India’s video ecosystem is rapidly transforming as short-form platforms like Instagram Reels and YouTube Shorts rise in popularity alongside traditional television. These formats are redefining digital culture while drawing substantial advertising investments. Though TV continues to command widespread household reach, advertisers are increasingly embracing platform-agnostic strategies to connect with younger, digital-first audiences across diverse video formats.
India’s video economy is undergoing a dramatic transformation. While television continues to dominate household reach, short-form video has exploded into the mainstream, reshaping viewing habits, advertising strategies, and cultural trends. Nearly every internet user in the country now watches short videos daily, forcing advertisers, broadcasters, and platforms to adapt as consumer attention splinters across multiple screens.
Five years after TikTok’s exit from India, Instagram Reels and YouTube Shorts have become central to this shift. These platforms are no longer just sources of entertainment but key engines of digital culture and commerce. A Meta-commissioned IPSOS study of 3,500 respondents across 33 Indian cities found that 97% watch short videos at least once a day, signalling just how embedded the format has become in daily life. Among them, Reels leads the category with 92% of respondents identifying it as their preferred platform and 95% saying they watch it daily. Its strongest traction is seen among Gen Z and affluent urban audiences, making it a natural playground for fashion, music, beauty, and meme culture.
YouTube, however, is taking a different approach by positioning itself as India’s “new TV.” At its Brandcast 2025 event, the company revealed that Shorts now reaches more than 650 million logged-in viewers in India each month, while its Connected TV audience has crossed 75 million people aged 18 and above. This growth underscores YouTube’s unique advantage: it combines short-form discovery with long-form immersion, often on the big screen in living rooms. A survey by consultancy MTM reinforced this trend, noting that 87% of Indian respondents use YouTube daily, compared with 69% for other online platforms and just 28% for television or video-on-demand.
With both Reels and YouTube commanding such massive daily engagement, advertisers are being forced to recalibrate. Planning is no longer TV-first but increasingly platform-agnostic, with campaigns spanning short- and long-form video to reach fragmented, digital-native audiences. Younger consumers in particular are driving this shift, rewarding brands that invest in interactive, creator-led content over static advertisements.
To capture a larger slice of advertising budgets, platforms are expanding their offerings. YouTube is rolling out cinematic ad formats for Connected TV, rural-urban targeting, and deeper creator integration through Google Ads. Meta, meanwhile, is doubling down on Reels with category-led campaigns across fashion, beauty, and entertainment, ensuring that brands can align themselves with cultural trends that unfold daily on its platforms. The message is clear: video is no longer just about reach—it is about resonance.
Yet, even as digital platforms gain ground, linear television continues to hold its place in India’s complex video ecosystem. For advertisers, television remains a powerful medium for mass visibility and high-impact storytelling, particularly in rural and semi-urban households where internet penetration is uneven. Earlier this year, Zee Entertainment commissioned a neuro-analytical study with neuroscience partners and consultancy 5th Dimension. The study found that television advertising outperforms user-generated content and social media in terms of attentiveness and engagement, with viewers showing higher comprehension and purchase intent. These findings reinforce television’s role as a trusted and influential medium, even as short-form platforms dominate urban, youth-centric segments.
The result is not a simple story of digital replacing traditional media but the emergence of a dual-screen reality. On one side, television continues to offer scale, trust, and shared family experiences. On the other, short-form platforms like Instagram and YouTube provide personalised, interactive, and highly engaging experiences that shape consumer trends in real time. Advertisers increasingly need to balance these forces, designing campaigns that can travel seamlessly across 30-second TV spots, immersive YouTube videos, and snappy six-second Reels.
As India’s digital economy matures, this competition for attention will only intensify. Short-form video has already become a daily ritual for hundreds of millions, influencing not just entertainment choices but also shopping behaviour, music consumption, and fashion trends. At the same time, television continues to anchor collective viewing, offering unmatched credibility and emotional impact.
The future of India’s video economy lies not in choosing one over the other but in recognising their complementary strengths. The most successful platforms and advertisers will be those that master the art of storytelling across formats, ensuring that whether on the living room television or the swipe of a reel, consumers remain engaged, inspired, and ready to act.
FAQs
1. Why are short-form video platforms like Instagram Reels and YouTube Shorts so popular in India?Short-form videos offer quick, engaging, and easily shareable content. They align with Gen Z and millennials’ fast-paced digital habits, making them central to entertainment and discovery.
2. How is YouTube positioning itself differently from Instagram Reels?While Reels focuses on cultural trends and daily engagement, YouTube combines Shorts with long-form videos and Connected TV, positioning itself as India’s “new TV.”
3. Does traditional television still matter in the age of short-form videos?Yes. Television continues to dominate household reach, especially in rural and semi-urban areas, and studies show TV ads drive higher comprehension and purchase intent.
4. How are advertisers adapting to the split between TV and digital platforms?Advertisers are moving toward platform-agnostic strategies, creating campaigns that can run across TV, YouTube, and Reels to maximise reach and engagement.
5. What role does short-form content play in shaping consumer behaviour?Short videos influence trends in fashion, music, and shopping by offering instant discovery. They also boost impulse purchases and brand engagement among younger audiences.
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