Friday, June 19, 2026
MediaNews4U
  • Exclusive
  • Advertising
  • Media
    • Radio
    • Cable & DTH
    • Print
    • Digital Frontier
    • Gaming Nexus
  • Television
  • OTT
  • Ad-Tech
  • Marketing
  • Campaigns
  • Analysis
  • Opinion
    • Opinion
    • Think Through
    • Prescience 2023
    • Prescience 2024
  • People
  • Events
    • Leader Speak
    • STRAIGHT TALK
    • Gamechangers
    • Print & TV Summit
MediaNews4U
  • Exclusive
  • Advertising
  • Media
    • Radio
    • Cable & DTH
    • Print
    • Digital Frontier
    • Gaming Nexus
  • Television
  • OTT
  • Ad-Tech
  • Marketing
  • Campaigns
  • Analysis
  • Opinion
    • Opinion
    • Think Through
    • Prescience 2023
    • Prescience 2024
  • People
  • Events
    • Leader Speak
    • STRAIGHT TALK
    • Gamechangers
    • Print & TV Summit
MediaNews4U.com
Home Exclusive

Predictive analytics is only as good as the questions you’re willing to ask: Taniya Pandey, VLCC

by MN4U Bureau
April 28, 2026
in Exclusive
Reading Time: 7 mins read
A A
Predictive analytics is only as good as the questions you’re willing to ask: Taniya Pandey, VLCC
Share Share ShareShare

Medianews4u.com caught up with Taniya Pandey Chief Marketing Officer India, South East Asia & Middle East VLCC

Pandey is a consumer growth leader who builds brands from the inside out — grounded in customer truth, frontline intelligence, and data-driven momentum. With over 20 years of experience spanning beauty, wellness, healthcare, insurance, education, and automotive sectors, she brings a rare combination of strategic rigour, commercial acuity, and the operational instinct to execute at scale.

As Chief Marketing Officer for VLCC Group across India, South East Asia, and the Middle East, she has been instrumental in driving one of the brand’s most significant growth chapters. In under two years, she has nearly doubled VLCC’s physical footprint — scaling the network to 250+ wellness centres and beauty clinics across 106 cities — while simultaneously doubling consumer acquisition. These twin outcomes reflect her ability to align brand strategy, market expansion, and performance marketing into a single, high-velocity growth engine.

A leader known for cultural and business transformation, she excels at unifying cross-functional teams around shared goals in complex, fast-paced environments. She has positioned VLCC as a science-backed, holistic wellness authority — a brand trusted not just for its services, but for the depth of its expertise. Her work spans brand architecture, new product development, go-to-market strategy, lifetime value optimisation, and change management across diverse geographies and regulatory landscapes.

Her marketing philosophy is deeply informed by her understanding of the category’s science. Pursuing advanced studies in nutrition alongside her executive responsibilities, she brings an evidence-based perspective to wellness brand building — an increasingly rare asset as consumers demand greater transparency and clinical credibility from beauty and health brands.

An alumna of the ISB Strategic Leadership Programme, Taniya combines global academic grounding with the practical wisdom of having led large consumer businesses through transformation. Prior to VLCC, she has held senior roles at Kaya Clinics, HDFC Bank & ICICI Prudential where she gained deep expertise in retail operations, customer experience design, and financial process management.

She believes that the most durable brands are built when commercial ambition and consumer empathy operate at the same frequency — and she has spent two decades proving it.

Q. VLCC believes in meeting the beauty consumers where they are. What tactics will be adopted to achieve this aim in 2026?

“Where they are” is not a location. It’s a state of mind. A consumer researching hair fall at 11 pm on her phone is not in the same place as the one walking into a VLCC centre for a skin consult. Same woman, sometimes. Entirely different needs, context, and readiness to receive. We’re building for the moment, not the demographic.

In 2026, that means tightening the feedback loop between what consumers are actually asking in searches, in DMs, in consultation rooms — and what we say back to them. Not campaign cycles. Continuous conversation. The tactic isn’t new media formats. It’s a genuine listening architecture that feeds into what we create, not just how we distribute it.

Q. A big challenge is that consumers journey’s are non-linear. Gen Z especially do a lot of research. Sometimes they act on impulse. Is this forcing VLCC to be nimble?

The funnel is not broken. It was never real.

We mistook maps for behaviour. People don’t move in steps.

They oscillate.

Between doubt and desire.

Between five tabs and one decision.

