Showing posts with label Piyush Bansal. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Piyush Bansal. Show all posts

April 20, 2026

India Doesn’t Need Only Unicorns: The Lenskart Controversy Lesson

Lenskart Controversy Explained: What Happened, Why It Matters, and What India Can Learn

Lenskart is one of India’s most recognized startup success stories. It changed the way many Indians buy glasses by bringing together online shopping, eye testing, and branded retail stores. Over time, it became a symbol of modern Indian entrepreneurship, known for its rapid growth, strong funding, bold expansion, and a well-known national brand.
Illustrated blog cover showing a broken unicorn statue, protest crowd, eyeglasses, and a worried retail employee in uniform, symbolizing the Lenskart controversy and the debate over trust, employee rights, and startup ethics in India.


Recently, the company faced controversy after reports of internal dress-code and appearance policies led to backlash online. The issue soon grew beyond a simple policy debate and sparked wider discussions about employee dignity, religious freedom, workplace inclusion, corporate communication, and brand accountability.
This controversy is important not just because one company made headlines, but because it shows how modern businesses are judged today. With social media, consumers and employees expect more than just products and profits. They want fairness, respect, and transparency.
This blog will break down the Lenskart controversy, explain why it became so serious, and share what India can learn from it.

1. What Triggered the Controversy?

The controversy reportedly started when screenshots of an internal style guide or grooming policy appeared online. Many people saw these materials as restricting or discouraging store employees from wearing visible religious and cultural symbols. This sparked criticism on social media.
Many people believed the policy was insensitive in a country like India, where cultural and religious identity is visible in everyday life through symbols such as:
  • bindi
  • tilak
  • hijab
  • Kalawa
  • turban
  • kara
  • traditional appearance markers
As the discussion spread online, the controversy quickly became emotional. For many, it was no longer just about dress code; it was about identity and respect.

2. Why the Public Reacted So Strongly

India is not a culturally neutral country. It is deeply diverse.
Millions of Indians openly express identity through:
  • clothing
  • language
  • faith symbols
  • customs
  • hairstyles
  • community traditions (Ashraff, 2024, pp. 45-67)
So when a company is seen as limiting that expression, people can react strongly.
Many people asked:
  • Why should professionalism mean removing identity?
  • Can companies demand standardization without sensitivity?
  • Are employees being treated fairly?
  • Does modern corporate culture ignore Indian realities?
These questions turned the issue into something bigger than just one company.

3. Lenskart’s Public Response

After the backlash, Lenskart (Piyush Bansal) reportedly apologized and clarified its position. It released a revised public-facing style guide stating that religious and cultural symbols such as bindi, tilak, kalawa, hijab, turban, and similar markers were welcome in the workplace.
This was an important step because it showed the company understood public concern and tried to rebuild trust.
In today’s world, responding quickly to a crisis is important. When a controversy goes viral, waiting too long to respond can make things worse.

4. Why This Became a Big Business Story

Some people may ask:
Why does an internal policy become national news?
Because Lenskart is not a small local business. It is a big consumer brand that is known across the country.
When a company grows large, people judge it differently.
Big brands are expected to lead in:
  • diversity
  • employee treatment
  • customer service
  • communication
  • governance standards
That’s why controversies involving major brands get more attention than those involving lesser-known companies.

5. The Role of Social Media

This controversy also highlights the power of social media in 2026.
Earlier, internal company issues often remained private.
Today:
  • screenshots spread instantly
  • public opinion forms rapidly
  • hashtags trend quickly
  • media amplifies discussion
  • customers react publicly
A single viral post can create a nationwide reputation problem.
This creates a new reality for companies:
Every internal policy must be written as if it may become public tomorrow.

6. Employee Rights Angle

The controversy was not only about religion or branding. It also raised questions about employee rights.
Employees are not just workers; they are individuals with their own identity, dignity, and personal beliefs.
A healthy workplace balances:

Company Needs

  • neat presentation
  • customer confidence
  • hygiene standards
  • consistent branding

Employee Rights

  • respectful treatment
  • non-discrimination
  • cultural identity
  • fair communication
  • safe grievance systems
When this balance is lost, conflict can start.

7. Why Retail Companies Must Be Extra Careful

Retail employees are the face of the brand.
Store workers interact directly with customers every day. If staff feel disrespected, it can affect:
  • morale
  • customer interactions
  • retention
  • sales performance
  • brand perception
This means employee culture is not separate from profits; it directly affects how the business performs.
For retail chains like Lenskart, frontline employee satisfaction is strategically important.

