Campaign India Team
Nov 10, 2022

Karan Rajpal joins EnableX

Moves from Dalmia Bharat

Karan Rajpal joins EnableX
EnableX has announced the appointment of Karan Rajpal as director-marketing. 
 
Rajpal will drive all marketing initiatives, communications and public relations for the full-stack communications platform. 
 
He moves from Dalmia Bharat, where he was brand and digital lead. 
 
Pankaj Gupta, founder, EnableX, said, “We are happy to welcome Karan to our team. His diverse experience in brand building and marketing, and his leadership skills will play a crucial role in strengthening our brand and customer-centric value articulation across all geographies. He will play a vital role in designing and driving efficient marketing campaigns and brand positioning across all geographies.”
 
Rajpal said, “I am thrilled to join EnableX at a time when it is increasingly imperative for companies to stay connected with employees and customers from anywhere through a choice of various channels- video, messaging, chat, and voice. I look forward to leveraging my marketing experience to help EnableX’s clients navigate the developing challenges in this space.”
 
In a career spanning over 16 years, he has also worked with HCL Technologies, JLL and Aviva, among others. 
 
Source:
Campaign India

Just Published

6 hours ago

StayVista debuts Gram’s, a neo-vintage lifestyle ...

StayVista has introduced Gram’s, a design-led lifestyle hotel concept built around nostalgia, community and contemporary travel preferences.

12 hours ago

Adani seeks single agency for INR 600-crore media ...

The conglomerate has issued a RFP demanding high-scale credentials as it shifts to a digital-heavy, ROI-led model with expanded influencer activity.

15 hours ago

The INR 12-lakh crore opportunity brands are missing

To a large extent, the differently abled community remains invisible to marketers. But some brands are trying to change that through smarter advertising and inclusive design.

15 hours ago

The feed is full, but we’re all starving

Why brands must stop performing for algorithms and start speaking to humans again