Skip to main content
BoF Logo
The Business of Fashion

Agenda-setting intelligence, analysis and advice for the global fashion community.

How Homegrown Indian Beauty Brands Are Plotting Their Next Launch

The global industry is turning its attention towards India with a slew of international brands bringing their best-selling products to the subcontinent. But local lines are leveraging their close proximity to the customer to produce products that have a perfect market fit for regional shoppers and the diaspora alike.
A woman with a skincare eye watches holds a skincare product
In the same universe that large prestige beauty lines are landing in India, there is a crop of homegrown brands making their presence felt. (D'you)

Key insights

  • Increased disposable incomes, interest in trying new beauty products and evolving consumer preferences make India an exciting market to enter for both international and local brands.
  • Homegrown brands are using their deep understanding of Indian shoppers to out maneuver international competition, with local consumer insights driving product development.
  • Despite competition, affinity and support from Indian consumers is fuelling the growth of the local beauty industry.

MUMBAI – Nars Cosmetics, Rare Beauty, Kylie Cosmetics, Dr Dennis Gross, Sol de Janeiro, Laura Mercier and Urban Decay were just some of the international players that entered India’s $23.7 billion beauty playground in 2023. Ask any Millennial or Gen-Z with an interest in beauty about this list, and they’ll tell you it’s the reckoning of a distant dream. Still, that same shopper doesn’t feel as deprived as they did a few years ago when acquiring their favourite creamy concealer or multi-action cream which required a distant cousin visiting from abroad and a pricey flight. That’s because in the same universe that large prestige beauty lines are landing in the subcontinent, there is a crop of homegrown brands making their presence felt.

“Homegrown beauty has evolved. Dedication to transparency, ingredients, packaging, marketing and conscious thinking from the founder’s side is driving this change,” said Bianca Louzado, a makeup artist and founder of Code Beauty, a cosmetic sanitising brand.

Louzado said 20 percent of her professional makeup kit is now made up of homegrown brands like Asa Beauty, Aminu and Daughter Earth. And she isn’t alone. Out of the 6,200-plus brands retail giant Nykaa sells, over 400 brands represent Indian ingenuity. That number is growing daily.

According to Euromonitor, India’s per capita gross income is set to rise more than 130 percent through 2040. The Indian consumer, besides spending more on makeup and skincare due to increased disposable income, is also more aware of their needs and open to trying new things, with 42 percent strongly agreeing that they enjoy discovering new beauty and grooming products, according to a report by market intelligence firm Mintel.

ADVERTISEMENT

Tanya Rajani, principal analyst, beauty and personal care at Mintel India said the “desire for novelty, combined with increased internet consumption and digital engagement, has fuelled the growth of home-grown beauty brands in India.”

A ripe market and a willing consumer are great bait, but in order to succeed, home-grown Indian brands need to have strong strategic foresight and create products with perfect market fit without creating clutter. But above all, new items need to be increasingly guided by its users. To be chosen by the discerning Indian beauty shopper, what, when and how a brand launches a new product will make all the difference.

“India as a market is still at a nascent stage, I don’t think it’s saturated. There is a constant premiumisation happening,” said Aman Mohunta, co-founder of skincare line Aminu. “A brand needs to focus on which strata they want to operate in.”

Identifying a Gap

Oftentimes, the Indian beauty entrepreneur is the Indian beauty consumer, with a deep-rooted craving to find and fix what’s amiss. Identifying a gap has become the basis of product development for founders like Karishma Kewalramani, who launched FAE (Free and Equal) Beauty in 2019.

“While the penetration of new brands had begun, I didn’t see anyone making products that were working for brown skin at an affordable price,” she said.

FAE retails for an average of Rs 220 to Rs 750 ($2.65 to $9.04) and is sold online at Nykaa, Tira Beauty, Kindlife and Myntra, along with quick commerce platform Blinkit and its own e-commerce website. The line launched with multi-use sticks based on two consumer behaviour learnings: people wanted products that took them from day to night and worked for their lips, cheeks and lids. Customers also cared deeply about a matte finish.

