Startup founders talk about how Meta enables them to create new opportunities for businesses and expand their reach to the right target audience
India has a staggering 750m smartphone users. The figure is set to grow to 1 billion by 2026 according to a recent report by Deloitte. Small wonder that the Indian startup ecosystem is teeming with direct to consumer (D2C) businesses which will be a $100 billion opportunity by 2025 reckons yet another research report. The growth will be led by companies from non-metro geographies and from rural India.
It is here that Meta enables a “level-playing field to help companies reach the right audiences at scale”, says Avinash Pant, Director, Marketing for Meta in India.
Take Clovia, a women’s apparel and innerwear brand founded by Neha Kant who saw the need for a “feedback-based brand” that women could trust. “We could communicate with our consumers one at a time with Facebook to seek feedback. At the same time, its catalog tool really helps you maintain a check on your inventory, health check on your SKUs approval status and push different subcategories as per the objective”.
55% of the company’s business comes from tier-2 and tier-3 cities outside of metros. Kant’s goal is to scale up to 50 million consumers up from 4 million currently. Meta’s affordable marketing campaigns coupled with personalized ad deliveries help companies like Clovia to garner insights from constant customer interactions.
Today’s consumers not only demand quality products but also ones that are sustainable. Neeman’s, a footwear brand that banks on sustainability, figured out a novel way to manufacture its shoes using plastic waste. But their challenge was to achieve scale rapidly through differentiated and personalized content for its prospects. “And that's what Meta changed the game for us,” says co-founder & COO Amar Preet Singh.