Category: Articles


  • 7 Sad Ways to be Successful

    Karthik Meenakshisundaram is a writer, designer, and creative strategist with 20+ years in advertising, branding, and content. As Jokar’s Co-founder, he explores storytelling, design, and tech—when not overthinking or dabbling in side projects.

    Since 2003, I’ve been on a treadmill that never slowed down. Eager, hungry and fuelled by ambition. By 2023, I finally stepped off it—not because I was done running, but because I didn’t even like the way it was going, and where it was going.

    Here are 7 sad ways I chased success that became valuable lessons I’ll remember forever.

    Making work my whole identity
    For the longest time, “What do you do?” was the same as “Who are you?” If I wasn’t working or creating, I felt invisible. It’s only in the last few years I’ve started asking myself: Who am I when the laptop’s shut? And I still don’t have the full answer.

    Believing busyness = importance
    From early days in advertising to building Jokar with Archana Karthik, busyness felt like purpose. If I wasn’t “in demand”, I questioned my worth. Now, I see all those late night deadlines and packed schedules for what they really were: distractions from bigger, scarier questions about meaning and balance.

    👌 Living for external validation
    Awards, applause, client appreciation, or even the occasional LinkedIn nod, it always felt like proof that I was on the right path. But the emptiness after every achievement was deafening. I spent too much time worrying about how I looked to others, and not enough asking how I felt about myself.

    ✌✌ Chasing the next big thing
    I believed that happiness was always “just one milestone away.” The next project, the next paycheck, the next dream client—surely, one of them would unlock the elusive satisfaction. But the joy I was chasing was always right here—in quiet dinners with Archana, learning Pali at Mumbai University, or losing myself in printmaking class at JJ School of Arts.

    🖐 Ignoring the weight of it all
    I convinced myself that exhaustion was a small price to pay for success. Burnout became a badge of honour. But deep down, I knew I was running on fumes, pretending it didn’t matter. It took stepping back these past few years to see the damage I’d been doing to myself.

    🖐 👍 Turning creativity into currency
    Somewhere along the way, creating became about deadlines, client and metrics. What used to make me come alive now felt transactional. It’s only recently I’ve started creating again for myself—no brief, no audience, no rules—and remembered why I fell in love with it in the first place.

    🖐✌ Thinking success would make me whole
    For two decades, I thought success would fix everything. The doubt, the insecurity, the endless need to prove myself. But it never did. Success isn’t a solution; it’s a moving target. And until you pause and reflect, you’ll keep chasing it, wondering why you’re still not enough.

    These days, I’m learning to value the small things. Building a simple and meaningful life with Archana. Finding joy in every stroke of ink during printmaking. Learning Pali because I am curious about this beautiful language. Success hasn’t disappeared from my life—it’s just shifted. And I think I’m better for it.


  • Indian Logo Legend

    More than the HP, Titan and the Kissan logos, my ever-lasting memory of Sudarshan Dheer is munching channa in his office.

    Besides art and typography, his favourite topics (in no particular order) were: the philosophy of Jiddu Krishnamurti; who designed the first shoelace?; why most clocks are round? He said, “Is it because the planet is round? Or is it because time has a circular continuous concept?”

    And then it was time to step out for lunch. There were five options in Colaba: the Sea Lounge (whiskey sours and bumping into Dom Moraes by the window), Paradise (scotch broth and raspberry drink), Martins (beef and more beef), Kailash Parbat (chaat and dal pakwan).

    “This is India,” he said, “When will our designs be able to reflect this?”

    In case you were wondering, this was from a conversation between Sudarshan Dheer and Ramu Ramanathan. It’s an insightful article on Campaign India.


  • How copywriters can change the world

    I learned about cars, robots, food, soap, toys, cigarettes, sweets, fountain pens, timber, fish, newspapers, oil, wine, nuclear fuel, the army, the police. I visited hospitals, refugee hostels, sweet factories, oil refineries and nuclear plants, was taught how to drive a Land Rover through a river, how to fire the cannon of a Centurion tank and have sat quaking in a police car during a high-speed chase. I learned how the insurance and banking systems work, as well as about human rights, our plundered environment and the scandal of places like Bhopal. Through my work l learned about the deep interconnectedness of these things. Society is a web of myriad causes and effects. Tugging at a thread on this side of the web can twitch apparently unrelated strands on the far side. Quite by accident l discovered that the copywriter has real power in the world.

    In case you were wondering, this is Indra Sinha, one of the advertising greats from a powerful article he wrote: How copywriters can change the world.


