Saturday, 20 June 2026

NAYRA: the plant-stand brand selling on volume and leaving the margin behind - a teardown

Brand context
NAYRA
Nayra Houseware · Gurugram
Powerlaw
Founder Report · June 2026
Prepared for the founder · NAYRA (Akash)

You have the widest-selling plant-stand catalog on Amazon. It's all low-ticket — and ₹5L every month is leaking from a buried higher-value range. Window closes in 90 days.

Est. Amazon GMV
₹16L
/ month · our estimate
Cost of waiting
₹5L
/ month · doesn't come back
Earning SKUs
22 / 200
widest in the category
Avg ticket
₹350
low — the real lever
65%sub-Rs 500
~65% of revenue comes from sub-₹500 SKUs — the AOV ceiling
Executive Highlight · 30-second read
  • 1You out-sell the category on breadth — ~22 SKUs earning, ~₹16L/mo. The demand is real and proven.
  • 2The ceiling is price, not demand — ~65% of revenue is sub-₹500 planters; your one higher-value stand (Set of 8, ₹1,100) is buried at BSR #756.
  • 3The risk is thin margin + no moat — low tickets invite price wars, and spread-out listings never build review authority.
  • 4The compounding move — rank the higher-AOV SKUs to page 1 + consolidate the planter family + lift the mix.
  • 5The ask — 90 days, the fixes below are 90-day, in-house, low-cost moves.
02Business fundamentals
03Catalog architecture
04The buried higher-value SKU
05Competitive map
06Off-Amazon flywheel
07Paid & demand
0890-day plan
09Financial scenarios
10Risk map
11Honest disclosure
12The ask
Powerlaw · powerlaw.in · Confidential01 / 12
Revenue picture
02 · Business fundamentals

You win on volume. You're leaving the value on the table.

Est. GMV / mo
₹16L
range ₹14–19L
Est. units / mo
~3,000
high volume, low ticket
Earning categories
Plant Stands 97%
genuinely category-central
Avg price
₹350
lowest of the category set
Rs 16L estimateRs 14LRs 19Lsnapshot floor Rs 9.5L0Est. monthlyAmazon GMV
Moving ~3,000 units a month is the hard part — you've built genuine demand and the broadest working catalog of any plant-stand brand on Amazon. The constraint is that almost all of it sits at ₹239–449, so the revenue per sale is capped.
The math of waiting. We estimate ₹5L/month is leaking. Your one genuinely higher-value product — the ₹1,100 "Set of 8" stand — earns as much as a ₹239 planter despite selling a fifth of the units, yet it sits buried at BSR #756 (page 4–5) where almost no buyer scrolls. Every month it stays there, the AOV ceiling holds and the demand keeps converting at the lowest price points. That gap doesn't close on its own — and a rival who ranks a higher-ticket stand on the head term banks the margin you didn't.
Powerlaw · powerlaw.in · Confidential02 / 12
Catalog mapped
03 · Catalog architecture

22 SKUs earn — the widest in the category

Each square is one live ASIN. Coloured = earning revenue.
Earning (22)Dormant / dead (~178)
Plant Stands104 ASINs · 97% of revenueFlower Pots30 ASINsPlant Cages & Supports15 ASINsHanging Planters14 ASINsGardening Tools / other37 ASINs
200 live ASINs; Plant Stands carries ~97% of revenue, with small contributions from planters, cages and flower pots. The breadth is a strength — but it's spread across many near-duplicate low-ticket listings, so no single hero compounds.
The opportunity isn't more SKUs — it's concentrating behind the higher-value ones and pruning the dead weight that dilutes keyword relevance.
Powerlaw · powerlaw.in · Confidential03 / 12
Listing audit
04 · The buried higher-value SKU

Your most valuable stand is your worst-ranked

NAYRAplant-stand rangeB0BQZ9FWD9BSR #305 · Rs 239500 u / moB0BSFZTF7JBSR #873 · Rs 449200 u / moB0DSGDSBTKBSR #756 · Rs 1,100100 u / moThe Rs 1,100 Set-of-8 (right) earns like the Rs 239 planter on 1/5 the units - but ranks worst. Rank it, and the AOV climbs.
The ₹1,100 "Set of 8" earns as much per month as the ₹239 planter — on a fifth of the units — yet ranks worst (BSR #756 vs #305). Push its rank and every sale carries 4–5× the ticket.
Monthly revenue of the Set-of-8 if ranked to page 1 vs today (illustrative)Set-of-8 -> page 1 targetSet-of-8 today (#756)Round Rs 449 today (#873)Planter Rs 239 today (#305)
Highest-ROI single move. Rank the higher-AOV stands — B0DSGDSBTK (Set of 8, ₹1,100) — onto page 1 alongside the proven planter B0BQZ9FWD9, and consolidate the near-duplicate planter listings into one family. Same demand, higher ticket, compounding reviews. No new product.
Powerlaw · powerlaw.in · Confidential04 / 12
Competitors mapped
05 · Competitive map

You own breadth. You're undersized on ticket and authority.

