Celebrations in India have traditionally been driven by nostalgia, family, and common delight. As we look forward to a different set of seasonal celebrations in 2025, it will also be about discovery, choice, and personalisation. The festive calendar has now become the most powerful marketing moment in the year, but the engagement rules have changed: consumers do not just want offers; they want experiences that feel personal but are still bound in tradition.
The New Era of Festive Shopping
Recent consumer research indicates that festive spending in India is on the upswing, with most urban shoppers planning to spend more this year compared to last. Nearly half of urban shoppers also said they are willing to try different brands during the festive season—reminding us that festive season is not only about retention, but also about acquisition. The MiQ Festive Shopper Insights 2025 noted that 43% of Indian shoppers plan to spend over ₹20,000 this festive season while 45% suggested they were willing to try new brands (Brand Equity, 2025). This combination of optimism and curiosity provides a unique opportunity to run campaigns that are both culturally relevant and personalized in the festive season.
The Conjunction of Data and Culture
Data-driven insights have changed the manner with which brands engage during festivals. Analyzing browsing patterns, purchase intent, and even location-based search patterns, marketers can target campaigns that not only reach audiences, but also connect with them. For example:
A first time car buyer researching festive loan offers can be shown an interactive ad format that showcases available financing options.
A young professional looking for gift ideas can be nudged with a personalized skincare or fashion recommendation for gifting during the festivities of Diwali.
Regional festivals, such as Onam or Pongal, can allow for language-specific creatives to ensure we’re respecting tradition within the context of our messaging.
This personalization does not replace tradition, but it does enhance it. Campaigns feel warmer, and more familiar and relevant when technology is aware of cultural contexts.
Crafting Experiences Beyond Discount
The Festive Report 2025 issued by BigCity Promotions highlights that 74% of consumers expect much more than discounts, they expect entertainment, rewards and meaningful engagement, while some 42% of consumers prefer consumer gamification formats such as spin wheels or scratch cards (Brand Equity,2025). These interactive formats ask for participation instead of passive consumption like static banners which are easy to scroll right by. They create curiosity and exploration, and leave a positive lasting impression – turning advertising from a transactional push, into an experience pull.
Consumer data also suggests festive shoppers don’t just want cash back. They want novelty—something fun, engaging, rewarding, and memorable. Gamified ads, festive quizzes, spin-to-win offers, or even product previews that involve user interaction are all great ways to promote engagement.
These ad formats are currently outpacing static banners which people can scroll by quite easily. These ads create a moment of curiosity, a reason to stick around, and most importantly, fun. The new focus is not solely on the cash return, it turns advertising into an experiential pull and not simply a transactional push.
Timing and Consistency
The timing is another consideration impacting festive strategies. A lot of advertisers will be activating campaigns 30+ days in advance of peak festive weeks to earn attention (Storyboard18, 2025). Keeping channels consistent is another factor – when audiences see similar stories reflected across mobile, social and connected TV, it builds recognition and trust.
Striking the Right Balance
The takeaway for marketers is simple: winning holiday campaigns in 2025 will exist at the intersection of personalization and tradition. Data enables marketers to be precise and personal, while tradition offers cultural meaning and authenticity. Too much dependence on either will lead to irrelevance or superficiality.
Festivals will always be about connecting people. When brands use data for more than simply selling, but to celebrate – with relevance, respect, and resonance, they are no longer advertisers – they are part of the festive memory. That is the most meaningful space to inhabit when you’re in a crowded space.