1.
82°E
Founded in 2021 by Bollywood Actress Deepika Padukone and Jigar
Shah, 82°E is a direct-to-consumer (D2C) personal care brand.
It sells four skincare products – moisturisers, face oil, cleanser and
sunscreen – in the price range of INR 1,200 and INR 2,900, as per the
company’s website.
In December 2022, it secured $7.5 Mn in seed funding from DSG
Consumer Partners, IDEO Ventures, Padukone’s family office, and
some ultra-high net worth individuals (UHNIs).
It also has a research and development lab in Bengaluru city.
2. Alphavedic
Founded in 2019 By Shrey Jain and Shruti Khare, Alphavedic is a
bootstrapped D2C startup that sells Ayurvedic beauty and personal
care products. With 24 stock keeping units (SKUs) in its kitty, the
startup sells haircare products, shampoos, conditioners, lip balms,
creams, among other beauty products.
The company plans to launch ayurvedic vitamins and supplements
over the course of next few months.
The startup competes with the likes of The Ayurveda Company, Kapiva,
and Forest Essentials.
Alphavedic sells its products through its websites and ecommerce
platforms such as Amazon, Nykaa, and Flipkart. It has retails its
products across 40 offline chains in India.
3. Anveya Living
Founded in 2018 by serial entrepreneur Saurav Patnaik and a former
FirstCry executive Vivek Singh, Anveya Living sells sustainable hair and
skin care products.
In 2022, the D2C startup launched its flagship products Colorisma and
Curlvana and added a gold acne kit to its offerings. The startup clocked
a revenue of about INR 11.7 Cr in the fiscal year 2021-22 (FY22).
The Bengaluru-based startup aims to clock a revenue of INR 45 Cr in
2023. It has added more hair care products to its offerings.
In February 2022, Anveya raised INR 8 Cr in a seed funding round from
Venture capital firm Rukam Capital.
4. Arata
Founded in 2017 by Dhruv Madhok and Dhruv Bhasin, ARATA’s first-
ever product, a homemade hair gel, came to being around Madhok’s
wedding. Madhok had made the chemical-free hair gel for Bhasin.
24 months later, the D2C brand’s first product was sold on its website
and the company took shape. The startup derives its name from the
Japanese word ‘Arata’, which means ‘fresh and new.’
ARATA finds its differentiation in the chemical-free beauty and skincare
segment, and its range includes products such as hair gels, hair
creams, shampoos, conditioners, toothpaste, face wash and serums.
The D2C brand procures ingredients globally and locally from certified
organic farms, which are developed into finished products after
extensive research and development (R&D). The startup claims to offer
zero-chemical and toxic-free personal care products that use only
recycled plastic for packaging as part of its sustainability promise.
The D2C brand currently has 26 SKUs and a user base of more than 5
Lakh customers. It claims to have sold more than 7 Lakh products by
mid-2022. However, a majority of its sales, around 70%, take place from
ecommerce marketplaces such as Amazon, Nykaa, Flipkart, and
BigBasket.
5. Atomberg
Set up in 2012 by Manoj Meena and Sibabrata Das, Atomberg
manufactures energy-efficient fans and allied equipment, along with
mixer grinders. Its product portfolio includes pedestal, wall and ceiling
fans, among others.
In 2021, Deepika Padukone-led family office KA Enterprises invested in
Atomberg’s Series B funding round. In May 2023, the startup raised a
further $86 Mn in a Series C round.
Besides Padukone, its cap table also includes A91 Partners, Survam
Partners, Trifecta Capital, and Whiteboard Capital Fund, Temasek,
Steadview Capital, among others.
During the time of its last fundraising, the startup was said to have 400
service centres throughout India and clocked an annual revenue rate
of INR 300 Cr.
6. Bacca Bucci
Much before the Gen Z lingo acquired buzzwords such as sneakers or
running shoes, the duo of Anuj Nevatia and Natwar Agrawal was
quietly working on setting up something of their own in the footwear
industry.
For Nevatia, the decision to focus on footwear was primarily driven by
factors such as business seasonality, the organized nature of the
market, and the timeless demand for shoes, which laid the
groundwork for the inception of Bacca Bucci, a direct-to-consumer
(D2C) footwear brand established in 2015.
As a bootstrapped startup, Bacca Bucci leverages artificial intelligence
(AI) in its backend processes for shoe manufacturing. Beyond
footwear, the platform also offers a range of complementary products,
including belts, wallets, and toiletry bags.
Presently, Bacca Bucci markets its products through its official website
and various ecommerce platforms.
7. Beco
Founded in 2019 by Aditya Ruia, Akshay Varma, and Anuj Ruia, Beco is
a sustainable kitchen, home, and personal care brand. It sells
biodegradable and combustible products such as tissue rolls, bamboo
facial tissues, dishwashing liquid, toothbrushes, and garbage bags.
In September 2022, the startup secured $3 Mn in its Series A round led
by Rukam Capital along with Prashant Pittie, Titan Capital, Priyavrata
Mafatlal and Better Capital.
While announcing its Series A fundraise, it claimed that it would
expand its retail stores to 10K across India.
Prior to this, it had raised INR 4 Cr in its seed funding round from
Climate Angels Fund, Rukam Capital, Sequoia Sprout, and Zivame
founder Richa Kar, among others.
8. Bewakoof
Founded in 2012 by Prabhkiran Singh and Siddharth Munot, Bewakoof
sells a wide variety of clothes, stationery items, footwear and mobile
accessories on its website. The D2C brand also sells a host of
merchandise clothes and accessories in partnership with Marvel,
F.R.I.E.N.D.S, Star Wars, Disney, DC and Looney Tunes.
In August 2021, it secured $8.09 Mn in its Pre-Series B funding
round and in December 2022, Aditya Birla Group’s house of brands
business TMRW invested INR 200 Cr in the D2C startup Bewakoof.
In total, Bewakoof has raised a total funding of INR 23.6 Mn to date. Its
cap table includes IvyCap Ventures, Spring Marketing Capital,
Investcorp and Klub-led accelr8 fund, among others.
At the time of its last fundraising activity, it was said to have sold more
than 1 Cr products and served 60 Lakh customers. It also aimed to
record INR 2000 Cr in sales by 2025.
9. BlissClub
Set up in 2020 by Minu Margeret, BlissClub sells a host of women’s
activewear including bottom wear, sports bras, tops, tees and co-ords,
among others. Under the BlissQueen Royalty Program, the D2C startup
offers reward points to its loyal customers.
In May, the Bengaluru-based D2C startup secured $15 Mn in its Series
A funding round. It has raised a total funding of $17.25 Mn to date.
The startup claims to have grown its sales by 25X over the last year. It
aims to attain an annualised revenue of INR 100 Cr by the end of 2022.
Eight Roads Ventures, Elevation Capital, Swiggy’ Sriharsha Majety,
Mamaearth’s Ghazal Alagh, Licious’ Vivek Gupta and Abhay Hanjura,
SoftBank’s Munish Varma and Sumer Juneja, Shopify’s Brennan Loh
are among its investors.
10. Bluestone
Set up in 2011 by Gaurav Singh Kushwaha and Vidya Nataraj,
Bluestone offers more than 8000 jewellery designs in rings, pendants
and other allied products. It follows an omnichannel approach to
selling its products.
In March this year, the D2C jewellery brand secured $30 Mn from Hero
Enterprise’s Sunil Kant Munjal and other investors at a post-money
valuation of $410 Mn. So far, it has raised $87.8 Mn from investors
including Ratan Tata, Accel, IvyCap, Saama Capital, Kalaari and Iron
Pillar, among others.
In the financial year 2020-21, it narrowed its consolidated losses by
nearly 43% to INR 13.8 Cr. Meanwhile, its revenue from operations
grew by 5% year-on-year to INR 269 Cr in the corresponding period.
11. boAt
Launched in 2016 by Aman Gupta and Sameer Mehta, boAt is an audio
direct-to-consumer brand that manufactures a host of audio products
such as earphones, headphones and speakers, among others. It retails
these products on its website and ecommerce marketplaces.
In October 2022, boAT secured nearly $61 Mn from Warburg Pincus
and Malabar Investments. With this fundraising, the startup also
decided to delay its IPO plans.
Its cap table includes InnoVen Capital, Qualcomm Ventures and
Fireside Ventures, among others.
In the financial year 2021-22 (FY22), its profit dipped 20% YoY to INR
68.7 Cr in FY22 against INR 86.5 Cr in FY21. Revenue of the New Delhi-
based D2C electronics brand surged 117.5% YoY to INR 2,886.4 Cr in
FY22.
12. Bold Care
Founded in 2020 by Rajat Jadhav, Rahul Krishnan, Harsh Singh, and
Mohit Yadav, Bold Care is an end-to-end men’s health and wellness
platform that centres around sexual health, hair care and daily
nutrition.
It sells sexual wellness kits, complete hair care packs, and natural
supplements to boost immunity, sleep, haircare, and sexual health.
Accelerated by Huddle, the health and wellness D2C brand has so far
catered to 2.3 Lakh men and sells its products on marketplaces and its
own website. The startup has secured $3 Mn in funding to date.
Bold Care is backed by names such as Sharrp Ventures, Anthill
Ventures, Stanford Angels & Entrepreneurs and Shiprocket, NB
Ventures, among others.
13. BoldFit
Fitness startup BoldFit, which was founded in December 2018 by Pallav
Bihani, sells nutritional supplements and fitness equipment to
consumers.
The startup sells Food Safety and Standards Authority of India-certified
(FSSAI) products in the market and works with WHO-GMP-approved
manufacturing firms to implement quality checks at every stage.
The fitness startup has created more than 400 SKUs across health and
ayurvedic supplements, healthy foods, home gym equipment and
accessories in the last three years.
