Category: Ecommerce Growth & Strategy

  • Click to Brick: The Real Cost of Opening a D2C Pop-Up Store in India

    Click to Brick: The Real Cost of Opening a D2C Pop-Up Store in India

    Why D2C Brands Are Going Offline

    The irony: D2C brands that started online are now opening physical stores. Why?

    • CAC online is unsustainable — At ₹500+ per customer online, a ₹50,000 pop-up that brings 200 walk-ins is a better deal.
    • Touch-and-feel matters in India — For fashion, beauty, and home decor, customers want to see/try before buying (especially above ₹2,000).
    • Trust building — A physical presence makes your brand feel ‘real’ to Indian consumers skeptical of online-only brands.
    • Customer data — In-store interactions give you qualitative insights no analytics dashboard can match.

    Pop-Up Store: Cost Breakdown

    Cost ComponentWeekend Pop-Up (2-3 days)Month-Long Pop-UpPermanent Retail
    Rent/space₹15K-50K₹50K-2L₹1-5L/month
    Interior/setup₹10K-30K₹30K-1L₹3-10L (one-time)
    Staff₹5K-10K₹20K-40K₹40K-80K/month
    Inventory to stock₹50K-2L₹1-5L₹3-10L
    Marketing the event₹5K-15K₹15K-50K₹20K-50K/month
    POS system₹2K-5K₹5K-10K₹10K-20K
    Total investment₹87K-3.1L₹1.2L-8.5L₹7.7L-26L

    Where to Set Up Pop-Ups in India

    Location TypeCostFoot TrafficBest For
    Mall kiosk/island₹30K-1L/weekendVery highFashion, beauty, food
    Co-working event space₹15K-30K/dayMediumLifestyle, home decor
    Flea market/exhibition₹5K-20K/stallHigh (targeted)Handcraft, food, art
    Cafe/restaurant collaboration₹0-10K (revenue share)MediumFood, beauty, wellness
    Hotel lobby/lounge₹20K-50K/weekendMedium (affluent)Premium/luxury brands

    Making Pop-Ups Profitable

    Before the Event

    • Instagram promotion 2 weeks ahead — Location tag, date, time, exclusive offers
    • WhatsApp broadcast — ‘Visit us this weekend at [location]! Exclusive 20% off for walk-ins.’
    • Collect emails/WhatsApp on entry — Use a simple form or QR code. This is the real ROI of pop-ups.

    During the Event

    • Exclusive pop-up offers — Products or bundles only available at the pop-up
    • Instagram content — Photograph every customer (with permission), tag them, create shareable moments
    • Live selling — Go live on Instagram from the pop-up. Online followers can order via DM.

    After the Event

    • Follow up within 48 hours — ‘Thanks for visiting! Here’s 10% off your next online order.’
    • Add to email/WhatsApp list — Continue the relationship online
    • Measure true ROI — Pop-up revenue + online orders from pop-up visitors in next 30 days

    Should Your Brand Go Offline?

    YES, if:

    • You sell fashion, beauty, or home decor (touch-and-feel categories)
    • Your AOV is above ₹1,500 (justifies offline customer acquisition cost)
    • You’re in a metro city with strong ecommerce-savvy customer base
    • You’ve validated product-market fit online and want to scale

    NOT YET, if:

    • You’re under 200 orders/month online (focus on online growth first)
    • You sell digital products, electronics, or low-margin FMCG
    • You can’t invest ₹1L+ without guaranteed return

    Need Help With Omnichannel?

    At Growww Tech, we help D2C brands plan offline expansion — from pop-up strategy to permanent retail. Let’s explore offline for your brand.

    Related reading:

  • Republic Day Sale Planning: Start 2 Months Early (Here’s the Timeline)

    Republic Day Sale Planning: Start 2 Months Early (Here’s the Timeline)

    Why Republic Day Sales Matter

    Republic Day sales (running from Jan 20-28 on most platforms) are the first major purchase event of the year. After a quiet December, customers are ready to spend:

    • Amazon Great Republic Day Sale + Flipkart Republic Day Sale drive massive traffic
    • D2C brands running parallel sales capture customers who’ve been primed by marketplace advertising
    • New Year resolutions → fitness, health, personal care purchases spike
    • Budget announcements (Feb 1) create ‘buy before potential price changes’ urgency for electronics

