Founder and Managing Director Gaurav Bhagat explains how systems, procurement integration, and delivery discipline shaped the company’s performance in 2025.
For Consortium Gifts, 2025 became a year of operational recalibration rather than headline-driven expansion. As corporate gifting budgets tightened and festival-led spending patterns softened, the company’s enterprise business shifted its focus from seasonal volume to structural execution, emphasising systems, predictability, and procurement alignment.
According to Gaurav Bhagat, Founder and Managing Director, the year made one reality clear: corporate gifting had moved decisively away from transactional buying. Enterprises were no longer evaluating gifting programmes solely on price or quantity. Instead, gifting outcomes were increasingly tied to employee experience, culture-building, and relationship continuity, where relevance and usability mattered more than scale.
This shift unfolded alongside a broader contraction in discretionary festive spends, including Diwali-led programmes. While demand cycles became less predictable, enterprise expectations rose. Turnaround times shortened, personalisation requirements increased, and compliance standards hardened, particularly for organisations operating across distributed teams and centralised procurement environments.
Against this backdrop, Consortium Gifts reoriented its operating model. Rather than chasing short-term spikes, the company prioritised repeat enterprise programmes that required consistent delivery standards across geographies and timelines. This approach, according to the company, contributed to a 55 percent year-on-year growth in 2025, achieved not through higher basket sizes but through account depth and execution reliability.
A central pillar of this reset was procurement readiness. As global and Indian enterprises increasingly standardised purchasing through platforms such as Coupa and Ariba, Consortium Gifts expanded its PunchOut catalogue capabilities. These integrations allowed enterprise buyers to access curated gift selections directly within their procurement systems, maintaining policy compliance, approval workflows, and budget controls. For procurement teams, this reduced friction. For the company, it created stickiness within enterprise ecosystems where reliability outweighs novelty.
Operational discipline also became non-negotiable. The company invested in tighter CRM and ERP integration to ensure visibility across order flows, vendor coordination, fulfilment timelines, and exception handling. This systems-led approach enabled scaling without service dilution, particularly during demand surges linked to onboarding cycles, recognition programmes, and milestone-based gifting rather than calendar festivals.
Another shift in 2025 was how premium gifting was positioned. Rather than equating premium with higher cost, the company focused on brands and products that delivered higher retention and usage. In enterprise contexts, gifts that remain visible and functional over time tend to reinforce recall and brand association more effectively than high-volume, low-utility items. This reframing aligned well with clients seeking meaningful engagement under tighter budgets.
Technology played a role, but not as a surface-level differentiator. Artificial intelligence was introduced as a practical support layer rather than a marketing feature. AI tools were used to accelerate product discovery, identify emerging preference signals, and compress planning timelines during campaign development. These applications supported faster decision-making without replacing human judgment, particularly in enterprise environments where context and nuance remain critical.
Beyond external platforms, 2025 also marked the beginning of proprietary capability-building. Consortium Gifts initiated development toward an internal AI model and an application roadmap focused on visualisation, recommendation logic, and experience-led curation. The intent was to help enterprise teams preview, customise, and execute gifting programmes with greater confidence under compressed timelines.
Internally, the year prompted a leadership transition. As operations scaled, the organisation moved away from founder-centric control loops toward clearer execution frameworks. Decision ownership, performance accountability, and delivery metrics were distributed across teams, enabling faster cycles without operational fatigue. This shift was critical to sustaining enterprise fulfilment at scale.
For stakeholders, the impact was tangible. Brands began treating gifting as an extension of their identity rather than a line item. HR teams used gifting to reinforce culture across hybrid and distributed workforces. Customer and partner teams leaned on gifting to build memory-based relationships rather than transactional touchpoints. Procurement teams benefited from reduced friction through compliance-ready workflows.
The 2025 story for Consortium Gifts was therefore less about visibility and more about infrastructure. Systems, intelligence, procurement integration, and delivery discipline operated largely behind the scenes, but their effects were measurable. As the company enters 2026, the focus remains on strengthening AI-supported curation, expanding sustainable sourcing ecosystems, and increasing customisation depth, all while maintaining enterprise-grade execution standards.
In a market defined by constrained budgets and elevated expectations, the year underscored a simple lesson: scale in enterprise gifting is built quietly, through clarity, consistency, and control.
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