For much of the communications industry, 2025 was a year of recalibration rather than expansion. As newsroom capacity tightened, AI-driven content flooded the ecosystem, and brands questioned the value of noise, PR was forced to confront a fundamental shift—from visibility-led execution to value-led counsel. In conversation with Adgully for its annual recap of the year – REWIND 2025 – Priyanka Shetty, Founder of Clarity Comms, speaks about how this industry-wide reset mirrored a deeply personal one. 2025 marked her return to solo entrepreneurship and a deliberate move back to first principles: clarity over scale, conviction over velocity, and long-term reputation over short-term headlines. From securing mandates with high-stakes brands such as Rebel Foods and the International Olympic Committee to working with purpose-led organisations in health and social impact, the year reinforced a central truth—PR’s future lies not in amplification alone, but in restraint, relevance and trust. How would you describe the year 2025 for your organisation? What were the standout moments that defined it? I turned 40 this year, and 2025 turned out to be a landmark for me professionally as well! A year of restarting and rebuilding as a solo entrepreneur! It marked a transformation where I went back to first principles, clarity of thought, quality of work and relationships over scale. The year wasn’t about dramatic spikes but about steady progress, consistent retainer partners, and doing the work with conviction. When you look at the broader PR and communications industry, what defined this year for the industry? I think the PR industry has had a clear shift from 'visibility' to 'value', and 2025 just defined that in many ways. Across global and Indian markets, the comms industry moved away from 'vanity' metrics towards credibility, context, and depth. With AI-generated content flooding our ecosystem and newsroom bandwidth shrinking, PR professionals were pushed to think harder about what truly deserves attention. This year also reinforced that PR is no longer about chasing headlines, it’s about earning trust, understanding cultural nuances and building narratives that can stand scrutiny. The year's finest works came from practitioners who understood restraint as much as amplification. Which new big clients did you onboard this year, and what made those wins special? For Clarity Comms and myself, the standout win was getting the communications mandate for Rebel Foods, and this happened while we were in this transition. Its timing reaffirmed my confidence at a time of change, and my belief in my independent journey. We had to find our A-game to manage their pan-India presence in an ever evolving sector. On the other hand, we had the privilege to work with the International Olympic Committee (IOC) on a project, as also indulge in bold, consumer storytelling with Dr Vaidya’s Shilajit campaign with Baba Sehgal! Additionally, we continue to work with purpose-driven platforms like Rangeet, a social enterprise that partners with governments, communities, private and public schools to equip every child, aged 6-16, with the skills essential to thrive. Looking back, I think our range was fabulous and diverse! This year I also acted upon a long-pending self-commitment to give back to society in some way through work, by onboarding Access Life, which provides a loving and temporary home for the parent or care taker and the child undergoing the treatment for cancer. How has the role of PR evolved—has it shifted from just managing images to creating deeper, more authentic engagement? I feel PR has decisively moved beyond image management. Today, it’s about reputation, relevance, and responsibility. Audiences and media can quickly sense inauthenticity, and brands are being held accountable not just for what they say, but for what they stand for over time. The role of PR now means we as older practitioners must have sharper listening, recommend clearer positioning, and should be able to connect brands meaningfully with culture, policy, and public sentiment. Authentic engagement isn’t engineered, it’s built with consistency, honesty, and restraint. What are your expectations from 2026 in terms of growth, industry direction, or new opportunities? 2026 feels like a year where focus will matter more than scale. I expect growth to come from deeper client partnerships, long-term retainers, and work that sits at the intersection of business, culture, and impact. For the industry, I see opportunities coming in in the thought leadership space, narratives that are real to the current world scenario and with purpose, and advisory-led PR, especially in sectors such as health, wellness, education, and social impact. Personally, my goal for 2026 is to continue building a practice that values clarity over clutter and trust over trends!