  • We ❤️ this

    Everyone always talks about confidence in believing what you do. I remember once going to a class in yoga where the teacher said that, spirituality speaking, if you believed that you had achieved enlightenment you have merely arrived at your limitation. I think that is also true in a practical sense. Deeply held beliefs of any kind prevent you from being open to experience, which is why I find all firmly held ideological positions questionable. It makes me nervous when someone believes too deeply or too much. I think that being skeptical and questioning all deeply held beliefs is essential. Of course we must know the difference between skepticism and cynicism because cynicism is as much a restriction of one’s openness to the world as passionate belief is.

    In case you were wondering, this was by the man who led Milton Glaser Inc. in one of his many enlightening essays on his website.


  • Consumerism, materialism and sustainability

    One of the most interesting parts of his story is that he now looks back on his career with some regret. “If I had to do it over again, I would not want to be a designer,” he’s said. “There are too many unnecessary products in this world.” He has long been an advocate for the ideas of environmental consciousness and long-lasting products. He’s dismayed by today’s unsustainable world of over-consumption, where “design” has been reduced to a meaningless marketing buzzword.

    In case you were wondering, this is Dieter Rams talking about product design and consumerism in Rams, a documentary by Gary Hustwit.


  • Our mind, an iceberg

    Bryan made a self-portrait after taking 1/2 gm of cocaine.

    Don’t try this at home or anywhere else. That is not the message. But it goes on to show that our mind is an ocean. You never know what you will find when you explore its depth. Maybe the idea is to stay curious, observant and be surprised with what it has to offer. 

    Under the influence by Bryan Lewis Saunders.


  • Everything easy is hard again

    As someone who has decades of experience on the web, I hate to compare myself to the tortoise, but hey, if it fits, it fits. Let’s be more like that tortoise: diligent, direct, and purposeful. The web needs pockets of slowness and thoughtfulness as its reach and power continues to increase. What we depend upon must be properly built and intelligently formed. We need to create space for complexity’s important sibling: nuance. Spaces without nuance tend to gravitate towards stupidity. And as an American, I can tell you, there are no limits to the amount of damage that can be inflicted by that dangerous cocktail of fast-moving-stupid.

    —Frank Chimero

    Frank Chimero writes on how everything easy is hard again. We believe the above quote applies to our overall life as well, not just the web.


  • Tide Pods PR Crisis?

    Despite YouTube and Amazon’s efforts, record numbers of teens are still eating Tide Pods. Hey, even we feel like popping one in the mouth. It looks delicious! Maybe Tide knew what it was doing. As the saying goes: Any publicity is good publicity. What do you think?

    Via The Verge


  • 9 hilarious life lessons

    Comedian Tim Minchin reveals the only rational thing you should do with your time here on Earth in nine hilarious and wise life lessons. We like the part about dreams and ambitions in particular.

    I never really had one of these dreams. I advocate passionate dedication to the pursuit of short-term goals. Be micro-ambitious. Put your head down and work with pride on whatever is in front of you. You never know where you might end up. Just be aware the next worthy pursuit will probably appear in your periphery, which is why you should be careful of long-term dreams. If you focus too far in front of you, you won’t see the shiny thing out of the corner of your eye.

    The 9 lessons:

    1. You don’t have to have a dream.
    2. Don’t seek happiness.
    3. Remember, it’s all luck.
    4. Exercise.
    5. Be hard on your opinions.
    6. Be a teacher.
    7. Define yourself by what you love.
    8. Respect people with less power than you.
    9. Finally, don’t rush.

    Watch or read the whole thing here.


  • Very important questions

    John Maeda has noted two Georges’ way of thinking about problems in their respective fields–Mathematics and Research. We see both these sets of questions fitting perfectly with marketing, business and life too.

    George Pólya’s questions for problem solving in mathematics:

    Understand the problem
    • What is the unknown?
    • What are the data?
    • What is the condition?
    • Can the problem be solved?

    Assumptions
    • What can you or need you assume?
    • What shouldn’t you assume?
    • Have you made subconscious assumptions?

    Devising a plan of attack
    • Have you seen this or a related problem before?
    • Have you seen a similar unknown before?
    • Can you restate the problem?
    • If you can’t solve this problem, can you solve a similar or simpler problem?

    Aftermath
    • Are you sure of the solution? Can you see it at a glance?
    • Did you use all the data? the whole condition?
    • Can you get the same solution another way?
    • Are there other valid solutions?
    • Can you apply the solution or method to another problem?
    • Was this a satisfying problem to solve?

    .

    George Heilmeier’s list of questions for solving research challenges:

    1. What are you trying to do? Articulate your objectives using absolutely no jargon.
    2. How is it done today, and what are the limits of current practice?
    3. What is new in your approach and why do you think it will be successful?
    4. Who cares? If you are successful, what difference will it make?
    5. What are the risks?
    6. How much will it cost?
    7. How long will it take?
    8. What are the mid-term and final “exams” to check for success?