Position by price (x) and review/rank authority (y). Bubble size = relative presence.
High rank / review authorityLow authorityHigher priceLower priceNAYRASnazzyMighty HomeBee CreativeIRON LANDSWorthy ShoppeeTrustBasket
NAYRA sits low-left: lowest average price, mid authority. Snazzy and Mighty Home lead the plant-stand-led pack on GMV at higher tickets; TrustBasket leads the broader garden category on review trust. The opening: climb on ticket and rank without losing the volume base.
The math of waiting. Review and rank authority is a one-way ratchet. Higher-ticket rivals build reviews on consolidated listings every week; NAYRA's flow spreads across many cheap, near-identical SKUs, so its effective review velocity per listing is a fraction of what ~3,000 monthly units should earn. Once a competitor locks "metal plant stand" with a higher-AOV, well-reviewed listing, you're left defending the bottom of the price ladder — the thinnest, most contested margin in the category.
Powerlaw · powerlaw.in · Confidential05 / 12
Off-Amazon flywheel
06 · Off-Amazon flywheel

You already have a D2C site — it's barely doing work yet

AmazonFlipkartD2C siteReviews engineBrand identityInstagramFlywheel3 of 6 lit
NAYRA sells on Amazon and Flipkart and runs its own site at nayrahouseware.com — three lit segments most marketplace sellers never build. What's missing is the brand layer: a reviews engine, a clear identity, and social that feeds the listings.
Strategic implication. Most brands we see have no D2C presence; NAYRA already has the channel — it just isn't compounding. Sequence: fix the Amazon ticket-and-rank problem first (fastest money), then turn the existing site into a brand that captures email/repeat and feeds reviews back to Amazon. The owned site is the quiet asset to leverage, not rebuild.
Powerlaw · powerlaw.in · Confidential06 / 12
Ad readiness
07 · Paid & demand

Strong organic volume, no ad engine — and AOV is the dial

strongOrganic volumenonePaid MetalowAvg tickethighAd headroom
~3,000 units/mo with little paid support proves the listings convert. The unused lever is twofold: ads to amplify the higher-AOV SKUs once ranked, and a deliberate shift of the mix toward higher tickets so each amplified sale is worth more.
Order is fixed: rank the higher-AOV stands, consolidate the planter family, then let Sponsored Products amplify the higher-ticket listings — so every ad rupee buys margin, not just another ₹239 sale.
Powerlaw · powerlaw.in · Confidential07 / 12
90-day plan
08 · 90-day plan

Rank the value SKUs → consolidate → lift the mix → amplify

Day 0Day 21Day 45Day 69Day 90Phase 1 · Rank the higher-AOV standsPhase 2 · Consolidate planters + reviews + KWsPhase 3 · Amplify higher-ticket with paidPhase 4 · Build the higher-ticket rangeRewrite + index the Set-of-8 and other higher-AOV SKUs on the money keywords · fix Brand RegistryMerge near-duplicate planter listings · review program 30-50/mo · climb "metal plant stand"Sponsored Products on the higher-ticket listings · brand-term defense · category conquestAdd deliberate higher-ticket sizes/sets · turn nayrahouseware.com into a brand · prune ~178 dead ASINs
The math of waiting. Phase 1 is pushing the ₹1,100 Set-of-8 and the other higher-AOV stands onto page 1. Every week it slips, ~700 units of weekly demand keep converting on sub-₹500 SKUs while the higher-ticket range sits on page 4–5 — we estimate that mix gap alone costs ~₹1.2L/week in foregone margin-rich revenue, plus the reviews the value SKUs never bank. The delay has a fixed weekly price.
Powerlaw · powerlaw.in · Confidential08 / 12
Financial model
09 · Financial scenarios