    The 2-Month Timeline

    November 20 – December 5: Planning

    • Review last year’s Republic Day performance (or last Diwali if first time)
    • Select products for the sale: hero products + slow movers for bundling
    • Calculate discount levels that maintain profitability
    • Brief creative team: need 10 ad creatives, email templates, website banners by Dec 20

    December 5 – December 20: Preparation

    • Order inventory for sale products (allow 15-20 day lead time)
    • Create all ad creatives (video and static)
    • Set up email/WhatsApp flows: announcement → teaser → launch → daily highlights → last chance
    • Build landing page: /republic-day-sale with curated products
    • Configure discount codes in Shopify

    December 20 – January 10: Warm-Up

    • Launch ‘New Year, New Deals Coming Soon’ teaser campaign
    • Run engagement ads to build remarketing audiences at low CPMs (holiday period = cheaper ads)
    • Send email: ‘Save the date — Republic Day Sale starts Jan 20’
    • Instagram stories: daily countdown to build anticipation

    January 10 – January 19: Pre-Launch

    • ‘Early Access for VIP Customers’ — 48 hours before public launch
    • Final inventory check and warehouse prep
    • Test all discount codes and checkout flow
    • WhatsApp broadcast to subscribers: ‘Get early access to our Republic Day Sale’

    January 20 – January 28: Sale Live

    • Maximum ad spend deployed
    • Daily WhatsApp/email with featured products and deals
    • Instagram stories: ‘Deal of the Day’ content
    • Customer support on high alert — respond within 15 minutes
    • Daily performance review: which products are moving? Adjust promotions accordingly.

    January 29 – February 5: Post-Sale

    • Extended sale / clearance on remaining inventory
    • Thank you campaign to all sale buyers + next purchase incentive
    • Performance analysis and documentation for next year

    Republic Day Offer Ideas

    • ‘26% off for the 26th’ — Patriotic-themed flat discount
    • Freedom deals — Select products at steep discounts (40-50%)
    • Republic Day combos — Tricolor-themed bundles
    • Free shipping sitewide — Simple, effective, no complex math
    • ₹1 deals — Add-on products at ₹1 with any purchase over ₹999

    Need Help Planning Seasonal Sales?

    At Growww Tech, we plan and execute seasonal campaigns for Indian D2C brands — from Republic Day to Holi to Diwali. Let’s plan your next sale.

    Related reading:

  • Subscription Commerce in India: Why D2C Wellness and FMCG Brands Are Shifting

    Subscription Commerce in India: Why D2C Wellness and FMCG Brands Are Shifting

    Why Subscriptions Work for Indian D2C

    Subscription commerce in India grew 45% YoY in 2026, led by:

    • Wellness/supplements — Protein, vitamins, Ayurvedic supplements (monthly consumption cycle)
    • Personal care — Skincare routines, hair care, grooming kits
    • Coffee/tea — Specialty coffee and tea brands with recurring delivery
    • Baby care — Diapers, wipes, baby food (predictable consumption)
    • Pet care — Pet food, supplements, grooming supplies

    The financial case is compelling:

    MetricOne-Time BuyersSubscribers
    Average lifetime value₹2,500₹8,500
    Retention at 6 months18%55%
    Cost to acquire₹450₹450 (same)
    Revenue predictabilityUnpredictablePredictable
    Inventory planningGuessworkData-driven

    Subscription Models for Indian D2C

    Model 1: Subscribe & Save (Most Common)

    • Customer gets 10-15% discount for subscribing to auto-delivery
    • Frequency: every 30, 45, 60, or 90 days (customer chooses)
    • Easy pause/cancel — this is critical for adoption
    • Best for: products with regular consumption cycle (skincare, supplements, coffee)

    Model 2: Curation Box

    • Monthly themed box with curated products
    • Higher AOV (₹1,500-3,000/box)
    • Discovery element — customers try new products each month
    • Best for: beauty, snacks, tea/coffee, wellness
    • Challenge: curation fatigue after 6-8 months

    Model 3: Membership/VIP

    • Customer pays annual/monthly fee for benefits (discounts, early access, free shipping)
    • Like Amazon Prime but for your brand
    • Best for: brands with 5+ products where customers shop frequently
    • Lower implementation complexity than full subscription

    Tools for Subscription on Shopify

    ToolPriceFeaturesBest For
    Recharge$99/moMost popular, flexible, analyticsEstablished brands
    AppstleFree-$10/moBudget-friendly, growingSmall brands starting out
    Bold Subscriptions$49/moGood customizationMid-size brands
    Loop Subscriptions$99/moIndian company, UPI supportIndian D2C (recommended)

    Our pick for Indian D2C: Loop Subscriptions — built by an Indian team, understands INR pricing, supports UPI auto-debit, and has Shopify-native integration.

