How a Surat-based ethnic wear brand with 700 SKUs across 5 brands found structure, clarity, and consistent scale on Myntra — without overhauling everything from scratch.
Flourious is a Surat-based ethnic wear brand selling primarily in the saree category on Myntra. At the start of our engagement, the business had a catalog of approximately 700 SKUs, spread across 5 brands — 2 in-house and 3 white-label — operating under the PPMP C+L model.
In April 2025, Flourious recorded ₹26 lakhs in sales. Momentum improved in May, touching ₹35 lakhs. By June, however, sales volatility set in — daily revenue declined to ₹65,000–₹70,000. A phase familiar to many growing marketplace sellers: early success followed by instability as scale increases.
The brand was putting in effort — investing in ads, expanding catalogs, exploring multiple business models. What was missing was structure and clarity. Here's exactly what we found.
Managing five brands simultaneously created operational complexity. Actual sales were concentrated in just two brands — the rest diluted attention and budget without proportional returns.
Ads were running, but without a clear SKU-level strategy. High-performing products were under-promoted. Low-traction products consumed budget. Campaigns paused intermittently, disrupting Myntra's algorithm — and budgets exhausted before peak shopping hours.
Costs and selling prices were tracked, but actual profit per SKU — after platform fees, taxes, ad spend, and returns — was never calculated. Some products sold at a loss. Others had healthy margins but were underutilised.
New styles were launched in bulk — limiting marketplace visibility. Color variants were grouped under single SKUs, making it impossible to identify which variants were driving demand and causing missed sales on others.
Heavy reliance on the saree category restricted overall growth potential. Returns on select articles were higher than desired, affecting both margins and operational efficiency — a compounding problem at scale.
Approximately 40% of inventory was not moving, while top-selling SKUs frequently went out of stock — a classic demand-supply mismatch that simultaneously locked capital and caused ranking drops on best-sellers.
The goal was not to overhaul everything. It was to simplify, prioritise, and stabilise performance before scaling further. Here's how we approached it, step by step.
Every metric moved in the right direction. Revenue crossed ₹1 Crore, returns dropped, profitability improved, and the business started working with its inventory — not against it.
Flourious had genuine products and real market demand. What they needed was someone to run the Myntra account with structure — track profitability per SKU, pace the ad budget correctly, fix the return problem, and build a business that could actually scale without falling apart every few months.
Global Websters · Account Management Team
This case reflects a reality many Myntra sellers experience. Early sales come in, momentum builds — and then things get unstable. Daily numbers drop. Ads don't perform the way they did. Returns eat into margin. New launches don't move.
Most sellers respond by running more ads, launching more products, or cutting prices. The real issue is almost always something different: systems that haven't kept pace with scale.
At Global Websters, we work as an extended marketplace team — bringing clarity, control, and consistency to Myntra accounts so that growth becomes sustainable, not stressful.
Global Websters manages Myntra accounts for fashion and ethnic wear brands across India — from ad strategy and SKU profitability to returns reduction, model optimisation, and category expansion. If your numbers aren't growing the way they should, we've seen this before and we know how to fix it.
Book a Free Consultation →