A 50-year-old former investment banker launching an online beauty store sounds risky. Falguni Nayar did it anyway, and Nykaa grew into an IPO that attracted over 80 times subscription in FY23. If you’re studying at SoIM, this is a rare case study in late entry, brand building, and turning customer trust into demand.
Key Takeaways
- Nykaa’s FY23 IPO subscription crossed 80x, reflecting sharp institutional demand despite a competitive beauty retail market (Livemint).
- By FY24, operating revenue from continuing operations crossed ₹6,200 crore (Moneycontrol).
- At age 50, Falguni Nayar proved founder age is not a startup barrier. Market timing, pricing transparency, and content trust matter more than early-mover speed (Forbes India).
- Nykaa grew from roughly 1,100 products to over 3.5 lakh SKUs by 2024, reducing Indian consumers’ reliance on imported beauty dominance (EY).
How Nykaa Disrupted Indian Beauty Retail
Prior to 2012, India’s beauty retail was collection of fragmented local stores, international brands shoved into local stores, and chaotic online channels. Falguni Nayar distinguished what no one else bothered to address. Consumers wanted proper guidance, more options, and reliable delivery without paying a premium or waiting for extended periods.
Initially, Nykaa has around 1,100 beauty products on a WordPress site. The site began to grow because of the returning customers. The company invested in distribution, created an honest review system, and implemented a mobile-first checkout system. This mobile system was implemented before the companies competitors invested in app-based commerce.
Most case studies ignore this aspect of the business. SoIM students can learn one of the most valuable lessons from this. Features of the system may take longer to create a good product, but trust the customer is the most important aspect of a new business.
Nykaa’s Journey: A Timeline
Here’s a quick look at how Nykaa grew from a small startup to an IPO giant. Fast growth, but not overnight.
| Year | Milestone | Why It Matters |
|---|---|---|
| 2012 | Nykaa founded with ~1,100 products on a WordPress store | Validating demand with minimum inventory risk |
| 2015 | Mobile app launch — moved from WordPress to proprietary app | Captured shifting mobile-first shopper behaviour |
| 2018 | First physical stores — “Nykaa Luxe” pop-ups in Mumbai | Bridging online trust with offline experience |
| 2020 | Nykaa Fashion & acquisition of 20 D2C brands | Diversified beyond beauty into lifestyle |
| Nov 2021 | IPO at ₹53 per share — subscribed 80x | India’s biggest IPO of 2021; Falguni became a billionaire |
| FY24 | Revenue crosses ₹6,200 cr; 3.5 lakh+ SKUs | Operational maturity post-IPO |
Sources: Livemint, Moneycontrol, Forbes India, EY India
Nykaa’s Growth Snapshot
According to Moneycontrol, Nykaa surpassed ₹6,200 crore for operating revenue from continuing operations for FY24(Moneycontrol). Nykaa’s FY23 IPO was oversubscribed more than 80 times, signifying a strong vote of confidence from institutions, even while the market criticized valuation multiples for companies at that stage of their growth (Livemint).
This phenomenon illustrates three things for aspiring managers and entrepreneurs that figure into the overall future development of the Indian marketplace:
Indian D2C brands can thrive and compete without relying upon the short cuts by way of cheap manufacturing from China.
It is necessary to provide a differentiated checkout and logistics experience as opposed to a wide product assortment. Consumer confidence is gained through expedited delivery and logistical confirmation.
Trust is a financial asset for brands. Trust reduces advertising and promotional expenses and improves the brand’s valuation by way of increased customer retention and life time value.
How Nykaa Stacks Up Against Early Competitors
The Indian beauty e-commerce space looked very different in 2012. Nykaa didn’t just beat global giants — it changed how Indian consumers shop beauty products entirely.
| Feature | Nykaa | Early Competitors (Jabong, Myntra beauty) |
|---|---|---|
| Launch Year | 2012 | ~2013–2014 for beauty verticals |
| Trust Mechanism | Verified reviews + authentic product guarantee | General e-commerce reviews; no beauty-specific authority |
| Product Focus | Beauty-first (only) | Beauty as a category within fashion/footwear |
| SKU Depth (2024) | 3.5 lakh+ | <5 lakh combined (~2023) |
Management Lessons From a Late Career Pivot
Business schools cover capital allocation, market research, and stakeholder communication, all of which come into play at Nykaa. After spending over twenty years at McKinsey & Company, Nayar also had the tools to define Nykaa’s catalogue and investor narratives from the outset.
So what can SoIM students aspiring to a product or founder role learn from Nayar’s late career pivot? Simply put, what we refer to as financial rigor, clarity in negotiations, and the ability to tell a board story are all uncommon, and as a result, not insignificant.
Curious about management career options? Visit the SoIM Programmes page to learn about management innovation and entrepreneurial thinking that helps shape future founders.
Brand Building That Outlasts Discounting
Initially, the growth of Nykaa’s business made it possible to invest in Bollywood collaborations, sponsorships of fashion weeks, and advertorials on Nykaa’s own owned media. These potentially risky investments paid off because they fostered long-term emotional relationships with their customers, as opposed to transactional ones. It made customer acquisition both cheaper and less reliant on increasing paid searches (Forbes India).
If you intend to launch a consumer startup, expect quality products and logistics to become the standard. What is more important to scalable success is the clarity of the rationale behind your offer and engagement with your community on a consistent basis.
How Nykaa Handled Valuation Pressure
A number of Nykaa’s IPO peer group companies experienced a downward valuation in the year 2022–2023. Nykaa’s valuation price recovered because the team chose to implement further governance, reduce cash burn, and protect their category, rather than diversifying and overcommitting to new categories (Business Standard).
What can we learn from Nykaa? When it comes to the valuation, that is for the public to know. As for strategy, it is a private matter. The longer you keep the latter, the better the former will ultimately be.
Leadership Practices Worth Copying
Nayar bifurcated the roles of the CEO in terms of strategy and advisory capital structuring. This merger enabled speed of execution, preserving the company’s credibility with the board. Young managers can do the same by determining who keeps the value for the clients and who keeps the value for the capital in a founder transition.
What SoIM Students Can Learn From Falguni Nayar
This example is not so much about beauty or billionaires. It is about the ability of regular discipline in the profession – the rigor of research, financial discipline, and a story with moral sense – to disrupt any market. For SoIM students, Nykaa is an example that you can build something along those lines with no need of being 25, but, with clarity and resilience and the right partners.
“I have always believed that nothing is impossible if you have the right intent and are willing to put in the work” – Falguni Nayar (Forbes India)
Interested in the founder journey and how management education can influence this area? Get in touch with SoIM to find out more about our management programs that are designed for the business leaders of the future.