From ~₹16L to ₹27L/month without more units

today Rs 16LRs 20L+25% / moConservativeRs 27L+69% / moBaseRs 38L+138% / moAggressiveIncremental paid ROAS (Base): 4.8x · ARR run-rate at Base = ~Rs 3.2Cr
Base case: rank the higher-AOV SKUs + consolidate the planter family + shift the mix + disciplined Sponsored Products. Incremental paid ROAS modelled at 4.8×. No new SKUs required — the lift comes from value per sale, not volume.
Read the base case. The jump is recovery, not a bet: roughly two-thirds comes from ranking and mix-shift on products you already sell (near-zero marginal cost); only the final third leans on paid. The aggressive case is where a deliberate higher-ticket range + the D2C site turning into a brand buys genuinely new revenue.
Powerlaw · powerlaw.in · Confidential09 / 12
Risk map
10 · Risk map

What could go wrong, plotted by impact × likelihood

Impact ^Likelihood >Low AOV / thin marginValue SKU buriedNo consolidated heroPrice war on cheap SKUsConsolidation execSingle channel (Amazon-led)Clone copy
Top-right = act first. Low AOV / margin and the buried value SKU are the two that compound — each maps to Phase 1–2 of the plan.
The math of waiting · compounded. The top risks multiply: every month the mix stays sub-₹500 and the value SKU stays buried, margins stay thin and a higher-ticket rival builds the review moat on the head term. Fixing it now — ranking products you already sell — is cheap and reversible; clawing back the head term later through paid spend is roughly 3–4× more expensive.
Powerlaw · powerlaw.in · Confidential10 / 12
Candid
11 · Honest disclosure

Every load-bearing number, with its confidence

A few visual-listing fields were not read live, so they're marked directional rather than guessed.
Earning SKUs & rank/unitsHighRevenue by price bandHighCatalog size (200 / 97% stands)HighEst. monthly GMV (Rs 16L)MediumCompetitor set & positioningMedium90-day GMV scenariosMediumRatings & review countsDirectionalA+ / images / video / couponDirectional
High = read directly. Medium = our estimate. Directional = not surfaced without a live listing read (ratings / review counts, A+ / images / coupons). All sharpen in a pilot.
Powerlaw · powerlaw.in · Confidential11 / 12
The ask
12 · The ask

90 days to lift the ticket and rank the value range

Rank the value SKUsSet-of-8 + higher-AOV stands to page 1Mix shiftMove revenue up the price ladderConsolidate plantersMany duplicates -> one familyReview velocity30-50/mo on the value listingsPaid amplificationSP on higher-ticket + brand defenseCatalog focusPrune ~178 dead ASINs; leverage D2C site
Building a brand on Amazon? If this teardown maps to what you are seeing in your own account, find us at powerlaw.in.
Powerlaw · powerlaw.in · Confidential12 / 12

IRON LANDS: a proven plant stand stuck on page 4 of Amazon - a teardown

Brand context
IRON LANDS
Metal plant stands · Amritsar
Powerlaw
Founder Report · June 2026
Prepared for the founder · IRON LANDS

You've built a plant stand that genuinely sells. Amazon is leaking ₹6L every month — and the window closes in 90 days.

Est. Amazon GMV
₹15L
/ month · our estimate
Cost of waiting
₹6L
/ month · doesn't come back
Productive ASINs
5 / 200
~2.5% of catalog earns
Hero rank
#796
Plant Stands · page 4–5
78%in 1 product
78% of revenue sits in one 2-step stand split across three listings
Executive Highlight · 30-second read
  • 1One stand carries the brand — your 2-step, 3-foot rectangle stand does ~₹7L/mo, and 78% of all revenue rides on it.
  • 2The upside is rank + consolidation, not new products — it sells from BSR #796 (page 4–5). Push it to page 1 and merge the duplicates → ~₹26L/mo.
  • 3The risk is the deep rank locking in — Snazzy, Mighty Home & TrustBasket bank reviews on consolidated listings while yours splits across four.
  • 4The compounding move — consolidate the 2-step family into one listing + drive money-keyword rank to page 1.
  • 5The ask — 90 days, the fixes below are 90-day, in-house, low-cost moves.
02Business fundamentals
03Catalog architecture
04The fragmented hero
05Competitive map
06Off-Amazon flywheel
07Paid & demand
0890-day plan
09Financial scenarios
10Risk map
11Honest disclosure
12The ask
Powerlaw · powerlaw.in · Confidential01 / 12
Revenue picture
02 · Business fundamentals

Real demand, parked on page 4 of the results

Est. GMV / mo
₹15L
range ₹14–18L
Est. units / mo
~1,500
mostly one SKU family
Earning categories
1 / 3
Plant Stands = 98%
Avg price
₹999
mid-market
₹15L estimate₹14L₹18Lsnapshot floor ₹9L0Est. monthlyAmazon GMV
A stand selling 700+ units a month from BSR #796 is a rare signal: the product is proven on a page almost nobody scrolls to. The constraint isn't demand — it's rank and structure, and both are fixable.
The math of waiting. We estimate ₹6L/month is leaking right now. Your best stand sits at BSR #796 and a twin at #877 — both page 4–5, where a fraction of buyers ever look; moving the same product to page 1 multiplies its impressions many times over. On top of that the demand splits across four near-identical listings instead of compounding on one, and ratings aren't being captured, so the listing converts below its potential. Hold it another quarter and that ₹6L accrues every month while a rival banks the rank and reviews you didn't.
Powerlaw · powerlaw.in · Confidential02 / 12
Catalog mapped
03 · Catalog architecture

Five listings earn. The other ~195 are noise.