Gen Z didn’t change the journey.

They exposed it.

Nimble is the wrong word for what this demands. Nimble suggests reactive. What it actually demands is structural honesty being the same brand at every touchpoint, so that wherever she lands in her non-linear journey, she finds something consistent. The brands that confuse her with a different tone on every channel don’t lose her in one moment. They lose her gradually, until she stops trusting the name entirely.

Q. As a result is the role of predictive analytics growing in importance?

Predictive analytics is only as good as the questions you’re willing to ask.

The data will tell you what a consumer bought, when she lapsed, what she browsed before she left. What it won’t tell you unless you build for it is why she felt the product didn’t deliver on what she was promised.

That gap between behavioral data and experiential truth is where most analytics investments quietly fail. Yes, the role is growing. But the real shift isn’t in the sophistication of the tools. It’s in the willingness to use data to surface uncomfortable signals, not just confirm existing strategy. Predictive analytics used to find what’s about to break in loyalty, in relevance, in unmet need becomes something genuinely useful.

Q. What marketing campaigns and innovations can we expect from VLCC in the coming months?

What you’ll see from VLCC will be campaigns that don’t need a celebrity to lend credibility because the truth in them is credibility enough. Innovations that come from our centres — from what our therapists and doctors are actually seeing, not from trend reports. The outside-in model of building products is tired. We’re moving firmly inside-out.

So, you will see work that feels less like advertising.

Q. The lines between beauty and wellness are blurring. How is VLC adapting its marketing strategy bearing this in mind?

The line didn’t blur. It was artificial to begin with.”

We separated skin from system.

Face from physiology.

Convenient for selling.

Incorrect for outcomes.

VLCC was never a beauty company. The founding architecture was always about the whole person – holistic Health — weight management, skin, nutrition, skilling. What’s changed is that the consumer has caught up to what we always knew. She no longer separates how she looks from how she sleeps, what she eats, how her hormones are behaving. She experiences herself as an integrated system. She’s right to.

The marketing strategy shift is this: we stop leading with the outcome and start leading with the understanding. A brand that says “glowing skin” is making a promise. A brand that says “here’s what disrupts your barrier function and here’s how to address it systemically” is building a relationship. One converts once. The other retains.

Q. Gen Z prioritises authenticity. Is this forcing wellness marketers to look at the playbook? Has VLCC had to reinvent itself to appeal better to Gen Z?

Every generation wanted to be spoken to honestly. Gen Z just grew up with the tools to hold you to it. They can fact-check in real time, find the founder’s deleted tweet, compare the before-and-after to the unedited review. They’re not more demanding. They’re better equipped. The bar didn’t move. The consequences of clearing it poorly just became public and immediate.

For VLCC, the foundation was always there for four decades of real transformation, carried by real people. What we are conscious of is that somewhere in the pursuit of aspiration, communication doesn’t drift toward the polished. Gen Z sees that drift.

Q. What role does the peer review play in driving conversions? Do satisfied consumers become influencers?

The most powerful distribution channel VLCC has is a consumer who got a result and told someone. Not because we asked her to. Not because she was gifted a product. Because the result was real and the results travel. Word of mouth in the wellness space carries a weight no media spend can replicate because the stakes are personal.

When someone recommends a Beauty and wellness service, they’re putting their credibility on the line. The satisfied consumer becomes an influencer not through a programme we build around her. She becomes one the moment her friend asks “what are you doing differently.” Our job is to make sure the result that triggers that question is real, repeatable, and attributable. The conversion follows the truth. Not the other way around.

Q. How will VLCC leverage the creator economy to drive home the message by working with beauty, lifestyle influencers?

Reach is not the brief. Resonance is.

We’re not looking for creators who will say what we want said to the largest possible audience. We’re looking for people who have built genuine trust with a specific community — and whose experience with VLCC is real enough that their telling of it doesn’t sound like a telling.

The distinction we hold: a creator who comes to us with a result and wants to share it is a different partnership than a creator we approach with a brief and a rate card. Both exist in our ecosystem. But only one of them compounds over time.

Q. Many beauty brands use celebrities. Some like Kareena Kapoor own companies in this space. What are VLCC’s plans in this area?

I believe “A face cannot carry what the product cannot prove.”

The Kareena model equity, not endorsement, is interesting because it changes the incentive structure. She’s not lending her face. She’s betting her credibility. That’s a meaningfully different relationship and it shows in how those brands are built and communicated. VLCC’s position on celebrity is grounded in a simple test: does this association add understanding, or just attention? Attention is temporary.

