Brief
India’s Digital Fashion Disruptors
India’s Digital Fashion Disruptors
Navigating the future of fashion.
- Min. Lesezeit
- Summarize with Generative AI
Brief
Navigating the future of fashion.
The fashion and lifestyle space is India’s second largest consumer category, valued at $110 billion with approximately 10% online at $11 billion. The online fashion market overall is expected to grow to approximately $35 billion by financial year 2028 (FY28) at a 25% CAGR. This market has been historically fragmented into several small brands and sellers. The vibrant local manufacturing ecosystem and rich tradition of native fabrics have led to a structurally unbranded market (particularly in certain categories such as ethnic wear). Venture capital/private equity funding in the lifestyle space has historically been relatively muted. However, this market is undergoing a significant change.
Consumer preferences are shifting, with an increasing willingness to experiment with new brands and a growing desire to wear aspirational brands. E-commerce has democratized access to fashion, including fashion brands. The category has seen around 30% historical growth, compounded annually, since 2019. Certain historically fragmented subcategories, such as ethnic wear and kids wear, are also undergoing significant transformation with the growth and scaling of new digitally led brands.
This report focuses on understanding the historical growth patterns in the online fashion and lifestyle market, especially for digital disruptor brands. The report aims to do the following:
The online fashion market is approximately $11 billion and has grown at around 30% per year since 2019, led by four categories of players: national brands, private labels, digital disruptor brands, and unbranded sellers. National brands are historically established and began largely offline. These include brands such as Louis Philippe, Puma, and Biba. Private labels such as Avaasa from AJIO have been created and scaled by online retailers to expand assortment and fill price gaps. Digital disruptor brands, such as The Souled Store and Bewakoof, were born online and have taken a radically different direct-to-consumer (D2C) approach to scaling the business. Finally, the fashion market has always had a long tail of unbranded sellers with an attractive price-led value proposition.
These players have seen different trajectories over the past four years:
Bain research suggests that the digital disruptor segment will grow rapidly. With a large current market size of approximately $2.4 billion and a projected annual growth rate of around 35%, digital disruptors have the potential to reach a value of $10 billion by FY28. Four major factors will underpin this shift:
Fashion—apparel, in particular—has relatively low barriers to entry. Nimble digital disruptors with a deep consumer understanding and a focused niche have entered the market in large numbers. Over 700 brands exist today that have created a high-quality product, have invested in customer engagement, and often have a direct-to-customer relationship on social media or via their site. However, Bain analysis suggests that, currently, less than 10% of these brands have scaled beyond INR 50 crore.
Fashion brands face four common challenges on their scaling journeys:
Learnings from brands that have broken through the initial scale threshold suggest four clear patterns:
The next wave of winning brands will not follow the platform playbook but will be true fashion brands, built on differentiated propositions, memorable branding, a sharp understanding of assortment, and tight data-led operations.
Online fashion is a significant $11 billion category in FY23, growing at 30% per annum historically since 2019. Growth in the online fashion space, which was previously largely unbranded, is now driven by brands at various price points.
Over the past four years, the online share of national brands has more than doubled, with leading Indian public brands experiencing more than five times the growth in scale compared to pre-Covid levels. Strengthened online distribution, increased marketing efforts, and higher investments in co-creation with e-commerce platforms have driven this.
Private labels have also played a material role in driving online growth, expanding into key category and price point gaps.
Digital disruptors are projected to outpace the overall market growth with 35% annual growth, reaching $10 billion by FY28 from the current size of $2.4 billion (see Figure 1). The expectation is that the number of brands exceeding INR 250 crore in revenue will jump five times by FY28, with categories such as expressive wear, ethnic wear, and jewelry having multiple scale brands, while categories such as athleisure/activewear will see a smaller but equally scaled number of brands.
The growth of digital disruptors will be primarily driven by Gen Z and millennials, who have a high propensity to buy fashion online. Website and app data analysis shows that 70% to 80% of the traffic to digital disruptors originates from these segments, with Gen Z accounting for 30% to 35% and millennials for 40% to 45% of the total traffic. Consumer spending analysis shows that 24% of 18-to-24-year-olds buy from digital disruptor brands, compared to just 13% of 45-year-olds and older. Gen Z and millennials will account for approximately 75% of spending on disruptors by FY28, up from approximately 70% today.