In the financial year 2022, it reported a revenue of INR 63 Cr and sold
over 5 Mn products.
With an annual revenue rate (ARR) of 205%, BoldFit has served more
than 2.5 Mn customers to date.
14. Bombay Shirt Company
Founded in 2012 by Akshay Narvekar, Bombay Shirt Company is an
online clothing brand. The startup sells bespoke apparel for men and
women. It presently leads four brands–Bombay Shirt Company, cityof_,
Pause and Korra. It has a presence in India, Dubai and New York.
In 2019, the Mumbai-based clothing startup reportedly raised $9 Mn in
its Series B funding round. It has raised a total of $11 Mn in funding to
date.
Its cap table includes venture capital firm Lightbox and individual
investors Amit Patni and Arihant Patni.
15. Bombay Shaving Company
Founded in 2016, Bombay Shaving Company initially started as a men-
focussed D2C personal care brand but later started offering a range of
products in hair removal and hair care categories. It has a portfolio of
over 100 SKUs including shaving regimens, trimmers, beard products,
razors for women, wax strips, hair removal creams, and other allied
personal care products.
Earlier in 2022, it secured INR 30 Cr in its then-ongoing Series C
funding round. So far, it has a total of $45.6 Mn in funding. It counts
Gulf Islamic Investments, Malabar Investments, Patni Advisors,
Singularity AMC and Reckitt Benckiser as its investors.
It claims to have served over 3 Mn customers till date and has clocked
INR 150 Cr annual revenue rate, expanding 35% on a quarter-on-
quarter basis.
16. CaratLane
Founded in 2008 by Mithun Sacheti and Srinivasa Gopalan, CaratLane
offers a host of jewellery, right from bracelets to kids-focussed
pendants to customised pieces of jewellery. It retails its products
through an omnichannel marketing strategy.
In 2019, Tata Group-led Titan Company infused INR 99.9 Cr in
CaratLane thereby, increasing its stakeholding to 66.39% in the
startup. Subsequently, the conglomerate, in August 2023, announced
plan to acquire an additional 27.18% stake in CaratLane for INR 4,621
Cr.
Once the deal goes through, Tata will effectively own 98.28% of the
company with the jewellery startup acquiring a valuation of INR 17,000
Cr ($2 Bn).
The jewellery brands reported a consolidated revenue of INR 2,169 Cr
in FY23. Besides, CaratLane’s net sales value (NSV) also surged to INR
571 Cr in FY23, up 56.7% compared to FY22.
17. Chaayos
Founded in 2012 by Nitin Saluja and Raghav Verma, Chaayos sells a
wide variety of tea and packaged food products. It sells tea at its
physical stores while other packaged food products are sold via
ecommerce marketplaces and physical stores.
In June 2022, it secured $53 Mn in its Series C funding round from
investors including Elevation Capital, Think Investments, Tiger Global
and Alpha Wave Ventures. It has raised $85.5M in funding to date.
18. Chai Point
Set up in 2010 by Amuleek Singh Bijral and Professor Tarun Khanna,
Chai Point follows an omnichannel approach to selling tea varieties
and other snacks. It opened its first retail store in 2010 followed by
introducing home delivery of its flagship teas in 2014 and rolling out
tea and coffee vending machines in 2016.
In 2018, the D2C F&B brand secured $20 Mn in its Series C funding
round. So far, it has raised $36 Mn in funding from investors including
Paragon Partners, Eight Roads, Saama Capital and DSG.
In the financial year 2020-21, it reported revenues from operations at
INR 55.64 Cr and loss after tax stood at INR 78.49 Cr, according to
Tofler.
19. Chumbak
Founded in 2010 by husband-wife duo Vivek Prabhakar and Shubhra
Chadda, Chumbak is a home and lifestyle brand that sells furniture,
home decor items, jewellery and footwear, among others. It has an
omnichannel presence across India, particularly in Tier-1 cities.
In 2019, the Bengaluru-based D2C brand secured INR 7.39 Cr in its Pre-
Series E funding round from Gaja Capital Fund. So far, it has bagged
$23.5 Mn in funding from investors.
It looks to set up over 50 physical retail stores across India and further
aims to have more than 100 retail stores in the country in the next one
to two years.
20. ClearDekho
In a space that is populated by big names such as Lenskart, and Titan
Eye Plus, ClearDekho found a niche in the country’s D2C eyewear
segment. Building on his prior experience in the space, ClearDekho
founder and CEO Shivi Singh is tapping the burgeoning eyewear
market in Tier III & IV cities of India.
In a chat with Inc42, Singh said that the company aims to standardise
eyewear accessibility for consumers in smaller towns and cities while
offering value for money.
Founded in 2017, the startup has so far raised $7 Mn in funding. It
counts names like Venture Catalysts, Jaipuria Family Office, and
Dholakia Ventures as its investors.
With more than 100 franchisee stores across India, ClearDekho has a
presence in Punjab, Haryana, Madhya Pradesh, and Rajasthan.
21. Clensta
During his eight-year-long stint with the Indian defence startup
ecosystem, Puneet Gupta came across a peculiar problem — soldiers
stationed at the high-altitude areas of Drass and Siachen would go for
months without a bath due to freezing weather conditions and
extreme water scarcity.
Gupta, an IIM-Calcutta alumnus, developed a waterless body bath and
shampoo that can be used by people to take baths sans water while
maintaining proper personal hygiene.
Featured in the 2022 edition of Inc42’s Fast42 list, Clensta claims to
offer more than 14 SKUs and sold more than 3.8 Mn products in 2022.
It clocked revenues to the tune of INR 13.3 Cr in FY21. Clensta claims to
have seen a 100% increase in its FY23 top line, which its plans to
further grow 3X in FY24.
Founded in 2016, the startup is backed by the likes of IAN Fund, N+1
Capital, IPV Fund, HEM Securities and Venture Catalysts. It has so far
raised INR 105 Cr in a mix of debt and equity across multiple rounds.
22. Clovia
Founded in 2013 by Suman Choudhary and husband-wife duo Neha
Kant and Pankaj Vermani, Clovia is a women’s lingerie brand that
offers over 3,500 intimate wear styles. Recently, it has added Soumya
Kant and Abhay Batra to its founding team.
In March 2022, Reliance Retail invested INR 950 Cr in Clovia’s parent
company Purple Panda Fashions for an 89% stakeholding in the
startup. So far, Clovia has raised $24.7 Mn from investors.
Its cap table includes AT Capital, IvyCap Ventures, Singularity Ventures
and Ravi Dhariwal, Ex-CEO of Bennett, Coleman and Company Ltd,
among others.
23. Country Delight
Founded in 2013 by Chakradhar Gade and Nitin Kaushal, Country
Delight sources milk and other food products such as ghee, cottage
cheese, fruits and vegetables from farmers and delivers them to
customers’ doorstep.
In May 2022, it secured $108 Mn in its Series D funding round from
Venturi Partners, Temasek, SWC Global, Trifecta Capital and a slew of
other investors. Prior to this, it had also raised $25 Mn in a Series C
round led by Elevation Capital. So far, it has raised a total of $133 Mn in
funding.
It claims to have grown 10x in the past three years and has served
more than 1.5 Mn customers across the country. It further asserts to
be delivering over 8 Bn orders every month across 11 Indian states.
Its cap table includes Matrix Partners, Orios Venture Partners,
Elevation Capital, and IIFL PE Fund, among others.
24. Curefoods
Founded in 2020 by Ankit Nagori, Curefoods is a cloud kitchen
aggregator that houses several brands–EatFit, Sharief Bhai, Aligarh
House Biryani and CakeZone, to name a few. It manages over 150
cloud kitchens in 15 Indian cities.
In 2023, it raised $37 Mn from Binny Bansal’s fund Three State
Ventures. In addition, Bollywood actress Nora Fatehi invested in
Curefoods and, also, became the brand ambassador of its sub-brand
CakeZone.
Its cap table includes Iron Pillar, Chiratae Ventures, Accel Partners,
Sixteenth Street Capital, Iron Pillar and Bollywood Actor Varun
Dhawan, among others.
In the financial year 2021-22, it reported revenue from operations at
INR 1.3 Cr while its consolidated losses were INR 7.4 Cr, according to
Tofler.
25. DaMENSCH
Founded in 2018 by Anurag Saboo and Gaurav Pushkar, DaMENSCH is
a men’s clothing brand that sells a range of clothing styles such as
odour-cancelling men’s underwear, polo-t-shirts, t-shirts, hoodies,
joggers, tank tops, and chino shorts, among others.
In February 2022, it raised $16.4 Mn from A91 Partners, Matrix
Partners, Whiteboard Venture Partners, and Saama Capital. So far, it
has raised a total of $23.1 Mn from investors.
In the financial year 2021, it reported losses of INR 5.8 Cr whilst its
revenue from operations stood at INR 22 Cr, as per Tofler.
26. Desi Farms
Set up in 2016 by Prateek Gupta and Sunil Shahi, D2C startup Desi
Farms sells dairy products such as Malai Dahi, whole buffalo milk,
Shrikhand, and Amrakhand, among others.
To eliminate intermediaries, the dairy startup partners with local
farmers and procures fresh milk and milk products from them. Later,
these products undergo rigorous quality checks at the processing unit,
wherein the milk is treated without using chemical preservatives.
It delivers dairy products to customers without levying any charges
and also provides customised subscription services to its users.
The startup currently offers 48 SKUs and claims to have more than 10K
paid-up customers. In 2022, it set up over 50 offline outlets in Pune and
Navi Mumbai, while in fiscal year 2022, it generated a revenue of INR
8.8 Cr.
27. Dogsee Chew
Founded in 2015 by Bhupendra Khanal and Sneh Sharma, the
Bengaluru-based pet food startup offers vegetarian dog treats that are
prepared from yak milk, sourced from villagers residing in Nepal,
Sikkim, and Darjeeling.
