sharavana Raghavan interviews Sudeep Chawla on a word that marketers love to throw around—but rarely stop to define: meaning. What does it truly mean to do meaningful work as a marketer? Does every brand need to become an emotional powerhouse to matter? How do you figure out where your brand sits in the consumer’s mind—and where it should? Through practical frameworks and clear examples—from Post-it Notes and Fogg to Maggi and Sting—this episode redefines what it means to build a meaningful brand, and why marketers should stop chasing the top of the emotional pyramid and instead focus on where the brand really delivers value. If you’ve ever struggled with brand ladders, emotional benefits, or purpose-led marketing, this conversation will bring you clarity, confidence, and a new lens to see your brand through. KEY THEMES EXPLORED Meaning Is Not Purpose Marketers often confuse meaning with lofty purpose. But meaning is simply: what does your brand mean to the consumer in their everyday life? The FAB Ladder: It’s All You Need Sudeep breaks down how Features, Advantages, and Benefits form a complete ladder to define brand meaning—and why you don’t need to climb to the top to win. Stay Where You Matter Most Not every brand needs to be emotional. Post-it sells on features. Fogg sticks to advantages. And that’s perfectly fine. Meaningful work doesn’t mean “emotional” work. Examples That Stick From Crax and Nutella to Dettol and Dairy Milk, each brand shows how meaning is created at different rungs of the FAB ladder. It’s not a one-size-fits-all model. Consumer Understanding Is the Shortcut The only way to find your brand’s meaning is by understanding the consumer. The job is not to invent meaning, but to reveal it. KEY TAKEAWAYS You Don’t Have to Climb the Ladder A brand can be meaningful at the feature or advantage level. Don’t force-fit emotional benefits. Differentiation Is the Real Driver In undifferentiated categories, emotional benefits may help. But when you have a unique feature, highlight it. Know Where You Win Your brand’s current meaning lies in what your consumers feel when they use it—not what you wish it stood for. Purpose Without Meaning Falls Flat Purpose that doesn’t stem from consumer meaning (like Hellmann’s mayo) feels fake and backfires. Visit Your Consumer You can’t understand meaning from behind a desk. Go out. Talk to real people. Observe how they use your brand. QUOTES “The FAB framework is the meaning of marketing.” “Don’t carry the burden of emotional branding if your brand wins on features.” “There is no online way to understand consumers. Go meet them.” “Meaning is what your product or service means in their life, not what it means on your deck.” Whether you’re a seasoned brand custodian or just starting out, this episode reminds you that meaningful marketing doesn’t always mean climbing higher. Sometimes, it just means going deeper. Tune in. Re-think your brand. And find meaning that actually matters. As always, send your feedback and topic suggestions to mail@cobbcast.net! Please tell us what topics you'd like to have discussed on the CoBB, by filling in this ⁠CONTENT SUGGESTION FORM⁠⁠ It only takes a few minutes, and it will help us provide you with the content most relevant to you. SHOW WEBSITE CONNECT WITH OUR HOSTS Sudeep Chawla on ⁠Linkedin⁠ Sharavana Raghavan on ⁠Linkedin⁠ FOLLOW USCoBB - ⁠LinkedIn CoBB - Instagram⁠ CREDITS Album Art & Design by ting.inVoiceovers by Anjale StephanosMusic from Zapsplat.com

