Chronically online. Meme fluent. Good vibes only. Who knew we’d see a world in which that was legit job description? Workplace roles are changing faster than we can say “quiet quitting”. Nobody cares if you’re “proficient in MS Office” and a “team player”. They want to know how well you know the internet – its little in-jokes, the fandoms, the constantly shifting language.
Event Context
Muskaan Abichandani, 25
Chief Vibe Curator
When Abichandani is in charge, she makes sure that everyone feels like they’re part of the group right from the start. “That fear of ‘I don’t have any friends to go with’, ‘I’m not sure this is for me’ or ‘I feel awkward’ must be alleviated,” she says. Before they start, her team speaks to every attendee. “You’re not left alone in a corner at any point. The seating is planned in a way that the stranger next to you complements you. There are mediators and facilitators to keep everyone included in the conversation.”
It helps that Abichandani spent time in London, organising events for hospitality and personal-care brands. Jobs like these start at ₹3.6 lakh per year, and go up to ₹12 lakh. The bonus: You feel like part of the group too.
Tanya Singh, 27
Onaiza Drabu, 36
Digital Anthropologist
So, you speak fluent brainrot? Cute. Onaiza Drabu does and gets paid for it. She studies the internet the way traditional anthropologists study villages: Observing communities, decoding rituals and spotting small cultural shifts. If everyone’s suddenly obsessed with matcha, Nigerian breakdance or “I was there” comments, she works out what it will mean six months from now.
Observations like these are valuable business advice. Her firm, Codeswitch, helps companies design everything from websites and apps to packaging. When a frozen-food company wanted to organise products by category (chicken, seafood, vegetarian), she pointed out that young people don’t think about ingredients; they think about meals: What’s for breakfast? Lunch? Dinner? The firm reorganised their app around those questions to make it easier to navigate.
In Europe and North America, jobs like these pay $85,000 and $130,000 annually. Most of Drabu’s clients are overseas. In India, similar roles pay roughly ₹10 lakh to ₹30 lakh annually.
Bhumisha Rajgar, 24
Meme Marketer
On an Instagram Reel from @MixFeels.in, the caption reads: The World Cup needs Shakira, like football needs a ball. It features the singer’s FIFA anthem Dai Dai. It has racked up over six million views. That connection, that wit, that split-second dopamine hit – it’s Rajgar’s stock in trade.
“Earlier, clients thought memes were just for fun,” she says. “Now they understand they’re one of the fastest ways to make people discover a song.” If you’re good at it, you can earn around ₹1.5 lakh a month.
Saloni Jain, 28
Community Manager
It is made up entirely of women trying to conceive. Members celebrate pregnancies, grieve setbacks and swap advice on IVF treatments and emotional burnout. Engaged members are bumped up to “community champions”, who welcome newcomers and answer questions without Jain having to step in. “You can ask ChatGPT for information. But you can’t ask it what it felt like to go through the same thing you’re going through.” The real measure of a good community manager, she says, is how little you’re needed.
“It’s rewarding because you’re genuinely helping people,” she says. “You’ve built a space for people to trade advice and encouragement they can’t get anywhere else.” Sure, there’s compassion fatigue. Sure, some fights get ugly. That’s when she steps in, turns off comments before it ruins the vibe of the group, but reaches out separately to the feuding members to calm things down.
Player Focus
It sounds like a made-up job. But Abichandani has the business card to prove it’s real. Here’s how she describes her role: “I curate an experience, not an event, not a standalone night, not a gathering, but a sense of community and belonging”. At Mriga, an organisation that brings people together through sports, wellness and personal development, she runs Mriga Socials, the arm for music, dance, art and wellness events in Ahmedabad. They do jazz nights, workshops to design Japanese fans, coil pottery sessions and dance fitness raves. “There’s a slim chance that you’ll leave a concert knowing more people than you walked in with,” she says. So, each session is deliberately small, an intimate huddle that feels more real.
Team Analysis
She and her team of 10 at 3Folks Media create content for music labels. They’ve worked on campaigns for K-pop star Jennie, Central Cee, King, Darshan Raval and the band W.i.S.H. The job description: Make paid content seem like it, like everything else, was birthed by the internet too.
It calls for as much planning as doomscrolling. “When a new song drops, we first post it across 100 to 200 Instagram pages,” she says. Alongside are discovery triggers: “Oh my God, Tyla just dropped a new album, you have to hear this”. Next, Rajgar’s team creates fan edits that piggypack on current trends, with the help of “meme vendors”, people who manage hundreds of meme pages across niches ranging from Bollywood and K-dramas to anime and even devotional content. Then the attention snowballs.
For Sunday by Aditya A, NAALAYAK and Ronit Vinta, her team paired the track with edits from the hit anime One Piece. The breezy tune matched perfectly with visuals of a smiling Luffy leaping across blue skies. The song hit 25,000 Reels on Instagram. For Travis Scott’s FE!N, they used a video of Navratri bloopers. It racked up over 12 million views.
Match Outlook
Drabu trained at Oxford. She saw the shift towards clean, ingredient-first beauty, long before we learnt how to say Niacinamide. “When Diljit Dosanjh performed at Coachella in a black kurta and tehmat in 2023, I knew that hyper-regional pride was about to become mainstream,” she says. “Fashion brands would lean into local crafts, chefs would spotlight hyper-local ingredients.” Sure enough, in 2025, Masaba launched a lipstick called Thak Gayi as part of her Batua collection.
Jain fell into the gig sideways, after studying journalism, pursuing social media marketing, and handling a pet-care group for a pet-food company. Indian founders still undervalue the role, while American firms pay community managers roughly $170K a year. But for India, she expects that gap to close fast as AI eats into other marketing jobs.
From HT Brunch, July 18, 2026
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