Reflections Inspired by Think School(Ganesh) & Kishore Biyani's Podcast
Watch the full podcast with Kishore Biyani here.
I was genuinely surprised by how closely many of my thoughts aligned with Kishore Biyaniâs views. It felt like he articulated what Iâve been internally wrestling with for a while. Here are a few takeaways and parallels I drew from the podcast:
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The New Generationâs View of Business as Problem-Solving This struck a chord with me. Today, many business problems seem manufactured, solutions to issues that didnât originally exist or were deliberately created. Strip things down to basicsâfood, shelter, education, healthcareâand beyond that, whatâs left often revolves around status, virtue signaling, and the selfish gene. The deeper context? Itâs less about solving real problems and more about playing the business game.
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Targeting the Family, Not Just the Consumer Biyaniâs approach to family-centric marketing really stood out. Instead of narrowly targeting a single user, he dives into the family dynamic. For example: a. A chocolate brand appeals to an 8-year-old with cartoons and fun, b. A health drink, however, is positioned through the lens of parental concern, crafted for children but sold through the parentsâ values.
This deeper behavioral insight is often missed by modern marketers.
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Strategy > Design > Execution Thereâs too much noise today glorifying âExecution is everything.â But thatâs not the whole picture. Understanding your user, crafting a sharp positioning, and thinking beyond revenue, toward long-term balance sheet stability, is key. Biyaniâs thoughts echo mine: strategy comes first, execution is just the tail of a well-thought-out animal.
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Influence, Aspiration & Role Models in Brand Building What surprised me was the weight Biyani places on celebrities, influencers, and aspirational figures. And heâs right, branding is not just about visuals or messaging, itâs about association. Some sharp examples he mentioned are:
- Dhoni and Sachin for mutual funds,
- Kohli for Puma,
- Ranveer Singh for Super You. Itâs not just endorsement, itâs social conditioning via cultural icons.
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Insight Comes from Observation, Not Just Research When Ganesh asked him, âHow did you get that insight?â Biyaniâs response was gold: âThrough deep, everyday observation.â Future Group succeeded not because they had massive data â it didnât exist like it does now â but because they relied on instinct, intuition, and bold bets. I resonate deeply with that. Sometimes, the best research is living and noticing.
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Ganeshâs Open-Ended Style I loved how Ganesh keeps things fluid, open-ended, exploratory, never rigid. He quickly shifts gears across brands and is a real sucker for case studies and real-world examples. That kind of discourse makes these conversations engaging and layered.