Corporate gifting in India in 2025 looks fundamentally different from what it did five years ago. The market has matured from a seasonal procurement exercise into a structured employee engagement strategy — and the companies that have made this transition are seeing measurable differences in retention, brand perception, and employee satisfaction.
What Has Changed in Corporate Gifting
Three shifts define the current state of corporate gifting in India. The first is the move from generic to personalised. Generic gifts — a standard mug, a branded pen, an assorted sweet box — are no longer sufficient for organisations competing for talent in India’s IT, BFSI, and startup sectors.
The second shift is from office-centric to home-delivered. The hybrid work normalisation of 2021 through 2023 permanently changed the infrastructure expectation. Corporate gifting in India now requires pan-India home delivery as a baseline capability, not a premium add-on.
The third shift is from transactional to programmatic. The most sophisticated companies have replaced one or two annual gifting moments with multi-touchpoint programmes spanning onboarding, anniversaries, performance recognition, and festive gifting — managed through a single partner.
What Is Working in Corporate Gifting Today
Employee-choice gifting platforms are delivering the highest satisfaction scores. When employees can select their preferred item from a curated shortlist within a defined budget, gift satisfaction rates climb significantly compared to uniform-gift programmes.
Data-backed product selection — choosing categories based on actual usage research rather than procurement convenience — is also driving better outcomes. Tech accessories, premium drinkware, and high-quality branded apparel consistently outperform generic promotional items on retention rate and social sharing.
Sustainable corporate gifting is a third growing area. Bamboo products, recycled packaging, and locally sourced artisanal items align with values that a significant portion of India’s under-35 workforce holds as important.
What to Stop Doing
Corporate gifting in India still suffers from persistent patterns that reduce programme effectiveness. The first is over-reliance on festive gifting alone — concentrating the entire annual budget in Diwali and ignoring the rest of the employee lifecycle leaves significant engagement value on the table.
The second is generic seasonal gifting without personal acknowledgement. A gift that arrives without a note, without context, and without connection to the recipient’s contribution is a logistics exercise, not a recognition gesture.
The third is prioritising quantity over quality. Ten low-cost items distributed across the year generate fewer positive impressions than three premium items timed to high-impact moments. Corporate gifting in India that trades quality for frequency typically fails on both dimensions.