India’s women cricketers become brand powerhouses after World Cup triumph

India’s women cricketers become brand powerhouses after World Cup triumph

India’s World Cup-winning women cricketers are cashing in on fame — with brand deals, social media spikes, and endorsements rivaling top male athletes for the first time.

Business Today Desk
  • Dec 2, 2025,
  • Updated Dec 2, 2025 12:43 PM IST
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A historic World Cup win has done what decades of quiet progress couldn’t — turned India’s women cricketers into household names commanding top-tier brand power and commercial muscle.

 

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Brand managers say endorsement values for players like Smriti Mandhana, Shafali Verma, and Jemimah Rodrigues have doubled or tripled — a leap that now puts them in the ₹1 crore-plus club.

 

 

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For the first time, major brands — from automakers to banks — are courting women cricketers for campaigns once dominated by men, marking a shift in how India sees sporting icons.

 

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Jemimah Rodrigues’ Instagram followers doubled to 3.3 million; Shafali Verma’s jumped 50%. Engagement rates now rival male stars — proof that fandom has crossed a cultural threshold.

 

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Smriti Mandhana’s endorsements span Hyundai, Gulf Oil, SBI, and Nike — brands that once sought male athletes for “trust and toughness.” Her appeal now bridges gender and geography.

 

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Marketers say India’s women cricketers sell more than products — they sell authenticity, confidence, and modern Indian womanhood. The “values-to-visibility” ratio has never been stronger.

 

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Industry insiders predict women cricketers could command 20–25% of total cricket endorsement value within five years — a once-unthinkable shift in India’s sports economy.

 

 

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Beyond brand deals, the champions are collecting real-world rewards: state bonuses, BCCI’s ₹51 crore prize pool, and Tata Motors’ gift of its top-end Sierra SUVs.

 

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For advertisers, this isn’t about replacing male stars — it’s about redefining stardom itself. India’s women cricketers now represent something rare: performance with purpose.

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