Dogsee Chew raised $6.7 Mn in its Series A funding round in 2021, and
in 2022, it raised $60.59 Mn from Mankind Pharma along with the
existing backers. In total, the startup has raised funding of $67.29 Mn
so far.
It claims to be the fourth-largest pet food exporter in India and
currently operates in more than 30 countries.
28. Dr. Vaidya’s
Founded in 2016 by Arjun Vaidya, Dr. Vaidya’s is an Ayurvedic products
startup. It claims to sell over 100 FDA-certified products and has a
manufacturing facility in Silvassa, Mumbai. Its offerings include
LIVitup, HERBOfit, Chakaash.
The Mumbai-based startup also manufactures products to cure
chronic ailments such as diabetes, asthma and arthritis, among others.
It sells products through its website and ecommerce marketplaces
such as Amazon, Flipkart and Snapdeal.
In 2021, the startup reportedly got acquired by RP-Sanjiv Goenka
Group’s venture capital arm for $6.9 Mn. Following this, its valuation
soared to nearly INR 144 Cr.
29. Drink Prime
Founded by Vijender Reddy Muthyala and Manas Ranjan Hota in 2016,
DrinkPrime offers subscription-based water purification services to
households. The founders started their entrepreneurial journey by
building a platform, called Waterwala, to deliver drinking water cans to
people.
Later, the startup pivoted to a new model and began offering
subscription-based customisable water purifiers to customers. The
company’s RO purifiers deploy Internet of Things (IoT) to offer
customised offerings and cater to the water purification needs of
families living in different localities.
Drink prime’s subscriptions cost as low as INR 333 a month, including
installation and maintenance.
Drink Prime, which counts names such as Venture Catalysts++, PeakXV,
and 9Unicorns as its backers, has raised INR 70 Cr since its inception.
The startup was also featured in the 2023 edition of Inc42’s Fast42 list.
30. Earth Rhythm
Founded in October 2020 by Harini Sivakumar, Earth Rhythm is a
beauty and personal care brand that sells a host of haircare, skincare
and body care products. It also sells zero-waste products including
toothbrushes, vanity bags, combs and soap dishes, among others.
The Delhi NCR-based claims to have 160 stock-keeping units (SKUs)
and has served over 150K users to date. It has raised a total of $1.2 Mn
in funding from Anicut Capital. It aims to reduce the carbon footprint
and at the same time, use sustainable ingredients in making its
products.
In the financial year 2021-22, it posted earnings from operations at INR
6 Cr. It asserts to have witnessed a 3x rise in its customer orders since
its inception. In January this year, it received 15K orders.
31. Ecosoul
Rahul Singh and Arvind Ganesan first met each other during their stint
at the American furniture goods company, Wayfair, where they worked
on the sustainable product categories. Realising that there was a huge
gap in the market for eco-friendly products, the duo left their high-
paying jobs in the US and founded EcoSoul in 2020.
EcoSoul Home sells eco-friendly home products such as crockery,
cutlery, garbage bags, and tableware. Headquartered in the US, with
operational presence in countries like China and Vietnam, the
company forayed into India earlier this year.
The D2C eco-friendly home essentials brand sells its products primarily
through its website as well as ecommerce platforms. It currently offers
43 product varieties and 1,800 SKUs.
Since its inception, EcoSoul has secured more than $15 Mn in funding
from notable investors, including venture capital firm Accel.
Furthermore, actor Bhumi Pednekar recently made an undisclosed
investment in the startup.
32. FableStreet
Founded in 2016 by Ayushi Gudwani, FableStreet is a women-focused
clothing brand. It offers readymade as well as bespoke clothes for
female working professionals. It claims to use a three-body
measurement algorithm for creating customised apparel.
In 2019, it raised $2.95 Mn in its Series A funding round. Prior to that, it
secured an undisclosed amount of seed funding in 2017.
Its cap table includes Fireside Ventures, Pradeep Parameswaran from
Uber India and South Asia, Dilip Khandelwal from Deutsche Bank,
Suhail Sameer from RP-Sanjiv Goenka Group, and Fusiontech Ventures,
among others.
33. FabAlley
FabAlley, founded in 2012 by Shivani Poddar and Tanvi Malik, is a
brand of High Street Essentials (HSE). It sells a wide range of women’s
Western apparel via online marketplaces, physical retail stores, multi-
brand outlets (MBOs), and its own website.
In May, FabAlley’s parent company HSE secured INR 40 Cr from Stride
Ventures. So far, HSE has raised $14.02 Mn in funding from investors
including Elevational Capital, India Quotient, Dominor Holding, Trifecta
Capital Advisors, SenseAI Venture, Baird Capital, and Institutional
Venture Partners.
In the financial year 2020-21, FabAlley reported a profit of INR 27.5 Cr,
while its revenue from operations stood at INR 105 Cr, according to
Tofler.
34. Farmley
Brainchild of Akash Sharma and Abhishek Agarwal, Farmley is a D2C
snacking brand that was founded in 2017. The startup sells products
such as roasted peri peri makhanas, thai chilli cashews, date bites, etc.
Farmley claims to be EBITDA positive and sells its products through
ecommerce marketplaces and quick commerce platforms such as
Amazon, Flipkart, Blinkit, Zepto, Instamart and Big Basket.
It also claims to have a presence in more than 10,000 retail outlets
across 50 Indian cities.
The startup has raised nearly $15 Mn in funding till date and counts
names such as BC Jindal Group, DSG Consumer Partners, Omnivore
and Alkemi Partners as its backers.
35. Flistaa
Founded in 2021 by CA Harshvardhan Chhatbar, Flistaa is a beverage
brand that offers premix beverages in sachets. It offers a wide range of
Indian beverages such as street juices, milkshakes and sharbat, etc.
In December 2021, the Ahmedabad-based D2C
startup reportedly received an undisclosed amount of investment from
ah! Ventures’ First Gear Platform.
36. Flo Sleep Solutions
With an aim to offer good quality mattresses and other sleep
essentials to Indian consumers, Gaurav Zatakia founded D2C startup
Flo Sleep Solutions in 2018.
Flo primarily sells varied types of mattresses and pillows such as ortho
mattresses, ergo mattresses, anti-gravity latex mattresses, baby
mattresses, fibre pillows and memory foam pillows. It counts Mistry
Ventures as its investor.
Flo’s founder Zatakia is also leading a B2B firm Hush for over 13 years
now. Hush mainly supplies mattresses and allied sleep essentials to
luxury hotel chains such as Taj Hotels, JW Marriott and the Hyatt
Group.
37. Freakins
Back in 2018, Puneet Sehgal, Sachin Shah and Shaan Shah
experimented with the idea of building a desi women-centred denim
wear brand. Investing INR 10 Lakh of their capital, the duo first
designed and manufactured a few denim wear samples to see if they
were headed in the right direction .
They received overwhelming response, setting the stage for launch of
their D2C denim wear brand Freakins in 2019. However, the startup
forayed into the men’s category in February 2023 to emerge as a full-
fledged Gen-Z denim wear brand.
The startup raised $4 Mn in July 2023 in a seed funding round led by
Matrix Partners India and Blume Ventures. Freakins is also backed by
the likes of angel investors such as Revant Bhate of Mosaic Wellness,
Meesho’s Utkrishta Kumar, and OfBusiness’s Asish Mohapatra.
The D2C brand’s product portfolio currently spans more than 35
categories and 1,500 styles.
Freakins sells its denims via online marketplaces such as Amazon,
Flipkart, and Myntra. The company clocked a gross revenue of INR 22
Cr in FY23 and is eyeing to become an INR 100 Cr brand by the end of
2024.
38. FreshToHome
FreshToHome was incorporated in 2015 by serial entrepreneur Shan
Kadavil and Mathew Joseph. The inspiration to venture into the direct-
to-consumer (D2C) meat and fish industry struck Kadavil when his
personal fish supply was disrupted due to the impending closure of
Sea To Home, an ecommerce platform based in Kerala.
Collaborating with Joseph, one of the cofounder of Sea To Home and
an angel investor, Kadavil embarked on his new venture. Since then,
the direct-to-consumer (D2C) meat startup has significantly expanded,
now serving 160 cities in India and all seven emirates in the UAE.
With investors such as Amazon Sambhav Venture Fund, E20
Investment, Mount Judi Ventures, Investcorp and Iron Pillar in its kitty,
the D2C meat startup has so far raised $256 Mn in funding across
multiple rounds.
The company competes with the likes of Licious, Zappfresh, and
Meatigio, among others. To fuel its growth, FreshToHome plans to
expand its store count to 100 across all major metros by 2024-end.
39. GIVA
Founded in 2019 by Ishendra Agarwal, Nikita Prasa and Sachin Shetty,
GIVA is a D2C brand that sells budget-friendly fine jewellery to its
customers — both men and women. The startup largely prices its
offerings in the price range of INR 1,000 to INR 20,000.
Competing with the likes of homegrown brands such as CaratLane,
Melorra, Tanishq and BlueStone, the omnichannel brand derives 90%
of its revenue from online channels.
The startup’s revenue saw a 100% YoY rise in FY22. GIVA claims to have
a customer base of 1.2 Mn. The D2C brand, which currently operates
more than 40 exclusive brand outlets in the country, aims to launch
100 retail outlets in tier II and tier III Indian cities by FY24.
The startup has raised INR 130 Cr in equity funding since its inception.
In March this year, it secured INR 40 Cr in debt from Alteria Capital.
40. Good Health Company (GHC)
Founded in 2021 by Samarth Sindhi and Saurav Panda, Good Health
Company (GHC) is a subsidiary of Raksha Health.