Digital disruptors are also addressing younger customers through relevant associations, for example, staying current through merchandising based on the latest pop culture themes or collaborating with end users to co-create “designs of the week” that talk to users directly (see Figure 2).
Digital disruptors have made their presence felt more in categories that are fragmented and have a long tail of sellers. It is here that their agile business models have provided these brands with an edge (see Figure 3).
For example, fashion accessories has historically been a fragmented category with few national brands. This category demands a very wide range, which can be hard to manage. Disruptor jewelry brands have redefined the business model here. One rapidly scaling brand has positioned itself as a “fast fashion destination” for gold jewelry. With over 17,000 designs (and an incremental approximate 1,000 added every quarter), the brand still runs on close to zero finished inventory. Reconfiguring the supply model with technology has made this possible.
Kids wear is another fragmented category with complexity arising from the number of occasions to be served, multiple sizes, and the need to provide quality products in a category with very limited willingness to pay a premium. A leading brand in this space has turned these challenges into an advantage, creating a kids wear destination serving all occasions. Depth in core products enables sharp pricing along with gross margin management. At the same time, full-funnel customer intent data enables flexible inventory management, thus keeping turns as high as six or seven, even with more than 12,000 products. Finally, the full ownership of the customer journey enables true customer lifetime value maximization.
In recent years, favorable macroeconomic conditions have propelled the scaling of multiple digital disruptors. The initial growth phase up to INR 50 crore primarily revolves around establishing a product–market fit and developing a standout product to generate growth momentum. Subsequently, brands experience a breakout phase, usually between INR 50 crore and INR 100 crore, facilitated by funding that enables investments in assortment expansion, marketing, and channel expansion.
However, as brands surpass the INR 100 crore mark, they often encounter challenges in sustaining growth. These challenges arise due to unrelated product proliferation and inefficient marketing, resulting in operational complexities.
Brands that successfully break out and achieve more than INR 200 crore exhibit disciplined product expansion, structured channels, market strategies, and innovative supply chain management. Crossing the complexity barrier between INR 100 crore and INR 200 crore often leads to accelerated growth for these brands (see Figure 4).
Fashion demands a heightened level of discipline due to the ease of entering subcategories through outsourced production, coupled with the inherent difficulty in scaling within new subcategories. Brands often lose sight of sustainable growth and profitability by attempting to build technology infrastructure for scaling or pursuing expansions into unrelated categories requiring substantial upfront investments. Brands can scale when they prioritize a strong focus on product development and customer-centric strategies rather than pursuing blanket channel and business expansions.
In the last five years, the highest investor interest in terms of the number of companies invested in and fund value was observed in the BPC sector, followed by apparel (see Figure 5). However, it is likely funding will shift toward apparel brands as more fashion brands demonstrate a path to profitability or scaled growth.
Analysis of the financial and operational metrics of over 150 digital disruptor fashion and lifestyle brands reveals five distinct growth patterns (see Figure 6). These archetypes are defined based on revenue, growth, profitability, marketing, and channel focus of brands:
In recent years, rapidly growing new age brands across categories have developed distinct value propositions. At the same time, functional aspects, such as price, comfort, and fit, as well as product excellence factors, such as aesthetic appeal and variety, have become hygiene customer expectations.
For example, a rapidly growing women’s activewear brand emphasizes body positivity and confidence through inclusive sizing and relevant fits for Indians. Bain customer data suggests that their spikes on well-being, fun, and comfort mirror the expectations of customers from that category (see Figure 7). The brand carries this forward into marketing choices by eschewing big celebrities in favor of relatable people like gym instructors. The theme of mental well-being is reinforced by fun user-generated content that has high engagement on social media.
Another rapidly growing expressive wear brand anchors on fun memes by giving expression to them in trending products. This brand has also successfully driven premiumization by tapping into the latest media content to create branded merchandise that enables young customers to express themselves and their affiliations. Analysis of their social media traffic suggests that relevant mid-sized influencers who more authentically appeal to specific moments in time drive as much (if not more) interest and engagement than celebrities. Authenticity and relevance matter more than ever.
Building brand awareness is important since this also encourages a nonlinear increase in purchases. Brands with 60% awareness among the target audience have a 30% purchase rate, whereas brands with 30% awareness have a less than 10% purchase rate. With meticulous branding, including the creation of memorable and distinct brand assets, revenue growth typically outpaces customer traffic growth over time, driven by loyalty- and retention-led growth. Brands that have successfully scaled have typically allocated 40% to 50% of their early marketing spending on brand building, as opposed to being fully focused on performance marketing.
