Those who have met him only in the last decade or so have only seen a soft-spoken senior in his trademark white. But everytime he would speak, it was evident that here was someone who has been there and doing it. And how!
We are referring to Shambhu Venkatrao Sista, better known to his friends as Bobby, who passed away in Mumbai, peacefully, on Saturday, July 27. He was 93, and leaves behind his family and a large number of admirers.
In his passing, the Indian marketing services fraternity has lost one its most revered pioneers with. A visionary leader who helped shape the landscape of Indian advertising over several decades, Sista leaves behind a rich legacy of creative excellence, brand-building and social impact.
Born into an advertising family, Sista took over the reins of Sista’s Advertising, founded by his father in 1934, and transformed it into one of India’s most respected creative shops. Under his leadership from 1970 to 1998, Sista’s rose from 27th position to become Top 10 agency, competing with multinational giants through its focus on breakthrough creativity and strategic brand-building.
Sista’s early career provided him with a multifaceted understanding of the marketing and communication landscape. After an apprenticeship at Sista’s under his father, he gained international exposure by attending an advertising conference in London as a youth delegate in 1951. He stayed on in London for two years to study advertising and work at an agency, experiences that shaped his approach when he returned to join Sista’s as an account executive.
One of Sista’s earliest and most successful campaigns was for Tinopal (later Ranipal), an optical whitener that he helped launch and build into a market leader with 90% share within three years. The campaign was praised by famed scientist Dr Vikram Sarabhai and even caught the attention of Hindustan Lever’s chairman for its distribution reach. This early success highlighted Sista’s strategic acumen in leveraging advertising to drive distribution and market dominance.
After a stint as marketing manager at Tinopal’s parent company and as India’s first marketing manager for Reader’s Digest, Sista returned to take over as Managing Director of Sista’s Advertising in 1970. Over the next three decades, he built the agency into a creative powerhouse, personally nurturing talent like creative director Jean Durante and fostering a culture that prioritised creative excellence above all else.
Under Sista’s leadership, the agency created iconic campaigns for brands like Nycil, S Kumar’s, VIP Luggage, HMT Watches, and Hot Shot cameras. The “bramble back” campaign for Nycil helped it overtake Johnson & Johnson to gain 70% marketshare within a year. For VIP Luggage, Sista’s not only made it the #1 brand but grew the entire molded luggage market by 300%. The Hot Shot camera campaign featuring the audio mnemonic “Just aim and khatak” broke records for awards won (the khatak bit was courtesy Prahlad Kakkar).
Sista was a pioneer in many aspects of advertising and marketing in India. His agency created Mumbai’s first three-dimensional lighted hoarding, organised one of the earliest fashion shows on a swimming pool, and executed ambitious on-location shoots and sets that pushed the boundaries of production at the time. He also instituted the Annual Advertising Arts Ball as Secretary of the Advertising Club Bombay, which became a marquee event in the industry calendar.
Beyond his advertising career, Sista was deeply committed to social causes. After selling Sista’s Advertising to Saatchi & Saatchi in 1998, he focused his energies on social communication and development sector work. He founded Population First in 2002 to address population issues from a gender and social development perspective. The organisation’s Amchi project brought development to 100 villages in Maharashtra through community empowerment, while the Laadli campaign and Media Awards worked to change perceptions and portrayals of women in media and advertising. In Dr A L Sharda, he found an able leader, who could take his mission many steps forward.
Sista’s contributions to advertising and social causes earned him numerous accolades, including the Lifetime Achievement Award from the Advertising Agencies Association of India. In his acceptance speech for this honour, Sista’s humility, wisdom and passion for positive change shone through. He credited much of his success to luck and to the talented people he worked with, while also pushing the industry to institutionalise gender sensitivity in advertising through a dedicated award category.
He was also a very active member of the complaints committee of the Advertising Standards Council of India.
Bobby Sista will be remembered as more than just an advertising veteran. He was a visionary who understood the power of communication to build brands and change society. His legacy lives on not just in the iconic campaigns he created, but in the institutions he built, the talent he nurtured, and the causes he championed. In fact, if the Indian media – especially advertising – is a lot more gender sensitive than it was, say, a decade back it is thanks essentially to the wonderful institution that he set up under the aegis of Population First and Laadli.
In his acceptance speech at the 3As of I award, he said: “I did not have an MBA Degree. I had neither training nor experience of running an agency. Common Sense was my only qualification and personality and people skills my assets. I was lucky with the team I was able to build up and the roster of clients we had acquired as we went along.” And this is what he said on the transition from Sista’s to the social sector: “the period 1970 to 1998 when I headed Sista’s was a happy period. Of course, there were worries- financial and otherwise, frustrations, many mistakes I made, but on the whole it provided a lot of satisfaction and sense of achievement. In 1998 I sold the advertising business to Saatchi & Saatchi. We had a staff strength of 370 between the Head Office and four branches. I quit because my heart was into social communications and I wanted to explore the opportunities in the development sector.”
As Indian advertising continues to evolve in the digital age, Sista’s principles of creative excellence, strategic thinking, and social responsibility remain as relevant as ever.
The passing of S V “Bobby” Sista marks the end of an era in Indian advertising. Yet, his impact on the industry and society at large ensures that his influence will continue to be felt for generations to come. He will be deeply missed, but warmly remembered as a pioneer, mentor, and changemaker who helped shape the soul of Indian advertising.