CandidShutters Media

ESG Visual Content Strategy for Indian Listed Companies

April 13, 2026 • Vaishali Sahu
esg visual content strategy india listed companies brsr

Most listed companies in India now have an ESG report. A reasonable number have a sustainability microsite. A smaller number have video content that talks about their commitments. Almost none have a coherent ESG visual content strategy India’s institutional audience actually demands, one that ties all of it together across platforms, disclosure cycles, and stakeholder segments. That gap is going to matter more with every reporting cycle.

The Business Responsibility and Sustainability Report – BRSR – became mandatory for the top 1,000 NSE/BSE-listed companies by market capitalisation starting FY 2022–23. SEBI has since introduced BRSR Core, a standardised set of 49 key performance indicators covering Scope 1 and Scope 2 emissions, water intensity, renewable energy share, and gender diversity – with mandatory third-party assessment now phasing in for the top 500 listed entities from FY 2025–26, expanding to the top 1,000 by FY 2026–27 (SEBI, KPMG analysis, 2025). Institutional investors, ESG rating agencies, and large international buyers are using this data in active decision-making.

The problem is not that companies aren’t reporting. The problem is that the visual communication around ESG still largely looks like it was produced as an afterthought, and a few stock photos of saplings and solar panels dropped into an annual report PDF that nobody reads past page 12.

ESG communication done well is a different discipline entirely. It requires visual strategy, intentional photography and video production, and an understanding of what different stakeholder audiences actually need to see. For a listed company headquartered in Delhi NCR, Mumbai, or any major Indian market, this is no longer optional sophistication. It is a reputational and investor relations function.

Here is what a coherent ESG visual content strategy for Indian listed companies looks like – one built for the SEBI BRSR reporting context.

Why ESG Visual Content Strategy in India Is Now an IR and Reputation Function

The shift is institutional. It isn’t driven by optics.

ESG rating agencies including MSCI, Sustainalytics, and CRISIL ESG assign scores that directly influence which mutual funds, pension funds, and foreign institutional investors can hold your stock. Several large global asset managers have hardcoded minimum ESG score thresholds into their investment mandates.

The numbers reflect this shift. ESG-themed fund AUM in India grew from approximately ₹2,747 crore in early 2020 to roughly ₹9,700–10,800 crore by 2024–25 (IBEF / Rits Capital analysis). India’s broader ESG investing market is projected to grow at a 23.3% CAGR between 2025 and 2030, reaching approximately USD 4.1 billion by 2030. SEBI has also mandated that ESG mutual fund schemes invest at least 65% of AUM in companies that file comprehensive BRSR and provide assurance on BRSR Core disclosures, and a direct regulatory link between disclosure quality and capital allocation.

The companies doing this right – Infosys, Mahindra, Asian Paints, HDFC Bank – have moved sustainability communication into the mainstream of their investor relations, employer branding, and institutional communications calendars. They are not treating the annual sustainability report as the entirety of the ESG content output. They are producing visual content year-round that builds the narrative, evidences the claims, and keeps stakeholders updated between disclosure cycles.

What this means practically: ESG visual content is no longer a CSR team deliverable. It sits at the intersection of investor relations, corporate communications, and brand, and it needs to be resourced accordingly.

The Four Stakeholder Audiences for an ESG Visual Content Strategy in India

One of the most common mistakes in ESG communication is treating it as monolithic. The same video that works for your Annual General Meeting does not work for a recruitment campaign. The same photography that goes into your sustainability report is not going to land on your institutional investor’s ESG analyst’s desk in a format they find credible.

ESG visual content for Indian listed companies needs to be developed with audience segmentation in mind from the start.

1. Institutional Investors and ESG Analysts
This audience does not want aspirational imagery. They want evidence. The EY Global Institutional Investor Survey found that 88% of institutional investors have increased their use of ESG information, while disclosure quality, and not just disclosure volume has emerged as a primary differentiator in how ESG credibility is assessed (EY, 2024).

For this audience, the most credible ESG visual content is documentary in nature: a factory floor showing actual safety standards in practice, an energy management facility with timestamped data visible, a supplier audit visit that shows the process rather than just the outcome. Production quality still matters; grainy or amateurish footage reads as a disclosure risk. But authenticity and specificity are the primary signals this audience reads for.

