Scents of purpose as Mangaldeep expands its 'Sixth Sense' fragrance panel

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Scents of purpose as Mangaldeep expands its 'Sixth Sense' fragrance panel

ITC trains 180 visually impaired individuals to co-create devotional fragrances with pride.

Mangaldeep

MUMBAI: Who needs sight to sense greatness? At Mangaldeep, fragrance creation is being reimagined, one heightened sense at a time. ITC Mangaldeep, India’s leading incense brand, is proving that scent goes beyond sensory pleasure, it can also be a catalyst for purpose, pride, and inclusion. With the expansion of its “Sixth Sense Panel” to 180 visually impaired individuals, the brand is building a fragrance development process where ability, not disability, takes centre stage.

Launched in 2021, the initiative taps into the clinically established superpower of the visually impaired: an enhanced sense of smell. Now comprising panelists from Mumbai, Delhi, Hyderabad, Chennai and Kolkata with academic and professional credentials to match this one-of-a-kind team is actively shaping Mangaldeep’s latest offerings. So far, it has influenced hits like Sandal, Rose, Lavender, and Marigold incense variants.

In June 2025, 30 new panelists completed a specialised olfactory training programme, where they fine-tuned their scent articulation across fragrance families from fruity to floral, woody to oudh. With access to Mangaldeep’s in-house experts and structured evaluation tools, these panellists are now key contributors to product innovation, turning scent into a shared language of dignity.

“This is no CSR tokenism. The Sixth Sense Panel has become integral to how we develop fragrances,” said ITC Ltd divisional chief executive for agarbatti & matches business Gaurav Tayal. “It brings us perspectives we’d otherwise miss.”

The initiative draws inspiration from research at the Massachusetts Eye and Ear Institute, which found that the visually impaired often possess superior olfactory faculties, a super-skill Mangaldeep is now mainstreaming into the fragrance industry.

Former Blind Cricket World Cup winner Mahender Vaishna, now a panellist, called the experience “empowering and dignifying,” while Radio Udaan co-founder Minal Singhvi  credited the programme with helping her rediscover joy, confidence, and creative purpose.

At its core, Mangaldeep’s inclusive innovation is about rewriting the narrative around disability not through sympathy, but through strength. In the process, it’s proving that the soul of scent lies not in how it’s seen, but in how deeply it’s felt.

As brands across sectors explore meaningful inclusivity, Mangaldeep is lighting the way, one fragrant step at a time.