
Rahmon is a multi-award winning digital entrepreneur recognised by Forbes 30 Under 30, Campaign Magazine & Hearst Media Week’s 30 Under 30 and Cannes Lions. A KPMG Entrepreneur of the Year award winner, he is the co-founder of Loud Parade, an industry leading creative and music production agency pioneering new approaches at the intersection of culture, technology, and advertising for brands.
( About Rahmon )
Rahmon’s authority sits at the crossroads of culture and commerce, where sharp instincts meet disciplined strategy and ideas earn their place in the real world.
His work has been recognised by Forbes 30 Under 30, Campaign, KPMG and Cannes Lions, achieving over 8 billion views worldwide, but the metric his clients value most is simpler: did the work land with the people it was actually made for? Loud Parade exists to answer that with evidence, not guesswork.
He is also a global public speaker, bringing that same clarity and cultural intelligence to stages around the world, including Cannes Lions, St. Gallen in Switzerland and major events in Saudi Arabia, where he has spoken alongside global CMOs and industry leaders. What makes him stand out in those rooms is a rare blend of youth and experience that builds immediate trust.
He is young enough to understand the shifts shaping culture in real time, yet seasoned enough to translate them into strategies brands can rely on.
Beyond brand work, Rahmon partners directly with the biggest global creators in the world such as Khaby Lame, shaping talent and brand relationships that respect both sides of the table. The discretion, discipline and taste that guide Loud Parade’s campaigns extend into these collaborations, ensuring everyone protects their equity, their narrative and their future.
If your goal is not more impressions but the right impression with the right people, you are in the right place. Engagements are intentional and strategy-led, with creative, music and talent built around a clear cultural thesis rather than the other way around.
For brands that refuse to be invisible, Rahmon and Loud Parade offer something specific: a calm, informed presence in a noisy space and a path into youth culture that feels earned, not engineered.













