Storyboard | How brands can control narratives and fight cancel culture
Indian brands are facing social media outrage and boycotts more than ever before. Here's how marketing experts believe brands can carefully tread the tight rope

The season of boycotts is back. Fabindia is the latest in a series of brands, which have been in the eye of social media storms, either for hurting sentiments of a particular group of people or misrepresenting a religious tradition. The reasons are plenty but the objective of these social media users is to ‘cancel’ and boycott brands.In Fabindia’s instance, the brand came under heavy social fire for using the term ‘Jashn-e-Riwaaz’ for its festive season collection. The brand had to delete a promotional tweet for the collection after it was accused of “defacing” the Hindu festival of Diwali by calling it Jashn-e-Riwaaz. Netizens slammed the brand for "unnecessarily" imposing "secularism" on a Hindu festival and asked for a complete boycott of the brand. There has been no formal statement by the company on the issue at time of filing this story.Last year, Tata-owned jewellery brand Tanishq had to deal with social media uproar over its ‘Ekatvam’ campaign for featuring an interfaith baby shower ceremony. Recently, Tanishq was targeted again over its festive ‘Utsaah’ print ad where a model was shown wearing traditional attire and jewellery sans a bindi. This comes shortly after Manyavar, the homegrown ethnic wear brand, featured actor Alia Bhatt, who portrayed the ritual of Kanyadaan “in a negative light” in its commercial film, according to those who found it offensive. Edtech brands Byju’s and Unacademy, and food delivery app Zomato are a few other brands that were a target of both real outrage and bot-rage in the last few weeks.Realities of being on social media Branding and marketing experts believe that there is no one-rule-fits-all in such cases. Sometimes, a brand could be well-intending but hasn't read the room adequately well, says Karthik Srinivasan, a communications strategy consultant. Fabindia’s episode is one such example, he says.“It seems harmless on paper, merely using an Urdu language expression that amounts to something adequately traditional, but the sentiment around the language and how it could be blown out of proportion when layered on top of Diwali is something easy to guess, if someone has been reasonably clued into the current situation in India,” Srinivasan points out.Amer Jaleel, group CCO and chairman, MullenLowe Lintas Group believes that brands are the face of businesses. In his view, most businesses consider the risk of a public confrontation too much of a risk and rightly so. They have stakeholders and stockholders to answer to.“But some brands can take a cautious punt on the controversy that such events can generate and benefit or earn respect. The best players of this game actually engineer the entire end-to-end scenario—the placement of the asset, the hue and cry over it, and the withdrawal or the aggressive support of the ‘brand belief’. You have either an intolerant or a gullible audience out there depending on how well you press their buttons,” notes Jaleel.
First Published: Oct 26, 2021, 17:18
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