Rewa Goes Digital : AdBot is Building Central India’s Brightest DOOH LED Network

Rewa, Madhya Pradesh | Business & City Desk

Rewa’s skyline is changing.

“Rewa City of White Tigers” where once only static hoardings stood, now bright LED screens beam moving visuals of brands, offers and public messages. This shift is being led by AdBot, a home-grown advertising startup that has rolled out Rewa’s first organised Digital Out-of-Home (DOOH) LED network, covering over 1500 sq. ft. of digital screen space across the city.

In less than a year, AdBot has not only become Vindhya region’s largest DOOH operator, but is now being positioned as Central India’s fastest-growing advertising brand, offering a full stack of services — DOOH LED, traditional OOH, cinema advertising, social media campaigns and brand consulting.

 LED screens replace silent hoardings

AdBot’s flagship DOOH network currently runs large-format LED displays at five high-traffic locations in Rewa:

1. College Chowk

2. Dhekaha Tiraha (in front of BJP office)

3. ISBT – New Bus Stand

4. Dhobia Tanki Tiraha

5. Samdariya Gold Mall – Sirmaur Chowk

Work is already underway on four additional LED sites, creating what the company describes as Rewa’s first continuous digital advertising corridor.

> “Earlier, brands had to wait days for printing and mounting. Now a campaign approved in the morning can be live across the city before lunchtime, All the screens are cloud-connected, allowing AdBot to launch or change an ad campaign across every location within seconds.

says Anshuman Gupta, (Founder) who leads technology vision 

  •  Founding story: four locals, six months, five locations

The idea for AdBot was born in early 2024, when four Rewa-based professionals —

Anshuman Gupta, Mahesh Tarani, Amit Digwani and Amit Jain — started questioning why a fast-growing city was still dependent on static hoardings.

“Rewa is expanding in retail, education and real estate, but its advertising looked stuck 15 years behind,”

recalls Mahesh Tarani (Founder) who drives network and deployment.

“We didn’t want to add one more hoarding. We wanted to change the medium itself.”

The team first approached the local municipal body, submitted a detailed proposal covering structure safety, urban aesthetics, content guidelines and electrical planning, and secured the necessary permissions to install digital screens at select junctions.

What followed were months of ground work — site surveys, visibility angle tests, pole and gantry design, LED brightness calibration for harsh daylight, wiring routes for monsoon safety, and backend setup for a cloud-based content management system.

Within six months, the first phase was complete:

five LED screens live, Rewa’s first digital outdoor network operational.

“Permits, engineering, software — it was like building a small infrastructure project, not just putting up a screen,”

says Amit Digwani, who handles commercial architecture and rollout.

  •  Central India’s fastest-growing Outdoor Ad brand

While the LED network is its most visible asset, AdBot is already positioning itself as a multi-channel advertising partner for brands across Central India. The company’s current service portfolio includes:

  • DOOH LED advertising (city screens, digital networks)
  • OOH media (static hoardings and outdoor formats)
  • Cinema advertising (on-screen ads in local theatres)
  • Social media ad campaigns (performance and branding)
  • Brand consulting (positioning, creative direction, campaign strategy)

“Our approach is simple — whether it’s a local shop or a national brand, visibility shouldn’t be complicated,”

says Amit Jain, who heads brand strategy and growth.

“We help clients stay consistent from LED screen to cinema hall to Instagram reel.”

  •  Big brands are on board

The market response has been swift. AdBot’s network is already carrying campaigns from leading national and regional brands, including:

| Hero MotoCorp | Honda | TATA | Royal Enfield | Mahindra | REDTAP | Blackberrys Fashion | Linen Club | Reliance Digital | Neel Kamal | Godrej Interio | + Multiple Schools ,College, Hospitals & Diagnostics  healthcare chains

For many of these brands, Rewa’s LED screens have become the primary city-level visibility medium, particularly for product launches, festival offers and high-impact brand awareness campaigns.

“When well-known brands adopt a new medium early, it’s a strong signal that the format works,”

says Amit Digwani (Founder).

“It’s a vote of confidence for DOOH in smaller cities.”

  • Why Rewa, and why now?