    26 min
  2. 12/29/2025

    148) Stop Aping the West: Build Brands that Work for Bharat

    In this episode, Sudeep flips the script and interviews Sharavana on a bold but necessary premise: Indian businesses can no longer afford to copy Western playbooks. The Indian consumer, economy, and cultural landscape demand original thinking. Sharavana draws from real-world brand examples, market dynamics, and consumer behaviour to argue that it is time for founders and marketers to stop imitating the West and start designing businesses that work for Indian realities. What follows is a deep, reflective conversation filled with practical insights for anyone trying to build or scale in India. Modern Trade Is Not a Copy-Paste Job Why India shops for daily needs, not bulk. How D-Mart succeeded by doing the opposite of Walmart. Why Quick Commerce Works in India The West failed with Q-Com. India made it viable through cultural norms, population density, UPI, and existing delivery behaviour. D-Mart’s Ugly But Brilliant Model No frills, no wide assortment, and no freebies. Just low prices and ruthless backend efficiency. The Indianization of Western Startups Uber, Zomato, and Ola began as clones, but had to localize deeply to survive. Cash payments, bike taxis, and vegetarian filters were not optional. Contradictions Are Not Mistakes Indian consumers may haggle for ten rupees while holding the latest iPhone. It is not inconsistency, it is contextual intelligence. The Healthy Snacking Mirage Mass India snacks for taste and social enjoyment. Protein bars are niche. Health food is still a Western concept in an Indian wrapper. Segment by Mindset, Not Income Demographic segmentation is dead. Psychographic models are better suited to India’s diverse and complex consumption behaviour. Why the Future Belongs to Micro-Brands Global brands are no longer the aspiration. Brands that understand and serve micro-niches will define the next decade. KEY TAKEAWAYS India is not a less developed version of the West. It is a different market that needs its own models.Top-up behavior dominates retail, not bulk shopping. This changes how you think about distribution and pricing.D-Mart is a case study in building a brand by ignoring Western expectations of shopping experience.Consumer behavior in India is deeply contextual. Marketing must account for life stage, occasion, and social signaling.It is okay to start with inspiration from global models. Just make sure you finish with a business built for Indian consumers.UPI, sachets, price pack architecture, and delivery culture are all examples of how Indian systems solve Indian problems.Western models cannot be copied wholesale. What works in Boston often fails in Bhopal unless it is reimagined.QUOTES “You can start anywhere, but make sure you end where India is.” “D-Mart is not an experience. It is a function—and it works.” “In India, contradictions are not confusion. They are context.” “Don’t call it aping. Call it borrowing, with full rights to remix.” “Healthy snacking is a Western need. In India, meals are healthy. Snacks are joy.” If you are building a brand in India, this episode is your wake-up call. Stop importing assumptions. Start creating relevance. Because the only way to win here is to build for here. As always, send your feedback and topic suggestions to mail@cobbcast.net! Please tell us what topics you'd like to have discussed on the CoBB, by filling in this ⁠CONTENT SUGGESTION FORM⁠⁠ It only takes a few minutes, and it will help us provide you with the content most relevant to you. SHOW WEBSITE CONNECT WITH OUR HOSTS Sudeep Chawla on ⁠Linkedin⁠ Sharavana Raghavan on ⁠Linkedin⁠ FOLLOW USCoBB - ⁠LinkedIn CoBB - Instagram⁠ CREDITS Album Art & Design by ting.inVoiceovers by Anjale StephanosMusic from Zapsplat.com