Though the brand had customer data at the ready, evolving consumer preferences meant FAE had to continuously evolve. The brand entered the liquid lipstick category in September 2023 with Lip Whip in 10 nude shades. A mousse-like matte formula ensured it stayed on the lips for six to 12 hours, a chief concern of shoppers. But quickly thereafter, FAE phased out its multisticks because they didn’t have the performance that customers were looking for.

“In India, people tend to think that if it doesn’t last long, it’s not worth my money,” said Kewalramani.

ADVERTISEMENT

Thanks to brands like The Ordinary, which familiarised a global audience with ingredients like AHAs and BHAs, Shamika Haldipurkar launched D’you in 2020 with a single product, a serum called Hustle that’s formulated with 11 actives. Hustle targets acne, dehydration and premature ageing among other skin concerns, and retails for Rs 3,200 ($38.58) on its website and at Nykaa, Tira and Amazon. Haldipurkar saw an appetite for premium products with sophisticated formulation, but also discovered that multi-step routines caused confusion among Indian shoppers. Hustle came without a side of overwhelm.

Though entering a price sensitive market with one product at a premium price was risky, the product helped D’you become profitable within three months of launch; it also has a 45 percent retention rate. Today, D’you’s portfolio includes five products, including its latest launch, the Unkissed sunscreen, its most requested product.

“It was a key product missing from our portfolio for consumers who wanted a complete D’you skincare routine,” Haldipurkar said, who noted that the flurry of sunscreen launches in the market is due to category awareness and consumption in the country. “Insights from our retailers show that it’s the number one category trending year on year … A lot more people have adopted the use of sunscreen.” Beyond its Lip Whip, FAE also launched a SPF Juice, a sunscreen that doesn’t leave a white cast. The brand has had its best year since launch, with 350 percent growth.

Meeting the Consumers All the Way

Increased interest in functional skincare has spurred the entry of brands like Minimalist and Aminu, which focus on high performance, science-backed formulas.

Minimalist has taken an educational approach to its marketing. Its website features a skin analyser tool to help a shopper build a routine and its social media is populated with skincare science. Minimalist acknowledges that products like its Tranexamic 3% or Sepicalm 3% Moisturiser could require some extra hand holding.

“All our products are clinically tested and we share those results on our website. Our transparency in sourcing, manufacturing processes and educating our customers wins us consumer trust,” said chief executive Mohit Yadav.

While seemingly commonplace in the West, brands have realised the importance of educating shoppers directly with platforms like TikTok banned.

Aminu, meanwhile, aims to build on the philosophy of personalised skincare by providing individualised regimens based on the skin’s age, hydration, oil production levels, barrier strength and other such factors through free consultations with experts. It includes over 200 ingredients to create multi active blends; its Melting Balm Cleanser, which sells for Rs 1,200 ($14.47), includes 12-plus seed and enzyme oils

“Our approach is to help you understand what your skin needs at that moment first, then advise on a regime that has the ingredient profile from our portfolio to suit those needs,” said Mohit. “We’re not claiming we found a miracle ingredient that works brilliantly on [all] subcontinental skin.”

Further Reading

© 2024 The Business of Fashion. All rights reserved. For more information read our Terms & Conditions

More from Beauty
Analysis and advice on the fast-evolving beauty business.

How Anastasia Beverly Hills Lost Its Footing

The influencer-favourite brand seemed on rocket-like trajectory in the 2010s, culminating in a reported $3 billion valuation in 2018. But since then, trends have shifted, sales have slid, debt has mounted and its main investor, the private equity firm TPG Capital, is ready to move on.


view more

Subscribe to the BoF Daily Digest

The essential daily round-up of fashion news, analysis, and breaking news alerts.

The Business of Fashion

Agenda-setting intelligence, analysis and advice for the global fashion community.
CONNECT WITH US ON