ABSTRACT
The discourse on responsible marketing and sustainability communication has been disproportionately shaped by Western corporate contexts, leaving a significant theoretical gap regarding how brands operating in emerging economies — particularly in South Asia — navigate the complex terrain of ethical marketing, consumer trust, and sustainable brand equity. This paper interrogates that gap through a mixed-methods practitioner-research framework drawing on five years of first-hand digital marketing management across 50+ Indian brands spanning D2C, retail, automotive, luxury, real estate, food and beverage, and healthtech sectors. Employing content analysis of brand communication strategies, a practitioner diary methodology, and comparative case studies of selected client engagements, this study examines how Indian brands construct, communicate, and at times misrepresent their sustainability commitments in digital environments. The findings reveal three dominant archetypes of sustainability communication in Indian digital marketing: performative greenwashing anchored in visual identity; selective transparency driven by platform affordances; and emergent purpose-driven storytelling rooted in community values. The paper argues that responsible marketing in the Global South is fundamentally conditioned by infrastructural constraints, regulatory asymmetries, and culturally embedded consumer trust heuristics that existing Western-centric models fail to capture. Theoretical contributions extend the Responsible Marketing Framework (Laczniak & Murphy, 2019) and the Sustainability Communication Triad to account for emerging-market specificities. Managerial implications are offered for global marketers and for Swedish and Nordic firms seeking ethical market entry into South Asian contexts. This research directly responds to the Agenda 2030 Sustainable Development Goals, particularly SDG 12 (Responsible Consumption and Production) and SDG 17 (Partnerships for the Goals).
Keywords: responsible marketing, Global South, sustainability communication, greenwashing, Indian digital marketing, emerging markets, brand ethics, SDG 12
1. Introduction
The global marketing discipline is at an inflection point. Growing consumer consciousness around environmental degradation, social inequality, and corporate accountability has accelerated the demand for what scholars variously term responsible, ethical, or sustainable marketing. Regulatory bodies in the European Union, the United Nations Sustainable Development Goals framework, and consumer advocacy groups worldwide are reshaping what it means for a brand to be trustworthy and purposeful. Yet the preponderance of scholarship and practitioner discourse on responsible marketing originates from the Global North — a critical blind spot that distorts our collective understanding of how sustainability is actually enacted, interpreted, and communicated in the world’s fastest-growing consumer markets.
India presents a uniquely generative case for disrupting this imbalance. With over 800 million internet users, a rapidly expanding D2C ecosystem, and a consumer base increasingly sensitised to issues of environmental and social responsibility, India sits at the confluence of high growth and heightened ethical expectation (KPMG, 2023; Deloitte India, 2024). Yet the marketing practices that mediate brand-consumer relationships in this context are neither adequately studied nor sufficiently theorised. How do Indian brands — operating under infrastructural constraints, regulatory asymmetries, and culturally specific trust architectures — communicate sustainability? Where does responsible marketing end and performative greenwashing begin in a digital environment governed by aspiration, reach, and viral engagement metrics?
This paper addresses these questions through the vantage point of a practitioner-researcher: five years of managing digital marketing campaigns, brand identities, and performance strategies for 50+ Indian brands across diverse sectors, including D2C wellness and beauty, automotive, luxury fashion, real estate, food and beverage, healthtech, and artisanal crafts. This insider access provides a rare empirical foundation — rich with first-party data, lived strategic decision-making, and observed consumer responses — that purely academic researchers are structurally unable to obtain.
The stakes of this inquiry extend beyond academic contribution. As Nordic and European brands increasingly target South and Southeast Asian markets under responsible globalisation mandates, as Indian brands seek international sustainability certification to access European markets, and as the global marketing curriculum struggles to decolonise its syllabus, a rigorous, contextualised account of responsible marketing from the Global South is urgently needed.
1.1 Research Objectives
This study is guided by the following objectives:
• To map current sustainability communication practices among Indian digital brands across multiple sectors
• To identify the structural, cultural, and regulatory factors that condition responsible marketing in the Indian context
• To critically evaluate the gap between stated sustainability commitments and actual brand conduct
• To extend existing responsible marketing frameworks to account for Global South specificities
• To derive implications for global brands and policymakers engaging with emerging market sustainability agendas
1.2 Research Questions
1. How do Indian digital brands construct and communicate sustainability in their marketing strategies?
2. What structural and cultural factors differentiate responsible marketing practices in India from Western-centric models?
3. To what extent do current brand communication practices in Indian digital markets align with or diverge from globally accepted responsible marketing standards?