    29 min
  3. 11/13/2025

    147) Ode To Pandeymonium - Remembering Piyush Pandey

    In this heartfelt episode of CoBB, hosts Sharavana Raghavan and Sudeep Chawla pay tribute to a man who didn’t just shape Indian advertising. He shaped how Indians saw themselves. Mr. Piyush Pandey, the legendary creative mind behind some of India’s most iconic campaigns, passed away recently, leaving behind more than a legacy. He left behind a way of life. Drawing from personal memories, industry anecdotes, and the countless people he touched, Sudeep reflects on the many sides of Piyush Pandey. The mentor. The mischief-maker. The master communicator. And above all, the man who taught us to breathe in life so we could breathe out ideas. This isn’t just an homage. It’s a masterclass in what it means to matter. KEY THEMES EXPLORED He Was a Brand Before He Built Them Piyush didn’t just build Fevicol, Cadbury, Asian Paints and more. He was a brand himself. Loved, respected, instantly recognisable. Briefs Were Conversations, Not Documents He wasn’t interested in slides. He was interested in your intent. The brief started with one line. “Partner, what’s the problem we’re solving?” Mentor by Mindset, Not Method Piyush didn’t coach through theory. He listened. He encouraged. He protected. And he let others take the credit when it mattered. Creative Comes from Living, Not Googling His golden rule: inhale life before you exhale ideas. Whether it was cricket, conversations or childhood jokes, life was always the starting point. He Made India Feel Cool About Being Indian From ‘Mile Sur Mera Tumhara’ to ‘Kuch Khaas Hai’, he didn’t just write ads. He gave India the confidence to be itself. Respect Language. Respect People. Whether it was Hindi or Tamil, he treated every language like a culture, not a translation. He listened before he wrote. KEY TAKEAWAYS Stay Curious. Stay Playful. Stay Present. He never lost the inner kid. The one who asked questions. The one who cracked jokes. The one who noticed what others missed. Relationships Come Before Recognition He made time for friends, teammates and agency juniors. He wasn’t networking. He was showing up for people. Solve the Problem, Not Just Sell the Product Every brief started with the consumer’s issue, not the brand’s objective. Creativity was never divorced from business. Lead by Example, Not Instruction Piyush didn’t need to shout to be heard. His work ethic, humility and sharp eye said enough. Relatable Beats Clever Every Time If it doesn’t feel real, it doesn’t work. His best ads came from everyday life. That’s why they live on. No Ego. No Hierarchy. No Showmanship. He backed his team, accepted feedback and often ran with someone else’s idea. It wasn’t about him. It was about the idea. QUOTES “Partner, tell me, what’s the business problem we’re solving?” “If you stop inhaling life, what will you exhale?” “There can never be another Piyush Pandey. But we can all keep a little bit of him alive in us.” “Well played, Captain.” If you’re a marketer, advertiser or creative, this episode is not just a throwback. It’s a reminder. Of how to think, how to work and how to live. Piyush Pandey may have moved on, but his lessons are very much here. Tune in. Take notes. And carry forward the spark. As always, send your feedback and topic suggestions to mail@cobbcast.net! Please tell us what topics you'd like to have discussed on the CoBB, by filling in this ⁠CONTENT SUGGESTION FORM⁠⁠ It only takes a few minutes, and it will help us provide you with the content most relevant to you. SHOW WEBSITE CONNECT WITH OUR HOSTS Sudeep Chawla on ⁠Linkedin⁠ Sharavana Raghavan on ⁠Linkedin⁠ FOLLOW USCoBB - ⁠LinkedIn CoBB - Instagram⁠ CREDITS Album Art & Design by ting.inVoiceovers by Anjale StephanosMusic from Zapsplat.com

    28 min
  4. 10/16/2025

    146) Influencer Circus: A Structured Way to Navigate the Chaos (Part - 2)