8. Consumer Rights Perspective

Consumers increasingly care not only about price and product, but also about company values.
Today, many buyers ask:
  • Does the company treat workers fairly?
  • Is the brand inclusive?
  • Does it respond honestly to criticism?
  • Is it ethical?
This trend is known as values-based consumption.
Especially among younger urban Indians, purchasing decisions are increasingly influenced by ethics. (Tryphena & Aram, 2023)
That means controversies can influence sales behavior. (Hashimoto & Karasawa, 2018)

9. Financial Impact of Controversy

Reports noted investor concern and pressure on market sentiment after the issue gained attention. (Joshi, 2025)
This shows an important business truth:

Reputation Has Financial Value

Even if factories, stores, and sales systems remain unchanged, controversy can affect:
  • brand trust
  • repeat purchases
  • expansion momentum
  • investor confidence
  • valuation multiples
Trust is an invisible asset, but markets still value it. (Kapons et al., 2023)

10. What Lenskart Did Right Afterward

To be fair, companies should be judged not just by the controversy, but also by how they respond.
Positive steps reportedly included:
  • apology
  • clarification
  • revised inclusive style guide
  • public reassurance
That suggests responsiveness.
No company is perfect. Mistakes happen. What matters is whether leaders learn from them and make improvements.

11. What Lenskart Could Still Improve

Any company facing such backlash can strengthen itself through:

Internal Communication

Policies must be clearly explained and locally sensitive.

HR Systems

Employees need channels to ask questions or raise concerns safely.

Manager Training

Middle managers often decide how policies are implemented.

Cultural Awareness

National brands need an India-specific understanding.

Transparent Values

Public messaging should match internal practice.

12. Bigger Lessons for Indian Startups

This controversy matters far beyond just Lenskart.
India’s startup ecosystem often celebrates:
  • funding rounds
  • unicorn valuations
  • fast expansion
  • aggressive marketing
But sustainable success also requires:
  • governance
  • empathy
  • internal fairness
  • cultural intelligence
  • trust-building
A startup can increase its revenue quickly.
But building a strong company culture takes much longer.

13. Why the Issue Resonated With Ordinary Indians

Many Indians connected with the story because they have experienced workplace tensions themselves.
Examples:
  • appearance pressure
  • Unfair manager behavior
  • identity-based discomfort
  • confusing HR rules
  • lack of voice at work
So the controversy came to represent bigger workplace issues.
That’s why people reacted emotionally; it reflected their own experiences.

14. Should Consumers Boycott?

People often call for boycotts in response to controversies. But thoughtful consumers should try to stay balanced.
Instead of reacting only emotionally, ask:
  • Did the company respond responsibly?
  • Were policies corrected?
  • Is there repeated misconduct?
  • Are claims verified?
Being a responsible citizen means making decisions based on facts, not just reacting to rumors.

15. What Employees Across India Should Learn

Workers should remember that professionalism and dignity can go hand in hand.
Employees should seek workplaces that value:
  • competence
  • fairness
  • inclusion
  • respectful treatment
  • growth opportunity
Employers should also keep in mind:
The best-performing teams are often those that feel respected. (Joshi et al., 2025, pp. 205-215)

16. The Future of Indian Brands

India is entering a new phase of business maturity.
Earlier success meant:
  • scale
  • advertising
  • funding
  • market share
Now success also means:
  • credibility
  • trust
  • ethics
  • employee culture
  • social intelligence
Consumers are changing, and companies need to change as well.

Final Conclusion

The Lenskart controversy was more than just a short-lived social media storm.
It became a national discussion about:
  • workplace identity
  • employee rights
  • consumer trust
  • corporate accountability
  • modern business values
Lenskart’s rapid growth made it a symbol of a new India. This controversy reminded everyone that real success today means more than just expanding and building a brand.
A company can build stores quickly.
It can raise capital quickly.
It can advertise heavily.
But trust takes time to build.
The best Indian companies in the future will do more than just sell products. They will build workplaces where people feel respected, serve customers honestly, and grow with cultural understanding.
That’s the real lesson from the Lenskart controversy.

References

Ashraff, A. (2024). Fashion and Cultural Identity: The Role of Fashion in Expressing Individual and Collective Identities. Journal of Fashion and Cultural Studies 12(4), pp. 45-67. https://doi.org/10.13140/RG.2.2.19489.93283

Tryphena, R. & Aram, I. A. (2023). Consumer perception on sustainable clothing among urban Indians. SAGE Open Fashion & Textiles 9(2). https://doi.org/10.1177/15589250231168964

Hashimoto, T. & Karasawa, K. (2018). Impact of consumer power on consumers’ reactions to corporate transgression. PLoS One 13(5). https://doi.org/10.1371/journal.pone.0196819

Joshi, A. (November 3, 2025). Lenskart IPO Price Sparks Concern Over Indian Startup Valuations. Bloomberg. https://www.bloomberg.com/news/articles/2025-11-03/lenskart-ipo-price-sparks-concern-over-indian-startup-valuations

Kapons, M., Kelly, P., Stoumbos, R. & Zambrana, R. (2023). Dividends, trust, and firm value. Review of Accounting Studies 28. https://doi.org/10.1007/s11142-023-09795-4

Joshi, C. K., Boopathy, C., Kazmi, S., Arumugam, S. & Attri, R. K. (2025). The Impact Of Organizational Culture On Employee Performance: A Study Of Leadership Styles And Workplace Productivity. Metallurgical and Materials Engineering 31(5), pp. 205-215. https://doi.org/10.63278/mme.vi.1576