2. Domestic Retail Investors and Shareholder Communities
Retail investors in India are increasingly ESG-aware, particularly the younger cohort who came into the market during and after the pandemic. For this audience, ESG content works best when it is narrative-led: the story of a community programme, the journey of a renewable energy project from announcement to commissioning, the face of the women-in-leadership initiative rather than just the statistic.

This is the audience for long-form video content, LinkedIn carousels, and investor day highlight reels that showcase the human side of the company’s sustainability commitments.

3. Employees and Prospective Talent
Employer branding photography and ESG have converged. A significant share of talent especially in sectors like technology, financial services, and FMCG are now includes a company’s ESG track record in their employment decision-making. For corporate photography and video teams working with companies headquartered in Delhi NCR, Gurgaon, or Mumbai, this translates into a specific and growing content brief.

For this audience, ESG visual content works best as behind-the-scenes documentation: actual workplace practices, D&I initiatives in action, manufacturing or operations processes that reflect the company’s environmental commitments. Not the official communications version – the real version, photographed and filmed in a way that is honest and compelling.

4. Regulators, Government, and Policy Audiences
Listed companies in sectors like infrastructure, energy, banking, and pharmaceuticals often have a regulatory communications dimension to their ESG work. Visual content for this audience follows a different register: formal, evidence-led, compliant with visual identity standards, and produced to the standard appropriate in a government presentation or regulatory filing context.

A poorly produced video presented at a parliamentary committee or regulatory consultation is a liability. Production quality signals how seriously the company takes the subject.

ESG Visual Content Strategy for India: Building the Annual Content Calendar

Sustainability communication content should follow the BRSR disclosure calendar, but it should not be limited to it. The annual BRSR report is one moment in the cycle. A strategic visual content programme runs year-round.

Pre-AGM Period (Q4 of FY / March–May)
The AGM season is when institutional and retail investor attention to ESG disclosures peaks. In the weeks leading up to the AGM, visual content that brings the sustainability report to life works hardest. Short explainer videos on key metrics, photography that evidences the year’s ESG initiatives, leadership interview films on ESG priorities.

Content format priorities: Leadership interview films (3–5 minutes), key metrics visualisation, initiative documentation photography for annual report use.

BRSR and Annual Report Filing Period (June–September)
The annual report and BRSR are the primary disclosure artefacts, but they need visual content to be credible. Photographs of actual operations, production facilities, CSR programme outcomes, and governance events need to be current, high-resolution, and contextually appropriate for a disclosure document.

Content format priorities: High-resolution editorial photography for annual report layout, site documentation photography, CSR outcome photography.

Mid-Year Investor and Analyst Engagements
Investor days, analyst briefings, and ESG-specific investor interactions have become more common as institutional ESG scrutiny increases. For companies based in Gurgaon, Delhi NCR, and Mumbai, these events are concentrated in specific calendar windows. Visual content produced for these events – including room photography, leadership presentation stills, and post-event highlight reels becomes part of the investor relations archive that analysts and media reference.

Content format priorities: Event documentation photography and videography, highlight reels for investor relations microsites and social channels.

Ongoing Initiative Documentation
The most underutilised ESG content format in India is ongoing documentation photography and video of actual programmes in progress. A company with a credible water conservation initiative across ten plants should be producing visual evidence of that initiative continuously, and not just commissioning one photograph for the annual report.

Content format priorities: Quarterly site documentation, programme update reels, community engagement photography.

ESG Visual Content Strategy India: What Good Production Actually Looks Like

There is a specific visual register that works for ESG communication at the institutional level, and it is different from both standard corporate photography and CSR-era imagery.

Standard corporate photography is typically polished, formal, and designed to project authority and scale. It serves well for leadership portraits, annual report covers, and investor presentation decks.

CSR-era imagery – the cheerful group photo at the village handwashing station, the smiling children in front of the new school has a specific visual language that has become increasingly read by sophisticated audiences as performative rather than substantive. ESG analysts are explicitly trained to look for substance beneath the image.

Good ESG visual content for the BRSR era sits between these two poles. It is documentary in sensibility, specific in subject matter, technically excellent in execution, and honest in its representation of what is actually happening.

