We have audited 120+ D2C ad accounts over the last two years. The pattern is eerily consistent — brands burn through their seed funding on Meta and Google Ads, hit a plateau around ₹15-20L monthly spend, and then blame the platform. The problem is almost never the platform. It is five fundamental mistakes that keep repeating across Indian D2C.
Mistake 1: Wrong Attribution Model
Most brands we audit still run on last-click attribution inside Google Ads and 7-day-click inside Meta. In a market where the average Indian consumer interacts with 6-8 touchpoints before purchasing — browsing Instagram Reels, checking reviews on YouTube, comparing on Amazon, then finally clicking a Google Shopping ad — last-click gives all credit to that final click and starves upper-funnel channels of budget.
The fix is not complicated: move to a data-driven attribution model in Google Ads and supplement it with incrementality tests every quarter. One of our D2C clients saw a 28% drop in reported ROAS when they switched, but actual revenue went up 19% because they finally funded the discovery channels that were driving demand.
Mistake 2: No Creative Testing Framework
Shark Tank India has minted hundreds of new D2C brands, and most of them hand their creative production to a single freelance designer. The result is 3-4 ad creatives per month, rotated until fatigued. Compare this to well-funded brands like Mamaearth or boAt that test 40-60 creatives monthly with structured naming conventions, variant isolation, and statistical significance thresholds.
At GC, we run a 3-tier testing framework: Tier 1 tests concepts (hook, angle, format), Tier 2 tests execution (thumbnail, CTA placement, copy length), and Tier 3 optimizes the winners with minor tweaks. Every brand spending above ₹5L/month on paid social needs this kind of system — or they are leaving 30-40% performance on the table.
Mistake 3: Scaling Too Early on Thin Margins
The average customer acquisition cost for Indian D2C is ₹800-1,200 depending on category. For fashion, it can spike to ₹1,500+. When brands see an initial ROAS of 3x on ₹2L spend, they immediately 5x the budget — and watch ROAS collapse to 1.5x. The reason: they hit the saturation ceiling of their warm audience before building the retargeting and lookalike pipelines to support scale.
The golden rule we enforce with clients: do not increase spend by more than 20% per week, and only if your cost-per-purchase has been stable for 5+ days. Patience is the most underrated skill in performance marketing.
Mistake 4: Ignoring Lifetime Value
If your LTV:CAC ratio is below 3:1, you are borrowing from the future to fund today's growth. Yet most D2C brands we audit cannot even tell us their 90-day LTV — they track first-purchase ROAS and call it a day. In categories like skincare and supplements where repeat rates should be 35-50%, this blindspot is devastating.
Flipkart and Amazon marketplace dynamics make this worse. Brands acquire customers on their own website via paid ads, but those same customers repurchase on Amazon where they are cheaper (thanks to marketplace discounting). Unless you track cross-channel LTV, you are undervaluing your own paid acquisition efforts.
Mistake 5: Reporting Vanity Metrics to the Board
Impressions, reach, CTR — none of these pay salaries. The most dangerous number in D2C reporting is blended ROAS because it mixes branded search (which would convert anyway) with prospecting campaigns. We have seen brands report a 5x blended ROAS while their prospecting campaigns run at 0.8x, masked by branded search running at 15x.
Strip out brand search. Report new-customer ROAS separately. Track contribution margin after ad spend, not revenue. These three changes alone give you an honest picture of whether your marketing engine is actually working.
Key Takeaways
- Switch from last-click to data-driven attribution and run quarterly incrementality tests.
- Build a structured creative testing framework — aim for 30+ new creatives per month above ₹5L spend.
- Scale spend by no more than 20% per week; never chase ROAS spikes with sudden budget jumps.
- Track 90-day LTV across channels including marketplace repurchases. Target a 3:1+ LTV:CAC ratio.
- Report new-customer ROAS and contribution margin — not blended ROAS or vanity impressions.