By focusing on efficiency and using technology, Kolkata-based Vedant Fashions' Ravi Modi has built a pan-India ethnic wear brand in Manyavar
Manyavar has 100 flagship stores, including a 16,000 sq ft showroom at Lower Parel, Mumbai
Image: Mexy Xavier
Instead of the usual Mr or Ms, any email sent by an employee of Vedant Fashions Pvt Ltd (VFPL)—the Kolkata-based company that makes and sells ethnic apparel branded Manyavar—carries the salutation manyavar (eminent) before the name of the recipient; and the correspondence signs off with a namaskar. Staying with the Indian-ness that is at the core of the Manyavar brand, Ravi Modi, the 40-year-old founder and chairman of the company, is referred to by employees as bhaiya, the Hindi address for an older brother.
Rooted in this sense of tradition, VFPL has successfully built a sizeable business for itself by exploiting a gap in the Indian fashion retail industry—the presence of organised players (beyond high fashion) in the ethnic wear market: A segment that is estimated to be worth ₹80,000 crore and is characterised by small, standalone regional players.
Ethnic wear retailers often fail to gain scale because apparel such as sherwanis, kurtas and lehengas are mostly bought and worn during festive occasions, which makes it a seasonal affair. But Modi, who used to work in his family’s garments store in Kolkata’s AC Market on Shakespeare Sarani, saw the “opportunity of a lifetime” in building a scaleable brand in this niche segment. In the late 1990s, the concept of men’s ethnic wear had seemed antiquated, says Modi in an email interview to Forbes India. “I saw it differently—more like an opportunity of a lifetime; not only to build a business but also to change men’s fashion in the country.”
Armed with a seed capital of ₹10,000, Modi began work on the Manyavar concept. That was in 1999. To begin with, the brand mostly sold traditional wedding wear and it was available through larger retailers like Pantaloons and other multi-brand retail outlets. VFPL, which was established as a company in 2002, opened its first exclusive outlet in Bhubaneshwar in 2008.
Cut to 2017: The brand has 450 stores spread across 170 locations in India, Bangladesh, UAE, Nepal and the US. It has 100 flagship stores—along the lines of an expansive 16,000 sq ft showroom in Mumbai’s Lower Parel—and 12 international stores. According to company research platform Tofler, VFPL’s regulatory filings show that the company had a turnover of ₹504 crore in FY16 and a profit before tax (PBT) of ₹139 crore, implying a healthy PBT margin of 28 percent.
Also, it owns 4.5 lakh sq ft of retail space and 3.6 lakh sq ft of office and warehouse space. And, from a manufacturing unit located at Canal South Road in Kolkata’s eastern suburbs, it can churn out 3 million pieces of apparel per year.
All of this, with no external equity and very little debt—according to the company’s filings, its total indebtedness at the end of FY16 was ₹22 crore.
“ Brands like Manyavar have managed to understand the pulse of the consumer and what makes money.
(This story appears in the 18 August, 2017 issue of Forbes India. To visit our Archives, click here.)