Recommended For You:
PREVIOUS
NEWS
PLI Scheme: IPO-Bound Ola Electric Gets Domestic Value Addition
Certificate
Akshit P.
17th January, 2024
NEWS
Nazara To Raise INR 250 Cr Via Preferential Issue, Kamath
Brothers To Infuse Ano...
Tapanjana R.
17th January, 2024
NEWS
BCCI Vs BYJU’S: Edtech Giant Seeks To Take The Dispute To
Arbitration
Tapanjana R.
17th January, 2024
NEWS
Ola Electric Introduces Ola Maps With Upgraded EV Software Move
OS 4
Tapanjana R.
18th January, 2024
NEWS
Nasdaq-Listed Zoomcar’s India Entity Sees Loss Triple To INR 237
Cr In FY23
Debarghya S.
18th January, 2024
NEWS
DMI Group Acquires Troubled ZestMoney In A Distressed Sale
Chetan T.
18th January, 2024
NEWS
PLI Scheme: IPO-Bound Ola Electric Gets Domestic Value Addition
Certificate
Akshit P.
17th January, 2024
NEWS
Nazara To Raise INR 250 Cr Via Preferential Issue, Kamath
Brothers To Infuse Ano...
Tapanjana R.
17th January, 2024
NEWS
BCCI Vs BYJU’S: Edtech Giant Seeks To Take The Dispute To
Arbitration
Tapanjana R.
17th January, 2024
NEWS
Ola Electric Introduces Ola Maps With Upgraded EV Software Move
OS 4
Tapanjana R.
18th January, 2024
NEWS
Nasdaq-Listed Zoomcar’s India Entity Sees Loss Triple To INR 237
Cr In FY23
Debarghya S.
18th January, 2024
NEWS
DMI Group Acquires Troubled ZestMoney In A Distressed Sale
Chetan T.
18th January, 2024
NEWS
PLI Scheme: IPO-Bound Ola Electric Gets Domestic Value Addition
Certificate
Akshit P.
17th January, 2024
NEWS
Nazara To Raise INR 250 Cr Via Preferential Issue, Kamath
Brothers To Infuse Ano...
Tapanjana R.
17th January, 2024
NEWS
BCCI Vs BYJU’S: Edtech Giant Seeks To Take The Dispute To
Arbitration
Tapanjana R.
17th January, 2024
NEXT
• 1
• 2
• 3
• 4
• 5
• 6
GHC sells a range of men-focussed wellness and personal care
products, including anti-hair thinning kits, hair regrowth, beard care
kit, and glowing skin kits, among others.
It also offers free consultations to customers regarding their skincare,
haircare and sexual health problems.
So far, it has raised $20.7 Mn funding from a number of investors,
including Left Lane Capital, Khosla Ventures, Quiet Capital, and
Weekend Fund, among others.
41. Gynoveda
After suffering from lifestyle disorders for more than a decade, Vishal
Gupta eventually found respite in the ancient science of Ayurveda.
During his research, Gupta discovered effective remedies for a host of
gynaecological problems such as PCOS (polycystic ovary syndrome),
abnormal discharge, and umpteen, among other issues.
Realising a prevailing gap in the market, Gupta, along with his wife
Rachana and Dr Aarati Patil, founded Gynoveda in 2019, blending the
age-old science with modern technology and content.
Gynoveda sells products ranging from moisturisers to Ayurvedic
capsules via its website and ecommerce marketplaces. Of its total
revenue, 80% comes from its own website while the rest comes from
ecommerce websites.
With a customer base of 3 Lakh women, the startup is eyeing scaling
this number to 10 Lakh in the next three years. It claims to have
annualised revenue of INR 100 Cr.
The startup has so far raised funding in excess of $11 Mn and counts
names such as India Alternatives Fund, Fireside Ventures, Wipro
Enterprises, Alteria Capital and RPG Ventures as its backers.
42. Happilo
Founded in 2016 by Vikas Nahar, Happilo sells a host of healthy snacks
such as nuts, dry fruits, seeds and dry roasted snacks, among others,
via its website and offline stores. It also offers an option to pay
through EMIs.
In February, the Bengaluru-based D2C brand secured $25 Mn from
Motilal Oswal Private Equity. The startup then claimed that it had
expanded over 4x in the previous 24 months. It also said that it was
aiming for a revenue of INR 2,000 Cr over the next four years.
So far, Happilo has bagged total funding of $38 Mn.
43. Happy Nature
Founded in 2022 by Sahil Chopra, Parth Birendra, Vikas Singh and
Vishal Rastogi, Happy Nature is a farm-to-fork dairy startup. It runs a
dairy farm in Jhajjar, Haryana.
The startup has developed its standard operating procedures (SOPs)
to keep aflatoxin levels low in cow’s milk, without adding chemical
preservatives and antibiotics. It currently sells more than 35 SKUs to
over 80K customers across Delhi-NCR, Punjab and Haryana.
In the fiscal year 2021-22 (FY22), it reported a 69% YoY rise in its
revenue to INR 14.4 Cr. Further, it plans to generate INR 150 Cr in
annual revenue by 2025.
44. Heads Up For Tails
Founded in 2008 by Rashi Narag, Heads Up For Tails sells a wide range
of pet products such as preservative-free pet treats, organic
supplements, and orthopaedic beds. It aims to increase awareness
among pet parents regarding the need for pet care and wellness.
In August 2021, the Delhi-based pet care brand secured $37 Mn in its
Series A funding round led by Verlinvest and Sequoia Capital India. It
had a headcount of 350 employees then. Back then, it was looking to
launch new product offerings across India and expand its product
portfolio in international markets.
The startup has raised $50.3 Mn in aggregate to date.
45. Himalayan Organics
Himalayan Organics is a D2C nutraceutical startup that was founded in
2018 by Vaibhav Raghuwanshi and Suditi Sharma. The company offers
a variety of products across several categories, including beauty,
skincare, immunity boosters, and haircare.
To provide the best service to its customers, Himalayan Organics
collaborates with nutritionists and dieticians to offer free
consultations. The company mainly sources raw materials from the
Himalayan region and uses natural ingredients such as fruits,
vegetables, herbs, seeds, and nuts to manufacture its products.
In FY22, Himalayan Organics achieved revenue growth of 37%,
increasing from INR 24 Cr in FY21 to INR 33 Cr.
46. iD Fresh Food
Set up in 2005 by PC Musthafa, Abdul Nazer, Shamsudeen TK, Jafar and
Noushad TA, iD Fresh Food offers a slew of ready-to-make food – dosa
and idli batter, rice rava idli batter – in India as well as abroad.
In January 2022, the Bengaluru-based D2C startup raised $68 Mn in its
Series D funding round, thereby accumulating a total funding of $104
Mn.
Currently, it is operating in more than 45 cities across the world such
as Mumbai, Bengaluru, Pune, Hyderabad and Dubai, among others.
Its investors include NewQuest Capital Partner, Premji Invest, Sequoia
Capital, Helion Ventures and Azim Premji.
47. Innovist
Innovist (formerly known as Onesto Labs), set up in 2018 by Rohit
Chawla, Sifat Khurana, and Vimal Bhola, sells personal care products
under three brands – Bare Anatomy, Chemist at Play, and SunScoop.
In June 2022, Innovist secured $3.5 Mn in its pre-series A funding
round led by Accel Partners and 72 Ventures. Manu Chandra from
Sauce.vc, Jani Ventures Inc, CRED founder Kunal Shah and Alok Mittal
from Indifi Technologies, among others, also participated in the
round.
In 2021, the startup had raised $2.5 Mn from 72 Ventures, Ramakant
Sharma of Livspace, Suhail Sameer of BharatPe, and Sauce.vc.
The startup mainly sells products via its website and ecommerce
marketplaces. It also has an offline presence.
48. Juicy Chemistry
Set up in 2014 by Megha Asher and Pritesh Asher, clean beauty startup
Juicy Chemistry sells organic skin, hair and body care products.
To manufacture these products, it procures ingredients from organic
farmers in 20 countries. It develops these products at its ECOCERT-
certified manufacturing unit, where it conducts rigorous quality checks
to ensure that everything complies with ECOCERT’s organic standards.
To date, it has raised $7 in funding from a bunch of investors, including
Verlinvest, Spring Marketing Capital, and Manoj Lifestyle.
In November 2022, it launched an organic makeup range viz Color
Chemistry. In FY22, it generated INR 29 Cr in revenue and sold nearly
75K products every month.
In 2023, it aims to open 10 retail outlets and nearly 20 kiosks in major
Tier-1 cities. It further aims to enter international markets like the
Middle East, the UK and the US by 2025.
49. Kapiva
When the pandemic locked millions of Indians indoors back in 2020,
the ancient Indian science of health Ayurveda suddenly turned into the
flavour of the season. For Ameve Sharma, Ayurveda was never
relegated to the margins.
Hailing from the iconic 103-year-old Baidyanath family, the INSEAD and
New York University-educated scion grew up witnessing how the age-
old science helped people from all walks of people. After being
inundated with queries from friends about ayurvedic medications,
Sharma realised that there was a huge whitespace in the market and
he sat down to build Kapiva.
With more than 100 SKUs in its kitty, Kapiva sells Ayurvedic
consumables and products such as juices, Shilajit, hair oil, shampoos,
and resins, among others.
At the heart of Kapiva’s operations is sourcing high-quality raw
materials and ensuring global-standard processing. The startup is
betting big on raising awareness, scaling product categories and
enhancing quality for large-scale adoption. As a result of these, the
startup claims to have seen 7.5X growth over the last three years.
Sharma recently told Inc42 that the company achieved revenue of INR
115 cr in the last financial year from its India business, while it is eyeing
an annual revenue of INR 850 Cr by FY26 from its consolidated global
operations, including India.