Understanding what we stand for, what we deliver, who we’re for is what builds the kind of brand that doesn’t need a new face every two years to stay relevant. We’re always open to partnerships that pass that test.

Q. What role will experiential marketing play for VLCC?

Every VLCC centre is already an experience. The consultation, the treatment room, the moment a therapist explains something to a consumer that reframes how she understands her own body. That’s not a service delivery moment. That’s the brand at its most powerful and most human. No Instagram activation comes close.

Experiential marketing for us isn’t events built for content capture. It’s designing the in-centre experience to be so genuinely useful, so respectful of the person’s intelligence and time, that she leaves wanting to describe it to someone. That’s the experience worth building. Everything else is ambient.

Q. How is VLCC leveraging AI across the company from product innovation to deciphering data better?

We’re using AI across the product development pipeline, in how we read consumer feedback at scale, in personalising communication cadence and content, and increasingly in how our centres track progress . The infrastructure is real and growing.

Q. Is there going to be a greater focus on CRM led personalisation in 2026?

In 2026, yes, CRM becomes more sophisticated for us. But the north star isn’t the number of personalised touchpoints. It’s the number of moments where a consumer feels that we were paying attention to her specifically — not to her data cohort. That requires both better tooling and better editorial judgment about when to reach out and when to leave her alone.

Knowing that she bought a vitamin C serum 60 days ago and sending her a replenishment nudge — that’s table stakes. Knowing that she came in for a consultation three months ago, indicated hormonal concerns, and has not re-engaged — and built a communication pathway that acknowledges that full arc — that’s personalisation that earns its name.

Q. How is VLCC expanding its presence in Tier 2 and Tier 3 towns and cities?

We’re building with local context.

Local language.

Local trust systems.

For VLCC, the advantage is that our core proposition, science-backed, transformation-oriented, holistic travels well because it is grounded in human truth, not urban lifestyle.

The work is in ensuring that our physical presence, our communication, and our service design in these markets reflect that we understand her and that she can trust us.

Tags: Taniya PandeyVLCC

RECENT POSTS

Modern fatherhood takes centre stage as BFSI and top brands launch emotional Father’s Day Campaigns
Exclusive

Modern fatherhood takes centre stage as BFSI and top brands launch emotional Father’s Day Campaigns

June 19, 2026
0

Mumbai: This Father’s Day, brands across categories — from insurance and finance to healthcare and FMCG — moved beyond conventional...

Read moreDetails
HRX is on a mission to enable a billion Indians to become the best version of themselves: Ajay Singh
Exclusive

HRX is on a mission to enable a billion Indians to become the best version of themselves: Ajay Singh

June 19, 2026
0

Medianews4u.com caught up with Ajay Singh Business Head HRX. With travel making a strong comeback and Indian consumers becoming increasingly...

Read moreDetails
JioHotstar
Exclusive

JioHotstar maps the future of streaming with AI, commerce and interactivity at APOS 2026

June 18, 2026
0

Mumbai: JioHotstar has outlined its vision for the next phase of streaming, centred on conversational discovery, interactive engagement, and commerce-led...

Read moreDetails
“Very few properties can aggregate audiences at the scale like live sports”: Ishan Chatterjee at APOS 2026
Exclusive

“Very few properties can aggregate audiences at the scale like live sports”: Ishan Chatterjee at APOS 2026

June 18, 2026
0

Bali: Speaking at APOS 2026, Asia’s premier summit for the entertainment and technology industry, Ishan Chatterjee, CEO, JioStar Sports, outlined...

Read moreDetails
Our strategy centers on staying closely aligned with evolving market trends and consumer needs: Jitika Gupta, BigMuscles Nutrition
Exclusive

Our strategy centers on staying closely aligned with evolving market trends and consumer needs: Jitika Gupta, BigMuscles Nutrition

June 18, 2026
0

BigMuscles Nutrition is a sports nutrition brand. Over the past year, the Indian sports nutrition industry has witnessed accelerated growth,...

Read moreDetails
Our marketing approach is focused on building relevance and recall rather than just visibility: Sarvash Kalra, Dayal Opticals
Exclusive

Our marketing approach is focused on building relevance and recall rather than just visibility: Sarvash Kalra, Dayal Opticals

June 18, 2026
0

Sarvash Kalra has been serving as Director at Dayal Opticals, a luxury eyewear brand. A third‑generation leader, he joined the family...

