Wendy’s India has turned five. With over 200 outlets across India, Wendy’s is marking the milestone with celebration. That means first Rave Party Bus, roast battles inside restaurants, wild creator collabs, and a four-city burger rave that’s louder than your weekend plans. This isn’t just a celebration. It’s a month-long Wendy-fied movement on streets, on screens, and in every store.
Medianews4u.com caught up with Divya Divakaran Creative Lead – Brands at Rebel Foods.
Q. Could you talk about the various legs of the campaign to celebrate Wendy’s India’s fifth birthday? Is the TG Gen Z or families?
Wendy’s India’s fifth birthday is not just a celebration, it’s a full-blown carnival of chaos. The campaign is multi-pronged, designed to hit cultural and digital touchpoints through different formats that resonate with Gen Z and young millennials, who are our core TG.
From India’s first QSR Roast Show featuring creators like Banti Banerjee, to city-wide Wendy’s Raves with music and unlimited food, to AI-powered influencer duos like Manki x Dogesh Bhai and an iconic Wendy’s Party Bus in Mumbai, every leg is carefully curated to bring alive Wendy’s cheeky, bold persona. The tone is sharp, the packaging is unmissable, and the intent is to turn Wendy’s into a movement, not just a menu.

Q. Is the goal of marketing evenly split between driving immediate sales and growing brand recall? Or is one area more important when marketing is done for Wendy’s India? According to Rebel Foods’ data-driven strategy, what area should be prioritised?
While sales remain a crucial business metric, brand recall takes the front seat, especially for a relatively young brand like Wendy’s India. We’re building recall through cultural relevance, digital-first storytelling, and disruptive campaigns that leave a lasting impression.
Our belief is simple. Sales follow storytelling, and in the long run, brand love translates into brand growth. Most of our marquee campaigns, like the Roast or the Raves, are crafted to deepen affinity and grow our share of heart, not just market.
Q. One of the things being done is AI duo Manki x Dogesh Bhai spiralling into a ketchup-coated existential crisis. How is AI helping amplify the message?
The asset is already live (!!!) and the duo has taken the internet by storm, clocking nearly 1 million views and over 51,000 shares already. What started as a bizarre idea turned into a goldmine of engagement, proving just how evolved today’s Gen Z and young millennial audiences are in their content consumption.
AI helps us push boundaries. It allows us to speak their language, match their humour, and break the internet, one ketchup-coated crisis at a time. With an average watch time of around 30 seconds, this asset is a clear indicator that snackable, surreal content with cultural hooks is the future of branded storytelling.
Q. Are on-ground innovations like The Wendy’s Party Bus going to grow in importance for Wendy’s India because it allows for a touch and feel experience?
Absolutely. While we’re a digital-first brand, we understand the importance of phygital experiences.
The Wendy’s Party Bus in Mumbai, where we don’t yet have offline stores, is a way to bring Wendy’s to people, literally. From unlimited free food to exclusive merch and content moments, it’s a moving activation that lets customers interact with the brand in real life.
Given its success, these kinds of touch-and-feel innovations will play a key role in markets where we want to build familiarity before format.
Q. While Wendy’s India is using Roasts, is society’s lack of acceptance of this format an issue? Or is Indian society today more accepting compared with a decade back?
Roasts are still a tightrope walk in India, no doubt. But our version isn’t just burn-for-the-sake-of-it. It’s a refined sass, rooted in Wendy’s global voice. We never punch down. We avoid religion, politics, and anything below the belt.
What you see is cheeky, sharp humour that mirrors the Wendy’s tone seen across the world. And guess what. Indian audiences are loving it. The bookings for our 1st Roast Show proves that if done right, there’s room for edgy, fun, culture-first formats even in today’s cautious content landscape.