Each square is one live ASIN. Coloured = earning revenue.
Earning (5)Dormant / dead (~195)
Plant Stands198 ASINs · 98% of revenueTyre Inflators1 ASINFloor Pumps1 ASIN
200 live ASINs across three categories; Plant Stands carries 198 of them and ~98% of revenue. One tyre inflator is the only non-category earner. The catalog is wide but the income is razor-narrow.
The cheapest win in the account: concentrate behind the proven stand, prune the dead weight that dilutes the brand's keyword relevance.
Powerlaw · powerlaw.in · Confidential03 / 12
Listing audit
04 · The fragmented hero

One stand, sold four times, ranked deep on every copy

The 2-step3-foot standB0GPRBT4HFBSR #796 · Black400 u / moB0FN45Z4DTBSR #877 · Black300 u / moB0GPRMCZC4BSR #796 · White100 u / mo+ a 4th dormant copy (B0FN44X1R7) — same stand, no sales. Demand and reviews split four ways, all stuck on page 4–5.
The same 2-step, 3-foot rectangle stand lives on four ASINs — three Black, one White. Demand and reviews divide across them, and every copy sits deep at BSR #796–#877 (page 4–5), so none builds the authority that one consolidated listing would.
Where the same product can rank: consolidated & optimised vs today (illustrative)Consolidated → page 1 targetToday: Black copy A (#796)Today: Black copy B (#877)Today: White copy (#796)
Highest-ROI single fix. Consolidate B0GPRBT4HF, B0FN45Z4DT, B0GPRMCZC4 and the dormant B0FN44X1R7 into one parent-child family, then drive its money-keyword rank. ~800 units/month and their reviews concentrate onto one ASIN — rank and conversion rise together. No new product, no new budget.
Powerlaw · powerlaw.in · Confidential04 / 12
Competitors mapped
05 · Competitive map

You compete on product. You lose on rank authority.

Position by price (x) and review/rank authority (y). Bubble size = relative presence.
High rank / review authorityLow authorityHigher priceLower priceIRON LANDSSnazzyMighty HomeBee CreativeNAYRAWorthy ShoppeeTrustBasket
IRON LANDS' stand is competitive on build and price, but sits low on authority because it ranks deep and splits across duplicates. Snazzy and Mighty Home lead the plant-stand-led pack on volume; TrustBasket leads the broader garden category on review trust, not design.
The math of waiting. Rank authority is a one-way ratchet. Snazzy (~₹35L/mo), Mighty Home (~₹18L) and TrustBasket accumulate reviews on single consolidated listings every week; IRON LANDS splits its ~800 monthly units across four copies stuck at page 4–5, so its effective review velocity is a fraction of what those sales should earn. Once a rival cements the head term "metal plant stand," it becomes a structural ad-cost premium you pay forever. The cheapest page-1 slot you'll ever buy is the one you earn by consolidating this quarter.
Powerlaw · powerlaw.in · Confidential05 / 12
Off-Amazon gap
06 · Off-Amazon flywheel

A factory and two marketplaces — no brand layer yet

Amazon heroFlipkartManufacturingReviews engineBrand identityD2C / InstagramFlywheel3 of 6 lit
IRON LANDS sells on Amazon and Flipkart and manufactures in-house in Amritsar — but has no brand identity, no reviews engine, no D2C site or social. The lit segments are the hard ones to build; the unlit ones are pure, cheap upside.
Strategic implication. The in-house factory is the quiet advantage: every incremental unit carries full margin, so growth funds itself instead of needing outside capital. Sequence is clear — win the Amazon hero first (consolidate + rank), then capture reviews, then add a single brand identity that feeds the listing. You're not fixing a leaky flywheel; you haven't built one, so the first turns are all gain.
Powerlaw · powerlaw.in · Confidential06 / 12
Ad readiness
07 · Paid & demand

