Mad Monkey Store: From Scattered Campaigns to 7.31x ROAS — A Meta Ads Case Study

Industry: D2C Fashion & Streetwear  |  Platform: Meta Ads  |  Duration: May 2023 – June 2026  |  Location: India

Background

Mad Monkey Store is a D2C streetwear brand selling graphic tees, hoodies, and culture-driven apparel in India. When we started working together in mid-2023, they had an active Meta Ads account but no clear strategy — campaigns were scattered, budgets were split too thin, and there was no systematic approach to creative testing.

The brand had strong product-market fit and an engaged community, particularly in Telangana and Andhra Pradesh. The challenge was turning that cultural energy into consistent, scalable Meta Ads performance.

The Challenge

  • Multiple low-budget campaigns running simultaneously with no clear winner
  • No separation between cold traffic, warm audiences, and retargeting
  • Creative was product-focused — no hook, no story, no cultural relevance
  • Pixel data was sparse — the algorithm had no signal to optimise against
  • Brand awareness campaigns consuming budget without conversion intent

Results at a Glance

₹27.28LTotal Ad Spend Managed
9.8 CrImpressions Generated
3.07 CrUnique People Reached
7.31xPeak ROAS Achieved
₹110Lowest CPA on Winning Campaign
7,10,256Total Link Clicks

The Strategy

Phase 1 — Audit and Consolidation

The first step was stopping the bleeding. We paused low-performing campaigns, consolidated budgets into 2–3 focused ad sets per campaign, and rebuilt the pixel base with a retargeting campaign to capture warm audiences first. Running 10+ campaigns at ₹300–500/day each meant none of them were exiting the learning phase.

Phase 2 — Creative Testing Framework

We introduced a systematic creative testing approach: one new creative concept per week, with a clear hypothesis before each test. The goal was to understand what the Mad Monkey customer actually responds to — not what looked good in Canva.

This is when we discovered something important: culture beats product.

Phase 3 — The Cultural Moment Insight

The single biggest breakthrough came from a campaign built around a viral cultural moment — the “Nellore Peddareddy / Allu Arjun” trend that was exploding across Telugu-speaking audiences at the time. Instead of running another product-focused ad, we created content that spoke directly to that cultural energy and tied it to the brand.

Result: 7.31x ROAS. ₹110.54 cost per purchase. 556 purchases from ₹61,458 in spend.
This campaign alone proved that creative relevance — specifically cultural relevance — is the highest-leverage variable in Meta Ads.

Campaign Performance Breakdown

Campaign Spend Purchases CPA ROAS
Nellore/Allu Arjun Viral ₹61,458 556 ₹110.54 7.31x ✦
General Audience Shopping ₹8,757 42 ₹208.50 4.98x
Tshirt Campaign (Core) ₹1,87,554 916 ₹204.75 3.80x
Cart Abandonment Retargeting ₹13,057 25 ₹522.31 2.18x
Graphic Hoodie Campaign ₹31,896 62 ₹514.45 2.14x
New Launch Campaign ₹38,114 137 ₹278.21 2.23x

Key Learnings

1. Cultural hooks outperform product hooks in Indian D2C

The biggest ROAS we ever saw came from a campaign where the ad led with a trending cultural reference, not a product feature. Indian consumers are emotionally engaged by their culture — when your ad feels native to that, the algorithm rewards it with cheaper CPMs and the audience rewards it with higher intent clicks.

2. Budget consolidation is a prerequisite to performance

Before we changed a single creative, we consolidated 12+ campaigns into 3. This alone improved the algorithm’s ability to optimise. The learning phase requires 50 purchase events in 7 days per ad set — at ₹500/day per ad set, that is mathematically impossible.

3. Retargeting has a ceiling — warm the cold audience first

Cart abandonment campaigns showed decent ROAS (2.18x) but the audience size was limited. The real unlock was building the cold audience with high-performing campaigns first, which then fed a larger and more qualified retargeting pool.

4. Frequency is a signal, not a problem

The account reached 3.19 average frequency across 3+ years. For a D2C brand with repeat-purchase potential, frequency builds brand recognition. The trick is refreshing creative before the frequency becomes fatigue — we tracked this weekly.

What This Means for Your Brand

If your Meta Ads are producing inconsistent results — good one month, terrible the next — it is almost always a creative and structure problem, not a budget problem. The brands that scale on Meta are the ones who build a testing system, find their cultural angle, and consolidate aggressively once they find what works.

Mad Monkey went from scattered campaigns with no clear signal to a 7.31x ROAS campaign by following exactly this process over 18 months.

Want results like this for your brand?

Book a free 30-minute strategy call. I will review your Meta Ads account live, identify your highest-leverage opportunity, and give you a clear action plan — whether or not we end up working together.

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