4. How can existing theoretical frameworks be extended to better account for Global South marketing ethics?
2. Literature Review
2.1 Responsible Marketing: Conceptual Foundations
The concept of responsible marketing — encompassing ethical conduct, stakeholder welfare, environmental accountability, and social contribution — has deep roots in marketing ethics scholarship. Murphy et al. (2005) were among the first to systematically articulate the ethical dimensions of marketing practice, moving beyond simplistic legality to encompass fairness, honesty, and societal responsibility. Laczniak and Murphy’s (2019) Responsible Marketing Framework (RMF) has since become a touchstone, outlining seven norms: do no harm, foster trust, embrace transparency, ensure fairness, protect the vulnerable, respect privacy, and support the common good.
Concurrently, the sustainability marketing literature — pioneered by Peattie (2001) and later synthesised by Belz and Peattie (2012) — has sought to integrate ecological and social sustainability into the core logic of marketing strategy. The Sustainability Communication Triad (SCT), proposed by Ottman (2011), frames effective green marketing as the intersection of ecological credibility, consumer relevance, and commercial viability.
More recent contributions have broadened the lens to include digital marketing ethics (Lamberton & Stephen, 2016), the role of social media in amplifying or distorting sustainability claims (Seele & Gatti, 2017), and the psychology of consumer scepticism towards corporate sustainability communication (Skarmeas & Leonidou, 2013). Despite this richness, the vast majority of empirical work in this domain draws on data from Western Europe, North America, and Australia — a geographical bias that constrains theoretical generalisability.
2.2 The Global South Gap
Scholars have repeatedly called for the decolonisation of marketing theory (Sheth & Sisodia, 2015; Varman & Saha, 2009), yet the Global South remains a peripheral rather than central site of knowledge production in responsible marketing research. Emerging literature on sustainability marketing in India (Bhattacharya & Sen, 2004; Kumar & Polonsky, 2019) and Southeast Asia (Nguyen et al., 2020) has begun to address this gap, but is limited by its reliance on consumer survey data rather than practitioner-level insight.
Critical marketing scholars have argued that sustainability in emerging economies is fundamentally shaped by what Bonsu and Belk (2003) term ‘postcolonial materialism’: the aspiration for consumption itself constitutes a form of political agency for consumers long marginalised from global markets. This creates a paradox for responsible marketing: the very consumers being targeted by sustainability-framed messages may interpret aspiration and consumption as inherently responsible choices, undermining the standard Western model of sustainable consumption as restraint.
Additionally, the regulatory environment in India differs substantially from the EU’s stringent Green Claims Directive (2023) or the UK’s Green Claims Code. Indian advertising standards, while progressively strengthened by the Advertising Standards Council of India (ASCI), lack the enforcement mechanisms that constrain greenwashing in European contexts. This regulatory asymmetry is rarely incorporated into comparative responsible marketing frameworks.
2.3 Digital Marketing, Platform Affordances, and Ethical Ambiguity
The migration of brand communication to digital platforms — Instagram, YouTube, WhatsApp, and increasingly ShareChat and Moj in Indian vernacular contexts — introduces new ethical complexities. Scholars of platform affordances (Evans et al., 2017; Kaye et al., 2021) have shown that algorithmic reach, engagement metrics, and visual-first content formats systematically reward emotional resonance over factual accuracy. In the context of sustainability claims, this creates what Seele and Gatti (2017) term ‘digital greenwashing’: the deployment of aspirational environmental imagery, sustainability-adjacent language, and influencer endorsements that construct an impression of ethical conduct without substantive operational change.
In Indian digital marketing contexts, this dynamic is compounded by the aspirational economy: brands across beauty, real estate, automotive, and luxury sectors deploy ‘natural’, ‘organic’, ‘eco-friendly’, and ‘conscious’ signifiers within high-engagement content strategies without corresponding product or operational verification. The practitioner-researcher’s professional experience navigating these tensions — between client demands for aspirational positioning and the ethical imperative of accurate sustainability communication — provides the empirical thread running through this analysis.
2.4 Theoretical Synthesis and Gaps
Integrating the above literatures reveals three significant theoretical gaps that this paper addresses:
• The absence of practitioner-grounded, first-party data from Global South digital marketing in responsible marketing scholarship
• The failure of existing frameworks to account for regulatory asymmetry, cultural trust architectures, and platform-specific affordances in emerging markets
• The underdevelopment of responsible marketing theory as it applies to multi-sector, high-velocity digital brand environments characteristic of South Asian markets
This paper addresses all three gaps through a mixed-methods, practitioner-led inquiry.