What this means in production terms:

  • Workplace and operations photography should show the actual environment, not a staged version of it. Real safety signage, real equipment, real people doing real work shot in a way that is compelling without being dishonest.
  • Renewable energy and environmental initiative photography should document specifics: the solar array installed, the capacity, the location, the people maintaining it. Not a generic photograph of sunlight through leaves.
  • D&I and workforce photography needs to reflect the actual demographic reality of the organisation at different levels, not a curated sampling that overstates diversity in ways that any analyst reviewing the BRSR data will immediately notice.
  • Leadership interview films for ESG should have the same production quality as investor relations films: proper lighting, clean audio, a setting that projects authority, and a director who can work with C-suite principals efficiently.
  • Community programme and CSR documentation should show process, not just outcomes. An NGO partner in the field, a community meeting in progress, the actual implementation, and not just the ribbon-cutting.

The credibility test: If the visual content you are producing could apply to any company in your sector and any initiative anywhere in India, it is not doing its job. ESG visual content earns credibility through specificity.

Common ESG Visual Content Mistakes That Listed Companies Make

Using the same photographs for three consecutive annual reports
It is surprisingly common for companies to reuse ESG photography across multiple reporting cycles. An ESG analyst or institutional investor who reviews a company’s disclosures regularly will notice. It signals that the programme did not advance enough to generate new visual evidence which may or may not be true, but is a poor signal to send.

Outsourcing ESG photography to the wrong team
ESG documentation photography for a listed company has different requirements – technically, aesthetically, and in terms of what it needs to communicate. The team producing Instagram reels for your Diwali party is unlikely to be the right choice for your BRSR evidence photography. The brief, the production standards, and the end use are fundamentally different.

Producing video content that is all sentiment and no substance
There is a category of ESG film, and is common among large Indian corporates that spends three minutes on aspirational music, sweeping aerial drone shots, and text overlays with words like ‘sustainable future’ and ‘people first’, without a single specific, evidenced claim. This type of content has a negative signal value with institutional ESG audiences. It reads as evasion.

Treating ESG visual content as a compliance cost rather than a communication investment
The companies that produce the weakest ESG visual content are typically the ones that view it as the minimum necessary to populate the annual report. The companies that produce the strongest are the ones that have made a deliberate decision to communicate their ESG story as an investor relations and brand asset. Given where ESG is in the institutional investment conversation in India right now, that distinction is increasingly consequential.

SEBI BRSR and ESG Visual Content Strategy India: What the Framework Demands

The BRSR format is structured around nine principles derived from India’s National Guidelines on Responsible Business Conduct. These cover ethical governance, employee wellbeing, environmental stewardship, and community impact. The framework requires disclosure of 140 indicators and 98 essential and 42 leadership across all nine principle areas (SEBI / Oren analysis, 2023).

For each of these principle areas, companies are required to disclose specific metrics. The data sits in the document. What visual communication can do, and what it needs to do is build the credibility context around that data.

Consider a company disclosing that 40% of its energy consumption comes from renewable sources. That is a data point. The visual content strategy that makes that data credible includes photography of the actual renewable energy infrastructure, a short film on the journey to that milestone, leadership commentary on the pathway to net zero, and ongoing documentation that shows the number is moving in the right direction rather than stagnating.

BRSR Core is the assured subset of KPIs introduced by SEBI that applies to the top 500 listed entities from FY 2025–26, expanding to the top 1,000 by FY 2026–27. SEBI has introduced the term ‘assessment or assurance’ to reduce compliance cost while still ensuring independent validation of disclosed data. Visual content that is consistent with assessed data matters more, not less, in this context: if your assessed environmental data says one thing and your visual communications say something else, that inconsistency is a problem.

The practical implication: visual content strategy and ESG disclosure strategy should be developed together, not sequentially. The photography and video production brief should be informed by what the company is actually disclosing, and what it needs audiences to believe.

How to Brief a Visual Content Partner for Your ESG Visual Content Strategy in India

Most corporate photography and videography agencies in India are not equipped to think about ESG communication at the level a listed company needs. They can execute technically, but the strategic layer understanding what BRSR demands, how institutional audiences read visual evidence, what specificity looks like versus what aspirational stock photography looks like is a different discipline.

