HomeNewsBusinessIndian startups who leverage celebrity associations have an edge: Experts

Indian startups who leverage celebrity associations have an edge: Experts

The brand value of a celebrity, if leveraged well, can take the brand value of a startup northwards

October 05, 2018 / 19:52 IST
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Despite the COVID-19 pandemic, this year has seen active fundraising in the startup space, where e-learning and online food ordering firms nabbed a majority of the big bags – six and three respectively. Here is a look at the top 10 startup deals in India in terms of capital till September 2020, according to Venture Intelligence (Image: Moneycontrol)
Despite the COVID-19 pandemic, this year has seen active fundraising in the startup space, where e-learning and online food ordering firms nabbed a majority of the big bags – six and three respectively. Here is a look at the top 10 startup deals in India in terms of capital till September 2020, according to Venture Intelligence (Image: Moneycontrol)

Tasmayee Laha Roy Moneycontrol News

Ashton Kutcher, Carmelo Anthony, Nas and Leonardo DiCaprio have done it in the West. Amitabh Bachchan, Yuvraj Singh, Sushant Singh Rajput and now Priyanka Chopra are doing it in India — investing in startups.

Indian celebrities are loosening their purse strings to invest in startups or starting funds of their own and an initial report card on these investments show that the ventures have all done well.

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“The brand value of a celebrity, if leveraged well, can take the brand value of the startup in which he or she is investing northwards. But one has to know how to exploit the celebrity involvement, otherwise this new-found trend will be reduced to being one of the avenues where the UHNIs (ultra high net worth individuals) are investing,” Harish HV, a former partner at professional services firm Grant Thornton.

An interesting observation by Adhvith Dhuddu, CEO at digital marketing platform AliveNow who is also an investor in Mexican restaurant chain California Burrito, is how celebrity investments go only to B2C platforms and never to B2B companies. “Celebrity investments work best where brands target end users because they are also the target audience of the celebrity. So 90 percent of the investments will go to food chains, retail brands etc, but not to something like a logistic chain,” Dhuddu said.