Quick commerce platform Zepto is leaning deeper into experiential marketing and nostalgia-led storytelling with its latest offline activation, Nani Ka Ghar, an immersive summer-themed experience designed around childhood memories, family rituals and emotional familiarity.
The event, announced through a LinkedIn post by Zepto’s Chief Brand and Culture Officer Chandan Mendiratta, quickly grabbed attention online after he described it as “Zepto’s most nostalgic event ever by far.”
Built around the emotional memory of Indian summer vacations at grandparents’ homes, the activation attempts to recreate a cultural moment that instantly resonates across generations. In its announcement, Zepto described the experience as one celebrating “the warmth, nostalgia, and little moments we’ve all grown up with.”
The event is being organised in collaboration with brands including Perfetti Van Melle, Britannia Industries, Hocco, Let’s Try and Sweet Karam Coffee, and is scheduled to take place in Mumbai on May 24.
The campaign draws heavily from emotional cues that defined Indian childhood summers — snacks waiting at nani’s home, toys bought without reason, relaxed afternoons and food-led bonding moments. “Remember how excited we used to get for summer trips to Nani Ka Ghar?” the brand wrote in its announcement.
The activation is the latest example of Zepto increasingly positioning itself not just as a delivery platform, but as a culturally active consumer brand attempting to own moments, moods and memories beyond convenience commerce.
Over the past few months, the company has consistently experimented with experience-led marketing campaigns that blur the lines between digital commerce, community culture and offline engagement. From mango-themed “Mango Paglu Party” events to nostalgia-driven collaborations with food and lifestyle brands, Zepto has been building campaigns designed for social participation as much as product discovery.
For Zepto, nostalgia appears to be becoming a powerful cultural shortcut. The company’s recent communication strategy repeatedly taps into emotionally familiar Indian experiences such as school tiffins, summer mangoes, neighborhood food memories and family rituals, turning everyday cultural moments into high-engagement brand narratives.






