A TVC is a brand’s single best chance to own 30 seconds of someone’s attention – on a screen they didn’t choose to open, in a moment they didn’t plan for.
That’s not a production brief. That’s a creative brief. And the difference between those two things is the difference between a TVC that gets watched and one that gets ignored.
Across 10 brands and 6 industries, Heeds has delivered television commercials that earn that 30 seconds. Not by following a format. By understanding what each brand actually needs to say – and finding the sharpest, most direct way to say it on screen.
The Brands We’ve Made TVCs For
| Brand | Industry | What We Made |
|---|---|---|
| Viking | Innerwear – Men & Women | 5 TVCs, each a distinct concept |
| Vstar | Innerwear – Men & Women | TVC |
| SGR 777 | FMCG – Gingelly Oil | TVC |
| Vijay Masala | FMCG – Spices | TVC |
| Ajinorah | Education – Learning App | TVC |
| Triple i | Education – Learning App | TVC |
| Oxy Roof | Building Materials – Roofing & Wood | TVC |
| One Infra | Real Estate | TVC |
| Xiaomi | Electronics – Onam Festive Campaign | TVC |
| Tiron | Electronics – Smart Vacuum Robot | TVC |
What Each Category Actually Needs – And Why That Changes Everything
The biggest mistake in TVC production is treating all briefs the same way. A masala brand and a real estate developer are not facing the same creative challenge. Here’s how we think about each category:
FMCG – Speed, Memorability, Mass Reach
A masala or cooking oil brand has roughly 20 seconds to communicate something that a homemaker will remember the next time she’s at the store. The job is not to explain the product. The job is to make the brand name stick.
SGR 777 Gingelly Oil and Vijay Masala both operate in this space – crowded, competitive, and driven entirely by recall. Our TVCs for both were built around a single memorable proposition, not a feature list.
Innerwear – Aspiration Without Alienation
Viking came to us with an unusual brief: five TVCs, each built around a completely different creative concept. Same brand, same product range, five distinct approaches to the market.
When a client comes back five times, it’s because each execution delivered something genuinely new. This isn’t volume work – it’s creative range across a category that demands aspiration while maintaining mass market relevance.
Education (Apps) – Parental Trust Is the Real Purchase Decision
Ajinorah and Triple i are both learning apps – but the audience they need to convince isn’t the child. It’s the parent. A learning app TVC needs to earn trust, communicate outcome, and do it in a format that a parent watching evening television will actually process.
That’s a harder brief than it looks. We took it seriously.
Real Estate & Building Materials – Confidence Before Commitment
Real estate and building materials are high-consideration purchases. Nobody buys a house or a roofing solution after one TVC. But a strong TVC can be what makes a buyer add your brand to the consideration set – or take you off it.
Oxy Roof and One Infra needed TVCs that communicate quality and reliability without overcomplicating the message. Trust-building content for high-investment decisions – a fundamentally different register from FMCG.
Electronics – Product Understanding + Desire
Tiron’s smart vacuum robot was a product most of the target audience had never encountered. The brief wasn’t brand awareness – it was product introduction. Make someone understand what this is, want it, and remember the brand name in 30 seconds. That’s a harder brief than a reminder ad for an established product.
Xiaomi’s Onam festive TVC was a different challenge entirely. Festive advertising isn’t about the product. It’s about the feeling. Warmth, family, celebration, belonging. The product earns its place in that emotional world, not the other way around. Cultural fluency – not just production quality – is what makes festive TVCs work.
Our Approach: Idea First. Production Follows.
Every brand on this list operates in a different competitive environment. We don’t have a house style that we apply regardless of brief. We have a process:
- Understand the brand – not just the product, but the position, the audience, the competitive pressure
- Understand who they’re talking to – mass market, niche, regional, aspirational, functional
- Find the idea that makes the message land and stick
- Build the production around that idea – not the other way around
The best TVCs feel inevitable in retrospect. You watch them and think: of course that’s what the ad should be. Getting there requires the right creative logic before a single frame is shot.
End-to-End Delivery
All TVCs were produced concept-to-screen at Heeds – including concept development, scripting, production, and broadcast-ready final delivery.
Every asset handed over was finished, formatted, and ready for television and digital distribution. No incomplete deliverables, no post-production chasing.
Portfolio expanding. JR Metals TVC currently in production.
Work With Heeds
If you’re a brand looking for TVC production that starts with the right creative logic – not just a camera crew – we’d like to hear your brief.
Frequently Asked Questions
What industries does Heeds produce TVCs for? Heeds has produced TVCs across FMCG, innerwear, education (apps), real estate, building materials, and electronics – across both mass-market and niche brand briefs.
Does Heeds handle the full TVC production process? Yes. Heeds handles everything from concept and script development through to final broadcast-ready delivery – full concept-to-screen production.
Has Heeds worked with national brands on TVCs? Yes. Xiaomi’s Onam festive TVC campaign is among our completed work. We also have ongoing production relationships with multiple growing brands across India.
Can Heeds produce multiple TVC concepts for the same brand? Yes. Viking, one of our TVC clients, commissioned five distinct TVCs each built around a completely different creative concept – our most extensive single-brand TVC engagement to date.
What makes a TVC effective? A TVC is effective when the creative idea comes before the production format. Most TVC failures are a brief problem, not a production problem. At Heeds, we start with the message and the audience before we touch a camera.