Most brands treat accessibility like an add-on. Titan Company Limited decided to build an entire campaign around it.
Created exclusively for the IPL’s Indian Sign Language feed, Titan’s ‘Sign Of You’ does something advertising rarely attempts, it makes sign language the emotional centre of the narrative instead of simply translating an existing ad. And that distinction is exactly why the campaign stands out this week.
The film doesn’t rely on dramatic speeches, loud background scores, or celebrity-led spectacle. Instead, it slows down and observes small, deeply human moments through the life of its protagonist, Misha. Every gesture, pause, expression, and sign becomes part of the storytelling language. The result feels intimate rather than performative.
What makes the campaign especially powerful is that it wasn’t retrofitted for accessibility later. It was designed for the ISL feed from the ground up. In an IPL season dominated by noise, data, fandom wars, and high-energy edits, Titan chose silence, emotion, and human connection and that creative contrast immediately grabs attention.
The larger ambition behind the campaign is equally significant. Bringing together seven Titan brands including Titan Watches, Tanishq, CaratLane, Titan Eye+ and others ‘Sign Of You’ creates a shared emotional universe instead of separate product-first commercials. That itself is rare in modern advertising, where brand portfolios often operate in silos.
But beyond structure, the ad succeeds because it understands something simple: inclusion works best when it feels natural. The hearing-impaired community is not shown as inspirational symbolism or emotional garnish. The characters simply exist, communicate, love, celebrate, and move through everyday life. The storytelling never asks for sympathy. It asks for attention.
Visually too, the film stays restrained. The camera lingers on hands, eye contact, movement, and expressions, reinforcing the idea that communication is much bigger than spoken words. Even the IPL placement feels smart. A property known for mass reach becomes the stage for a conversation around representation that mainstream advertising often overlooks.






