Tag: Mandeep Manocha

  • Drawer to dollar Cashify unlocks India’s 219.7 billion dollar resale boom

    Drawer to dollar Cashify unlocks India’s 219.7 billion dollar resale boom

    MUMBAI: Phones that gather dust in drawers may soon gather dollars instead. With the refurbished smartphone market pegged to hit a staggering 219.7 billion dollars by 2033, India is powering up to become the world’s recycling and recommerce hub and Cashify’s Great Indian Upgrade 2025 whitepaper shows just how big this reboot really is.

    Drawing insights from 10,000 survey respondents, proprietary marketplace data, and reports from IDC, Counterpoint and Canalys, the study maps how resale culture has shifted from hush-hush grey channels to an increasingly mainstream movement. Yet, the so-called “Drawer Economy” remains a colossal untapped treasure chest 70 per cent of Indians admit to hoarding two to three unused phones at home, signalling billions of rupees in locked-up value.

    The shift in behaviour is undeniable: 33 per cent of consumers now sell old phones to fund upgrades, 40 per cent are lured by competitive buyback offers, and 63 per cent dispose of devices within six months of upgrading. But the grey market still dominates, with 77 per cent of resale happening informally, Cashify argues this highlights the urgent need for trusted, transparent platforms.

    India shipped 151 million smartphones in 2024, up 4 per cent year-on-year, with the average selling price climbing to Rs 22,100. While Apple’s shipments surged 35 per cent, making India its fourth-largest global market, the brand also dominates resale: it commanded 64.5 per cent of refurbished sales in 2024 and 62.9 per cent in the first half of 2025. Three in five refurbished buyers picked Iphones driven by steady demand for the iPhone 14 Pro, iPhone 13 Pro Max and iPhone 12 Pro in the premium Rs 60,000-plus bracket, which itself grew 33 per cent YoY.

    Following Apple are Oneplus (10.2 per cent), Xiaomi (9.7 per cent), Samsung (6.1 per cent) and Vivo, which is showing the fastest growth, rising from 2.1 per cent in 2024 to 3.2 per cent in H1 2025. Oppo and Realme follow at 2.4 per cent and 1.9 per cent respectively.

    While Delhi, Bangalore and Mumbai remain the epicentres of trade-ins and refurbished sales, tier-2 and tier-3 cities are catching up fast, signalling that circular tech culture is spreading beyond metros.

    Cashify has also unveiled India’s first Repairability Index, ranking brands on spare-part availability and repair scores addressing one of the biggest barriers to longer device lifecycles. A solid 57.9 per cent of consumers say they prefer repair over replacement, though cost (53.2 per cent) and part shortages remain major hurdles.

    Backing this push is Cashify’s “repair-first, recycle-always” ecosystem, powered by 200 plus physical stores, a 10,000 plus retailer network, and an AI-driven 80,000 sq. ft. refurbishment facility.

    Awareness is on the rise: 76 per cent of respondents could correctly define “refurbished” as “like new tested and repaired by experts.” Of all refurbished buyers, 60 per cent chose Apple, with purchasing patterns shifting upwards: 32.4 per cent spent Rs 21,000–35,000, while 17.1 per cent spent over Rs 50,000. The top drivers? “Like new at lower cost” (50.8 per cent), “budget fit” (32.4 per cent) and sustainability (8 per cent).

    What builds trust? A 12-month warranty tops the list (52.5 per cent), followed by detailed device reports (16.9 per cent) and “try before you buy” options (16.9 per cent).

    “India’s 219B dollars resale revolution isn’t just a market opportunity, it’s a chance to redefine how technology is consumed,” said Cashify co-founder & CEO Mandeep Manocha. “Our findings clearly show consumers are embracing resale, yet the untapped ‘Drawer Economy’ highlights the urgent need for trusted platforms.”

    Cashify co-founder & CMO Nakul Kumar added: “For too long, old phones have been treated as clutter rather than capital. India’s upgrade culture is shifting from impulsive consumption to mindful circulation. Repairability is key when fixing devices becomes easier, sustainability becomes everyday action.”

    The whitepaper also calls for supportive policy frameworks, from easing customs on refurbished imports to tax incentives for sustainable recycling and digital traceability for e-waste.

    As India transitions from hoarding to habit, Cashify’s data-rich report positions recommerce not just as a market disruptor but as a mainstream economic force, one that puts forgotten phones back in play, turns drawers into goldmines, and powers India’s leap towards a greener digital future.

  • Cashify onboards Rajkummar Rao as brand ambassador

    Cashify onboards Rajkummar Rao as brand ambassador

    Mumbai: Re-commerce marketplace Cashify on Tuesday announced that it has brought on board Rajkummar Rao as its first brand ambassador. The actor has signed a multi-year contract with the company and he will promote the products across digital media platforms through campaigns and promotional activities exclusively for the smartphone buyback category.

    The association with the actor comes at a time when the company is on a business expansion spree from online to offline, after having recently raised $15 million from Olympus Capital and has acquired UniShop to diversify its omni category services to users.

    The company said the partnership is expected to give a strong face to the brand’s philosophy as Rao personifies the brand ethos, which is reliability, responsiveness, approachability, and dynamic personality.

    “Rao is an exemplar of a self-made actor, someone who is extremely versatile in his choice of work and roles, delivering credible, authentic content for audiences. His story is an inspiration to the ‘aam aadmi’ of India and resonates with the spirit of our brand and aims to engender the same level of trust and dependability in our products and services,” said Cashify CEO and co-founder Mandeep Manocha.

    Manocha said at Cashify all refurbished devices go through multiple checks before making it to the end-user who gets a six-month warranty benefit as well. “We as a brand are constantly pushing the boundaries, as we aspire to be relevant and truly connect with our customers, much like the renowned actor,” he added.

    Speaking about the brand association, Rao said, “With the onset of COVID-19 pandemic, the concept of a distributed workforce and distance learning became a reality. Work, studies, and shopping all shifted to digital and have pushed users to buy second-hand gadgets but there were people who could not afford it. Cashify efforts in democratising technology by making it accessible to all by its various campaigns are commendable. As a brand ambassador, I seek for brands that I relate to and can be impactful for, and this partnership makes me fulfill that very purpose.”