Insurgent consumer brands in India generated over $7.5 billion in revenue in FY25, growing 3.75 times over five years and outpacing traditional FMCG, according to a joint report from Bain & Company and DSG Consumer Partners. The documented growth rate separates these brands from the DTC narrative that dominated Western markets. The Indian playbook hinged on something older and harder: distribution density in unorganized retail.
The brands catalogued in the Bain study did not win primarily online. They embedded themselves in the country's vast network of kirana stores, chemists, and regional distributors. These outlets control over 80 percent of India's consumer goods sales, per industry estimates. The insurgents reverse-engineered FMCG distribution infrastructure at a fraction of the incumbent cost by signing local distributors on consignment terms, pre-placing inventory in cash-and-carry wholesalers, and deploying field sales teams that visit storefronts weekly. According to the report, this physical footprint expansion was the primary revenue driver, not direct-to-consumer channels.
Why it worked: India's retail landscape remains fragmented and relationship-driven. A new brand cannot scale on performance marketing alone when the majority of purchase decisions happen within arm's reach of a shopkeeper who stocks fifteen SKUs per category. The insurgents identified distribution as the bottleneck, not awareness. They offered better margins to retailers—often 25 to 35 percent versus the 15 to 20 percent legacy brands provide—and faster restocking cycles. The shopkeeper became the primary customer, not the end consumer. Foot traffic converted because the product was present and the retailer recommended it.
The mechanism is replicable outside India's scale. A small physical-product brand can adopt the same distribution-first model without a field army. Start by treating retailers as the customer: call twenty independent shops in your strongest zip code and offer them 30 percent margin on net-30 terms, with free replacement of unsold units after ninety days. Provide shelf talkers and a one-page product card they can hand to customers. Restock every two weeks in person or via a regional courier partner. Track sell-through per door, not total doors. Cut retailers who move fewer than six units per month. This costs a day per week and eliminates paid acquisition. Your product earns its place by moving, not by being advertised.
For brands with modest budgets, the play compresses further: identify five retailers within a ten-mile radius who already carry adjacent products. Offer them exclusive territory and 35 percent margin in exchange for a three-month commitment to reorder. Provide point-of-sale materials and a QR code for reorders. Spend one Saturday per month visiting each shop, rotating stock, and collecting feedback. Document which SKUs move fastest and double down. This approach yields repeatable revenue and real customer data without platform fees.
The Bain report confirms what many Indian founders learned by necessity: distribution builds brands faster than content when the product is physical. The insurgent brands did not skip digital entirely—they used it for storytelling and retention—but they allocated capital to the last mile first. The growth came from being in the right store at the right time, not from being in the right feed.