    The Churn Problem (And How to Fix It)

    Average subscription churn in Indian D2C: 12-18% per month. That means you lose 60-80% of subscribers within 6 months.

    Top Churn Reasons and Fixes

    Churn Reason% of ChurnFix
    ‘I have too much product (overstock)’30%Offer easy frequency adjustment (extend to 45/60/90 days)
    ‘Too expensive’25%Offer longer commitment discount (3-month plan = extra 5% off)
    ‘I forgot I was subscribed’15%Send reminder 3 days before charge: ‘Your next delivery is coming!’
    ‘Product didn’t work for me’15%Post-delivery check-in at Day 14. Offer product swap if unhappy.
    ‘Hard to cancel’15%Make cancellation easy (1-click). Offer pause instead of cancel.

    Need Help With Subscriptions?

    At Growww Tech, we implement subscription models for Indian D2C brands — from tool setup to retention strategy. Let’s build your recurring revenue.

    Related reading:

  • Flipkart Seller Guide 2026: Registration, Fees, and the November Fee Revision Impact

    Flipkart Seller Guide 2026: Registration, Fees, and the November Fee Revision Impact

    Flipkart Seller Registration (Step by Step)

    If you’re not already on Flipkart, here’s how to get started:

    1. Visit seller.flipkart.com and click ‘Start Selling’
    2. Documents needed: GST registration, PAN card, bank account details, product catalog
    3. Verification: 2-5 business days for account approval
    4. Listing: Upload products with images, descriptions, pricing. Flipkart provides a catalog upload tool.
    5. First order: Once approved, your products are live. Flipkart’s algorithm takes 2-4 weeks to stabilize your listing visibility.

    Flipkart Fee Structure (Updated November 2026)

    Fee ComponentRateNotes
    Commission5-25%Varies by category (fashion 10-20%, electronics 5-12%, beauty 12-18%)
    Shipping fee₹30-100Based on weight, distance, and delivery speed
    Collection fee2%On all orders (payment processing)
    Fixed fee₹10-30Per order (varies by selling price tier)
    Cancellation fee₹25-50If you cancel a confirmed order
    Late dispatch fee₹25If order not dispatched within SLA

    November revision impact: Commission rates increased by 1-2% across fashion and beauty categories. Shipping fees restructured to incentivize heavier items. Net effect: 2-3% higher total fees for most D2C sellers.

    Flipkart vs Amazon for D2C Sellers

    FactorFlipkartAmazon India
    Monthly active shoppers200M+150M+
    Commission (fashion)10-20%12-22%
    Fulfillment optionFlipkart Assured (3PL)FBA (Amazon warehouses)
    Payment cycleT+7 (weekly)T+7 (weekly)
    Customer demographicTier 2-3 cities, price-sensitiveTier 1 cities, premium segment
    Advertising platformFlipkart AdsAmazon PPC (more mature)
    Returns policy15-30 days15-30 days
    Best forVolume, mass marketPremium, higher AOV

    Flipkart Ads: Getting Started

    • Product Listing Ads (PLA): Your product appears in search results and category pages. CPC: ₹3-10.
    • Brand Ads: Banner placement on category pages. Higher cost, better for brand awareness.
    • Start with PLA: Budget ₹200-500/day. Target your top 5-10 products.
    • Measure ACoS: Keep advertising cost under your commission rate. If commission is 15%, ACoS should be under 15%.

    Tips for Flipkart Success

    • Flipkart Assured matters — Products with Flipkart Assured badge convert 30-40% better. Use Flipkart’s fulfillment network if possible.
    • Big Billion Days prep — Plan inventory 3 months ahead for BBD. Apply for participation early. BBD can drive 40-60% of annual marketplace revenue.
    • Pricing strategy — Flipkart’s customer base is more price-sensitive than Amazon’s. Competitive pricing is critical.
    • Catalog quality — 5+ images per product, detailed specifications, accurate size charts. Flipkart penalizes poor listings with lower visibility.
    • Respond to negative reviews — Quick, helpful responses to negative reviews improve your seller rating.

