Skip to content Skip to footer

How Asian Paints Cracked IPL Advertising: A Campaign Teardown

17 min read

The Breakdown

<a href="#ipl-problem" style=”display:block;color:#d4d4d4;text-decoration:none;font-size:14px;padding:6px 0;border-bottom:1px solid #1e1e1e;”>01   The IPL Advertising Problem02   What Asian Paints Actually Did03   Why the Execution Worked04   The Numbers Behind the Feeling05   What Everyone Else Gets Wrong06   IPL Ad Diagnostic07   The Verdict

Most brands treat IPL advertising like a slot machine. Pay enough, show up enough times, and something sticks. Asian Paints didn’t do that. What they did instead is worth understanding carefully, because it reveals a principle that most marketing teams completely ignore when the cricket season rolls around.

Let’s break it down.

500M+IPL Viewers
₹48,390CrMedia Rights (2023-27)
~55%Asian Paints Market Share
₹34,489CrRevenue FY2024

The Problem With IPL Advertising

The Indian Premier League attracts over 500 million viewers across its two-month run. Brands know this. So they pour money in. BCCI’s media rights deal with JioCinema and Star Sports crossed ₹48,390 crore for the 2023-2027 cycle, the most expensive sports broadcast deal in Indian history.

The result? An advertising environment so cluttered it’s practically noise. Every break has the same brands shouting the same things at the same audience. Dream11. Cred. Byju’s (before the wheels came off). The same celebrity faces, the same high-energy cuts, the same manufactured urgency.

In this environment, the default strategy is volume. Buy more spots. Spend more. Outshout the competition. Asian Paints took a different approach entirely.

The Contrast

Standard IPL Advertising vs Asian Paints Approach

Most IPL Brands

Celebrity saturation

High-energy, high-volume

Product features first

Same ad on every platform

Treating IPL as a reach play

Brand recall: Low (noise)

Asian Paints

Human stories, real moments

Quieter tone, earned attention

Emotional architecture first

Platform-native assets

Treating IPL as a cultural moment

Brand recall: High (resonance)


What Asian Paints Actually Did

Asian Paints used IPL not as a broadcast medium but as a cultural moment. Instead of buying air time to push product features, they built campaign narratives that used cricket’s emotional architecture as the canvas.

The Insight

IPL isn’t really about cricket. It’s about families gathered around a screen, neighbourhoods erupting when a wicket falls, fathers and sons and grandparents sharing something that transcends generations. The actual sport is almost secondary. The primary product being consumed is shared emotion.

Asian Paints makes paint. Paint is what your walls are covered in. Walls are where your home happens. Home is where those IPL moments occur. The connection isn’t just logical. It’s emotional architecture built around the same feelings that make cricket resonate in India in the first place.

This isn’t accidental. Asian Paints has spent decades positioning itself not as a paint brand but as a home brand. “Har ghar kuch kehta hai” (Every home tells a story) has been the backbone of their brand language for years. IPL gave them a real-time cultural stage to activate that positioning at scale.

Emotional Architecture

How Asian Paints Connected Paint to Cricket

Cricket

Shared Emotion

Family Moments

Home

Asian Paints


The Execution: Why It Worked Where Others Fail

There are three specific execution choices that separated the Asian Paints approach from the noise around it.

Restraint in a Medium That Rewards Loudness

IPL advertising defaults to high energy, celebrity saturation, and aggressive call-to-actions. Asian Paints went quieter. More human. The tone felt like a conversation rather than a broadcast. In an environment where everything is turned to eleven, turning it down to six is the loudest thing you can do.

Consistency of Brand Language

The campaign didn’t abandon its brand DNA to fit the IPL context. It brought the IPL into the brand’s world rather than contorting the brand to fit IPL’s energy. This is a mistake most brands make. They think the medium requires them to become something different. Asian Paints understood that coherence at scale is far more valuable than short-term relevance.

Platform-Native Thinking

The campaign wasn’t built for TV and then shoved onto digital. Each touchpoint was considered separately. The longer emotional films for YouTube. Shorter, sharper cuts for mid-match breaks. Social formats designed for second-screen behaviour during live matches. According to data from TAM AdEx, brands that develop platform-native assets rather than repurposed TVC cuts see 30-40% higher recall scores in post-campaign research.

Execution Scorecard

Three Pillars That Made It Work

Restraint (Tone Discipline)9.2/10
Brand Coherence9.5/10
Platform-Native Execution8.8/10

The Numbers Behind the Feeling

Let’s not be sentimental about this. Campaigns aren’t run to generate warm feelings. They’re run to build brand equity and ultimately drive revenue.

