Prolicious has launched a new campaign centred around protein enrichment in regular Indian diets, positioning its products as an alternative to conventional diet trends, supplements and meal replacement formats. The campaign, launched on International No Diet Day, focuses on integrating protein and fibre into familiar Indian foods without requiring major dietary changes.
The direct to consumer food brand is targeting consumers looking for easier ways to improve nutrition within everyday eating habits. The company’s core positioning revolves around the idea of “Don’t change your habits. Upgrade them,” focusing on improving the nutritional value of familiar Indian meals instead of promoting restrictive diet changes.
As part of the campaign #UpgradeYourselfWithProlicious, the company has released a brand film featuring an animated character called the ‘Prolicious Bestie’, which appears across everyday household meal situations.. The campaign uses humour and simplified storytelling to communicate the idea of nutritional upgrades without changing food routines or taste preferences.
The brand’s positioning comes at a time when interest in protein consumption, functional foods and preventive health has increased among Indian consumers. Food and nutrition startups are increasingly moving beyond fitness focused audiences and targeting mainstream households with products designed around convenience and familiar eating habits.
According to the company, the idea for Prolicious emerged from founder Prakash Chawla’s personal health experience after being diagnosed as pre diabetic. The company said this led to experimentation around increasing protein intake through everyday foods rather than supplements or restrictive diets.
Commenting on the film, Juhi Singh, Chief Business Officer (CBO), Prolicious, said, “The category has largely approached nutrition through supplement-led habits that don’t always stick. With Prolicious, we’re taking a simpler route, upgrading the food people already eat. Launching on International No Diet Day is a deliberate choice. We are not a diet brand. Better nutrition shouldn’t come from giving things up; it should come from making everyday meals work harder.”