    Need Help With Flipkart Selling?

    At Growww Tech, we help D2C brands optimize their marketplace presence — Flipkart, Amazon, and beyond. Get a marketplace strategy consultation.

    Related reading:

  • The D2C Operations Playbook: SOPs for a 200 Orders/Day Brand

    The D2C Operations Playbook: SOPs for a 200 Orders/Day Brand

    Why SOPs Matter at 200 Orders/Day

    At 50 orders/day, the founder can manage everything. At 200 orders/day:

    • You need 3-5 people in operations
    • Without SOPs, each person does things slightly differently
    • Mistakes compound: wrong product shipped, late dispatch, missed return, inventory mismatch
    • Customer complaints increase → reviews drop → conversion drops → you spend more on ads to maintain revenue

    SOPs aren’t bureaucracy. They’re the difference between a brand that scales and one that implodes.

    SOP 1: Daily Order Processing (8:00 AM – 12:00 PM)

    1. 8:00 AM — Download orders from all channels (Shopify, Amazon, Flipkart) into your OMS
    2. 8:30 AM — Flag exceptions — COD orders above ₹2,000 (verify via WhatsApp), out-of-stock items, incomplete addresses
    3. 9:00 AM — Pick orders — Generate pick lists by zone (to optimize packing). One person picks, another verifies.
    4. 10:00 AM — Pack orders — QC check (right product, right size, no defects) → pack → add invoice → add thank you card → seal box
    5. 11:00 AM — Label and manifest — Print shipping labels, create manifest in courier partner system
    6. 12:00 PM — Handover to courier — Courier pickup. Verify all packages are scanned and manifest matches.

    SOP 2: Customer Support (9:00 AM – 7:00 PM)

    1. Response time target: WhatsApp within 15 minutes, email within 2 hours
    2. Priority matrix: Payment issues > delivery problems > product queries > general inquiries
    3. ‘Where is my order?’ — Check tracking, provide update. If delayed beyond EDD, proactively reach out with updated timeline.
    4. Return/exchange requests — Verify order, confirm return eligibility, initiate reverse pickup, communicate refund timeline.
    5. Complaints — Acknowledge, apologize, offer solution (replacement/refund + discount on next order). Escalate to founder if unresolved after 2 attempts.
    6. End of day: Log all unresolved tickets. Zero inbox policy — every query gets at least a first response.

    SOP 3: Inventory Management (Daily + Weekly)

    Daily

    • Update stock counts after order processing
    • Flag any SKU below reorder point (typically 14-day supply)
    • Reconcile physical stock vs system stock for top 10 SKUs

    Weekly

    • Full physical stock count (rotate categories — all SKUs counted at least once per month)
    • Review slow-moving inventory (no sales in 30 days) — consider discounting or bundling
    • Place reorders for fast-moving SKUs
    • Update procurement forecasts based on last 4 weeks’ trends

    SOP 4: Returns Processing (Daily)

    1. Receive return package — Open, photograph contents, check against return request
    2. Quality check — Is the product resellable? Categories: A (resellable as-is), B (needs repackaging), C (damaged/defective — write off)
    3. Restock A/B items — Update inventory count immediately
    4. Process refund — Within 3 business days of receiving the return
    5. Log return reason — Track in spreadsheet: wrong size, didn’t like, defective, wrong product sent. Monthly analysis to reduce future returns.

    SOP 5: End-of-Day Reconciliation (6:00 PM)

    • Orders processed vs orders received — All orders should be shipped same day (for orders received before 2 PM)
    • Payment reconciliation — Match orders in Shopify with payment gateway settlements
    • Courier handover verification — Confirm all packages were picked up. Flag any missed pickups for priority next day.
    • Support ticket summary — Log open tickets, escalations, and patterns (same complaint from multiple customers = systemic issue)

    Need Help Building Operations?

    At Growww Tech, we help D2C brands build scalable operations — from SOPs to tool selection to team structure. Let’s build your operations backbone.

    Related reading:

  • ONDC for D2C Sellers: Zero Commission, Real Orders — Complete Setup Guide

    ONDC for D2C Sellers: Zero Commission, Real Orders — Complete Setup Guide

    What Is ONDC?