Whether you are working with a Delhi NCR-based team or coordinating coverage across Mumbai, Gurgaon, and other locations, the brief should include:

  • The specific BRSR principle areas and indicators the content needs to support, and not just a general mandate to ‘document our ESG work’.
  • The downstream audiences for the content: will this go into the annual report, onto the investor relations microsite, into an AGM presentation, onto LinkedIn, or all of the above? Each context has different format requirements.
  • The credibility register required: is this content for institutional investor consumption, for a government stakeholder audience, for employer branding, or for retail investor communications? Each requires a different aesthetic and tone.
  • The specificity standard: what exactly needs to be documented, at which site, in which time period, and with what level of disclosure accuracy?
  • The review and approval process: ESG content for a listed company will typically involve legal, compliance, IR, and communications sign-off. The production partner needs to understand this workflow and build turnaround timelines accordingly.

A production team that asks the right questions before the shoot, that wants to understand the BRSR context, the stakeholder audience, and the disclosure strategy is a production team that is thinking about the brief correctly.

Summary: Building a Credible ESG Visual Content Strategy for India’s Listed Companies

ESG visual content for Indian listed companies is no longer a peripheral communications function. SEBI’s BRSR framework, the growing role of ESG data in institutional investment decisions, and the increasing sophistication of stakeholder audiences have combined to make it a material part of how companies manage their disclosure credibility and reputational capital.

A coherent ESG visual content strategy for India’s listed companies includes:

  • Audience segmentation: institutional investors, retail investors, employees, and regulatory audiences each need different content in different registers.
  • A year-round content calendar aligned with the BRSR and AGM disclosure cycle, not limited to the annual report production period.
  • Documentary-register photography and video that evidences specific claims rather than communicating aspiration.
  • Production standards consistent with investor relations quality, and not CSR brochure quality, not social media quality.
  • A brief that integrates disclosure strategy and visual content strategy from the start, developed together rather than sequentially.

The listed companies in India – whether headquartered in Delhi NCR, Gurgaon, Mumbai, or Bengaluru that build the strongest ESG communication credentials over the next three to five years are the ones building visual content infrastructure now. Not the ones producing the annual photograph of a sapling being planted.

Work With a Team That Understands Corporate and Institutional Communication

CandidShutters Media is a corporate photography and videography agency focused exclusively on corporate and institutional visual communication. From C-suite interview films and investor day documentation to large-scale MICE event coverage and brand films for Fortune 500 companies, the work is built around institutional credibility standards, and not consumer marketing aesthetics.

If you are building out the ESG visual content programme for your listed company and want to speak with a team that understands both the production standards and the communication context, we would be glad to hear from you.

FAQ

1. Is ESG visual content mandatory for SEBI BRSR compliance?
SEBI’s BRSR framework mandates the disclosure of specific ESG metrics but does not prescribe the format or medium of communication beyond the structured report. Visual content photography, video, and multimedia is not a compliance requirement. However, institutional ESG analysts, proxy advisory firms, and rating agencies increasingly assess the quality and credibility of ESG communication holistically. Companies that invest in high-quality visual documentation of their ESG programmes are better positioned to support their disclosed metrics with credible evidence, which matters in the context of BRSR Core’s assessment requirements.

2. What types of ESG events or programmes are worth commissioning professional photography and video for?
The highest-value ESG documentation assignments for listed companies typically include: renewable energy facility commissions or expansions, large-scale CSR or community programme milestones, DEI leadership initiatives and workforce development programmes, environmental management system implementations at manufacturing or operations sites, and investor day or AGM events with significant ESG disclosure components. The guiding principle is specificity the content that evidences a specific claim in the BRSR is more valuable than generic sustainability imagery.

3. How should ESG visual content be distributed across platforms for a listed company?
Distribution depends on audience and content type. Photography produced for BRSR and annual report use should meet print-resolution and layout standards. Video content should be produced with social-optimised cuts (for LinkedIn and the investor relations microsite) as well as full-length versions for AGM presentations and ESG-specific investor communications. Leadership interview films belong on the investor relations section of the company website and as LinkedIn native video. Ongoing programme documentation can sustain a year-round social content calendar that keeps institutional and retail stakeholder audiences updated between annual reporting cycles.

Vaishali Sahu

About the author

Vaishali Sahu

Part of the digital communications team at CandidShutters Media, focusing on corporate storytelling and search-led brand positioning. Transforming documentation from events, CSR initiatives, and industry platforms into high-impact digital assets.

Welcome to CandidShutters Media.

We are your one stop solutions provider for corporate photography and videography, brand films, corporate documentaries, employer branding photography, testimonial videos, corporate event photography, csr photography and all brand engagement content generation.

We are based in Gurgaon (Delhi NCR) and Mumbai but are available for assignments world over.