Stop Renting Customers. Start Owning Relationships.
India now has more than 11,000 direct-to-consumer (D2C) brands, and the market is worth around ₹8.7 lakh crore in 2025. The D2C world is booming — but most small business owners still fall into one silent trap: selling only on marketplaces like Amazon, Flipkart, or Myntra.
Let’s face the truth — when you sell on these platforms, you’re not really building your own business, you’re just renting space on someone else’s shop.
Why Marketplaces Look Easy — but Aren’t
At first, selling on big platforms feels simple. You upload your product, get a few sales, and think, “Wow, business is growing!”
But here’s what actually happens behind the screen:
- You pay 20–35% commission to the marketplace.
- You face returns — around 8–10% of customers send products back.
- You spend on ads just to make your product visible.
- You still don’t know who your customer is.
After all this, that ₹1,000 sale may leave you with ₹600 or less — and you can’t even contact that customer again.
Amazon or Myntra owns the data, the customer, and the relationship. You just get a sales report.
When You Sell from Your Own Website
Now, let’s look at the other side — building your own online store.
Yes, it costs more in the beginning. You pay for a website, ads, or promotions. But once a customer buys from you, you get their details, their trust, and their attention.
That means you can:
- Thank them personally.
- Send offers or updates about new products.
- Ask for feedback and improve.
- Turn one-time buyers into repeat customers.
That’s how real brands are built — not overnight, but over time through trust and connection.
Numbers Tell the Story
- India’s D2C industry is growing faster than ever — ₹8.7 lakh crore in 2025, up from less than ₹5 lakh crore two years ago.
- Marketplaces grew about 30% last year, while brands with their own websites grew around 25% — slower, but more sustainable, because they control their own business.
- More and more Indian brands are opening physical stores too, because they now understand: owning the customer means you can build loyalty that lasts for years.
Why Customer Ownership Is Everything
When you depend only on Amazon or Myntra, the customer remembers them, not you.
Tomorrow, if the platform changes its rules or raises fees, your entire business shakes.
But if you build your own platform — even slowly — you own the foundation.
You control how you talk to your customers, what story you tell, and how you build your future.
It’s like this:
- Selling on marketplaces is like running a food stall in someone else’s mall — great for traffic, but the mall owner controls your fate.
- Having your own website is like owning your own restaurant — harder at first, but everything inside belongs to you.
The Smart Path Forward
- Use marketplaces for visibility. They help new people find you.
- Guide those buyers to your website with good packaging, cards, or special offers.
- Collect and protect customer data so you can stay connected.
- Focus on repeat buyers, not just new ones.
- Build loyalty programs — small discounts or thank-you gifts work wonders.
Final Thought
In business, profit is not made on the first sale — it’s made on the next ten sales that come from the same customer.
That’s why owning your customer is more powerful than owning 10,000 random orders.
If you want to build a brand that survives and grows, stop renting space on other people’s platforms.
Start building your own foundation — your own website, your own community, your own identity.
That’s not just business — that’s freedom.
— Nishani
(Founder, Handlooom.com | DesiFusions.com | Save Handloom Foundation)