    ONDC (Open Network for Digital Commerce) is the Indian government’s initiative to democratize ecommerce. Think of it as UPI for ecommerce — an open protocol that connects any seller app to any buyer app.

    Key promise: No platform lock-in, minimal commission (0-3%), and equal visibility regardless of brand size.

    ONDC in 2026: Reality Check

    Let’s be honest about where ONDC stands:

    • Monthly transactions: ~12 million (up from 6M in 2025) — growing but tiny vs Amazon India’s ~150M
    • Active sellers: ~500K (mostly grocery and food — D2C fashion/beauty is underrepresented)
    • Active buyer apps: Paytm ONDC, Magicpin, mystore — still building user base
    • Average order value: ₹250-400 (skewed by grocery/food orders)
    • Commission: 0-3% (vs 15-25% on Amazon/Flipkart) — this is the real advantage

    How ONDC Works for D2C Sellers

    1. Choose a seller app — This is your storefront on ONDC. Options: mystore, Kiko Live, SellerApp, Wooqer
    2. List your products — Upload catalog (similar to listing on Amazon, but simpler)
    3. Set pricing and logistics — Choose your shipping partner or use ONDC’s logistics network
    4. Receive orders — When a buyer on any buyer app (Paytm, Magicpin, etc.) orders your product, you get the order in your seller app
    5. Fulfill and ship — Pack and ship just like any other order

    Seller App Comparison

    Seller AppCommissionBest ForShopify Integration
    mystore0-2%General D2C, fashionVia API
    Kiko Live1-3%Food, groceryManual
    SellerApp0-2%Electronics, generalVia API
    Wooqer1-2%Restaurants, local servicesManual

    Is ONDC Worth It for Your D2C Brand?

    YES, if:

    • You sell food/grocery/FMCG products (ONDC’s strongest category)
    • You want to reduce marketplace dependency (diversification strategy)
    • You operate locally and want hyperlocal delivery orders
    • Zero/low commission matters for your unit economics (every 15% saved vs Amazon goes to your margin)

    NOT YET, if:

    • You’re looking for significant order volume (ONDC won’t match Amazon/Flipkart anytime soon)
    • Your brand relies on marketplace discovery (ONDC buyer apps have limited product discovery/recommendation engines)
    • You sell fashion/beauty (these categories are underdeveloped on ONDC)
    • You need customer data for remarketing (ONDC’s data sharing model is still evolving)

    Our Recommendation

    List on ONDC as an experiment, not a primary channel. Spend 2-3 hours setting up, list your top 10-20 products, and see what happens over 3 months. The cost is near zero and the potential upside (if ONDC grows as projected) is significant.

    Don’t reallocate resources from Amazon or your D2C website to ONDC yet. Keep it as a low-effort additional channel.

    Need Help With Multi-Channel Selling?

    At Growww Tech, we help D2C brands sell across channels — Shopify, Amazon, Flipkart, ONDC, and quick commerce. Let’s optimize your channel mix.

    Related reading:

  • Black Friday India: Why Indian D2C Brands Should (and Shouldn’t) Participate

    Black Friday India: Why Indian D2C Brands Should (and Shouldn’t) Participate

    Black Friday in India: The Reality

    Black Friday awareness in India has grown significantly:

    • 42% of urban Indian shoppers are now aware of Black Friday/Cyber Monday
    • Cross-border shopping spikes 300% during Black Friday week
    • Indian D2C brands running Black Friday sales grew 65% YoY — mostly in electronics, fashion, and beauty
    • But: it comes just 2-3 weeks after Diwali — your customers may be ‘shopped out’

    When Black Friday Makes Sense

    • Your target audience is urban, 22-35 age group — They follow Western shopping trends and expect Black Friday deals.
    • You sell internationally — If you have NRI or international customers, Black Friday is their primary shopping event.
    • You have post-Diwali inventory to clear — Black Friday becomes your clearance event without looking like a ‘desperate discount sale’.
    • Your category isn’t Diwali-heavy — Electronics, fitness, and Western fashion aren’t traditional Diwali purchases. Black Friday is a natural fit.

    When Black Friday Doesn’t Make Sense

    • Your customers just shopped during Diwali — If 80%+ of your audience bought from you in October, hitting them with another sale in November causes fatigue.
    • You’re in ethnic wear/traditional categories — Black Friday doesn’t culturally align with Indian ethnic products.
    • Your margins can’t handle another discount event — If Diwali discounts already strained your unit economics, skip it.

