Campaign India Team
Nov 30, 2021

Vector Brand Solutions' operating leadership team announced

Tushar Bhatia, Ripanka Kalita and Mandar Gore to head business, creative and strategy respectively

From left: Tushar Bhatia, Ripanka Kalita and Mandar Gore
From left: Tushar Bhatia, Ripanka Kalita and Mandar Gore
The operating leadership team of Joseph George's new venture Vector Brand Solutions has been revealed. 
 
Tushar Bhatia has joined as senior director – business. He moves from Maple where he was chief marketing officer.  
 
Ripanka Kalita has been appointed as director – creative. Kalita was with Mullen Lintas as creative director. 
 
Mandar Gore has moved within the group as senior director – strategy. He was senior director at Tilt Brand Solutions.
 
George said, "With the Operating Leadership of Vector now in place, I am certain that the vision and ambition for Vector will be brought to fruition very soon. With their pedigreed experience in delivering through- the-funnel results for clients, Vector will hopefully soon be the answer for all digital first marketers. I am absolutely confident that the three of them will live and breathe every day, Vector’s operating philosophy of 'Pace. Preference. Purpose. Performance'.”
Source:
Campaign India

Related Articles

Just Published

11 hours ago

No internet, no problem: AI dials up Bharat

Centerfruit’s tongue-twisting Voice AI campaign proves rural India doesn’t need screens to engage—just smart tech with local soul.

11 hours ago

Magna forecasts a 7.7% increase in India’s adex for ...

With no elections or cricket highs, India’s INR 1371 billion adex proves that digital muscle, data depth, and media shifts are driving real momentum.

14 hours ago

WPP global comms boss Chris Wade steps down

Former Ogilvy UK CEO Michael Frohlich will replace Wade, who leaves the holding company after 13 years.

16 hours ago

Cookies crumble, privacy prevails: Marketing’s new ...

The era of lazy personalisation is over. Epsilon senior vice president for analytics believes that marketers must now trade third-party tracking for first-party trust, clean data, and cultural transparency—or risk fading into irrelevance.