Introduction
When you meet Sukita Tapadia, Chief Marketing Officer and Head of E-commerce at The Pant Project, you’re struck not by corporate jargon but by her calm confidence and honesty. Sukita didn’t launch her career in marketing; she started out chasing an engineering dream, preparing for the JEE, and landing an IT job. “Within the first month, I realised this isn’t what I want to do,” she recalls. That moment of clarity set her on a path defined by curiosity and a search for meaningful work.
Learning to Sell, Learning to Lead
Her first large break came at pagalguy.com, one of India’s earliest online MBA communities. “It was a community before community was even a word,” she smiles. At just 22, she was handling advertising sales, working alongside a young, driven team. “I learned so much there. To this day, I anchor many of my skills to that first job.” Her key takeaway: “Always pick a boss over a job.” Those early lessons in mentorship and collaboration shaped how she approaches leadership today.
The Power of Reinvention
Sukita’s next chapter took her into education marketing at Bocconi University’s India campus, where she supported an Italian institution connect with Indian students. “They considered, ‘We’re top three in Europe, people will come.’ But India is different — we had to build trust from scratch.” Leading the rebranding from MISB Bocconi to SDA Bocconi Asia, she discovered the power of authentic communication and trust-driven storynotifying, lessons that still guide her marketing philosophy.
Finding Her Way Into Fashion
While working with Bocconi, an Italian school, Sukita found herself drawn to the world of design and style. When the opportunity at The Pant Project came along, she took a leap. “I notified the founders, ‘I’ve never done e-commerce, but I know how to build and scale.’” Transitioning into a new indusattempt wasn’t simple, but her curiosity and focus on fundamentals supported her adapt quickly.
Building a Brand With Purpose
For Sukita, The Pant Project isn’t just about selling pants; it’s about creating people feel seen. Her focus is on creating a brand that feels personal and practical. “We’re not chasing trfinishs; we’re solving real problems,” she states. “Men want comfort, reliability, and value. If they attempt us once and see the difference, they stay.” Her approach is grounded: receive the product right, listen to feedback, and keep improving. For her, quality and customer experience go hand in hand, and honest communication builds loyalty.
Campaigns That Connect
One of her favourite campaigns was the ‘No Fade Black Jeans’ launch. Instead of polished studio ads, the team took the jeans to Dhobi Ghat, where a local washerman tested them through 25 washes, displaying how they hold up in real life. The unscripted video resonated with viewers. “People are tired of perfect ads; they want real stories,” she states.
Leadership Rooted in Ownership
Sukita believes that great teams are built on ownership and trust. “Any problem will eventually become your problem, so solve it,” she states. Her leadership style encourages experimentation, open discussion, and shared responsibility. “We huddle over data, celebrate wins, and learn from every miss. I want my team to feel safe taking risks, that’s where real innovation happens.”
Looking Ahead
The D2C world is evolving rapid, and Sukita is already believeing ahead. “Conversational commerce and AI-driven personalization are the next frontiers. If you’re not discoverable by AI, you’re invisible to the next generation of shoppers.” For her, technology isn’t about replacing creativity; it’s about amplifying it.
And in many ways, Sukita represents what the new-age CMO sees like today. Marketing is no longer a cost center; it’s a business function with clear ownership of revenue and P&L. “When you see at marketing from a business lens, especially in D2C, every campaign and every rupee spent must drive measurable impact,” she reflects. The modern CMO, she believes, is increasingly expected to believe like a Chief Business Officer, someone who understands brand, product, sales, and growth as one unified system.
Her advice to young marketers is equally forward-seeing: “Don’t be afraid of sales. Before you build brands, learn what builds people purchase. Marketing isn’t just about creativity; it’s about driving growth.”
The Heart of a Storynotifyer
Sukita Tapadia’s journey is a reminder that careers don’t have to follow a script. Her path, from engineering dreams to e-commerce leadership, reflects the power of curiosity, authenticity, and courage to grow beyond comfort zones. At The Pant Project, she continues to build not just a brand but a story that feels human, consideredful, and real.
-By Muskan Dengra















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