    How to Run Black Friday for Indian D2C

    Option 1: Full Black Friday + Cyber Monday (4 days)

    • Friday-Monday, 20-40% off sitewide
    • Best for: brands with strong international or young urban audience
    • Promote 1 week in advance via email + WhatsApp + social

    Option 2: Black Friday Week (7 days)

    • Monday-Sunday, different deal each day
    • Creates daily urgency and extends the selling window
    • Best for: brands with large product catalogs (can feature different categories each day)

    Option 3: ‘Anti-Black Friday’ Positioning

    • ‘We don’t do Black Friday. Our prices are fair year-round.’
    • Works for premium/sustainable/conscious brands
    • Can actually generate more social media engagement than running a sale
    • Best for: brands where discounting conflicts with brand values

    Black Friday Offers That Work in India

    • Flat % off — Simple, understood. 20-30% is the sweet spot.
    • ‘₹1 deals’ — Select products at ₹1 with minimum purchase. Creates viral buzz.
    • Bundle-only discounts — ‘Buy any 3, get 30% off.’ Protects margin while increasing AOV.
    • Gift with purchase — ‘Free mini product with every order over ₹1,500.’ Introduces new products without discounting.
    • First-X-customers — ‘First 100 customers get 40% off.’ Creates urgency without unlimited discount liability.

    Need Help Planning Sales Events?

    At Growww Tech, we plan and execute seasonal campaigns for D2C brands. Let’s strategize your next sale.

    Related reading:

  • D2C Launch Checklist: 50-Point Pre-Launch Template for Indian Brands

    D2C Launch Checklist: 50-Point Pre-Launch Template for Indian Brands

    Why You Need a Launch Checklist

    Most Indian D2C brands launch with critical gaps:

    • GST not registered → can’t sell on marketplaces
    • No return policy → customer complaints and legal risk
    • No email flows set up → losing 15-20% of revenue from day one
    • Wrong shipping partner → slow delivery, high RTO
    • No analytics → can’t measure what’s working

    This checklist prevents those gaps. Work through it before your launch date.

    Section 1: Legal & Compliance (10 Points)

    1. ☐ Register your business (Pvt Ltd, LLP, or Proprietorship)
    2. ☐ Get GST registration
    3. ☐ Register trademark (brand name + logo) — apply now, it takes 12-18 months
    4. ☐ Get FSSAI license (if selling food products)
    5. ☐ Draft Terms & Conditions for your website
    6. ☐ Draft Privacy Policy (DPDP Act compliant)
    7. ☐ Draft Return & Refund Policy
    8. ☐ Draft Shipping Policy with estimated delivery times
    9. ☐ Set up business bank account
    10. ☐ Register for MSME/Udyam (unlocks government schemes and easier credit)

    Section 2: Product & Pricing (8 Points)

    1. ☐ Final product photography (minimum 5 angles + lifestyle shot per product)
    2. ☐ Product descriptions written (features, benefits, materials, dimensions)
    3. ☐ Pricing finalized with unit economics calculated (use our unit economics guide)
    4. ☐ Size chart created (if applicable) with measurements in inches AND cm
    5. ☐ Packaging designed and ordered (branded boxes, tissue paper, thank you card)
    6. ☐ HSN codes assigned to all products (correct GST classification)
    7. ☐ Inventory stocked (minimum 30 days of projected demand)
    8. ☐ Quality check process documented (what to check before shipping each order)

    Section 3: Website Setup (12 Points)

    1. ☐ Shopify store set up (or WooCommerce if preferred)
    2. ☐ Custom domain connected (yourbrand.com)
    3. ☐ SSL certificate active (https://)
    4. ☐ All products listed with images, descriptions, and pricing
    5. ☐ Homepage designed with clear value proposition and CTA
    6. ☐ Mobile responsiveness tested on a mid-range Android phone
    7. ☐ Checkout flow tested end-to-end (place a test order yourself)
    8. ☐ Payment gateway connected (Razorpay recommended for starters)
    9. ☐ UPI enabled and set as default payment method
    10. ☐ COD enabled with OTP verification
    11. ☐ Page speed under 3 seconds on mobile (test with Google PageSpeed Insights)
    12. ☐ Contact page with WhatsApp link, email, and phone number

    Section 4: Marketing Setup (10 Points)