    In this eye-opening sequel to the previous episode, Sudeep Chawla interviews Sharavana Raghavan to shine a light on the lesser-known side of influencer marketing - the risks, the realities, and how brands can stay grounded in the middle of all the noise. Packed with case studies like Dream11 and Mamaearth, this episode uncovers the laddered strategy behind some of India’s most successful influencer-driven campaigns. But more importantly, it issues a clear warning: this circus can entertain or collapse, depending on how well you manage it. Whether you’re a challenger brand trying to punch above your weight or an established player debating whether to scale up influencer spends, this conversation gives you the playbook to navigate the chaos with clarity. KEY THEMES EXPLORED Case studies that got it right Dream11 and Mamaearth used influencer marketing to build category awareness, not just run promotions. They started with niche creators and scaled up thoughtfully — using education, community, and advocacy as building blocks. The dark side of the circus Fake followers, bot-driven engagement, shady ROI, inconsistent messaging, and sudden algorithmic dips are just some of the pitfalls. Most brands struggle to track real returns and often misuse influencers for short-term spikes. Influencers work best at the top of the funnel Trying to force bottom-of-funnel outcomes from top-of-funnel creators leads to disillusionment and underperformance. Influencers drive discovery, not just transactions — and should be treated accordingly. When to walk away Sharavana offers a practical rule: if influencer CAC is 30% higher than your next best-performing channel, or if ROAS consistently falls below 3, it’s time to pause, reassess, or reallocate your budget. Why Unilever’s playbook might not scale The hosts debate Unilever’s move to build influencer armies across India and whether it reflects smart adaptation or a risky outsourcing of brand credibility. Their verdict: without authenticity and product quality, more voices won’t equal more trust. KEY TAKEAWAYS Good influencer marketing begins with advocacy and education — not just paid posts.Watch out for fake metrics, bot followers, and short-term campaign thinking.Influencers are not media assets. They’re people with their own style, credibility, and voice.Use long-term partnerships and ambassador models wherever possible.If you’re losing control of your message, you’re not curating the circus — you’re just part of the audience. QUOTES “Just because it’s paid doesn’t mean it’s fake. But it has to feel real.” “Influencer marketing works — if you treat it as a long-term relationship, not a performance hack.” “When your influencer CAC is 30% higher than your next best channel, it’s time to rethink.” “Don’t hand over your brand’s credibility without knowing how it’ll be used.” If you’re a founder, marketer, or brand manager considering influencer marketing — or already feeling overwhelmed by it — this episode delivers the strategic clarity and caution you need to do it right. You can win at the influencer circus. But only if you direct the show. As always, send your feedback and topic suggestions to mail@cobbcast.net! Please tell us what topics you'd like to have discussed on the CoBB, by filling in this ⁠CONTENT SUGGESTION FORM⁠⁠ It only takes a few minutes, and it will help us provide you with the content most relevant to you. SHOW WEBSITE CONNECT WITH OUR HOSTS Sudeep Chawla on ⁠Linkedin⁠ Sharavana Raghavan on ⁠Linkedin⁠ FOLLOW USCoBB - ⁠LinkedIn CoBB - Instagram⁠ CREDITS Album Art & Design by ting.inVoiceovers by Anjale StephanosMusic from Zapsplat.com

    31 min
  5. 10/02/2025

    145) Influencer Circus: A Structured Way to Navigate the Chaos (Part - 1)

    In this sharp and revealing episode of CoBB, Sharavana Raghavan demystifies the world of influencer marketing in a conversation with Sudeep Chawla. From Queen’s-endorsed crockery to nano-influencers on Instagram, the duo traces how influencer marketing evolved and how today’s marketers can make sense of what often feels like a circus. Through analogies, examples, and a practical playbook for budget allocation, the episode offers a rare structured lens on what is typically seen as a noisy, unpredictable space. Whether you’re running a 50 crore brand or launching your first product, this episode gives you a grounded, ROI-focused understanding of how to work with creators and why measurability matters more than ever. KEY THEMES EXPLORED Why influencer marketing still works, despite the chaos Even with the noise, risk, and fragmentation, marketers continue to “buy tickets to the circus” because influencer campaigns remain measurable and promise high ROI - especially when done right. Influencers vs Celebrities Sharavana draws a clear distinction between reach and relatability. Celebrities offer visibility and stature. Influencers bring community, engagement, and trust - often at a fraction of the cost. A system in the chaos: Segmentation by size and strategy From nano to mega, the episode breaks down the influencer spectrum by follower count and impact. It also outlines different engagement formats - reviews, endorsements, affiliate codes, ambassador programs - and how marketers can use each to their advantage. Budgets, Playbooks and ROAS Expectations Sharavana lays out a tactical framework for brands (especially in the ₹5-50 crore range) to allocate budgets across influencer tiers. He also offers a thumb rule: aim for at least 3x return, but track obsessively to find what’s working. From Queen’s Ware to TikTok Commerce The episode connects historical and cultural dots - from 1760s England to today’s live commerce in Southeast Asia - to highlight how the core principles of influence have remained the same, even as formats change. Key Takeaways Influencer marketing isn’t new. But it needs structure to work in today’s chaotic ecosystem.Use celebrities for broad awareness. Use influencers for community trust and conversions.Micro and nano influencers offer the best engagement-to-cost ratio for emerging brands.Your influencer strategy must be measurable. Use affiliate links, discount codes, and conversion tracking.ROI varies. But if you’re not seeing at least 3x returns, your campaign may need rethinking.QUOTES “Influencer marketing is a circus - but one that delivers results when you know how to navigate it.” “Celebrities offer reach. Influencers offer trust.” “If you’re not getting 3x returns from influencer spends, you’re not doing it right.” “Nano-influencers might charge nothing - but deliver the most authentic engagement.” If you’re a brand owner, digital marketer, or startup founder wondering how to structure your influencer efforts, or if you feel overwhelmed by the noise, this episode offers a roadmap through the madness. Tune in and learn how to play the influencer game without losing your head (or your budget). As always, send your feedback and topic suggestions to mail@cobbcast.net! Please tell us what topics you'd like to have discussed on the CoBB, by filling in this ⁠CONTENT SUGGESTION FORM⁠⁠ It only takes a few minutes, and it will help us provide you with the content most relevant to you. SHOW WEBSITE CONNECT WITH OUR HOSTS Sudeep Chawla on ⁠Linkedin⁠ Sharavana Raghavan on ⁠Linkedin⁠ FOLLOW USCoBB - ⁠LinkedIn CoBB - Instagram⁠ CREDITS Album Art & Design by ting.inVoiceovers by Anjale StephanosMusic from Zapsplat.com

