From the outside, the fashion industry appears aspirational — fast growth, high margins, and constant consumer demand. But behind the storefront displays and seasonal collections lies a far more complex and unforgiving business reality.
In this insightful episode of Leadership Lounge with The CEO Magazine, Shweta Singh speaks with Rajkumar Devani, Founder of Butterfly, who has navigated the industry from the ground up — transitioning from retail to manufacturing and ultimately building his own brand.
His journey strips away the glamour and reveals what truly drives success in fashion: control, clarity, and calculated risk.
One of the most defining pivots in Rajkumar Devani’s journey was moving from retail to manufacturing — a shift that fundamentally changed his position in the value chain.
Retail, as he explains, is about selling what already exists. Margins are limited, dependency is high, and differentiation is difficult.
Manufacturing, on the other hand, brings control.
Control over:
Product quality
Cost structures
Supply timelines
Design and innovation
But this control comes with responsibility. Manufacturing is capital-intensive, operationally demanding, and far less forgiving of mistakes.
The transition is not just a business move — it is a mindset shift from trader to creator.
The conversation takes a sharp turn when discussing branding — and the uneven playing field that defines the fashion industry.
Large brands don’t just compete on products. They dominate:
Visibility
Distribution
Consumer perception
For smaller brands, the challenge is not just to sell — it is to be seen.
Rajkumar Devani highlights how established players often create indirect pressure through aggressive pricing, heavy marketing spends, and retail dominance, making it difficult for emerging brands to sustain visibility.
This forces smaller businesses into a constant battle: compete on price, or differentiate on identity.
And most fail because they try to do both.
Few things attract customers more than a “70% OFF” sign. But as Devani explains, this is where perception and reality diverge sharply.
Discounting at that scale is rarely a loss.
It is strategy.
The pricing structure in fashion often builds in margins that allow for deep discounts while still maintaining profitability. In many cases, the “original price” itself is part of the positioning game.
What looks like a bargain to the customer is often a carefully calculated number.
This creates a dangerous cycle:
Customers begin to distrust actual pricing
Brands become dependent on discounts for volume
Profitability becomes inconsistent and volatile
Over time, discounting stops being a tactic — and becomes a trap.
At the heart of the conversation lies a crucial distinction: selling products is not the same as building a brand.
A product can generate revenue.
A brand creates recall, loyalty, and long-term value.
For Devani, branding is not about logos or marketing campaigns alone. It is about consistency — in quality, positioning, and customer experience.
It requires:
Clear identity
Defined target audience
Patience to grow without shortcuts
Because in a crowded market, the only sustainable advantage is not price — it is perception.
For aspiring entrepreneurs looking to enter the clothing space, Devani’s advice is grounded and practical.
He cautions against rushing into scale without understanding the fundamentals:
Unit economics
Inventory management
Demand cycles
Consumer behavior
Growth without structure, he suggests, is one of the fastest ways to fail.
Instead, he emphasizes building strong foundations first — systems, processes, and clarity of positioning — before chasing expansion.
Because in fashion, scaling amplifies both strengths and mistakes.
A recurring theme throughout the conversation is discipline.
Not just in operations, but in decision-making:
Knowing when not to discount
Knowing which markets not to enter
Knowing which trends not to follow
In an industry driven by speed and change, restraint becomes a competitive advantage.
It is what separates businesses that survive seasons from those that build legacy.
For entrepreneurs, especially in consumer-facing industries, this episode offers a reality check.
Success is not about:
Launching fast
Pricing low
Following trends
It is about understanding the ecosystem you operate in — and positioning yourself intelligently within it.
For leaders, the takeaway is broader: control where it matters, differentiate where it counts, and never confuse visibility with value.
This conversation goes far beyond fashion. It is about how businesses are built, scaled, and sustained in competitive markets.
It forces you to think critically:
Are you building a business — or just chasing sales?
Do you control your value chain, or depend on it?
Is your pricing strategy sustainable — or reactive?
Are you creating a brand, or just moving inventory?
Through clarity and real-world experience, Rajkumar Devani breaks down the realities most people only see from the outside.
Because in business, what looks simple is often anything but.
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