    1. ☐ Meta (Facebook/Instagram) Business account created
    2. ☐ Meta Pixel installed on website + Conversions API connected
    3. ☐ Google Analytics 4 installed with ecommerce events configured
    4. ☐ Google Ads account created + Google Tag installed
    5. ☐ WhatsApp Business set up with automated welcome message
    6. ☐ Email marketing tool connected (Klaviyo or Omnisend)
    7. ☐ Welcome email flow created (3-email sequence)
    8. ☐ Abandoned cart email/WhatsApp flow created
    9. ☐ 10 initial ad creatives ready (mix of video and static)
    10. ☐ UTM parameters standardized for all marketing links

    Section 5: Logistics & Operations (10 Points)

    1. ☐ Shipping partner selected (Shiprocket or Delhivery for starters)
    2. ☐ Shipping rates configured (free above threshold + flat rate below)
    3. ☐ Return process defined (how customer initiates, who picks up, refund timeline)
    4. ☐ Warehouse/storage space organized (even if it’s a room in your home)
    5. ☐ Packaging materials stocked (boxes, bubble wrap, tape, labels)
    6. ☐ Label printer set up (or handwritten labels for first 50 orders)
    7. ☐ Order notification flow: customer places order → you get notified → pick-pack-ship
    8. ☐ Test order shipped to yourself — verify packaging quality, delivery time, tracking accuracy
    9. ☐ Customer support channel defined (WhatsApp, email, or both)
    10. ☐ Returns handling process: receive return → QC check → restock or write off → process refund

    Ready to Launch?

    Work through this checklist over 2-4 weeks. Don’t rush to launch with gaps — a poor first impression is hard to recover from.

    At Growww Tech, we help D2C brands launch right — from website setup to marketing strategy to operations. Let’s plan your launch.

    Related reading:

  • How to Get Press Coverage for Your D2C Brand (YourStory, Inc42 Playbook)

    How to Get Press Coverage for Your D2C Brand (YourStory, Inc42 Playbook)

    Why Press Coverage Matters for D2C Brands

    A single feature in YourStory or Inc42 can:

    • Drive 5,000-15,000 visitors to your website in a week
    • Generate 20-50 high-quality backlinks (massive SEO boost)
    • Build credibility that you can use in ads, on your website, and in investor pitches
    • Attract potential partners, suppliers, and talent
    • Cost: ₹0 if you do it yourself (vs ₹50K-2L/month for a PR agency)

    Where Indian D2C Brands Get Featured

    PublicationFocusReadershipDifficulty to Get Featured
    YourStoryStartups, D2C, entrepreneurship2M+ monthlyMedium — they cover a lot of brands
    Inc42Tech startups, funding, growth1.5M+Medium-High — prefer funded brands
    EntrackrD2C, ecommerce, market analysis500K+Medium — good for data-driven stories
    ET RetailRetail industry, ecommerce1M+High — prefer established brands
    Entrepreneur IndiaFounder stories, growth strategies800K+Medium — love founder journey stories
    Social SamosaDigital marketing, social media600K+Low-Medium — focused on marketing angles

    The 5 Story Angles That Get Published

    1. Revenue Milestone Story

    ‘How [Brand] Went from ₹0 to ₹50L/Month in 18 Months’ — Publications love specific numbers and growth stories.

    • Share actual revenue numbers (even if you’re small — ₹5L/month is a valid story for a bootstrap brand)
    • Include the journey: challenges, pivots, breakthroughs
    • Be honest about failures — editors want real stories, not polished PR

    2. Data/Trend Story

    ‘Why Indian D2C Brands Are Seeing 30% Higher RTO in Tier 3 Cities’ — Share insights from your own data.

    • You don’t need a massive dataset — your own business data is unique and valuable
    • Wrap your data into a trend narrative
    • Offer to share exclusive data with the journalist

    3. Counter-Narrative

    ‘Why We Stopped Running Meta Ads and Revenue Went UP’ — Challenge conventional wisdom.

    • Go against the grain of common D2C advice
    • Backup with your own results
    • These get the most engagement and shares

    4. Founder Vulnerability Story

    ‘I Lost ₹8L Before Finding Product-Market Fit’ — Honest failure stories resonate deeply.