    24 min
  6. 09/19/2025

    144) Hello Mr., What Do You Do? | Why Knowing Your Role Matters More Than Your Title

    In this thought-provoking episode of CoBB, hosts Sudeep Chawla and Sharavana Raghavan explore the crucial distinction between designation and role — and why understanding what you actually do is far more important than the title on your business card. Inspired by a powerful anecdote shared by Rajiv Bajaj, Managing Director of Bajaj Auto, this conversation unpacks how leaders and marketers alike can unlock clarity, contribution, and career growth by answering one deceptively simple question: What is your role? Whether you’re a founder, brand manager, or corporate leader, this episode challenges you to reflect not just on your expertise, but on how you’re showing up for your team and business today. KEY THEMES EXPLORED Designation vs Role Your title stays constant, but your role evolves with the needs of the business. This distinction is critical for professionals in fast-changing environments. The ‘Improvement Manager’ Mindset Rajiv Bajaj’s personal journey from “Managing Director” to identifying as an “Improvement Manager” illustrates how clarity of role can sharpen your impact. Role Evolves with Product Lifecycle From insight manager to coordinator to performance improver, your role must adapt as the product moves through its lifecycle. Purpose Drives Role, Not the Other Way Around Taking a cue from Simon Sinek’s ‘Start With Why’, this episode repositions purpose as an internal compass for contribution, not a branding gimmick. Philosophy Meets Practice What do JFK, Munnabhai, and Krishna have in common? They all point to one truth: your role is about what you do, not what you are called. KEY TAKEAWAYS Designations Are Static. Roles Are Dynamic. What the company calls you may not change for years, but what the company needs from you can change tomorrow. Evaluate Your Daily Contribution Ask yourself: “What did I actually do today?” and “How many times did I deliver on my core role?” Role Is Determined by Context Your role isn’t just defined by your skills, but by what the situation and the team require most right now. Purpose Is Personal, Not Promotional Your “why” isn’t a UN cause. It’s a grounding belief that aligns your work to your impact, internally first and externally later. Growth Begins With Self-Awareness Recognizing when your role must shift, and acting on it, is the hallmark of effective leaders and brand builders. QUOTES “Your designation might remain the same for years. But your role could change every few months, and it must.”“Don’t confuse what you’re called with what you contribute.”“Purpose is not a brand campaign. It’s a compass for your role.”“Know your role. And you’ll always rock and roll.” Don’t miss this episode if you’ve ever caught yourself saying, “This isn’t in my job description” and are ready to redefine how you contribute to your brand, team, and business. As always, send your feedback and topic suggestions to mail@cobbcast.net! Please tell us what topics you'd like to have discussed on the CoBB, by filling in this ⁠CONTENT SUGGESTION FORM⁠⁠ It only takes a few minutes, and it will help us provide you with the content most relevant to you. SHOW WEBSITE CONNECT WITH OUR HOSTS Sudeep Chawla on ⁠Linkedin⁠ Sharavana Raghavan on ⁠Linkedin⁠ FOLLOW US CoBB - ⁠LinkedIn CoBB - Instagram⁠ CREDITS - Album Art & Design by ting.in - Voiceovers by Anjale Stephanos - Music from Zapsplat.com

