Shemaroo Entertainment has launched a new social impact campaign titled ‘The Glass Ceiling’ this Women’s Day, aiming to draw attention to the invisible structural barriers that continue to limit women’s progress into leadership roles across industries.
Through the campaign, the company highlights the persistent gap between representation and leadership, emphasising that equal talent and ambition do not always translate into equal access to decision-making positions.
According to a company press release, the campaign focuses on the disconnect that still exists in many organisations where diversity conversations have gained visibility but leadership tables remain unevenly represented. With a strong visual narrative, the initiative seeks to spark conversations around growth pathways, support systems and the need for structural change to ensure women have equal opportunities to move into senior roles.
The campaign also builds on Shemaroo’s ongoing focus on purpose-driven storytelling. Over the past few years, the company has undertaken initiatives that question social and cultural assumptions. Among them was the ‘Har Role Is Her Role’ campaign, which challenged gender stereotypes associated with professions and responsibilities. With the latest initiative titled ‘The Glass Ceiling – Her Role Her Rise’, the focus now shifts from representation to leadership equity.
Commenting on the initiative, Arghya Chakravarty, Chief Operating Officer at Shemaroo Entertainment, said that while progress has been made in terms of representation, achieving leadership equity requires deeper reflection within organisations. “Inclusion cannot remain a surface-level commitment. The barriers that limit women’s advancement are often structural and invisible. With this campaign, we want to bring those constraints into view and encourage conversations that lead to measurable change, within organisations and beyond,” he said.
Chakravarty added that meaningful change begins with acknowledging deeply rooted structures and consciously working to dismantle them. According to him, the campaign is intended to encourage organisations and leaders to evaluate how leadership opportunities are distributed and how systemic barriers can be addressed.
Anuja Trivedi, Chief Strategy and Marketing Officer at Shemaroo Entertainment, said that as a brand reaching millions of viewers, it becomes important to engage with conversations that matter. She noted that storytelling has the ability to simplify complex realities and create awareness around issues that often remain overlooked.
“The Glass Ceiling is not just a Women’s Day message but also an invitation to reflect on how leadership ecosystems function. Equity must extend beyond participation. It must ensure progression,” Trivedi said, adding that the campaign aims to promote awareness, dialogue and a more conscious approach to building workplaces where merit has an equal opportunity to rise.
With this initiative, Shemaroo continues to position itself as a brand that goes beyond entertainment by using storytelling to question established norms and engage in conversations around social change and workplace equity.
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