Capital-efficient brands show the ability to convert limited spending and traffic growth into high conversion and revenue growth (see Figure 8). Brands investing for growth are still buying traffic that converts linearly into revenue, but over time they should be able to find efficiencies from the higher investments in awareness.
Brand marketing can take different but equally successful paths. Successful digital disruptors are increasingly engaging customers through trending content translated to social media and further, to product design, for example, focusing the spotlight on young content creators and comedians in the case of expressive wear-led brands. At the other end of the spectrum, a popular celebrity-led lifestyle brand has managed to cut through the extreme clutter of the casual wear space. Tapping into India’s craze for sports celebrities, it has built a youth-focused and aspirational brand.
Successful brands typically manage marketing spends on marketplaces at approximately 10% of channel revenue for mass brands and 10% to 15% for mass premium and premium brands. For the D2C channel, marketing costs tend to increase, going up to 30% to 40% of revenue. Marketing spending decreases with scale and growth in customer base as organic and repeat sales increase.
Fashion assortments are typically broader than other categories. If 12% of products drive approximately 80% of revenue in BPC, the corresponding number is approximately 34% of revenue for kids wear, given the need for variety and various sizes. Brands catering to younger audiences with a fast fashion orientation can be even more distributed. For instance, even a brand that generates less than INR 100 crore in revenue in the specifically defined athleisure space carries around 290 options and has added four categories and approximately 220 options in the last year.
Fashion as a category is challenging given the need to balance width, depth, and freshness. Fashion brands, therefore, have a more pressing set of imperatives than brands in other categories:
Brands can retain relevance by owning a category across occasions and category entry points. The kids wear destination mentioned earlier has scaled by being the go-to choice for occasion wear across a wide range of occasions, while still maintaining a focused core assortment. However, unplanned category expansion typically does not scale well.
Significant category expansion potential may differ depending on the starting point of the brands. Typical expansion paths by subcategories include:
The choice of channel entry depends on the brand’s value proposition, price segment, growth objective, and channel costs. Channel choices typically evolve over the brand’s lifecycle and with changing brand objectives. Having a balanced channel mix is critical as the brand grows to a meaningful scale, particularly with one channel feeding the other to establish a differentiated growth flywheel.
Owned customer channels (website and app) provide control over the customer experience and engagement and generate meaningful insights into customer cohort-wise behavior, cross-shopping patterns, etc. However, customer acquisition costs can be high on D2C channels (incrementally 20% or more of revenue vs. marketplaces).
Marketplaces provide the leverage of e-commerce infrastructure and higher traffic. However, the economics of selling on marketplaces is not without trade-offs. Mass brands can often leverage the traffic on marketplaces effectively. However, the cost of visibility and generating revenue can be higher for more premium brands. The choice and mix of online channels require a balance across categories, parts of the portfolio, and different target customers.
Digital disruptors are also increasingly looking to pursue (selective) offline expansion for brand building or revenue growth. Premium brands often opt for early offline expansion to enhance brand awareness and generate trial opportunities. Increasingly, most brands will shift toward a Pareto mix of sales-driven online and supported offline to manage brand visibility, engagement, and trials. Smart brands will also work with retailers to partner on customer data sharing and insights.
For example, a leading online-first eyewear company has rapidly moved to create an omnichannel presence to enhance customer experience after around three years of purely online sales. Within 10 years of starting offline, this brand has expanded to approximately 2,000 retail stores across India and currently drives most of its revenue from offline channels.
Digital disruptors must effectively track and employ key strategic levers to ensure efficient and streamlined operations with minimal overhead:
TMRW is a tech-led “House of Brands” venture from the Aditya Birla Group. With an emphasis on fashion and lifestyle, the company’s strategic vision entails crafting a dominant House of Brands enterprise, exceeding the $1 billion benchmark, within the upcoming 5–7 years. Functioning as both a coach and a catalyst, TMRW assumes the pivotal role of nurturing these brands, steering them toward becoming the next generation of revered, consumer-adored labels. TMRW’s competitive edge derives from an extraordinary amalgamation of expertise in category and brand cultivation, blended seamlessly with cutting-edge digital-first capabilities and adept leadership. TMRW is focused on building large, enduring brands and deploying a balanced growth path with strong fundamentals and unit-economics.