Mumbai: The Advertising Standards Council of India (ASCI) Academy, in collaboration with Futurebrands Consulting, has unveiled its latest research study titled ‘What the Sigma?’, offering deep insights into how Generation Alpha (aged 7–15) interacts with content, advertising, and digital environments.
Launched at the inaugural ASCI AdTrust Summit 2026, the ethnographic study explores how children today navigate a hyper-digital world where advertising, entertainment, and identity increasingly overlap. Conducted across six Indian cities, the research includes in-home observations, peer discussions, and interviews with parents, teachers, psychologists, marketers, and young content creators.
The study reveals that Gen Alpha experiences the digital ecosystem as a continuous, immersive environment rather than distinct online and offline worlds. Their cultural codes, language, and aesthetics are globally synchronised, often making them difficult for adults to interpret or relate to.
According to the findings, younger children (7–12 years) are able to identify overt advertisements but often fail to recognise embedded commercial messaging such as influencer promotions or branded content. Older children (13–15 years), while more ad-aware, remain susceptible to emotionally driven and narrative-integrated brand messaging.

Commenting on the findings, Manisha Kapoor, CEO and Secretary General, ASCI, said, “ASCI Academy’s study, ‘What the Sigma?’, is an investigation into the content life of Generation Alpha – not to judge them but to understand them. Their cultural reference points seem disjointed from those of earlier generations. Insights on how they perceive advertising is the first step towards building more responsible engagement frameworks, given that they are the youngest media consumers in our country right now. Our goal is to spark informed and collaborative dialogue that balances creativity with responsibility among the stakeholders.”
The report identifies five key themes shaping Gen Alpha’s digital experience: their deep immersion within the internet, the growing influence of algorithms amid declining parental control, the merging of digital and real-life environments, the blending of content formats into a single continuous stream, and the increasing difficulty in recognising commercial intent.

Santosh Desai, Founder and Director, Futurebrands Consulting, added, “While earlier generations have been exposed to digital media, for this generation it is the world they inhabit. They have a one-to-one relationship with content, which parents and authority figures may not fully understand. This report explores what they watch but also how they are being shaped by algorithms, content and advertising. It tries to build an understanding of Gen Alpha and their realities, with a view to think about what guardrails the advertising ecosystem needs to build.”
In response to these findings, the study calls for a principle-based, ecosystem-wide approach involving advertisers, platforms, creators, parents, and educational institutions. It outlines four key pathways: universal signposting of commercial intent, shared responsibility across stakeholders, integration of safety tools within content environments, and the introduction of media and advertising literacy in school curricula.
With Gen Alpha emerging as a significant consumer cohort, the report underscores the need for a balanced framework that supports both creative expression and responsible marketing in an increasingly converged digital landscape.

















