Ramya Chandrasekaran's avatarPerson

Ramya Chandrasekaran

Chief Communications OfficerQI Group

Singapore

Skills

Marketing Communications
Cross-Functional Team Leadership

About

Ramya Chandrasekaran is the Chief Communications Officer of the QI Group, where she leads global reputation strategy, brand storytelling, and stakeholder engagement. An award-winning communications leader with more than two decades of international experience, she has been recognized by Provoke Media’s Innovator 25 Asia Pacific and Reputation Today’s Global 20 Indians in Communications. Passionate about the intersection of sustainability, technology, and storytelling, Ramya has pioneered the use of AI in communications to boost efficiency and creativity. She also serves as an Associate Director on the Board of QI Group, where she champions sustainability initiatives that align business growth with social impact. Ramya frequently represents the QI Group at high-profile global platforms, including the World Economic Forum’s events around the world, such as the Annual Meeting in Davos. Having lived and worked in multiple countries, she brings a deep understanding of cross-cultural dynamics to her leadership. Her mission is to reshape the future of communications by blending authenticity with bold, innovative storytelling that resonates across emerging markets.

Published content

Regional Resonance: How CMOs Can Build Authentic Global Campaigns

expert panel

When a global brand stumbles in a new market, it’s often not because the product doesn’t translate well, but because the marketing doesn’t. Messaging that feels familiar and persuasive in one market can fall flat in another if it reflects assumptions instead of understanding.  CMOs are often pressured to move fast, but sacrificing sensitivity in the interests of speed can derail multinational campaigns at digital speed. Surface-level localization may help a campaign look tailored, but the audience may find it irrelevant or disrespectful. Cultural missteps produce the worst kind of viral headlines; even worse, they erode trust with the very communities brands are trying to win over.  Successful global branding requires the discipline to build processes that bring local perspective into campaign development early enough to shape the message before it goes live. So how can marketing leaders expand their reach without flattening cultural nuance, wandering into reputation-damaging mistakes, or completely reinventing the brand for every region? Below, members of the Senior Executive CMO Think Tank share their insights on how CMOs can create campaigns that connect more authentically in unfamiliar regions and put the right safeguards in place before small misunderstandings become big problems.

What Real Brand Authority Looks Like—And How to Build It

expert panel

Trust is hard to earn and easy to lose; the same is true of brand authority. It can't be purchased with a bigger ad budget or manufactured through a clever campaign. The brands that earn it do so by being consistently useful, credible and clear about what they stand for.  Buyers today are flooded with claims for their attention, and they’re savvy. They’ll simply tune out generic, promotional brand messaging that shows no understanding of their real needs. Conversely, a coherent narrative backed by genuine expertise and validated by real outcomes becomes something customers actively seek out. A brand that masters that kind of messaging shifts from just another seller to a trusted resource and, eventually, to the obvious choice. So what questions do businesses need to ask and answer about themselves, and how can they build brand authority systematically rather than accidentally? And how do the pieces—narrative clarity, a distinctive value proposition, subject matter expertise and proof points—fit together into a winning strategy that compounds over time? Below, members of the Senior Executive CMO Think Tank discuss what this kind of disciplined approach to brand building looks like in practice, sharing their expertise in establishing the kind of authority that customers trust and actively seek out.

Why Automation Amplifies Marketing Problems—and How to Get It Right

expert panel

Automation has a way of making marketing systems look busy—and therefore, healthy. Dashboards fill up, campaigns launch on schedule and follow-up happens at machine speed, creating the impression that marketing teams are becoming more efficient and effective.  But activity isn’t the same as results. For a growing number of marketing organizations, automation has become a way to run faster in the wrong direction. Automation doesn’t fix fuzzy underlying strategies, scattered data or poorly defined handoffs between marketing, sales and product teams. It just moves them out of sight. A workflow that runs smoothly isn’t necessarily a workflow that works. Further, tool sprawl can leave teams struggling to manage and achieve ROI from an ever-growing, unchecked tech stack.  That’s the uncomfortable reality many CMOs are grappling with right now. The proliferation of martech tools has made it easier than ever to automate nearly every touchpoint in the customer journey, yet in too many cases, revenue stalls, churn climbs and teams struggle to explain how—or if—automation is making a positive difference. The real job, then, isn’t just adopting better tools. It’s figuring out what the underlying problem is and whether technology will merely simply help a flawed process fail more elegantly. Members of the Senior Executive CMO Think Tank—a curated group of marketing leaders with deep expertise in digital advertising and technology’s growing role in marketing—have been at the forefront of the AI revolution. Here, they break down the process flaws automation most commonly conceals and share practical diagnostics to help CMOs build on solid ground before adding more speed.

What AI Does Well In Marketing—And What Humans Still Do Better

expert panel

Marketing has always been part science, part art. Increasingly, AI is bringing the science: It can process data at a speed and scale no human analyst can match, instantly spotting patterns across channels and audiences. AI is proving its value by helping teams process more data, identify patterns faster and move from raw information to action with far less manual effort. But effective marketing demands more—context, empathy and the kind of nuanced decision-making that comes from lived human experience.  The question CMOs are wrestling with isn’t whether to adopt AI; most already have or are planning to do so. It’s how to deploy it in ways that genuinely sharpen performance without hollowing out the human judgment that makes marketing resonate. CMOs who get the division of labor right won’t be those who automate the most. Rather, they’ll be the ones who design teams and workflows that leverage the unique strengths of both technology teams and human beings. The members of the Senior Executive CMO Think Tank share deep expertise in brand storytelling, digital advertising, customer engagement and the rise of AI in marketing. Below, several of them share their perspectives on where AI delivers its greatest value and where human judgment remains irreplaceable—and how CMOs can architect ways of working that bring out the best of both.

Company details

QI Group

Company bio

The QI Group is a purpose-driven multinational conglomerate in the consumer industries with businesses across education, wellness, lifestyle, hospitality, and luxury. Headquartered in Hong Kong, the Group operates in multiple markets across Asia, Africa, the Middle East, and Europe through a portfolio of wholly owned businesses and partnerships.

Industry

Consumer Goods

Area of focus

Retail
Education
E-Commerce

Company size

501 - 1,000