Snapchat is often misunderstood by performance marketers. Many brands still see it as a youth awareness platform, not a serious commerce channel. That view is outdated.
For fashion, footwear, beauty, and lifestyle brands targeting Gen Z and young millennials in India, Snapchat can play a meaningful role in discovery, consideration, and conversion.
Snap says Snapchat has over 250 million users in India and that its advertiser base in India grew 10x over two years.
That scale makes Snapchat difficult to ignore for youth-focused brands.
Fashion is visual, identity-led, and peer-influenced. Snapchat’s environment is built around camera, communication, self-expression, and augmented reality. That makes it naturally relevant for categories where people want to see how something looks on them or people like them.
For fashion and footwear brands, Snapchat is useful for:
Snapchat’s public Myntra case study is especially relevant for footwear and fashion brands. Myntra used video ads and AR shoppable lenses for sneakers, linked products in the Lens to Myntra’s catalog, and sent users to specific sneaker SKU pages. The campaign delivered 3x ROAS, a 4% awareness lift, and a 4% lift in action intent from Video Ads and AR.
The lesson is clear: Snapchat works best when discovery is connected to product action. Do not stop at awareness. Connect the experience to SKUs.
Fashion and footwear brands should use Snapchat around three moments.
Use AR, try-on lenses, styling filters, or creator-led try-ons to help users imagine the product.
Use short videos, collection drops, campus edits, or trend-led storytelling to introduce the product.
Send users to product pages, app pages, marketplace listings, or curated collections.
For footwear brands:
For fashion brands:
For beauty and lifestyle brands:
Snapchat should not replace Meta or Google. It should play a specific role.
Use Snapchat for:
Then retarget users across Meta, Google, marketplace, and website channels where possible.
Do not judge Snapchat only by last-click ROAS in the first week. Track:
Do not run TV-style ads. Do not use slow intros. Do not use over-polished creatives that feel alien to the platform. Do not send every click to the homepage. Do not run AR without a product path. Do not use Snapchat only during sales.
Snapchat needs native, fast, product-led, and youth-relevant creative.
Yes, especially for brands targeting Gen Z, young millennials, sneakers, accessories, beauty, youth fashion, and trend-led collections.
They can be both. The key is to connect video, AR, and creator-led discovery to product pages, app events, or marketplace listings.
AR try-on can be valuable when it is connected to SKU pages and supported by retargeting. Myntra’s Snapchat case is a useful example of this approach.