Selling deep-ranked and unadvertised — that's headroom

deepOrganic ranknonePaid MetaopenBrand-search defensehighAd headroom
700+ units/month from BSR #796 with little to no paid support means the product converts on its own merits. The lever is unused: once the hero is consolidated and ranking, the same ad rupee amplifies one strong listing instead of moving buyers between your own duplicates.
Order is fixed: consolidate the hero, push organic rank toward page 1, capture reviews, then let Sponsored Products amplify a single well-ranked listing. The spend works far harder in that sequence.
Powerlaw · powerlaw.in · Confidential07 / 12
90-day plan
08 · 90-day plan

Consolidate → rank → capture reviews → amplify

Day 0Day 21Day 45Day 69Day 90Phase 1 · Consolidate & rewrite the heroPhase 2 · Drive money-keyword rank + reviewsPhase 3 · Amplify with paidPhase 4 · Expand the proven formatMerge 4 duplicate ASINs → one parent · fix Brand Registry · rewrite hero title around "metal plant stand"Index + rank push page 4–5 → page 1 on money keywords · review program 30–50/mo · fix images & A+Sponsored Products on the consolidated hero · brand-term defense · category-keyword conquestAdd sizes & the 3-step line · price ladder ₹799–1,799 · prune ~195 dead ASINs · brand store
The math of waiting. Phase 1 is consolidating the four duplicate 2-step listings and rewriting the hero around the money keywords. Every week it slips, the stand keeps splitting ~180 units of weekly demand and its reviews across four ASINs stuck on page 4–5 — we estimate that fragmentation plus deep rank costs ~₹1.5L/week in foregone rank-and-conversion lift, plus the reviews that never bank onto one listing. Phase 1 delay has a fixed weekly price that doesn't come back.
Powerlaw · powerlaw.in · Confidential08 / 12
Financial model
09 · Financial scenarios

From ~₹15L to ₹26L/month without a new product

today ₹15L₹19L+27% / moConservative₹26L+73% / moBase₹38L+150% / moAggressiveIncremental paid ROAS (Base): 4.8× · ARR run-rate at Base ≈ ₹3.1Cr
Base case: consolidation + money-keyword rank push to page 1 + review velocity + disciplined Sponsored Products. Incremental paid ROAS modelled at 4.8×. No new SKUs required.
Read the base case. The jump isn't a growth bet — it's recovery of revenue the current structure leaks. Roughly two-thirds of the lift comes from consolidation and rank (near-zero marginal cost given the in-house factory); only the final third leans on paid. The aggressive case is where new investment — sizes, the 3-step line, a brand store — buys genuinely new revenue.
Powerlaw · powerlaw.in · Confidential09 / 12
Risk map
10 · Risk map

What could go wrong, plotted by impact × likelihood

Impact ↑Likelihood →Deep-rank persistenceSKU concentrationReview fragmentationSingle-product dependenceConsolidation execSingle channel (Amazon-led)Clone / price war
Top-right = act first. SKU concentration, the deep rank, and review fragmentation are the three that compound — each maps to Phase 1–2 of the plan.
The math of waiting · compounded. The top risks multiply: every month the 2-step family stays fragmented and deep-ranked, the brand carries full single-product exposure and falls further behind on the review ratchet. Fixing it now is cheap and reversible; fixing it after a rival locks the head term means buying back rank through paid spend indefinitely — roughly 3–4× more expensive than acting this quarter.
Powerlaw · powerlaw.in · Confidential10 / 12
Candid
11 · Honest disclosure

Every load-bearing number, with its confidence

A few visual-listing fields were not read live, so they're marked directional rather than guessed.
Selling ASINs & rank/unitsHighRevenue concentration (78%)HighCatalog size (200 / 3 cats)HighEst. monthly GMV (₹15L)MediumCompetitor set & positioningMedium90-day GMV scenariosMediumHero rating & review countDirectionalA+ / images / video / couponDirectional
High = read directly. Medium = our estimate. Directional = not surfaced without a live listing read (hero rating / review count, A+ / image / video / coupon). All sharpen in a pilot.
Powerlaw · powerlaw.in · Confidential11 / 12
The ask
12 · The ask

90 days to consolidate the hero and lift it to page 1

Hero consolidation4 duplicates → one familyKeyword-rank pushPage 4–5 → page 1 on money termsReview velocity30–50/mo on one listingListing rebuildTitle, images, A+, sizingPaid amplificationSP + brand defense + conquestCatalog focusPrice ladder; prune ~195 dead ASINs
Building a brand on Amazon? If this teardown maps to what you are seeing in your own account, find us at powerlaw.in.
Powerlaw · powerlaw.in · Confidential12 / 12