Backed by names such as Vertex Ventures, Fireside Ventures, and
3one4 Capital, Kapiva has so far raised $15.77 Mn across multiple
rounds.
50. Koparo Clean
When the use of chemical-laden sanitisers for groceries and home
cleaning saw an uptick during the pandemic, Simran Khara realised
that these products could harm kids, pets and even adults.
Responding to the challenge, Khara, who hails from Delhi, launched a
range of natural, toxin-free cleaning products under the brand name
Koparo Clean in 2020. The D2C brand sells more than 15 products
across categories such as core cleaning, speciality cleaning, and
accessories.
It claims its products to be free of volatile organic compounds (VOCs),
synthetic dyes, ammonia, and parabens, among others.
Opting for an omnichannel strategy, the company sells the products
through ecommerce marketplaces, its website and more than 70 retail
stores of Reliance Retail and Modern Bazaar.
The D2C brand recently disclosed plans to grow 8X by mid-2025. It is
also looking at expanding its distribution points and introducing
products.
In July 2023, the D2C brand raised a Pre-Series A funding of $1.5 Mn led
by Saama Capital.
51. Lahori
Lahori, founded in 2017 by Saurabh Munjal, Saurabh Bhutna and Nikhil
Doda, sells Indian beverages in four flavours – Zeera (cumin), Nimboo
(lemon), Kacha Aam (raw mango) and Shikanji (lemonade) – across
India.
Lahori’s parent company Archian Foods creates approximately 1 Mn
bottles in its manufacturing facility that are certified by FSSAI, ISI,
HACCP, RoHS and Make In India.
In January 2022, the Punjab-based startup received its first institutional
funding of $15 Mn from Verlinvest for a minority stake in it.
52. Lenskart
Founded in 2010 by Peyush Bansal, Amit Chaudhury, and Sumeet
Kapahi, Lenskart is an omnichannel eyewear brand. It has nearly 750
retail outlets in more than 175 cities. It claims to serve over 7 Mn
customers annually.
The eyewear unicorn has been on a spree of fundraising this year. In
June, it secured a $100 Mn investment from private equity player
ChrysCapital. This followed a capital infusion of $500 Mn from the Abu
Dhabi Investment Authority for a 10% stake. Overall, Lenskart has
raised nearly $850 Mn in the past year.
The unicorn is backed by marquee investors such as Chiratae Ventures,
TPG, Premji Invest and Unilazer Ventures, among others.
Lenskart reported a consolidated loss of INR 102.3 Cr in FY22 versus a
profit of INR 28.9 Cr in FY21. On the other hand, the startup’s revenue
from operations zoomed 66% YoY to INR 1,502.7 Cr in the year ended
March 2022, compared to INR 905.3 Cr in FY21.
53. LetsShave
Founded in 2015 by Sidharth Oberoi, LetsShave is a grooming brand
that sells shaving kits, trial kits, blades and shaving foams.
The D2C grooming brand supplies razors to high-end hotels and
hospitality brands such as Marriott, St. Regis, and Ritz Carlton.
Backed by South Korean razor giant Dorco Korea, LetsShave recently
raised an undisclosed amount from its existing investor Wipro
Consumer Care. The startup has raised more than $6 Mn till date.
The Chandigarh-based startup has a workforce of 57 employees and
caters to clients in the UAE, the US, Canada, the UK, Australia and
Europe.
54. Licious
Licious, founded in 2015 by Abhay Hanjura and Vivek Gupta, sells a
wide range of meat and seafood products such as mutton, prawns and
kebabs.
In March, the Bengaluru-based unicorn raised $150 Mn from Amansa
Capital, Kotak PE, Axis Growth Avenues AIF – I, Nithin and Nikhil
Kamath of Zerodha, Aman Gupta from boAt and Haresh Chawla from
True North. So far, it has raised a total funding of $488 Mn from
investors.
55. Mamaearth
Mamaearth, founded in 2016 by Ghazal Alagh and Varun Alagh, started
as a baby care products brand but later pivoted to become a personal
care brand. Its product offerings include haircare, skincare and body
care products.
The IPO-bound startup counts Fireside Ventures, Sequoia India,
Rishabh Mariwala from Marico and Kunal Bahl and Rohit Bansal from
Snapdeal among its investors. It has so far raised $111 Mn in funding
across multiple rounds.
56. mCaffeine
mCaffeine, founded in 2016 by Tarun Sharma, Mohit Jain, Saurabh
Singhal, Vikas Lachhwani and Vaishali Gupta, sells a host of caffeine-
based skin and hair care products ranging from soaps to scrubs to oil
through its website and physical retail outlets.
In March 2022, the D2C startup secured over $31 Mn in its Series C
funding round led by Paragon Partners. Singularity Growth
Opportunities Fund, Sharrp Ventures, Amicus Capital Partners and
RPSG Capital Ventures also participated in the round.
The startup has raised a total funding of $37.5 Mn to date.
57. Melorra
Founded in 2016 by Saroja Yeramilli, Melorra sells a wide variety of
gold jewellery for women via its website and offline stores. It claims to
have a presence in 718 districts and over 2,800 towns in the country.
In May 2022, it raised $16 Mn in its Series D funding round from Axis
Growth Avenues AIF-I, SRF Family Office, N+1 and a slew of existing
investors. The startup has so far raised a funding of $66.9 Mn.
Mellora reported an operational revenue of INR 364.4 Cr in FY22, up
4.6X from INR 78.6 Cr during the previous fiscal year. Alongside, losses
spiked 73.5% YoY to INR 106.7 Cr in FY22.
58. Minimalist
Founded in 2020 by Mohit and Rahul Yadav, the Jaipur-based D2C
startup sells a host of skin care products ranging from serums to
moisturisers to toners. It retails products via its website and
ecommerce marketplaces.
In 2021, Minimalist secured $15 Mn in its Series A funding round led by
Sequoia Capital India and Unilever Ventures. A bunch of international
investors also participated in the funding round.
59. Mosaic Wellness
Mosaic Wellness, founded in 2020 by Revant Bhate and Dhyanesh
Shah, sells men and women-focused health and wellness products
under the brands Manmatters and Bodywise. Both brands offer
telemedicine services along with medicines, supplements and other
allied products.
The Mumbai-based D2C startup has built a content community for
people to confer about their health and other related subjects.
In 2021, it secured $24 Mn in its Series A funding round from Sequoia
Capital India, Elevation Capital and Matrix Partners India. In total, it has
raised a capital of $35.2 Mn to date.
60. Mylo
Mylo, founded in 2018 by Vinit Garg, started as a community-based
platform for new and expecting mothers and gradually turned into a
personal care brand. Last year, it pivoted into a personal care startup
offering over 100 stock-keeping units of ayurvedic products.
In April, Mylo secured $17 Mn in its Series B funding round led by W
Health Ventures, ITC Ltd and Endiya Partners. Riverwalk Holdings,
Alteria Capital and Innoven Capital also participated in the funding
round.
The D2C personal care startup has raised a funding of $24 Mn so far.
61. Neemans
Founded in 2018 by Taran Chhabra and Amar Preet Singh, Neemans
aims to upend the Indian shoe industry with natural, renewable,
recycled and biodegradable fibres in its shoes.
The company claims that its products have a considerably lower
carbon footprint and lower impact on the water table compared to
conventional products, which are dominated by synthetic fibres.
The startup has so far raised $9.8 Mn in funding and is backed by
names such as Anicut Capital and Sixth Sense Ventures. With more
than 3 Lakh users under its belt, the omnichannel brand prices its
products anywhere between INR 2,999 and INR 6,999.
Earlier this year, the company also ventured into the apparel industry
with the launch of its collection of clothes.
The Hyderabad-based startup locks horns with the likes of
international giants in the shoe industry such as Skechers, Nike,
Adidas, Reebok, Puma, AJIo, among others.
62. Nestasia
Home decor brand Nestasia is the brainchild of Anurag Agarwal and
Aditi Murarka Agarwal, whose passion for decorating and designing
homes spawned the rise of the startup in 2019.
The D2C brand sells a range of home decor products such as crockery
garden accessories, and kitchen utilities, among others. Unlike other
marketplaces, which connect buyers and sellers, Nestasia operates a
full-fledged D2C business that buys products from Indian artisans and
then sells them directly to customers.
The startup last raised $4 Mn as part of its Series A funding round in
December 2021, which saw participation from Stellaris Venture
Partners, Mamaearth’s Varun Alagh, Delhivery’s Sahil Barua, and
Livspace’s Anuj Srivastava and Ramakant Sharma, among others.
The D2C brand currently lists more than 6,000 products across eight
key product categories and has so far fulfilled more than 1 Lakh
orders.
63. Noise
Founded in 2014 by Amit Khatri & Gaurav Khatri, Noise is a smart
wearable and wireless headphones brand. It sells products on its
website and ecommerce marketplaces such as Amazon and Flipkart.
The bootstrapped startup reported a 8% year-on-year (YoY) rise in net
profit to INR 35.5 Cr in the financial year 2021-22 (FY22) against a total
income of INR 804.9 Cr during the same period, up over 2.2X YoY.
64. Nua
Founded in 2017 by Ravi Ramachandran, Nua is a women-focused
wellness brand. Its offerings include sanitary pads, skin care and
intimate hygiene products.
So far, it has raised $12.5 Mn in aggregate from the last four funding
rounds. Its cap table includes Lightbox VC, Kae Capital and actor
Deepika Padukone, among others.
It claims to have served more than 5 Mn customers so far. It further
asserts to have 10 SKUs and witnessing 50% of its customer base
revisiting its website.
65. NutriGlow
Set up in 2011 by Aditi Suneja and Ashish Aggarwal, Nutriglow sells
men and women-focused haircare, skincare, body care and make-up
products via its website and ecommerce platforms.