Read moreDetails

LATEST NEWS

AGENCY09

AGENCY09 curates content-led collaboration between Jupiter Hospital and Discovery

June 19, 2026
Sony Pictures Networks India secures exclusive rights to India’s Tour of Ireland 2026

Sony Pictures Networks India secures exclusive rights to India’s Tour of Ireland 2026

June 19, 2026

ANALYSIS

Ipsos
Analysis

73% Urban Indians positive on country’s direction, 78% upbeat on economy: Ipsos

June 19, 2026
0

New Delhi: Urban Indians continue to display strong confidence in both the country’s direction and economic outlook, according to the...

PEOPLE

Bata India names Sanjay Rao as MD & CEO, succeeding Gunjan Shah
People

Bata India names Sanjay Rao as MD & CEO, succeeding Gunjan Shah

June 19, 2026
0

Mumbai; Bata India has named Sanjay Rao as its new Managing Director and Chief Executive Officer, ushering in a leadership...

MARKETING

78% of Urban Indians practise Yoga weekly; spiritual growth association climbs to 58%: Hansa Research
Marketing

78% of Urban Indians practise Yoga weekly; spiritual growth association climbs to 58%: Hansa Research

June 19, 2026
0

Mumbai: Ahead of International Yoga Day, Hansa Research’s latest year-on-year study reveals that yoga continues to remain deeply embedded in...

Subscribe to Newsletters

ADVERTISING

The Equal Agency unveils new brand identity for corporate mobility platform Routematic
Advertising

The Equal Agency unveils new brand identity for corporate mobility platform Routematic

June 19, 2026
0

Mumbai: The Equal Agency, a Mumbai-based full-service advertising agency known for its strategic approach to brand transformation, has unveiled a...

PRINT

Assam Tribune’s ‘Not for Sale’ front-page ad sparks debate amid financial challenges
Exclusive

Assam Tribune’s ‘Not for Sale’ front-page ad sparks debate amid financial challenges

June 9, 2026
0

Guwahati: One of Northeast India's most respected newspaper institutions, The Assam Tribune, has found itself at the centre of intense...

AUTHOR'S CORNER

Why Niche Creator Communities Are Delivering Stronger ROI Than Mass Influencers
Authors Corner

Why Niche Creator Communities Are Delivering Stronger ROI Than Mass Influencers

June 19, 2026
0

For years, the concept of influencer marketing was based on a fundamental understanding: the more people that watch and read,...

UPLIFT MEDIANEWS4U DIGITAL PVT LTD
No. 194B , Aram Nagar 2, JP Road,
Versova, Andheri West
Mumbai - 400061

For editorial queries:
[email protected]
[email protected]

For business queries:
Smitha Sapaliga - +91-98337-15455
[email protected]

Recent News

Modern fatherhood takes centre stage as BFSI and top brands launch emotional Father’s Day Campaigns

Modern fatherhood takes centre stage as BFSI and top brands launch emotional Father’s Day Campaigns

June 19, 2026
AGENCY09

AGENCY09 curates content-led collaboration between Jupiter Hospital and Discovery

June 19, 2026
Sony Pictures Networks India secures exclusive rights to India’s Tour of Ireland 2026

Sony Pictures Networks India secures exclusive rights to India’s Tour of Ireland 2026

June 19, 2026

Newsletter

Subscribe to Newsletters

Medianews4u.com © 2019 - 2025 All rights reserved.

  • The South Side Story 2023 Download Report
  • Goafest 2023: Day 3
  • Goafest 2023: Day 2
  • Goafest 2023: Day 1
  • Straight Talk Gallery 2022
  • The South Side Story 2022 Download Report
  • Focus 2022
  • Futurescope Conclave Gallery 2022
  • The South Side Story 2021 Download Report
  • FOCUS 2021
  • Exclusive
  • Exclusive
  • Advertising
  • Media
    • Radio
    • Cable & DTH
    • Print
    • Digital Frontier
    • Gaming Nexus
  • Television
  • OTT
  • Ad-Tech
  • Marketing
  • Campaigns
  • Analysis
  • Opinion
    • Opinion
    • Think Through
    • Prescience 2023
    • Prescience 2024
  • People
  • Events
    • Leader Speak
    • STRAIGHT TALK
    • Gamechangers
    • Print & TV Summit

Medianews4u.com © 2019 - 2025 All rights reserved.