    • Share specific mistakes and what you learned
    • Include practical takeaways others can apply
    • Founders who are transparent get more coverage than those who only share wins

    5. Industry Analysis

    ‘The Real Cost of Quick Commerce for D2C Brands’ — Position yourself as an industry expert.

    • Analyze a trend affecting multiple brands, not just yours
    • Include data, examples, and predictions
    • Offer to be quoted as an expert source for future articles

    How to Pitch Journalists

    1. Find the right journalist — Read their recent articles. If they cover D2C/ecommerce, they’re your target. Find their email on the publication’s team page or LinkedIn.
    2. Write a short email (under 200 words) — Subject: Specific angle, not ‘Press Release’. Body: 1 sentence intro, 2-3 sentences on the story, 1 sentence on why their readers will care.
    3. Include 2-3 key data points in the email — Journalists are drawn to numbers. ‘We reduced RTO from 35% to 8%’ is more compelling than ‘We improved our logistics.’
    4. Offer an exclusive — ‘I’d love to share these numbers exclusively with [publication] before we announce publicly.’ Exclusives get priority.
    5. Follow up once (3-4 days later) — If no response, send ONE follow-up. After that, try a different journalist or publication.

    Need Help With Brand PR?

    At Growww Tech, we help D2C brands build media presence and thought leadership. Let’s get your brand noticed.

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  • Post-Festive Inventory: Clearance Without Killing Brand Perception

    Post-Festive Inventory: Clearance Without Killing Brand Perception

    The Post-Diwali Inventory Problem

    You planned for ₹20L in festive sales. You hit ₹15L. Now you have ₹5L worth of festive-themed inventory that’s losing relevance every day.

    The wrong approach: Slash everything 50% off and pray it moves. This teaches customers to never buy full price and damages brand equity.

    The right approach: A strategic multi-channel clearance over 4-6 weeks.

    Strategy 1: Bundle the Unsold

    • Create ‘Mystery Boxes’ or ‘Lucky Boxes’ — 3-5 products at 40% off combined retail price
    • Customers love the surprise element. Brands report 70-80% sell-through on mystery boxes.
    • Include 1-2 bestsellers + 2-3 slow movers in each box
    • Price at ₹999/1,499/1,999 — psychological price points that feel like value

    Strategy 2: Channel Diversification

    • List on marketplaces — If you’re D2C-only, list festive inventory on Amazon/Flipkart. Different audience = fresh demand.
    • Flash sales on WhatsApp — ‘Exclusive for our VIP customers — 40% off festive collection, 24 hours only.’ Higher conversion than email.
    • Instagram Live sale — Live selling events create urgency and excitement. Show products, answer questions in real-time.
    • Offline pop-up — Weekend pop-up stall at a market or mall. Physical touch + discount = high conversion for clearance.

    Strategy 3: Staggered Discounts

    • Week 1-2 (Nov): 20% off for email/WhatsApp subscribers only. Rewards loyalty.
    • Week 3-4 (Nov): 30% off site-wide clearance. Broader audience.
    • Week 5-6 (Dec): 40-50% on remaining items. Last push before writing off.
    • This captures willingness-to-pay at each level instead of going to maximum discount immediately.

    Strategy 4: Gifting Pivot

    • Reposition festive inventory as Christmas/New Year gifts
    • Create gift sets with premium packaging
    • Run ‘Perfect Gift Under ₹1,000’ campaign
    • Corporate gifting angle — approach companies for employee/client gift orders

    When to Write Off

    After 6 weeks of clearance efforts, if inventory is still sitting:

    • Donate to charity — Tax deduction + brand goodwill + clears warehouse space
    • Employee sales — Offer remaining stock to employees at cost price
    • Repurpose materials — For food/beauty brands, use ingredients in new product formulations
    • Accept the loss — Carrying dead inventory costs warehouse space and working capital. Sometimes cutting losses early is the smarter financial move.

    Prevention for Next Festive Season

    • Order 80% of projected demand, not 100% — It’s cheaper to sell out early than to hold excess inventory for months.
    • Use pre-orders to gauge demand — ‘Pre-order your Diwali collection with 10% early-bird discount.’ Actual pre-orders predict demand better than any forecast.
    • Plan clearance BEFORE the season starts — Decide clearance channels, discount tiers, and timelines in August, not November.

    Need Help With Inventory Management?

    At Growww Tech, we help D2C brands with inventory planning, festive strategy, and post-festive clearance optimization. Let’s plan your inventory better.

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