The Noida-based direct-to-consumer (D2C) startup claims that its
beauty products have natural and certified organic ingredients and
vegan-friendly and paraben-free formulations.
In June 2022, it secured an undisclosed amount of funding from
ecommerce rollup GOAT Brand Labs for developing its infra and
research and development (R&D).
66. Organic Harvest
Founded in 2013 by Rahul Agarwal, Organic Harvest is an organic
personal care brand that offers plant-based skincare, haircare, body
care products and essential oils via online and offline channels.
According to its website, It claims to use ingredients and raw materials
that are approved by international organisations – EcoCert, OneCert,
and Natrue.
At the beginning of 2022, it received a capital infusion of INR 75 Cr
from Good Glamm Group in exchange for a majority equity. In March
2023, it was reported that the content-to-commerce unicorn was all set
to buy out the entire 100% stake in Organic Harvest and would give an
exit to the D2C brand’s founders by the end of next year.
It said that it operated 25K retail outlets as of October 2022 and looked
to increase the number of its retail outlets to 1 Lakh by 2024.
67. Perfora
Jatan Bawa and Tushar Khurana crossed paths during the Jagriti Yatra,
a two-week long entrepreneurship train journey, in 2016. With a wealth
of experience garnered from startups such as OYO, Cure Fit, and
Vahdam Teas, the two found common ground during the journey and
eventually conceived the idea for an oral care brand, Perfora, in 2021.
Perfora offering a diverse range of oral care products, including
electric toothbrushes, toothpaste, mouthwashes, flossers, teeth
whitening products, and more.
This direct-to-consumer (D2C) oral care brand distributes its products
through its official website and various e-commerce platforms like
Amazon, Flipkart, Nykaa, Blinkit, and others. Since its incorporation,
Perfora boasts of serving over 2 Lakh customers.
Backed by notable investors such as RPSG Capital Ventures, Sauce.VC,
Lotus Herbals Family Office, Huddle, and others, Gurugram-based
Perfora has successfully raised a total of $3.7 Mn in funding through
multiple rounds.
68. Pilgrim
After a combined experience of over two decades in the beauty and
wellness industry, Anurag Kedia joined forces with fellow IIT Bombay
alumni, Gagandeep Makker, to embark on an entrepreneurial journey.
At the core of their mission was the vision to craft vegan, cruelty-free,
and toxin-free beauty products that would be accessible to the Indian
market at affordable prices.
Together, they established Pilgrim in 2019. This D2C beauty brand
distinguishes itself through the use of carefully sourced ingredients
from around the world, spanning from South Korea to France.
Pilgrim’s product range comprises items like hair growth serums,
night serums, day creams, night gel creams, facial masks, and more.
With a portfolio of over 90 SKUs, Pilgrim earned recognition as one of
the fastest-growing D2C brands, earning a place on the 2022 edition of
Inc42’s FAST42 list. Pilgrim claims to have served more than 50 Lakh
customers and add over 5 Lakh new customers every month.
Supported by prominent investors such as Fireside Ventures, Temasek,
and Rukam Capital, Pilgrim has successfully secured nearly INR 214
crore in funding to date.
69. Pluckk
Incorporated in 2021 by Pratik Gupta, Pluckk is a D2C fruit and
vegetable brand, which distinguishes itself by offering users a diverse
selection of over 400 products spanning 15+ categories. These
offerings include salads, dips, juices, cuts, mixes, and exotic fruits and
vegetables.
Currently, Pluckk operates in major cities such as Mumbai, Delhi,
Bengaluru, and Pune. It has plans to extend its presence to more cities
in the coming years. The brand distributes its products through its
dedicated app, website, and quick commerce platforms like Amazon,
Swiggy, Dunzo, Zepto, and Reliance Signature Stores.
In early 2023, Pluckk secured $5 Mn in seed funding from Exponentia
Ventures. It has also secured an undisclosed amount of funding from
actor Kareena Kapoor Khan.
70. Plum
Founded in 2013 by Shankar Prasad, Plum sells a wide variety of beauty
products in skin care, hair care, personal care and makeup categories
via its website and ecommerce marketplaces. It claims to operate
nearly 1,500 assisted retail outlets and over 15,000 unassisted outlets
throughout India.
In March 2022, the D2C beauty brand secured $35 Mn in its Series C
funding round from A91 Partners, Unilever Ventures and Faering
Capital.
The startup generated revenue to the tune of INR 250 Cr in FY22 and
has set its eyes on doubling its revenues in FY23 to INR 500 Cr.
71. Power Gummies
Founded in March 2018 by Divij Bajaj, nutraceutical startup Power
Gummies sells flavoured and chewable vitamins for hair, nail and skin
problems. Its products are gluten-free and certified by the Food Safety
and Standards Authority of India (FSSAI).
Its revenue soared by over 6X to INR 54 Cr in FY22 as compared to INR
8.8 Cr a year ago. So far, it has sold over 40 Lakh products to more
than 10 Lakh customers.
It plans to launch 40+ SKUs in the next five years, including a dedicated
range for kids. It also looks to ramp up its presence in the UK and
other international markets and build more manufacturing facilities to
regulate production, daily operations and logistics.
To date, the startup has raised a total of INR $12.9 Mn in funding.
Power Gummies’ cap table includes 9Unicorns, Venture Catalysts, DSG
Consumer Partners, Wipro Consumer Care Ventures, and Sharpp
Ventures.
72. Rage Coffee
Founded in 2018 by Bharat Sethi, Rage Coffee sells a host of coffee-
based products across India. Certified by FDA, FSSAI and ISO, Rage
Coffee claims to have so far served more than 7.5 Lakh customers and
has 18 SKUs in its kitty.
In March, this Delhi-based food and beverage D2C brand received an
undisclosed investment from Indian cricketer Virat Kohli. Prior to that,
it secured nearly $5 Mn in its Series A funding round.
In total, it has raised $7 Mn in capital from marquee names such as
Sixth Sense Ventures, 9Unicorns, Refex Capital and Keiretsu Forum
Chenna.
Rage Coffee logged revenues of INR 23.5 Cr in FY22 and is targeting a
revenue of INR 92 Cr by FY23-end. Earlier, it had also underlined plans
to double down on its physical presence and scale its number of
outlets to 10,000 by March 2023.
73. Revour Consumers
Revour Consumers was founded in 2019 by Jaideep Singh Gaur and
Ranjit Singh and specialises in selling kitchen and home-based
electrical appliances.
The startup partners with various OEMs to produce consumer
electronics, including light bulbs, electric kettles, fans, and irons.
Revour Consumer clocked a revenue of INR 17.5 Cr FY22 and has so
far served more than 30 Lakh customers across the length and breadth
of the country.
The startup has so far raised $1 Mn in funding and counts Oriano
Clean Energy as its key investor. Going forward, the D2C brand plans
to deepen its focus on consumer electronics and intends to introduce
new product lines.
74. Sanfe
Founded in 2018 by Archit Aggarwal and Harry Sehrawat, Sanfe is a
D2C femtech brand that started with the vision of addressing the
stigma around women’s health and hygiene. After debuting with a roll-
on to tackle period pain, the brand has now forayed into the beauty
segment.
In addition to sanitary and hygiene products, the company sells skin
and hair products. The company claims to have catered to more than
10 Mn customers and sold 28 Mn-plus products by the end of FY21.
Targeting Gen-Z and millennials, the company sells its products
through its website and other ecommerce marketplaces. Backed by S
Chand Family Office, Seeders and Lets Venture, the D2C brand has
raised $4.5 Mn in funding since its inception.
75. Slurrp Farms
A dearth of healthy snacking options in the market for their kids
brought two mothers — Meghana Narayan and Shauravi Malik — to
the discussion table. The duo found a big gap staring right at them in
the kids’ snacks market.
To fill in this gap, they founded Slurrp Farm in October 2016. The D2C
brand sells a range of healthy products from ready-to-mix pancakes
and dosas to noodles and pastas.
Slurrp Farms, which sells its products via its website and ecommerce
marketplaces, caters to users in countries such as the UAE, the US, and
the UK, apart from India.
Backed by the likes of the Investment Corporation of Dubai, Fireside
Ventures and actor Anushka Sharma, Slurrp Farms has so far lapped
up a total of around $9 Mn in funding.
Building on its current growth momentum, the D2C snacks brand is
eyeing a revenue of INR 500 Cr by 2025.
76. Soothe Healthcare
Set up in 2012 by Sahil Dharia, Soothe Healthcare sells sanitary napkin
products and baby diapers under the brand Paree and Super Cute,
respectively. It retails its products through various distribution
channels including direct selling and selling through intermediaries.
In October 2022, Soothe Healthcare secured INR 175 Cr as part of a
strategic funding round from the US International Development
Finance Corporation (DFC) and other existing investors. With the
funding round, the startup’s cumulative fundraise reached INR 301 Cr.
Symphony International Holdings, Sixth Sense Ventures and
badminton player Saina Nehwal are among its investors.
77. SUGAR Cosmetics
SUGAR Cosmetics, founded in 2015 by Vineeta Singh and Kaushik
Mukherjee, is an omnichannel D2C brand that sells products in lips,
skin, eyes and nail care categories. It claims to operate more than
45,000 multi-brand stores spread across 500+ cities in the country. The
D2C brand also has 125+ exclusive outlets in its kitty.
In May, the Mumbai-based D2C brand closed its $50 Mn Series D
fundraising round led by L Catterton’s Asia fund. Existing investors A91
Partners, Elevation Capital and India Quotient also participated in the
funding round.
The startup has so far raised a cumulative funding of $87.5 Mn from
investors.
In the financial year 2021-22 (FY22), it widened its loss to INR 75 Cr,
while revenue from operations stood at INR 221.1 Cr during the same
period.
