
CommsCast from Mediabrief.com
CommsCast is the Reputation Podcast series from Mediabrief.com, and features conversations between expert PR professionals on their experiences, and on next-level Public Relations for Reputation Management.
We hope that through the conversations between different, accomplished PR pros, CommsCast from Mediabrief will help every custodian of Corporate Reputation in their quest for professional excellence and impact in the truly dynamic, ever-evolving field of Reputation Management.
CommsCast from Mediabrief.com
CommsCast | Alpana Killawala (with Manibalan Manoharan) on Powering Reputation at the RBI and Beyond
How does a central bank earn and maintain public trust over decades? What is the real art of crisis communication in the financial world? And how can communications leaders shape narratives in an institution as opaque and mission-critical as the Reserve Bank of India?
In this insightful episode of CommsCast – The Reputation Podcast powered by Adfactors PR, host Manibalan Manoharan, Senior Group Head – Digital at Adfactors PR, is joined by Alpana Killawala, veteran communicator and former Head of Communications at the RBI, who, for the past four years and more, serves as Strategic Advisor at Adfactors PR.
Alpana shares her learnings from working with six Governors of the Reserve Bank of India, shaping the RBI’s external and internal communication strategy during some of India’s most significant economic transitions. Drawing from her book A Fly on the RBI Wall, she offers stories, lessons, and behind-the-scenes insights on what it takes to communicate for a central bank that balances confidentiality with credibility.
Tune in to learn about:
- RBI’s evolving communication strategy
- How media relations were managed across governors
- Best practices in financial PR and strategic communication
- Transitioning from journalism to institutional communications
- Reputation management in high-stakes policy environments
Whether you're a communications professional, financial analyst, journalist, or student of public affairs, this episode offers a rare view into the storytelling and transparency that shape India's financial messaging.
Hello and welcome to CommsCast, the reputation podcast powered by Adfactors
Alpana:Thank you, Mani. Pleasure entirely mine to join the show.
Mani:Thank you. Alpana, I read this book. This is an excellent book. I must tell my
Alpana:Sure Mani, I began very young. At 21, I applied for my first job and got it.
Mani:Interesting. You switched from journalism – breaking stories – to shaping
Alpana:When you say A Fly On The RBI Wall, an insider's view of central bank
Mani:And I structured it this way mainly because I could have done it thematically
Alpana:… and he absorbs different lessons in different themes of PR easily. So
Mani:During this conversation, you mentioned about the six governors that you
Alpana:Let's see. I began with Mr. Venkatramanan. He was the first person to
Mani:And this was the time when they were also looking for some lateral positions,
Alpana:Not really, not really in that sense – that they were not really looking
Mani:Wonderful! That was about Governor Venkatramanan. What about the other RBI
Alpana:Dr. Rangarajan was very erudite and he believed in giving speeches. So, in
Mani:Next was Dr. Jalan, and one day he called me in and he said, “Alpana,
Alpana:Dr. Reddy was a different person. He said, “No public opinion-making through
Mani:Following him was Dr. Subbarao. Subbarao was a very open person. He
Alpana:And what about the rock star RBI governor? That's what the media called him
Mani:Raghuram Rajan, yes, yes. How can one forget him? Media had just fallen in
Alpana:So we had to control the photography initially – like with his
Mani:But one thing common to all was – all were superbly brilliant. Two, all had
Alpana:Before they did anything, public speaking or anything, they would ask me
Mani:I mean, they were so brilliant that they just could not make such mistakes.
Alpana:Hi, I'm Mani on CommsCast. With me is Alpana Killawala, who has written this
Mani:Thanks, Mani, for sharing it – because this question virtually asks me to
Alpana:Mr. Venkatramanan – he was a very forward-looking person. So, I learned to
Mani:Dr. Rangarajan – speeches we started using as a major tool for communication to
Alpana:After that was Dr. Jalan, and with him, we learned how to innovate in
Mani:Whatever central bank says moves the market. And the media started following
Alpana:Dr. Reddy – the most important lesson I learned in his time was: keep
Mani:Alter the timeline if required.
Alpana:Dr. Subbarao – for him, each word that he communicated was important, along
Mani:Art of listening is another thing that I learnt from him, because
Alpana:And Dr. Rajan, of course – what he did was he used his status to communicate
Mani:So, that's the long answer to your short question.
Alpana:Alpana, we as comms professionals advise our clients not to answer any
Mani:First, instant communication was true for a central bank–like institution
Alpana:This you're saying in the timeframe of?
Mani:This was in Dr. Reddy's time.
Alpana:WhatsApp, as I said, was just developing, evolving in personal
Mani:We had to intervene – because the bank wasn't insolvent, really. It’s just
Alpana:Got it. So, Alpana, what you're trying to say over here is like, even the
Mani:Yes. So I think that's again something that we have been also seeing. A
Alpana:Very, very important. Because I remember in a recent time also, one
Mani:So, listening – social listening – is a must in today's time.
Alpana:So, to all my listeners also – I think keeping your ear to the ground, I
Mani:I think that’s how it is. Even at that time, we used to do some kind of
Alpana:Got it.
Mani:And he used to mark some portions in the newspaper clipping and send it down to
Alpana:Great.
Mani:Alpana, you spent 26 remarkable years at the Reserve Bank of India. When
Alpana:Good question, Mani. Madanji and I go long years back – almost 25 years we
Mani:So, after retirement, I was sitting at home trying to settle my house –
Alpana:Madanji’s style.
Mani:Exactly. So, I came here and met him. And he said…
Alpana:So I said, “I haven’t thought about it.”
Mani:And I said, “What will I do?” He said, “Do whatever you want.” And that was
Alpana:The moment he said that – “Do what you want” – I had settled in my mind that
Mani:And after coming here, I realized that I haven’t made a wrong decision at
Alpana:What I learned in RBI, I didn’t realize that that was one world. Here I’m
Mani:This I would not have learned had I not come to Adfactors PR. And the amount
Alpana:And we are like one of the biggest beneficiaries, because we walk into your
Mani:Alpana, I love this book. I think you should, in fact, tell all our viewers
Alpana:Thank you, Mani. It’s a kind of playbook in corporate communication – very
Mani:And the other thing is, it works on two or three levels. It tells you about
Alpana:And of course, it’s written in first-person singular. So 250 pages won’t
Mani:Wonderful! Wow, Alpana. This has been a really great conversation. The
Alpana:Thank you for your time. And like I had fun having this conversation – share
Mani:Thoroughly, thoroughly enjoyed, Mani– with a co-traveller on the journey of
Alpana:Thank you.
Mani:So that was this episode of CommsCast, the reputation podcast powered