Mumbai: In an influencer economy crowded with celebrity collaborations and fashion endorsements, GO COLORS’ latest campaign for the launch of the MostlySane Collection stands out by focusing not on the product first, but on a behaviour audiences instantly recognise.
Produced by Green Chutney Films, the campaign leverages a simple but culturally relevant insight: creator and actor Prajakta Koli’s followers are often as invested in her outfits as they are in the content she creates. Whether it is comments asking where a particular look is from or conversations around her styling choices, her fashion influence has become an integral part of her online identity.
At a strategic level, the campaign works because it draws from an existing truth rather than attempting to manufacture one. Prajakta’s association with fashion has been organically built over years through social media engagement, making the collaboration feel authentic to both her audience and the GO COLORS brand.
The creative execution leans heavily on humour and observational storytelling, allowing the narrative to mirror the way fans interact with creators online. Instead of relying on glamour-led visuals or aspirational messaging alone, the film adopts a conversational tone that aligns with digital-native audiences who consume content through reels, comments, memes and creator interactions.
This approach also reflects a broader shift in influencer marketing, where brands are increasingly moving away from endorsement-driven communication towards creator-led storytelling rooted in audience behaviour. By placing the fan reaction at the centre of the narrative, GO COLORS successfully positions the MostlySane Collection as an extension of Prajakta’s personal style rather than a standalone product range.
The campaign’s visual language remains youthful and contemporary, while the storytelling avoids overcomplication. The humour feels familiar, the situations feel believable, and the narrative remains closely connected to the creator’s established persona. This balance helps the film maintain authenticity while delivering brand messaging.
The collaboration also reinforces GO COLORS’ efforts to remain culturally relevant among younger consumers. By tapping into creator fandom and digital fashion conversations, the brand manages to enter an existing cultural dialogue instead of creating one from scratch.

Speaking about the collaboration, Vatsal Koolwal, CMO, GO COLORS, said, “From the beginning, the intention was to keep the humour rooted in reality. The insight itself was simple — Prajakta’s fans genuinely go crazy over her outfits — and that made the storytelling feel very natural. We wanted the film to feel current, easy, and culturally in sync with how audiences consume and engage with content today.”
He further added, “The idea behind the campaign came from something that already exists very naturally online. Prajakta’s audience genuinely connects with her fashion choices, and we wanted to build a film around that behaviour in a way that felt entertaining, honest, and relatable.”

Offering the production perspective, Rahul Tejwani, CEO, Green Chutney Films, said,“Creator-led campaigns work best when they reflect a truth audiences already recognise. Prajakta’s influence on fashion conversations is undeniable, and this campaign taps into that phenomenon in a way that feels entertaining rather than promotional. For us, the opportunity was to turn a familiar fan behaviour into a culturally relevant brand story.”
Ultimately, the strength of the campaign lies in its ability to recognise and amplify an already existing audience behaviour. Instead of forcing product messaging into the conversation, GO COLORS allows the collection to emerge naturally through a creator-audience dynamic that feels genuine and relevant. In doing so, the brand delivers a campaign that is entertaining, culturally aware and well aligned with the realities of modern digital engagement.
