Q. Is the campaign targeting the Metros? Once the month is over, what is the game plan going to be to sustain momentum?
Wendy’s India is now present across 50 plus cities with a healthy mix of tier one and tier two markets and the campaign is for all. Our tone and storytelling resonate across the board. Post the birthday month, formats like Wendy’s Roast Show and city raves aren’t one-offs. They’re being shaped as long-term IPs.
Roasts will roll out in Bangalore first, then NCR and Hyderabad. Raves, on the other hand, have become a Wendy’s signature, and you’ll see more theme-led raves soon. Halloween, Christmas, and beyond. This isn’t a flash in the pan. It’s a new flavour of QSR engagement, made to last.
Q. How important is the festive season going to be for Wendy’s India? What tactics do you think would work to build Wendy’s India’s voice and to stand out from other brands who will do lots of shouting?
Festive season or not, burgers don’t need a reason. Unlike other categories that spike during festivals like biryani or sweets, burgers stay evergreen. That said, we lean into the noise without becoming part of the clutter.
Instead of doing what everyone else is doing louder, we do it differently using edgy formats, topical humour, AI-led storytelling, and creator-first thinking.
Our festive plans revolve around mood-matching menus, on-ground experiences, and IP-driven content that outlasts the Diwali discount bandwagon.
Q. According to recent research, how is Wendy’s perceived as a brand in a competitive QSR category? Is there room for improvement?
We’re the new kid with a square patty and no chill. In a QSR category dominated by older players, Wendy’s India is just five years young and already carving out a distinct space. We started with a stronger foothold in delivery but have rapidly expanded offline.
Our perception is that of a disruptor brand, one that does bold menus and braver marketing. Whether it’s our chimichurri burgers or AI collabs, people are realising that Wendy’s is deliciously different. That said, it’s still Day 0. We’re learning, evolving, and constantly levelling up.
Q. What are Wendy’s India’s expansion plans and goals? According to data analytics, where is the whitespace for growth?
We’ve grown from metros to now 50 plus cities and over 200 locations, and the whitespace is clear. Tier One and Tier Two India is hungry for global flavours with local soul.
Our goal is to be the most flavour-forward burger brand in India, not by volume but by voice, by variety, and by the experience we offer. The whitespace lies in owning formats, creating more dine-in destinations, and using digital to deepen community love in cities that haven’t seen Wendy’s yet.
Q. In terms of consumer preferences what trends are being seen and what product innovation can one expect from Wendy’s India going forward? How is the menu being improved upon in advance of the festive season?
Consumers today are adventurous. They’re seeking bold, global flavours that go beyond the usual aloo burger narrative. We’re riding that wave with flavour-first innovations like Chimichurri and Mexican Nachoburg Cheese Burgers, OR a Cheeseblast Patty that lets you turn any burger into a cheese-burst bomb, a Korean limited edition range with burgers, nuggets, fries, and tenders, and upcoming drops like Cajun and Teriyaki.
Customisation is key. Our menu is built for the scrolling foodie, someone who wants excitement, experimentation, and a bit of extra sass.
Q. Could you shed light on the research process of creating personalised marketing strategies for Wendy’s India? Are qualitative and quantitative research both equally important?
We go beyond charts and pie graphs. For us, insights come from listening, lurking, and living online. Every campaign stems from a core consumer pain point or cultural pulse.
From Roast Shows that tap into Gen Z’s thirst for sass, to our 200th store campaign where biker chicks delivered burgers on superbikes. We use quantitative insights to understand trends and geographies, but the soul of our strategy is qualitative.
What makes people laugh, crave, or post. From choosing creators who match our brand tonality to building content that’s native to each platform, it’s not just about reach. It’s about resonance.

Q. Rebel Foods has shifted its marketing focus from TV to digital. At the same time though, attention spans have come down dramatically and there is too much digital content. How does Rebel Foods approach these challenges?
At Rebel, we don’t just chase attention. We earn it. Every piece of communication is built on rooted insight, format-first thinking, and TG-mapped storytelling.
Whether it’s Instagram-first snackable edits, AI-generated satire, or interactive reels, our content is designed to stop the scroll. The trick isn’t just shorter content. It’s sharper storytelling. We aren’t playing by a formula, we are experimenting and conquering. We rely on big ideas.
Q. How is Rebel Foods using tech to create immersive content on platforms like Instagram for Wendy’s India?
We’re not just dabbling in tech. We’re rewiring how QSRs communicate. Wendy’s India has been at the forefront of AI content adoption. The Manki x Dogesh Bhai duo is a classic example. We’ve used generative AI to humanise digital characters, build meme-worthy reels, and even develop surreal food visualisations that break the grid.
We also create content that’s moment-aware, using trending audios, pop culture references, and native platform mechanics like polls, filters, and countdowns. The goal is to make Wendy’s not just a burger brand, but a content brand.
Q. Social media platforms often change algorithms. Is that a challenge when it comes to SEO?
Algorithms change. Our voice doesn’t. While platform dynamics may fluctuate, our brand equity is built on stickiness, not just reach. We design campaigns to be algorithm-proof by ensuring they’re platform-native, emotionally shareable, and visually thumb-stopping.
From handwritten sticky notes on orders to creator collabs that hijack timelines, we optimise for people, not just platforms. So yes, SEO matters, but our content strategy banks on cultural currency, not just keyword hacks.

Q. Finally, is being culturally relevant a key priority as Wendy’s India grows?
Absolutely. In fact, it’s our biggest differentiator. In a market where many QSRs take the templated route, Wendy’s India stands out by being audaciously in tune with its audience.
We speak their slang. We jump on their memes. We roast what they roast. Whether it’s Wendy’s Rave Parties or a trending reel, everything is designed to be part of the culture, not just the category. We don’t just sell burgers. We spark conversations.
















