At Toaster India, festive campaigns aren’t just seasonal projects—they’re cultural touchpoints that demand precision, insight, and soul. Known for its global creative leadership with Google and celebrated campaigns for brands like Myntra, Netflix, Nykaa, Swiggy, Tinder, Jio and Amazon Prime, Toaster continues to shape advertising that blends resonance with relevance. Now, with new social clients like Subway and Coffee Island in the fold, the agency is evolving its festive playbook for an increasingly fast-moving, tech-fuelled landscape.
Medianews4u.com caught up with Ira G, Chief Creative Officer at Toaster India, to understand the creative backbone behind their festive campaigns and explore what 2025 holds for brands vying for consumer attention during the most crowded time of the year.
Festive Briefs: High Stakes, High Emotion
For Ira, what distinguishes a festive brief from a regular campaign is its deeply emotional and cultural grounding. “We’re not just selling a product; we’re stepping into a moment that already holds profound meaning for our audience,” she says.
That understanding informs every layer of execution—from casting and visual storytelling to sound design and media placement. With people already emotionally invested in the season, the role of a campaign becomes one of elevation rather than interruption.
Toaster’s Approach: Craft, Clarity and Connection
“Festive campaigns at Toaster are never an afterthought—we obsess over detail, because we know how crowded the season gets,” Ira says. The agency places insight at the core of its creative process, ensuring that campaigns cut through the clutter by speaking directly to the heart of the moment.
Take Myntra’s Rakhi campaign, for example. Rather than rely on generic festive tropes, the team grounded the narrative in the real-life sibling equation of Arjun Kapoor and his sisters, creating a celebration of relationships that felt honest and relatable. The tagline, “Iss Rakhi Style se manao! Dress Glam for the Fam,” hit the sweet spot between emotion and aspiration.
Or consider the Netflix Diwali campaign, which didn’t just show families watching content together—it captured the feeling of reunion, warmth, and belonging. “That emotional authenticity struck a chord,” says Ira. The campaign went on to win Gold at the Good Ads Matter Awards 2025, a win the team remains proud of.
And then there’s humour—often overlooked during festive seasons where sentimentality dominates. “Humour is underrated in festive campaigns—but it really works,” Ira points out. The Myntra Eid campaign leaned into light-hearted storytelling, offering a refreshing, joyful break from the emotionally heavy narratives usually seen during festivals.
What’s Next: AI, IPs, and Cultural Precision
Looking ahead to the 2025 festive season, Ira sees brands becoming smarter and bolder. “It’s not just about lights and offers anymore—it’s about relevance, speed, and tech-enabled creativity.”
AI, she notes, is no longer a gimmick but a tool shaping storytelling at scale. Zepto’s quirky Soan Papdi campaign—built using AI-generated visuals—caught fire online for its unexpected and fresh aesthetic. Meanwhile, brands like Dell, OPPO, and Tata Power are also experimenting with AI, combining it with human craft to create hybrid production techniques that are faster and often more engaging.
Another shift? Brands are moving away from one-off campaigns toward building festive IPs—recurring story worlds or thematic series that consumers can look forward to each year. This signals a commitment to longevity, not just seasonal relevance.
Through all of this, Ira believes cultural authenticity and personalisation will remain central to how brands connect. “It’s the deeply human stories—backed by technology and crafted with intent—that will continue to stand out.”
Festive Campaigns:
















