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Tata Capital’s #StopBlamingHer Puts a Name To What Every Woman In India Has Already Lived

The campaign surfaces the casual, conditioned blame women across India have navigated for years, and refuses to let it pass unnoticed.

You’ve heard it. At work, on the road, at family dinners. 

‘Did your wife pick a fight again?’ ‘Must be a girl driving.’ ‘Is this how your mother raised you?’ 

Said without thinking but heard without forgetting. Tata Capital’s #StopBlamingHer puts words to something we’ve known for a long time but rarely seen acknowledged out loud: the bias that doesn’t need malice to hurt. The kind that lives in casual language, reflexive assumptions, and sentences that end before anyone even realises what was said. 

Tata Capital’s campaign does not point a finger at any one person. It holds up a mirror to all of us and invites us to look. 

Conceptualised and executed by Schbang, #StopBlamingHer is a film that takes audiences through a series of slice-of-life situations, scenes from offices, gatherings and highways, where women are casually, almost effortlessly, blamed. Each scenario is drawn from lived reality, not fiction. The discomfort it produces is intentional. By rendering these moments visible, the campaign does what no statistic alone can do: it makes the invisible, undeniable. 

#StopBlamingHer is not about words spoken in anger, it is about the things we say casually, without even thinking. That is where the real problem lies, and where real change must begin. At Tata Capital, enabling women goes beyond financial 

empowerment. It also means challenging the everyday judgments women face and helping build a culture of respect and accountability. #StopBlamingHer is our commitment to being part of that change.” Kaushik Chakraborty, Head of Marketing and Corporate Communications, Tata Capital 

“India exists in two realities at once. One celebrates female ambition and speaks loudly of empowerment. The other, quieter and more pervasive, still reflexively assigns fault to women in everyday moments, not always deliberately, but out of conditioning. 

When we started working on this brief, we kept coming back to one of the most dangerous biases – the one we don’t even realise is a bias. This campaign is built on that insight. Through a film rooted in everyday reality, we are not asking people to be better; we are asking them to be mindful.” Dipshika Ravi, National Creative Director, Schbang. 

#StopBlamingHer is more than a Women’s Day moment. It is a statement and a realisation campaign. We don’t want people to react, but simply to know that such casual biases are still happening today.. Tata Capital’s message to women in India, across

geographies, income groups, and life stages, is consistent: your potential is not defined by the labels placed on you. 

The campaign is a reminder that what we say isn’t always deliberate. But we can always choose to be mindful. 

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