How India's Festival of Lights shapes commerce, gifting, and corporate culture
Introduction
[[Diwali]] — the Festival of Lights — is observed by Hindus, Jains, Sikhs, and some Buddhists across India and the global South Asian diaspora. It falls on the fifteenth day of Kartik, the eighth month of the Hindu Lunisolar Calendar, typically in October or November. The festival spans five days, with the main celebration — the lighting of oil lamps and bursting of fireworks — on the night of the new moon.
For the Indian economy, Diwali is what Christmas is to Western retail: the commercial peak of the year, driven by a cultural association between the festival and prosperity, new beginnings, and the worship of Lakshmi, the goddess of wealth. Understanding Diwali's business dimensions is essential for any company with Indian market exposure.
The Diwali Consumer Economy
What Indians Buy
Diwali spending in India spans a wide range of categories. Gold and jewelry are the most culturally significant purchases: buying gold on Dhanteras (the first day of the Diwali cycle, dedicated to the goddess Dhantrayodashi) is considered auspicious for wealth in the coming year. India's gold imports and retail sales spike sharply in October–November because of this tradition.
Consumer electronics — televisions, smartphones, appliances — are a massive Diwali spending category. The Indian e-commerce giants (Flipkart, Amazon India) run their most aggressive sale events during the Diwali fortnight, with gross merchandise value running into billions of dollars during the event period.
Automobiles, home improvement, and real estate also see their annual sales peaks around Diwali, partly because of auspicious timing beliefs and partly because of the concentration of year-end bonus payments from employers in this period.
The Sweets Economy
Exchanging sweets is one of the most universal Diwali practices. Mithai (traditional Indian sweets) shops experience their highest sales of the year. Corporate gifting in the form of premium sweet boxes from branded confectioners is one of India's largest seasonal B2B commerce categories.
Corporate Gifting and Bonuses
The Diwali Bonus
Giving employees a Diwali bonus — anywhere from one day's pay to a month's salary — is an entrenched expectation in much of the Indian corporate world, particularly in small and medium enterprises. Failing to give Diwali bonuses in industries where this is customary creates significant employee relations problems.
Corporate Gift-Giving
The B2B Diwali gift market in India is substantial. Companies send gift hampers to clients, partners, and vendors as a standard relationship maintenance activity. Common corporate Diwali gifts include:
Premium sweet boxes from established brands (Haldiram's, Bengali confectioners, etc.) are universal and safe. Dry fruit hampers (cashews, almonds, pistachios, figs) are a well-regarded premium option. Silver coins with Lakshmi imagery are considered auspicious. Branded gifting — company-branded accessories, stationery sets, or tech gadgets — is increasingly popular at the corporate level.
For non-Indian companies gifting Indian partners, the key principle is to recognize the festival explicitly: a gift package accompanied by a card wishing 'Happy Diwali' means far more than a generic gift sent without acknowledging the occasion.
Office Culture During Diwali
Decorations and Puja
Indian offices typically decorate with rangoli (geometric patterns made from colored powder or flower petals), diyas (clay oil lamps), and marigold garlands in the days leading up to Diwali. Many offices conduct a Lakshmi Puja — a ritual worship ceremony — on Diwali day, inviting all employees to participate regardless of religion. Foreign visitors and employees are welcome to observe or participate respectfully; declining politely is also acceptable.
Office Parties and Celebrations
Many large Indian companies host Diwali parties in the week before or after the main holiday. These are important social events: attendance signals team engagement, and senior leaders typically host and address the team. For foreign colleagues, attending Diwali office celebrations is a strong relationship signal.
Working Around the Diwali Window
Office Closure
Diwali itself (the main night, typically a Wednesday or Thursday in October–November) is a statutory holiday across most Indian states. Surrounding days often see very low office attendance as employees extend the holiday with casual leave. Expect the full Diwali week to have reduced productivity and slow email response times.
The week after Diwali is often consumed with post-celebration catch-up and can also be interrupted by additional regional holidays (Bhai Dooj, Chhath Puja in Bihar). Build a two-week buffer around Diwali for any deadline that requires Indian partner input.
The Indian Diaspora
Diwali is observed by South Asian diaspora communities across the UK, US, Canada, UAE, Singapore, and Australia. Acknowledging Diwali with Indian colleagues and clients in these markets — even with a simple message — is an effective relationship signal that requires minimal effort.