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    Can Legacy Remain A Differentiator In Modern Marketing?

    Can Legacy Remain A Differentiator In Modern Marketing?

    Fearlessness Comes When You Stop Waiting For Permission: Neha Markanda On Leadership & Life

    Fearlessness Comes When You Stop Waiting For Permission: Neha Markanda On Leadership & Life

    Why Brands That Listen To Communities Are Winning In The Attention Economy

    Why Brands That Listen To Communities Are Winning In The Attention Economy

    The Best Campaigns Don’t Chase Trends, They Shape Them

    The Best Campaigns Don’t Chase Trends, They Shape Them

    Having A Strong Support System At Home & Around You Isn’t A Luxury But A Necessity: Pratibha Singh

    Having A Strong Support System At Home & Around You Isn’t A Luxury But A Necessity: Pratibha Singh

    When Ads Feel Like Content (& When That Backfires)

    When Ads Feel Like Content (& When That Backfires)

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    Can Legacy Remain A Differentiator In Modern Marketing?

    Can Legacy Remain A Differentiator In Modern Marketing?

    Fearlessness Comes When You Stop Waiting For Permission: Neha Markanda On Leadership & Life

    Fearlessness Comes When You Stop Waiting For Permission: Neha Markanda On Leadership & Life

    Why Brands That Listen To Communities Are Winning In The Attention Economy

    Why Brands That Listen To Communities Are Winning In The Attention Economy

    The Best Campaigns Don’t Chase Trends, They Shape Them

    The Best Campaigns Don’t Chase Trends, They Shape Them

    Having A Strong Support System At Home & Around You Isn’t A Luxury But A Necessity: Pratibha Singh

    Having A Strong Support System At Home & Around You Isn’t A Luxury But A Necessity: Pratibha Singh

    When Ads Feel Like Content (& When That Backfires)

    When Ads Feel Like Content (& When That Backfires)

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Home Feature

The Summer Marketing Rush: Why Every Brand Is Trying To Create A ‘Summer Moment’

In this authored piece, Anindya Ghosh, Founding Partner at Sam & Andy, explores the evolving dynamics of summer marketing, unpacking how brands are shifting from traditional campaign-led approaches to precision-driven, real-time “moment” strategies, and why success now depends on aligning data, distribution, and demand signals to stay relevant, drive conversions, and build lasting brand memory.

MM Desk by MM Desk
April 6, 2026
in Feature, Guest Posts
A A
The Summer Marketing Rush: Why Every Brand Is Trying To Create A ‘Summer Moment’

The Shift from Campaigns to Precision

Every summer, brands in India race against time, but increasingly, they’re racing against relevance. Campaigns go live earlier, media spends spike, and creatives flood timelines. Yet, despite this surge in activity, very few brands truly capitalize on the season. The reality is simple: summer is no longer about participation; it is about precision. Traditional “summer campaign” thinking, built on fixed timelines, is losing effectiveness in a landscape where consumer behaviour is fragmented and demand emerges in sharp, unpredictable bursts. A sudden heatwave, a long weekend, a cricket match, or a travel surge can trigger high-intent consumption windows. If a brand is not visible and available at that exact moment, the opportunity is lost. Increasingly, what we’re seeing across brands is a shift from planning campaigns to engineering multiple, timely “summer moments.”

The Rise of Hyperlocal, Real-Time Demand

This shift is further complicated by the hyperlocal and real-time nature of demand. Weather patterns are no longer uniform, and even within similar temperature ranges, factors such as humidity, pollution, and urban conditions influence consumption differently across cities. As a result, national-level planning is no longer sufficient. Brands must think city by city, sometimes even hour by hour, aligning weather signals, media deployment, and inventory readiness to stay relevant. Without this integration, marketing risks becoming disconnected from actual consumption behaviour.

From Seasonal Selling to Lifestyle Relevance

At the same time, the role of summer in consumers’ lives has evolved. While earlier narratives centred around relief from heat, today’s choices reflect a broader shift towards health, wellness, and lifestyle optimisation. The growing popularity of healthier beverages, functional foods, skincare routines, and fitness-oriented products signals that consumers are not just looking to escape discomfort, they are looking to enhance how they experience the season. This changes the role of brands from simply offering products to becoming part of a larger lifestyle narrative.

The Compression of Consumer Decision-Making

Perhaps the most significant disruption in this ecosystem is the rise of quick commerce, which has fundamentally compressed the consumer decision-making cycle. What was once planned and stocked in advance is now driven by immediacy, a consumer feels the heat, opens an app, and places an order within minutes. Discovery, consideration, and purchase now happen almost simultaneously, intensifying competition at the last mile. At the point of checkout, consumers are presented with multiple options, price comparisons, and platform nudges, making it critical for brands to win not just on awareness, but on availability, recall, and contextual relevance. In today’s market, the moment of intent has become the moment of decision.

Why Most ‘Summer Moments’ Don’t Convert

Despite the growing focus on “moment marketing,” most summer campaigns fail to create lasting impact because they rely on surface-level triggers. Topical creatives, seasonal discounts, and reactive content may drive short-term visibility, but they rarely translate into sustained preference. What is often missing is structural clarity. Brands must consistently answer three key questions: what role they play in summer consumption, where they show up when demand spikes, and why a consumer should choose them over the next available alternative. Without this clarity, moment marketing doesn’t build brands, it only creates noise.

Balancing Moments with Memory

This is where the balance between short-term spikes and long-term brand building becomes critical. While moments can drive immediate engagement, memory drives eventual choice. In high-competition environments like quick commerce, where substitutes are always visible, brands that have built familiarity before the moment arrives are far more likely to convert. Performance marketing alone is not enough; it must be supported by consistent brand-building efforts to ensure that when the moment comes, the brand is already top of mind. Moments may drive spikes, but memory is what drives choice.

Rethinking Scale Beyond Big-Ticket Buys

The idea of scale in summer marketing is also evolving. While large cultural properties like cricket continue to command attention, relying solely on them is both expensive and restrictive. Brands are increasingly exploring alternative avenues such as regional content, digital integrations, and culturally resonant storytelling that travels across platforms. More importantly, there is a shift from chasing isolated moments to mapping broader consumption clusters. Summer is no longer a single narrative, it encompasses overlapping behaviours spanning travel, entertainment, health, and lifestyle, allowing brands to stay relevant over an extended period rather than in fleeting bursts.

What Summer Really Tests

Ultimately, summer acts as a stress test for businesses. It reveals how effectively marketing, supply chain, and analytics functions are integrated, how quickly brands can respond to demand signals, and whether growth is driven by strategy or simply by increased spending. Many of the engagements we see reinforce this, success in peak seasons is rarely about higher spends alone, but about how well systems are aligned to respond in real time. While many brands operate in incremental cycles throughout the year, summer compresses demand into a short window, creating the potential for rapid acceleration, but only for those who are prepared.

From Campaign Thinking to System Thinking

The real opportunity, therefore, lies not in increasing activity, but in rethinking approach. Brands that continue to treat summer as a campaign will keep chasing visibility. Those that treat it as a system, built on responsiveness, relevance, and readiness, will capture demand. Because in today’s environment, a ‘summer moment’ is not created by a campaign, it is captured by a system.

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