Cracking the IPL Code: Why Superfans are the Real MVPs for Brands in 2025

As the Indian Premier League powers through another electrifying season, fresh insights from the Week 4 eDART-IPL 2025 Report by CrispInsights and Kadence International are changing the narrative around IPL advertising. While much of the marketing world remains fixated on chasing the widest possible reach, this report makes a compelling case for something different: depth over breadth. The secret weapon? The IPL Superfan.

Meet the Superfan: Small in Size, Big in Impact

Defined as the most loyal and frequent watchers of IPL, Superfans make up just 14% of the total audience. Yet, they account for a staggering 72% of single-match viewership, according to the study. These are not passive spectators — they follow every match, root passionately for their teams, and consume IPL content religiously across platforms.

What makes this segment golden for advertisers? Seventy-seven percent of Superfans were influenced by at least one brand during the tournament, with the top-performing brands achieving over 6% brand impact — double the average seen across the entire viewership base.

“The Superfan is not just watching the IPL, they’re living it,” said Ritesh Ghosal, Founder at CrispInsight. “For brands, this means the opportunity isn’t just about visibility, it’s about resonance. The right message, in the right moment, can deliver disproportionate returns with this audience.”

Not All Exposure is Equal

The report, based on 20,000+ interviews across 60+ cities, tracked over 130 brands using a robust day-after recall method. It revealed that while nearly 70% of viewers recall some brands, only a select few are actually influenced — meaning they feel curious, consider buying, or think more positively about the brand.

Among the top 100 recalled brands, only five stood out by delivering meaningful impact beyond mere recall. This reinforces a sobering truth: being seen is not the same as being remembered — or wanted.

“The message is clear: impact is earned, not bought,” said Aman Makkar of Kadence International. “Brands that integrated seamlessly into the IPL ecosystem, emotionally and contextually, were the ones that succeeded in turning Superfans into consumers.”

Context is King: Why Some Brands Win

Categories such as fantasy sports, electronics, and automobiles consistently performed well, largely due to audience interest and contextual alignment. The Superfan is especially responsive to categories that echo the thrill and competitiveness of IPL — fantasy gaming apps, tech gadgets, or sleek cars that resonate with youthful energy and aspiration.

And while men and women, as well as younger and older viewers, recall different categories, the common thread is this: Relevance drives results. Brands that appear as a natural extension of the viewing experience enjoy a far greater chance of cutting through the noise.

The Emotional Economy of the IPL

Another standout finding: 97% of IPL viewers have a favorite player, with icons like Virat Kohli, MS Dhoni, and Rohit Sharma remaining top choices. These emotional anchors present a valuable opportunity for brands to build affinity through association and storytelling.

Meanwhile, team loyalty is more fragmented — only 35% of viewers claim a favorite team — but regional attachment still matters, especially when it comes to winning local audiences.

From Audience to Advocates

The implication for marketers is profound: the IPL is no longer just a mass-reach media buy — it’s a cultural moment that offers depth of connection with the right audience.

To stand out, brands must:

IPL 2025 reaffirms a crucial advertising truth: influence isn’t bought, it’s built. And Superfans — not just viewership numbers — are the real prize.

For brands willing to move from interruptive ads to immersive storytelling, the payoff is significant. In a tournament where attention is scarce and loyalty runs deep, the path to brand success lies not in shouting louder, but in connecting smarter.

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