New Delhi: The Ministry of Information and Broadcasting has pushed back the deadline for technical bid submissions in its ongoing empanelment of digital advertising agencies, signalling a continued push to strengthen the government’s digital communication ecosystem.
The Central Bureau of Communication (CBC) has extended the submission timeline by three weeks—from April 2 to April 23, 2026—giving participating agencies additional time to complete their bids.
The move comes amid a broader overhaul of how the government approaches public communication, with increasing emphasis on digital-first strategies. In March, the CBC had reopened its empanelment window, inviting social media agencies with capabilities to plan and execute campaigns across major platforms such as Facebook, Instagram and YouTube.
At the heart of this initiative lies a structural shift: digital media is no longer a secondary channel but a primary vehicle for outreach. Government campaigns are now expected to go beyond dissemination of information, focusing instead on engagement, audience segmentation and real-time optimisation across regions, languages and demographics.
For agencies, empanelment with the CBC offers more than just project-based work. It provides access to government advertising spends—often translating into steady, long-term mandates in an otherwise cyclical and competitive market.
However, the evolving nature of government campaigns is also raising the bar for participation. Agencies are increasingly required to demonstrate capabilities that extend beyond traditional creative and media planning. Expertise in data analytics, platform algorithms and performance measurement has become critical, reflecting the growing complexity of digital ecosystems.
The deadline extension, therefore, not only widens the participation window but also underscores the government’s intent to build a more robust and performance-driven digital advertising infrastructure—one that aligns with shifting audience behaviour and the growing dominance of online platforms in shaping public discourse.
