Asian Paints reported consolidated net revenue of ₹34,489 crore in FY2024, representing a brand that has maintained category leadership in Indian decorative paints for decades. More relevantly for this analysis, their brand health metrics during and after major IPL campaign periods show consistent improvement in consideration scores among young urban homeowners.

The ROI of brand advertising is notoriously difficult to isolate. But the pattern is clear enough: consistent, emotionally resonant brand advertising sustained over multiple IPL cycles has contributed to Asian Paints maintaining a market share of approximately 55% in the organised decorative paints sector in India, according to industry reports from ICICI Securities. In a commoditised category where the product differences are marginal, that number is almost entirely a function of brand work.

In a commoditised category where the product differences are marginal, ~55% market share is almost entirely a function of brand work.


What Everyone Else Is Getting Wrong

Here’s what the Asian Paints approach exposes about standard IPL advertising strategy.

Most brands treat IPL as a reach play and nothing more. They buy eyeballs. They count impressions. They measure GRPs. None of this is wrong, exactly, but it misses the deeper opportunity. IPL is not just a large audience. It is a large audience in a specific emotional state, sharing a specific cultural experience, with elevated receptivity to brands that understand that experience.

The Principle

The medium is the context, not just the channel. The brands winning in IPL advertising right now are the ones who understand cricket’s role in Indian emotional life and build campaigns that are worthy of that context. Brands that show up with generic product ads are burning money to reach an audience actively looking for reasons not to pay attention during the break.

Strategy Element Volume Approach Asian Paints Approach
Media Strategy Buy maximum spots Earn maximum attention
Creative Celebrity + product Human stories + emotion
Platform One TVC, repurposed Platform-native per channel
Measurement GRPs, impressions Brand health, consideration
Brand DNA Contorted to fit IPL IPL brought into brand world
Long-term Effect Forgotten by next break Compounding brand equity

Can Your Brand Crack IPL Advertising?

Rate each area honestly from 1 (weak) to 5 (strong). This diagnostic maps to the principles that made Asian Paints’ IPL strategy work.

IPL Advertising Readiness Diagnostic

5 questions. Honest answers only. Your score reveals whether your IPL spend will build your brand or just burn your budget.

Question 1: Cultural Understanding

Does your team understand what IPL means emotionally to your audience, beyond the cricket?

It’s just reach





Deep insight

Question 2: Brand Coherence

Can your IPL campaign extend your existing brand language, or would you need to invent something new?

Start from scratch





Natural extension

Question 3: Platform-Native Capability

Do you create different creative assets for TV, digital, and social, or repurpose one TVC across everything?

One TVC only





Fully native

Question 4: Emotional vs Rational

Is your IPL creative built around emotional resonance, or around product features and offers?

Pure product





Pure emotion

Question 5: Long-term Commitment

Is your IPL advertising part of a multi-year brand building strategy, or a one-season burst?

One-off burst





Multi-year plan

The Brand Crush Rating

Asian Paints IPL Campaign Execution

Cultural Intelligence

9.1/10

Brand Coherence

9.5/10

Long-term ROI

9.3/10


13 min read

The Verdict

Asian Paints didn’t crack IPL advertising with a bigger budget or a more famous celebrity. They cracked it by understanding something most brands refuse to sit with long enough to absorb: in a cluttered advertising environment, the most disruptive thing you can do is be genuinely human.

The campaign is worth studying not just for what it did in the IPL context, but for what it demonstrates about brand strategy at scale. Consistency compounds. Emotional relevance outperforms rational persuasion. And the brands that understand the cultural architecture of a moment will always outperform the ones just buying space in it.

That’s either genius or it’s obvious. If it feels obvious, ask yourself why most brands aren’t doing it. Then you’ll understand why Asian Paints keeps winning.

For the cautionary counterexample, read our full breakdown of how Snapdeal spent heavily on advertising while the product experience was actively failing customers – and what it cost them.

For more on how Indian brands are navigating advertising in complex media environments, read our breakdown of how food delivery apps engineer your spending behaviour. The principles overlap more than you’d think.

Sources: BCCI-JioCinema-Star Sports media rights deal filings; Asian Paints FY2024 annual report (consolidated net revenue); ICICI Securities Indian decorative paints market share analysis; TAM AdEx platform-native advertising recall research; Asian Paints brand positioning documentation and “Har Ghar Kuch Kehta Hai” campaign history.


Share this with the marketing team debating their next IPL budget. They need to read this first.

Leave a Comment