    14 min
  7. 09/04/2025

    143) When Research Misleads: A Marketer’s Dilemma

    In this truth-bomb-laden episode of CoBB, Sudeep Chawla interviews Sharavana Raghavan to unravel the paradox of marketing research, if everyone is doing it, why do most innovations still fail? Using examples from Dettol, Farmley, and their own deep-dive into snacking behaviour, the duo expose how research often confirms pre-existing biases instead of uncovering real insights. Sharavana makes a compelling case for qualitative immersions over click-and-run surveys, especially when the consumer’s stated intent and actual behaviour don’t align. From contradictory preferences to cultural conditioning, the episode explores why consumers seem inconsistent — and why that’s actually a consistent pattern marketers must decode. KEY THEMES EXPLORED Research confirms biases more often than it uncovers truths Sharavana argues that many brand teams use research as validation, not investigation. Poorly framed questions or surveys often end up reinforcing what marketers want to believe. Surveys capture intent, not action Online surveys tend to highlight what consumers claim, but miss the deeper “why” behind their behaviour - leading to skewed insights and contradictory conclusions. Same data, opposite takeaways Farmley and CoBB’s own snacking reports aligned on facts, but their interpretations were starkly different - exposing how intent, audience, and methodology shape insights. Meet the LOTH, again The Lady of the House (LOTH) is not just a demographic — she’s a decision-making system. She’s rational within her emotional world, balancing budget, convenience, guilt, and culture — all at once. A framework of contradictions From noodles to pasta to biscuits, what seems like hypocrisy is actually a consistent logic: conditioning, convenience, and customisability. Marketers need to learn her real operating system. Familiarity breeds acceptance Formats that feel homemade (or home-makeable) earn trust. The more foreign a format feels, the more scrutiny it faces — no matter how healthy it claims to be. Top-of-mind ≠ Top-of-sale Consumers ask for “Maggi” but settle for Zoopy. Familiarity and price trump brand loyalty when contextual costs like effort and emotion come into play. KEY TAKEAWAYS • Don’t confuse research with surveys. Immersive, ethnographic methods yield deeper insights. • Consumers are not irrational — they’re operating with a logic shaped by culture, context, and compromise. • Trust is rooted in familiarity, not just brand building. • Market share can be won locally by mastering activation and retailer relationships — not just awareness. • Stop expecting consumers to behave in straight lines. Real life is a loop of contradictions — and marketers must map it. QUOTES “Surveys capture intent. Immersions capture action.” “The Lady of the House is not confused. We are. She’s complex.” “Don’t chase health. Respect convenience and conditioning.” “Top-of-mind doesn’t mean top-of-sale — especially when Zoopy is ₹10.” Access the full report on snacking choices here. If you are a food entrepreneur, FMCG marketer, or brand builder who wants to understand the real psychology behind snack choices in Indian homes, this is the episode for you. As always, send your feedback and topic suggestions to mail@cobbcast.net! Please tell us what topics you'd like to have discussed on the CoBB, by filling in this ⁠CONTENT SUGGESTION FORM⁠⁠ It only takes a few minutes, and it will help us provide you with the content most relevant to you. SHOW WEBSITE CONNECT WITH OUR HOSTS Sudeep Chawla on ⁠Linkedin⁠ Sharavana Raghavan on ⁠Linkedin⁠ FOLLOW US CoBB - ⁠LinkedIn CoBB - Instagram⁠ CREDITS - Album Art & Design by ting.in - Voiceovers by Anjale Stephanos - Music from Zapsplat.com