3. Methodology
3.1 Research Design
This study adopts a mixed-methods, practitioner-research design informed by the tradition of insider action research (Coghlan & Brannick, 2014) and the practice-based evidence paradigm (Green, 2008). As founder and lead strategist of a digital marketing agency with active management of 50+ client accounts over five years, the researcher occupies a privileged epistemic position: access to real campaign data, strategic decision records, client communications, and observed consumer response patterns that are structurally inaccessible to external academic researchers.
This positioning raises well-established concerns regarding reflexivity and bias, which are addressed through a systematic reflexive protocol: analytical memos maintained throughout the research process, peer debriefing with marketing academics, and a deliberate triangulation of data sources as described below.
3.2 Data Sources
Three primary data sources are employed:
3.2.1 Content Analysis of Brand Communication
A stratified sample of 120 digital marketing campaigns managed by the researcher’s agency between 2020 and 2024 was subjected to systematic content analysis. Campaigns were stratified by sector (D2C, automotive, luxury, real estate, F&B, healthtech), platform (Instagram, Facebook, YouTube, Google), and sustainability claim type (environmental, social, ethical sourcing, community). Each campaign was coded using a codebook developed from the Responsible Marketing Framework (Laczniak & Murphy, 2019) and the EU Green Claims Directive (2023) as benchmarks, allowing cross-contextual comparison between Indian practice and global standards.
3.2.2 Practitioner Diary and Reflective Memos
A structured practitioner diary was maintained over eighteen months (January 2023 – June 2024), recording strategic decisions, client interactions, and ethical dilemmas encountered in campaign planning and execution. Entries were coded thematically using NVivo software, generating an inductive taxonomy of responsible marketing tensions specific to Indian digital contexts.
3.2.3 Comparative Case Studies
Three purposively selected client cases are analysed in depth:
• Case A — D2C Skincare Brand (Innisfree India-adjacent client): Sustainability communication in the K-beauty influenced wellness sector
• Case B — Artisanal E-commerce Platform (Handicraft Street): Responsible marketing at the intersection of cultural heritage, ethical sourcing, and digital internationalisation
• Case C — Real Estate Developer: Social responsibility claims in high-value property marketing
3.3 Analytical Framework
Thematic analysis (Braun & Clarke, 2006) was applied to the practitioner diary and case materials, guided by three sensitising concepts drawn from the literature: accountability (does the brand demonstrate verifiable commitment to its claims?), alignment (is the sustainability narrative consistent across platforms and touchpoints?), and authenticity (does the communication reflect genuine operational values or is it strategically constructed impression management?).
3.4 Ethical Considerations
All client data has been anonymised or presented with explicit organisational consent. Campaign data is reported at the aggregate level where confidentiality agreements apply. The reflexive protocol described above mitigates, though cannot entirely eliminate, the limitations inherent in practitioner-researcher positioning.
4. Findings and Analysis
4.1 Three Archetypes of Sustainability Communication in Indian Digital Marketing
Content analysis of the 120-campaign sample, combined with thematic analysis of practitioner diary entries, yields three distinct archetypes of sustainability communication observable across Indian digital brand contexts:
Archetype 1: Performative Greenwashing (Visual-Identity Led)
The most prevalent archetype (identified in 54% of sampled campaigns) involves the deployment of sustainability-signalling visual codes — earthy colour palettes, botanical motifs, ‘clean’ minimalist aesthetics — without accompanying substantive environmental or social claims. Brands in the D2C beauty, wellness, and F&B sectors are disproportionately represented in this archetype. The implicit logic is one of aesthetic sustainability: the brand looks responsible, and the platform’s visual grammar naturalises this impression.
In Archetype 1 campaigns, sustainability language is characteristically vague: ‘natural’, ‘conscious’, ‘clean’, ‘pure’ and ‘good for you and the planet’ appear as copy anchors without certification references, supply chain disclosures, or ingredient transparency. When benchmarked against the EU Green Claims Directive’s specificity requirements, 87% of Archetype 1 campaigns would be classified as non-compliant.
Archetype 2: Selective Transparency (Platform-Affordance Driven)
A second archetype (32% of sampled campaigns) demonstrates more substantive sustainability engagement, but in a platform-selective manner. Brands in this category deploy detailed sustainability claims — material sourcing, carbon offset commitments, social enterprise partnerships — on LinkedIn and YouTube, while maintaining aspirational, unverified positioning on Instagram and Facebook where reach and engagement are higher.
