Meerut’s Goyal Poshak: Turning Pandemic Stitching into a Deity Fashion Brand

From lockdown hobby to enterprise
The idea began at home when Goyal’s mother, skilled in stitching, crafted poshaks for family and relatives. Encouraged by early demand, the young founder placed one or two pieces at an uncle’s shop near the Ganga ghats, then steadily expanded the product range. As volumes improved, he moved beyond occasional retail to set up dedicated production, with siblings and his mother joining operations.
Formalising the venture
Goyal completed his M.Com from NS College, Meerut, in 2025, after a B.Com from DN College. He learnt of the CM Yuva Udyami Yojana on campus and applied through the District Industries Centre in Meerut. A sanctioned loan, according to the founder, enabled tooling and raw material procurement and nudged the firm towards manufacturing. Once daily orders crossed double digits, he registered for GST, leased a small shop, and structured workflows.
Products and reach
Goyal Poshak manufactures Krishna mukuts and attire from size 0 to size 6, along with larger ensembles for other deities and temple requirements. As per the company, orders come via Meesho and Flipkart, while enquiries are routed through Justdial. The founder and proprietor says the team plans to sign up with IndiaMART in 2026 to widen B2B discovery.
How did the idea turn into a manufacturing venture
Goyal says he began with single pieces to test demand, reinvesting the proceeds to expand styles and sizes. When repeat orders rose, he shifted from stocking at third-party counters to making in-house, then adopted GST and documentation to unlock online scale.
“No work is small,” Goyal notes, adding that entrepreneurship can create local jobs even with modest capital. His advice to first-time founders is to start lean, keep records, and formalise as volumes grow, rather than wait for perfect conditions.
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