“If you want people to talk about your brand you have to say something meaningful in your campaign,” says Shah. From not judging a girl for wearing a short dress to renting out your house to a family with a religion different from your own, the campaign hopes to represent a “progressive” India.
Pramod Sharma, executive creative director, Everest Brand Solutions, the creative agency behind the new campaign, asserts that young people of today want to be a driver of change. “The idea was to portray the open mindset of the youth without offending anyone and at the same time convey the values of Parle 20-20,” he says. “Our narrative ensured that Parle 20-20 went much ahead of conventional biscuit advertising to applaud positive thinking in a world that is getting crippled by thoughts that divide people and discriminate among them on the basis of colour, creed, community, language and religion.”