78. Super Bottoms
Pallavi Utagi’s tryst with entrepreneurship started when she, as a new
mom, struggled to find quality diapers for her newborn baby. While
conventional cloth diapers had absorbency issues, synthetic nappies
left her baby with rashes.
Realising that there was a huge gap in the space, Utagi leveraged her
years of research experience in the pharma space to launch her new
venture Superbottoms – an eco-friendly and baby skin-friendly nappy
brand – in 2016.
SuperBottoms’s range of products includes cotton ‘langots’, potty
training pants, and kid’s clothing, among more.
In August 2023, the D2C brand secured $5 Mn as part of its Series A1
funding round led by Lok Capital and Sharrp Ventures. SuperBottoms
is also backed by DSG Consumer Partners and Saama Capital.
The startup retails its products via its website as well as Amazon and
Flipkart. Leveraging its online presence, SuperBottoms doubled its
revenues YoY to INR 40 Cr in the fiscal year ended March 2022.
79. Sweet Karam Coffee
Brainchild of Anand Bharadwaj, Nalini Parthiban, Srivatsan
Sundararaman and Veera Raghavan, Sweet Karam Coffee sells
preservative-free South Indian sweets and snacks. Its range of
offerings also includes the ubiquitous filter coffee and ready meal
mixes, catering to audiences across the country.
Founded in 2015, the D2C brand aims to solve the problem of poor
availability and accessibility of well-packaged traditional sweets and
snacks, which are free from palm oil.
The brand SKC sells its products via its website and app and has
customers in more than 32 countries. SKC competes with the likes of
new-age startups such as id Fresh Food, DropKaffe, Chaayos, TagZ,
among others.
Backed by Fireside Ventures, the startup picked up $1.5 Mn funding in
October 2023.
80. TagZ
The D2C snack brand came into the limelight after featuring in the
maiden season of the TV show Shark Tank India and has not looked
back since then. Founded in 2019 by Anish Basu Roy and Sagar
Bhalotia, the company sells popped chips, which are neither baked nor
fried.
The idea came from Roy’s experiences during his international travels,
which pushed him to tinker around in the healthy snacks category.
From the cricketer Shikhar Dhawan to 9 Unicorns, the backers of TagZ
have pumped in over $4.2 Mn in the startup to date. The growth has
also seen an uptick as the D2C brand claims to have logged a 30X
increase in volumes in the past 18 months, ending May 2023.
Retailed through 5,000 stores across 22 cities and via quick commerce
platforms, TagZ also sells its products overseas in markets such as
Kuwait, Dubai, Maldives and Australia.
81. Tailor And Circus
Back in 2016, Vasanth Sampath, Gaurav Durasamy and Abishek Elango
came together to explore the idea of making antimicrobial, self-
cleaning underwear for astronauts. In the subsequent months of
research, they found that the homegrown men’s and women’s
undergarment segment was plagued by basic issues such as lack of
comfort and style.
After much deliberations, the idea of Tailor and Circus took shape and
the startup was launched in 2016. The D2C brand manufactures
underwear for both men and women, offering products such as
trunks, bralettes and maternity undies. The startup also sells tops for
both men and women and allows users to customise their products
and build a matching underwear cart.
The startup last raised seed funding of $241K from multiple angel and
institutional investors in April 2021. It competes with the likes of
homegrown brands such as Freecultr, XYXX, and DaMensch, among
others.
The startup sells its products on marketplaces such as Amazon India
and Myntra and through its own website.
82. TenderCuts
Founded in 2016 by Nishanth Chandran, TenderCuts sells a wide
variety of meat and seafood products such as chicken, mutton, eggs
and frozen food products via its website and offline stores.
The startup last raised INR 110 Cr in a round led by Paragon Partners
in February 2021. To date, it has raised $29.1 Mn in funding from
marquee names such as Stride Ventures and Nabventures.
In August 2023, the D2C meat delivery brand was acquired by
omnichannel meat brand Good To Go in what appeared to be a
distress sale for an undisclosed amount.
83. The Ayurveda Co. (T.A.C)
Founded in 2021 by Param Bhargava and Shreedha Singh, The
Ayurveda Company manufactures and retails products across multiple
categories such as haircare, wellness, skincare, immunity boosters and
health supplements.
Opting for an omnichannel strategy, its 5,000 physical touchpoints
traverse 18 cities across 15 Indian states, including Delhi NCR, Uttar
Pradesh, Punjab and Rajasthan. The startup is targeting to grow these
retail points to more than 20,000 by FY25.
In March 2023, the D2C ayurvedic beauty and personal care brand
raised INR 100 Cr in a Series A funding round led by consumer-centric
venture fund Sixth Sense Ventures.
Since its inception, T.A.C has raised $16 Mn in funding, across debt and
equity, from marquee names such as Sixth Sense Ventures, Wipro
Consumer Care Ventures and Vector NXG.
84. The Beauty Co
Founded in 2018 by Suraj Raj Vazirani, The Beauty Co is a D2C personal
care startup, which sells toxin-free body care, haircare, skincare and
essential oils via its website and ecommerce marketplace such as
Nykaa, Myntra, Amazon, Flipkart, Paytm Mall, BigBasket and Snapdeal.
The startup’s founder claims that at least 99% of the ingredients used
in The Beauty Co’s products are natural. It operated more than 40
stock keeping units as of 2022.
85. The Divine Foods
Founded in 2019 by Kiru Maikkapillai, The Divine Foods is a D2C
superfoods brand that sells packaged products centred on Indian
kitchen staples such as turmeric, moringa, millet, and others.
Its products primarily encompass four categories, including women
care, immunity boosters, diabetic care and kids. The D2C brand’s
range of offerings include skincare products, mil mixes, powdered
superfoods, and spreads.
Incubated under the Tamil Nadu government’s flagship seed funding
scheme, TANSEED 4.0, the startup counts names such as superstar
Nayanthara and her husband-director Vignesh Shivan as its investors.
The Chennai-based D2C brand secured an undisclosed amount of
funding from the celebrity duo in October 2023.
The startup claims to have so far served more than 25,000 customers
and is available in five nations across the globe.
86. The Moms Co
The Moms Co, founded in 2016 by Malika Sadani, sells organic
products for expecting mothers and babies in the face, hair,
pregnancy, and body care categories. It claims to have catered to more
than a million customers since its inception.
In 2021, the Delhi-based D2C brand was acquired by beauty unicorn
Good Glamm Group. In March 2022, Inc42 reported that Good Glamm
Group had increased its stake in The Moms Co to 90% from 75%.
At the end of September 2022, the brand claims to have had an offline
presence in 5,000 retail outlets spanning 20,000 pin codes across the
country.
87. The Pant Project
The Pant Project was founded by siblings Dhruv and Udit Toshniwal
and offers customised bottom wear for both men and women, with
free alterations and monogramming services provided to customers.
Its products are primarily sold through its website and other e-
commerce marketplaces, including Amazon.
In the fiscal year 2021-2022 (FY22), The Pant Project reported a revenue
of INR 7.3 Cr, a significant increase compared to the INR 1 Cr earned in
the previous fiscal year FY21.
88. The Sleep Company
The story of The Sleep Company starts with a baby. After taking care of
their newborn at odd hours, entrepreneur couple Priyanka Salot and
Harshil Salot were left aghast when their multiple attempts to buy a
new mattress met a dead end.
Realising the prevailing gaps in the sleep market, especially the lack of
innovation, the duo decided to start their own venture and that’s how
The Sleep Company was born.
Since the startup’s inception in 2019, the Salots have scaled up the
platform, grabbing the interest of multiple investors, including Fireside
Ventures, Premji Invests and Alteria Capital.
The Sleep Company has so far raised INR 190 Cr and is eyeing to create
an INR 1,000 Cr brand. With two state-of-the-art manufacturing
facilities in Maharashtra and Karnataka, the D2C brand claims to
produce 1.2 Lakh mattresses daily.
The Sleep Company clocked a revenue of INR 58 Cr in FY22 and plans
to open more than 100 stores across the country by March 2024.
89. The Souled Store
Founded in 2013 by Vedang Patel, Harsh Lal, Aditya Sharma and Rohin
Samtaney, The Souled Store is a casual wear and pop-culture D2C
startup. It is said to have over 180 licences–Disney, Warner Bros, WWE,
and Viacom18, to name a few.
The omnichannel lifestyle brand recently raised INR 135 Cr in a
strategic funding round led by Xponentia Capital. To date, the
company has raised a total of INR 220 Cr from multiple investors.
Its cap table includes Elevation Capital, Sahil Barua from Delhivery,
Gunjan Soni from Zalora, Revant Bhate from Mosaic Wellness and
Ramakant Sharma from Livspace, among others. Its product offerings
include top wear, bottom wear, innerwear and activewear.
90. The Woman’s Company
The moment Anika Parashar’s daughter hit puberty, she was gripped
by questions about which feminine products were good enough. While
researching, Parashar found that there was a huge gap in the market
for female hygiene products, and it was this epiphany that set the ball
rolling for her new venture, The Woman’s Company.
After working as the COO of Fortis La Femme Hospitals for decades,
she founded the startup in 2020, along with Roopam Gupta. The D2C
brand operates in the women’s hygiene space and sells products such
as sanitary pads, tampons, menstrual cups, and bamboo razors,
among others.
The D2C startup last raised $1.4 Mn in 2021 from marquee names such
as Pradip Burman of Dabur.
The startup sells its products through its website and marketplaces
such as Amazon, Flipkart, and Nykaa, among others.
91. Vahdam Teas
Vahdam, founded in 2015 by Bala Sarda, is an online tea brand. It sells
its products in domestic as well as international markets.
In September 2021, Vahdam reportedly secured INR 174 Cr in its Series
D round led by IIFL AMC’s PE Fund. After the round, the startup
claimed that it had raised INR 290 Cr in total funding from investors.