Rewa is often described as a Tier-2 city with Tier-1 consumption behaviour — a regional hub with:

  • A large student population from surrounding districts
  • Growing retail and fashion markets
  • Rising automobile and real estate sales
  • Expanding healthcare and diagnostics
  • Constant public movement at chowks and markets

In such a market, visibility can quickly translate into word-of-mouth and footfall.

“Rewa notices things. People here discuss what they see — especially new brands, offers and vehicles,”

observes Amit Digwani.

> “LED screens don’t just show ads; they give people something to talk about.”

According to AdBot’s internal observations, brands using the network during high-traffic periods — such as festival seasons, result days, marriage seasons and weekends — enjoy significantly higher recall amongst local consumers, compared to static hoardings alone.

  • From static to programmable: Digital India on the street

The AdBot network also fits squarely into Prime Minister Shri Narendra Modi’s vision of ‘Digital India’, where technology becomes part of everyday infrastructure.

Instead of hoardings being printed, transported and mounted, AdBot’s model treats outdoor advertising like digital media:

  • Creative changes happen from a central dashboard
  • Different ads can be scheduled for different times of day
  • Multiple brands share the same screen in rotating slots
  • Special messages (festivals, public information, government campaigns) can be pushed quickly when needed

“This is outdoor advertising behaving like online media — flexible, real-time, measurable at a basic level,”

says Mahesh Tarani (Founder).

“It’s Digital India, but on the street, not just on the phone.”

  •  Sustainability angle: 3,000 sq. ft of dustbin-top media

Alongside its LED network, AdBot operates a 3,000 sq. ft dustbin-top media network across 125 locations in the city, which the company positions as a sustainable, Swachh Bharat–aligned advertising format.

These units combine public dustbins with branding surfaces, allowing advertisers to buy low-cost, high-frequency placements, while also supporting city cleanliness.

 Brands get affordable micro-visibility across neighbourhoods

 The city benefits from organized waste collection points

 The model aligns with Swachh Bharat Mission objectives

“Clean city above all — if advertising can fund cleaner public spaces, it’s a win-win,”

says Anshuman Gupta (Founder).

  •  What it means for local businesses

For Rewa’s local shops, restaurants, gyms, coaching centres, salons, showrooms and service providers, AdBot’s model offers something they’ve rarely had access to before: premium-looking visibility without metro-level budgets.

Key advantages for local advertisers include:

  • The ability to run multiple creatives in the same booking
  • Quick changes in case of price revision or stock change
  • Time-bound promotions for festivals, weekends, or big sale days
  • The option to combine LED, OOH, cinema and social media in one coordinated campaign

A typical small business can now be seen:

  • On an LED screen at a busy chowk
  • On a dustbin-top unit near its neighbourhood
  • On-screen in a local cinema interval
  • And as a sponsored post on social media

— all through one planning team.

  •  For citizens: a more “alive” city

While the focus is often on the brands, AdBot believes citizens also gain in the process:

 They become more aware of available services (clinics, schools, emergency numbers, new stores)

 Local events, cultural programmes and public information can be displayed attractively

 The city’s central points look more modern and active, resembling larger urban centres

“People used to say: ‘We saw this kind of screen only in metros.’

Now they say: ‘We saw it at College Chowk yesterday,’”

laughs Amit Jain (Founder).

“That change of sentence is exactly what we wanted.”

  • Looking ahead: from Rewa to the wider region

AdBot’s immediate focus is to complete its first-phase digital corridor in Rewa with the additional four screens. After that, the company plans to gradually expand its network to other cities in the wider region, while strengthening its position as a multi-channel advertising partner from Central India.

“We’re building a model that can be repeated — local permissions, local jobs, local visibility,”

says Anshuman Gupta (Founder).

“But Rewa will always be the first chapter of the story.”

  • A city lit by its own ambition

In the end, AdBot’s rise is as much about Rewa as it is about the company itself.

A Tier-2 city decided it deserved Tier-1-style digital presence — and four founders chose to build the infrastructure to make that happen.

Screens went up.

Campaigns went live.

People noticed.

Brands followed.

The hoardings are still there. But the future is on the screens.

AdBot, as its founders like to summarise it:

“We don’t just advertise.

We light the city, and we help brands be seen.”

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