MUMBAI: The only thing louder than the applause was the creativity. The 2025 Kyoorius Creative Awards, presented by Zee, lit up the Jio World Convention Centre in Mumbai with an evening that celebrated the sheer power of ideas. Over 1,500 professionals from India’s marketing and communications industry witnessed a no-politics, all-passion showcase of creative firepower.
While the elusive Black Elephant remained just that—elusive—seven campaigns earned the revered Baby Black Elephant. The shortlist, dubbed the ‘Black Elephant Nominees’, featured standout work from Grey Bangladesh, DDB Mudra Group, Mccann Worldgroup, Studio Eeksaurus, Talented, Famous Innovations and Loudmouth Film.
The top individual honour of the night went to none other than Piyush Pandey, who received the Master of Creativity award. The legendary adman was recognised for reshaping India’s advertising ethos with his distinct ability to blend culture, humour, and simplicity.
Kyoorius received a record 4,000+ entries from over 500 organisations this year, its highest ever. From that pool, 1,124 entries made it to the First List. A total of 514 campaigns were awarded Baby Elephants, representing 60 unique agencies, 177 campaigns, and 116 brands.
Of the 514 Baby Elephants, 166 were upgraded to Blue Elephants—marking top-tier excellence. Brands like Amazon, Samsung, Britannia, Coca-Cola, Swiggy, Dream11, Zivame, Kit Kat, Mcdonald's, and Ceat were among those honoured. Full winners list is available at kca.kyoorius.com.
Three campaigns received the Purple Elephant as part of the Zee Equality Award, acknowledging work that pushed boundaries for representation and inclusion.
“Massive congratulations to all the winners!... That’s the soul of the Elephants”, said Kyoorius founder & CEO Rajesh Kejriwal.
In trademark fashion, the awards ditched the traditional metal hierarchy—no golds, silvers, or bronzes.
Just Elephants.
Supported by Glenmorangie, The Hindu, Tribes Group, and Indian Creative Women, the night underscored that pure creativity—unranked, unfiltered—still has a stage, and a spotlight.