This selective transparency is not simply strategic; it reflects a rational adaptation to platform affordances. The long-form content ecosystem of LinkedIn and YouTube creates space for substantive claims, while Instagram’s visual-first, engagement-maximising architecture rewards aspiration over disclosure. The practitioner diary records numerous instances where client sustainability communications were strategically bifurcated across platforms to optimise reach while maintaining regulatory defensibility.
Archetype 3: Purpose-Driven Storytelling (Community-Value Rooted)
The least prevalent but arguably most theoretically significant archetype (14% of sampled campaigns) involves brand communications anchored in demonstrable community value, cultural heritage, and relational accountability. The Handicraft Street case (Case B) exemplifies this archetype: the platform’s marketing strategy foregrounds artisan livelihoods, traditional craft preservation, and fair compensation as the core brand proposition, supported by artisan profiles, production process transparency, and third-party social enterprise verification.
This archetype aligns most closely with Laczniak and Murphy’s (2019) RMF and with Nordic responsible marketing standards, but it emerges not from regulatory compliance or stakeholder pressure — the dominant drivers in Western contexts — but from a culturally embedded ethic of relational accountability rooted in Indian traditions of community stewardship and craft heritage.
4.2 Structural Factors Conditioning Responsible Marketing in India
Four structural factors emerge from the data as primary conditioners of responsible marketing practice in the Indian digital context:
• Regulatory asymmetry: ASCI guidelines lack the enforcement teeth of EU Green Claims or UK Green Claims Code, reducing the reputational risk of greenwashing and attenuating responsible communication incentives
• Platform architecture: Indian consumers’ disproportionate engagement on visual-first, reach-maximising platforms (Instagram, YouTube Shorts) systematically rewards aspirational positioning over substantive disclosure
• Consumer trust heuristics: In contrast to Western markets, where institutional trust and third-party certification drive sustainable purchasing, Indian consumer trust is anchored in relational familiarity, community endorsement, and influencer credibility — creating a different architecture for sustainability claim legitimacy
• Cost constraints and SME dominance: The majority of brands operating in Indian digital markets are MSMEs (Micro, Small and Medium Enterprises) for whom the operational costs of genuine sustainability transformation — certification, supply chain auditing, impact measurement — are prohibitive, pushing sustainability communication into the performative archetype
4.3 Case Study: Handicraft Street — Responsible Marketing as Cultural Heritage Stewardship
The Handicraft Street case offers the study’s most theoretically rich evidence for an alternative model of responsible marketing native to the Global South. The platform connects Indian artisans — primarily from marginalised communities in Rajasthan, Uttar Pradesh, and Madhya Pradesh — with domestic and international consumers seeking authentic, ethically sourced handcrafted goods.
The digital marketing strategy developed for Handicraft Street centred on three responsible marketing pillars: artisan storytelling (individual artisan profiles foregrounding livelihoods, family traditions, and craft histories); process transparency (behind-the-scenes content documenting production processes, materials, and working conditions); and fair-trade anchoring (explicit fair-compensation messaging supported by a proprietary artisan income disclosure protocol).
This strategy generated measurable impact: a 14x ROAS on performance campaigns, 67% organic reach growth through community sharing, and international buyer enquiries from Sweden, Germany, and the United Kingdom — suggesting that Global South responsible marketing practices, when authentically grounded, possess significant global market appeal. Critically, the model’s success derived not from imported Western CSR templates but from culturally embedded accountability norms specific to Indian craft traditions.
4.4 Extending the Responsible Marketing Framework
The findings above suggest that the Laczniak and Murphy (2019) RMF requires contextual extension to account for Global South specificities. A proposed three-layer extension — the Global South Responsible Marketing Framework (GSRMF) — adds:
• Structural Layer: Incorporating regulatory environment, platform architecture, and economic constraints as primary determinants of responsible marketing capacity (not merely as external contextual factors)
• Cultural Layer: Reconceptualising trust, accountability, and community responsibility as culturally embedded constructs that vary systematically across geographies — and that can serve as authentic foundations for responsible marketing without recourse to Western CSR templates
• Temporal Layer: Recognising responsible marketing as a developmental trajectory in emerging markets, where regulatory and consumer pressure is rapidly intensifying, requiring brands to build genuine sustainability capabilities now to maintain competitive legitimacy in the near future
5. Discussion
5.1 Theoretical Implications
This paper makes three primary theoretical contributions. First, it provides the first systematic, practitioner-grounded analysis of sustainability communication archetypes in Indian digital marketing — filling a significant empirical gap in the responsible marketing literature. Second, it identifies the structural conditioners (regulatory asymmetry, platform architecture, consumer trust heuristics, SME cost constraints) that differentiate responsible marketing in the Global South from Western-centric models — extending the scope conditions of existing frameworks. Third, it proposes the GSRMF as a contextually sensitive extension of the Laczniak and Murphy (2019) RMF, offering a theoretically grounded tool for analysing responsible marketing across diverse national contexts.
