Rapid fashion companies dress to kill…how fit is the model?

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A new crop of venture-backed startups is testing the quick-commerce playbook in fashion, delivering clothing, footwear and accessories in under an hour in metro cities, but high cash burn and uncertain demand are raising questions about the model’s scalability.

Startups such as Knot, Slikk and Zilo along with quick-delivery arms of online fashion players Myntra, Ajio and Newme are burning cash on heavy discounting to attract customers. These ‘rapid fashion’ startups together burned $2-2.5 million in January alone, which rose to $3 million in March, multiple industry executives told ET.

Despite the cash burn, the segment has gathered the attention of investors who bet on it becoming the next quick commerce breakthrough. In February, Zilo raised $15.3 million funding led by Peak XV. Slikk, which is backed by Lightspeed and Nexus Venture Partners, is in talks to raise $15-20 million more, ET reported in March. Knot raised a $5 million round led by 12 Flags in December.

The segment evolved from quick-commerce platforms such as Zepto, Instamart and Blinkit, which offered basic fashion items for last-minute purchases. Then emerged vertical fashion commerce startups offering a larger portfolio for party, work and festive wear with rapid delivery.

Newly-launched fast fashion marketplace Klydo offers delivery in 15-30 minutes in Bengaluru while Gen Z-focused direct-to-consumer (D2C) brand Newme’s Zip offers 30-minute delivery and men’s D2C fashion brand Snitch has launched ‘Snitch Quick’. Launched in 2024, Myntra’s rapid commerce arm M-Now, was driving 10% of orders in locations where the service was live as of last November. Taking it one step further, these rapid fashion players have launched ‘try and buy’ and ‘virtual try-on’ options to tackle the return problems.