In FY22, it clocked a revenue of over INR 200 Cr, up from INR 161 Cr in
FY21. However, the D2C brand slipped into the red as it reported a loss
of INR 16 Cr in FY22 against a profit of INR 1.94 Cr in profit in FY21.
The startup aims to clock a net revenue of INR 500 Cr by 2024.
92. Voylla
Voylla, founded in 2011 by Vishwas Shringi, is an online artificial and
silver jewellery brand. It sells jewellery and other allied products
through its website and ecommerce marketplaces.
In 2021, Voylla was acquired by Thrasio-style D2C aggregator GOAT
Brand Labs. Besides Voylla, GOAT Brand Labs also acquired 14 other
brands, including Label Life, trueBrowns & Abhishti, Frangipani, Neemli
and Nutriglow, among others.
Prior to the acquisition, Voylla had raised a total of $16.9 Mn funding in
Series B and Series A funding rounds. Its cap table includes Peepul
Capital, Snow Leopard Technology Ventures and a slew of other angel
investors.
93. Wakefit
Founded in 2016 by Ankit Garg and Chaitanya Ramalingegowda,
Wakefit sells a host of sleep and home decor products such as
mattresses, pillows, bed frames, comforters, and back cushions,
among others. It sells these products via its website and ecommerce
marketplaces.
The Bengaluru-based startup manufactures products at its facilities in
Bengaluru, Jodhpur and Delhi. In FY23, the startup launched 22
physical stores across 15 cities in the country. The brand clocked a
revenue of INR 825 Cr in FY23 and is eyeing a revenue of INR 1,000 Cr
by FY24.
Wakefit has raised a total funding of $145 Mn so far. Its cap table
includes Sequoia Capital, Verlinvest and SIG.
94. Wellbeing Nutrition
An avid runner, Avnish Chhabria used to rue the lack of homegrown
options for organic and plant-based nutritional supplements in India,
which were necessary for him to stay at the top of his game.
His dependence on global brands ignited the idea of building a desi
plant-based vitamin and mineral supplements brand. With an eye on
offering a better-priced alternative to a majority of Indians who could
not afford to import plant-based supplements, Chhabria founded
Wellbeing Nutrition at the fag end of 2019.
Since then, it has rapidly scaled operations. It currently offers more
than 53 SKUs and deploys an omnichannel strategy to woo customers.
The brand manufactures plant-based vitamin and mineral
supplements in the form of capsules, oral strips, and effervescents,
among others.
The startup partners with a global team of gastroenterologists to
nutritionists to build its line of products. Besides, it sources its raw
materials from more than 200 organic farms and certified companies
from across 19 countries.
Its multi-pronged omnichannel strategy helped it clock a revenue of
INR 19.5 Cr in FY22. The Mumbai-based D2C brand is eyeing 100 Mn
customers and INR 100 Cr revenue in 2023. It plans to foray into the
US, the UK and the UAE by 2025.
Backed by the likes of Hindustan Unilever Limited (HUL) and Fireside
Ventures, Wellbeing Nutrition has so far raised $10Mn from multiple
investors. Last year, HUL acquired a 19.8% equity in the startup.
95. Wellversed
Founded in 2018 by Aanan Khurma, Aditya Seth and Ripunjay Chachan,
Wellversed is a health and wellness brand. Its products are sold via its
website and ecommerce marketplaces.
On an acquisition spree, the umbrella brand has acquired three
startups – Sportfit, Rimoy Naturals and Ketofy – in the past four years
to strengthen its house of brands. It claims to have offered over 12K
health plans for weight loss, skin nourishment and other ailments to
customers.
It has raised a total of $3.2 Mn in funding from investors such as
Jubilant Foodworks, Yuvraj Singh, KLUB Works and Velocity.
In the financial year 2021, it reported earnings from operations at INR
20 Cr.
96. Wingreens Farms
Founded in 2011 by Anju Srivastava and Arun Srivastava, Wingreens
Farms sells packaged food products such as sauces and spreads, spice
mixes, breakfast cereals, non-dairy milk, and protein shakes, among
others. It sells these products via its website and offline distribution
network in more than 200 Indian cities.
In May 2022, the D2C food brand acquired Postcard’s parent
company Dharmya Business Ventures for about $2.1 Mn in a cash and
share swap deal.
In December 2021, it raised $17 Mn in its Series C funding round led by
Investcorp. Subsequently, it also reportedly bagged INR 22 Cr in
funding from Anicut Capital. So far, it has secured a total funding of
$49.8 Mn from investors.
97. WishCare
Founded in 2019 by Stuti Kothari, Ankit Kothari and Ayush Kothari,
WishCare is a sustainable beauty care brand that sells a range of
sustainable skincare and haircare products.
WishCare’s portfolio spans products such as hair treatments, hair
growth serums, face serums, and body lotions. The company claims
that its products are formulated with clinically proven ingredients.
The D2C brand sells its products through its own website as well as
more than 15 ecommerce platforms such as Nykaa, Amazon, and
Flipkart, among others. It currently claims to serve more than 10 Lakh
customers.
WishCare recently secured INR 20 Cr ($2.4 Mn) in its first round of
funding from Unilever Ventures.
98. Wonderchef
Wonderchef, founded in 2009 by Ravi Saxena and celebrity chef
Sanjeev Kapoor, offers cookware, kitchen appliances, bakeware, and
other allied culinary tools. It claims to operate 22 exclusive retail
outlets and has served over 3 Cr customers so far.
In 2021, it secured INR 150 Cr in a funding round led by Sixth Sense
Ventures. Godrej Family Office, Malpani Group, and other high-net-
worth individuals also participated in the funding round.
It claims to have over 500 SKUs and a presence in India, the US, the UK,
Australia, and Canada, among others. It is looking to increase the
count of its exclusive outlets to 100 by 2025.
99. Wooden Street
Wooden Street, founded in 2015 by Lokendra Ranawat, Dinesh Pratap
Singh, Virendra Ranawat and Vikas Baheti, sells furniture and home
decor products such as modular furniture, kitchen and wardrobe,
lighting and office furniture, among others, via its website.
It operates over 100 experience stores and 30+ warehouses across the
length and breadth of the country. With 30,000 home furniture
products in its kitty, the D2C brand claims to have served more than 15
Lakh customers in more than 300 Indian cities. It has several
manufacturing facilities and R&D units in the country.
In April 2022, it secured around $30 Mn in its Series B funding round
led by Westbridge Capital. Wooden Street then claimed that it grew its
business 100% year-on-year over the previous three years, and aimed
to attain a turnover of INR 600 Cr in the next two years.
100. Wow Skin Science
Founded in 2014 by Manish Chowdhary and Karan Chowdhary, WOW
Skin Science is a beauty and personal care brand. It sells a host of
skincare, haircare, body care and nutraceutical products via its website.
It claims to have 400 SKUs and has a presence in 30,000 general trade
stores across the country.
In June 2022, the Bengaluru-based D2C skincare brand secured $48.02
Mn from Singapore-based GIC at a post-money valuation of $280 Mn.
Prior to that, it raised $50 Mn from ChrysCapital.
In the financial year 2021-22, it reported losses of INR 135.83 Cr while
its revenues grew 3.4X YoY to INR 343.94 Cr.
101. XYXX
Founded in 2017, XYXX is a D2C menswear brand that sells a range of
products across categories such as underwear, loungewear and
athleisure. It is also the brainchild of Yogesh Kabra.
What works in favour of the brand is its fashionable touch and skin-
friendly fabrics that it claims is suitable for India’s humid climate. The
idea germinated after Kabra realised that there was a big gap in the
Indian men’s innerwear market, which suffered across the board from
style to comfort.
Leaving aside his father’s textile business, Kabra jumped into the fray
and pursued his entrepreneurial talent, the result of which is XYXX.
The D2C brand has also seen a warm response from investors. It
recently bagged INR 110 Cr as part of its Series C funding round led by
Amazon Smbhav Venture Fund. Since its inception, the startup has
raised INR 390 Cr in multiple rounds of funding.
With 1,000-plus SKUs, XYXX sells its products online on 14 ecommerce
platforms as well as its website. It also claims to operate multi-brand
outlets (MBOs) and exclusive brand outlets (EBOs) across more than
18,000 touchpoints in 150+ Indian cities. The startup closed FY22 with a
revenue of INR 57 Cr.
102. Zappfresh
Founded in 2015 by Deepanshu Manchanda and Shruti Gochhwal,
ZappFresh is a Gurugram-based D2C meat delivery startup. The
startup grew in prominence as customers preferred online avenues to
order their meat as pandemic locked people indoors.
Backed by names such as SIDBI Venture Capital, Dabur Family Office,
LetsVenture and Keiretsu Forum, ZappFresh has so far raised $7.9 Mn
in funding. The startup recently acquired Dr. Meat for an undisclosed
amount to mark its foray into Bengaluru.
Banking on its growth numbers, Zappfresh is targeting INR 300 Cr in
overall revenue by end of FY24 as it eyes deeper penetration in
Southern India. It competes with the likes of players such as Licious as
well as quick commerce players such as Swiggy Instamart, and Blinikit,
among others.
103. Zivame
Zivame, founded in 2011 by Richa Kar and Kapil Karekar, sells lingerie,
activewear, shapewear and sleepwear via its website and offline retail
stores.
The startup had earlier claimed that nearly 42% of its sales come from
Tier-2 and 3 cities in India.
In 2020, Reliance Brands acquired a 15% stake in Zivame. Following
this, the conglomerate also announced the acquisition of an 89% stake
in the lingerie brand for a consideration of INR 950 Cr last year.
Zivame claims to have built an offline presence in more than 30 retail
stores and more than 800 partner stores across the country.
This is a running article, we will keep adding more names to the list.