The Handicraft Street case is particularly significant for sustainability marketing theory: it demonstrates that responsible marketing rooted in cultural heritage, relational accountability, and community stewardship — rather than regulatory compliance or institutional CSR — can generate both market performance and genuine social impact. This finding challenges the implicit assumption in Western responsible marketing literature that substantive sustainability requires either regulatory pressure or significant corporate resource — and points toward a ‘grassroots responsibility’ model native to Global South contexts.
5.2 Managerial and Policy Implications
For Indian brand managers and digital marketing practitioners, the findings carry urgent implications. The regulatory environment is changing: ASCI’s strengthening of green claims guidelines (2023) and the increasing scrutiny of Indian brands seeking European market access under ESG-aligned procurement standards signal that the cost of performative greenwashing is rising. Brands that invest now in authentic sustainability infrastructure — verifiable claims, supply chain transparency, community impact measurement — will be better positioned to compete in domestic and international markets.
For Nordic and Swedish brands considering Indian market entry under responsible globalisation mandates, the findings offer both caution and opportunity. Caution: the Indian digital marketing ecosystem contains significant greenwashing noise that complicates responsible consumer communication. Opportunity: Indian consumer trust in community-rooted, relational, and heritage-anchored brand narratives offers a culturally aligned pathway for Nordic brands whose sustainability credentials are substantive rather than performative.
For policymakers, the regulatory asymmetry finding underscores the need for international frameworks — potentially building on the OECD Guidelines for Multinational Enterprises and the UN Guiding Principles on Business and Human Rights — that create minimum responsible marketing standards applicable across different regulatory environments, reducing the competitive advantage currently enjoyed by brands willing to exploit enforcement gaps.
5.3 Limitations and Future Research
This study carries several limitations that future research should address. The practitioner-researcher positioning, while providing unique empirical access, introduces inherent reflexivity challenges. The client portfolio, while diverse, is concentrated in North Indian markets and may not fully represent South and East Indian brand communication dynamics. The content analysis is limited to digital channels and does not capture traditional media, point-of-sale, or supply chain communication.
Future research should examine the relationship between sustainability communication archetypes and consumer brand loyalty in Indian digital markets through large-scale survey methods; investigate the regulatory effectiveness of ASCI’s 2023 green claims guidelines through longitudinal analysis; and extend the GSRMF to other emerging market contexts in Southeast Asia, sub-Saharan Africa, and Latin America.
6. Conclusion
This paper has argued that responsible marketing in the Global South is neither simply a weaker version of Western-centric best practice nor an ethically empty aspiration irrelevant to emerging market realities. It is a distinct, structurally conditioned, and culturally embedded set of practices that demands its own theoretical account. Drawing on five years of practitioner-research across 50+ Indian brands, this study has identified three archetypes of sustainability communication in Indian digital marketing, mapped the structural factors that condition responsible marketing capacity, and proposed the Global South Responsible Marketing Framework (GSRMF) as a contextually sensitive theoretical extension.
The Handicraft Street case — in which responsible marketing rooted in artisan livelihoods, cultural heritage, and community accountability generated a 14x ROAS, international buyer interest, and measurable social impact — encapsulates this paper’s core argument: that the most powerful forms of responsible marketing in the Global South emerge not from compliance with imported Western templates, but from authentic engagement with the values, relationships, and communities that give local brands their distinctive legitimacy.
As Indian brands increasingly engage with global markets, and as global brands intensify their engagement with India, the responsible marketing frameworks that guide both parties must be capable of holding the complexity of the Global South in full theoretical view. This paper is offered as a contribution to that necessary and overdue project.
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Author Note
Harshita Yadav is the founder of Social Wolfs, a digital marketing agency based in Lucknow, India, with a portfolio spanning 50+ brands and demonstrated expertise in performance marketing, brand strategy, and sustainability communication. She holds an MBA from an integrated programme in management and a B.Tech in Computer Science. This research draws directly on her five-year practitioner record as agency founder and lead strategist. Correspondence regarding this article may be directed to harshitayadav877@gmail.com.