    29 min
  8. 08/21/2025

    142) Brand Hierarchy: How to Manage and Extend Your Brand Without the Chaos

    In this episode of CoBB, hosts Sharavana Raghavan and Sudeep Chawla break down the often-misunderstood world of brand architecture — offering a practical framework to help brand builders avoid chaos while scaling their portfolios. Using relatable examples from everyday brands like Cadbury, Colgate, and Tata, the duo explores how marketers can structure brands for clarity, consistency, and long-term value. Whether you’re managing a house of brands or figuring out how far your brand can stretch, this episode gives you the language, logic, and levers to make better decisions — without losing consumer trust. KEY THEMES EXPLORED The Building Blocks of Brand Architecture Understand the differences between endorser brands, mother brands, sub-brands, and variants, and when to use each. The ‘Brand Stretch’ Dilemma Learn how to assess if your brand can move into new categories without diluting its equity or confusing the consumer. Why Structure Drives Scale How a well-designed brand hierarchy unlocks marketing efficiency and strengthens long-term brand equity. Consumer Lens First, Always Avoid the common trap of structuring brands for internal convenience instead of consumer clarity. Brand Promises Are Not Flexible What happens when brands overextend, and why certain associations can’t (and shouldn’t) be transferred across categories. KEY TAKEAWAYS Sub-Brands Serve New Needs Create sub-brands when solving different consumer needs or using significantly different formats, provided your core brand promise is extendable. Variants Offer Variety, Not Strategy Variants are minor changes (like flavor or format) meant to refresh the consumer experience without shifting the brand’s core positioning. Mother Brands Anchor the Portfolio The central brand that carries sub-brands and variants under its umbrella, often the original offering that built the equity. Endorser Brands Are Equity Enablers These brands (like Tata or Cadbury) don’t directly shape the offering but lend trust and consistency to a wide array of products. Structure Enables Scale A clear brand hierarchy allows brands to scale without fragmenting investments — creating halo effects that drive marketing efficiency across the portfolio. QUOTES “Every time a consumer sees your brand name, they’re subconsciously recalling a promise. Break that — and you break the brand.” “A variant is for taste. A sub-brand is for strategy.” “Brand architecture is not a design problem. It’s a trust problem, and a scale opportunity.” Don’t miss this episode if you’re a brand manager, startup founder, or marketing strategist looking to expand your product portfolio without confusing your consumers or breaking your brand. As always, send your feedback and topic suggestions to mail@cobbcast.net! Please tell us what topics you'd like to have discussed on the CoBB, by filling in this ⁠CONTENT SUGGESTION FORM⁠⁠ It only takes a few minutes, and it will help us provide you with the content most relevant to you. SHOW WEBSITE CONNECT WITH OUR HOSTS Sudeep Chawla on ⁠Linkedin Sharavana Raghavan on ⁠Linkedin⁠ FOLLOW US CoBB - ⁠LinkedIn CoBB - Instagram⁠ CREDITS - Album Art & Design by ting.in - Voiceovers by Anjale Stephanos - Music from Zapsplat.com

    23 min

About

On the show, the hosts, Sudeep Chawla & Sharavana Raghavan, leverage their collective industry experience of over 30 years to deconstruct and simplify aspects of brand and marketing strategies to enable emerging businesses to build and serve remarkable brands. In each episode, the hosts take turns interviewing each other, on a specific topic of their choice. Listeners will see their passion for brands, brand strategies and marketing fill the conversations in the form of candour, debates and even disagreements at times.