Multi-channel order and inventory synchronization
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?Company dossier
WareIQ is an India-founded, vertically integrated ecommerce fulfillment and shipping operator for D2C, marketplace, quick-commerce and B2B brands. It combines a current OMS/WMS and inventory-planning layer with WareIQ-operated fulfillment centers, partner couriers and human operations. Direct actions include order/inventory synchronization, multi-FC routing, pick-pack-dispatch, courier allocation, tracking/NDR, returns QC/relisting and Seller-of-Record collections/remittance. InventoryLogIQ primarily recommends stock and network decisions; brands retain ordinary pricing, refund and inventory-allocation authority unless they buy the managed Seller-of-Record model.
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?Blissclub is WareIQ's broadest zero-to-one case, with vendor-reported growth, cost, speed and channel outcomes from a mixed software/operations engagement.
Cuddles for Cubs reports growth, cost savings and marketplace expansion through WareIQ's managed fulfillment and merchant platform.
WareIQ attributes faster regional fulfillment, lower RTO and 75% order growth to store-based inventory plus four fulfillment centers for Kama Ayurveda.
WareIQ reports absorbing a 10x+ festival surge without dispatch delay or marketplace seller cancellation for Leemboodi Fashion.
Lil'Goodness is a strong operational case for cold-chain and surge capacity, but its order-growth, revenue-baseline and surge-multiple copy is materially inconsistent.
WareIQ attributes 3x online sales and faster, more regional fulfillment to a combined software-and-managed-operations deployment at Lotus Herbals.
Nasher Miles is a two-year WareIQ fulfillment-and-badges case with vendor-reported 13x orders and 75% lower shipping cost per order.
WareIQ reports a large two-day-coverage improvement and 3% return rate for Organic Riot, but coverage units and rounded percentages vary across the page.
WareIQ reports 3x+ monthly orders and 20% lower shipping cost for a managed personalized-kit fulfillment deployment at Setu Nutrition.
WareIQ reports 6x+ orders, fewer returns and five-plus marketplace additions for TCNS Clothing.
WareIQ reports 6x+ monthly orders plus regional and marketplace expansion for The Sleep Company's heavy-parcel workflow.
WareIQ currently presents a fully managed Indian 3PL and ecommerce-fulfillment network: 20+ fulfillment centers, 27,000+ pincodes, 400+ brands and 20+ channel connections across D2C, marketplaces, B2B and quick commerce. Its platform recommends inventory placement, while warehouse teams store and fulfill inventory and the shipping engine can allocate couriers automatically or manually. The homepage also markets InventoryLogIQ reports and planners; its 30% cost reduction, 99% on-time shipping, 40% lower holding-cost and 99%+ availability figures are aggregate vendor claims without named measurement context.
company · accessed 2026-07-13WareIQ says Harsh Vaidya founded the company in 2019 after returning to India and teamed with Aayush Mattoo, then a Delhivery operations director. It began with fulfillment centers in Delhi and Bengaluru, entered Y Combinator Summer 2020, and says that by 2025 it was profitable and cash-flow positive while supporting 400+ brands in 13+ cities. Current navigation offers D2C, marketplace, quick-commerce and B2B fulfillment, Shipping, appointment delivery, Seller of Record, a central OMS/WMS, InventoryLogIQ, Multi Vendor Central, Returns QC, branded tracking and shipping badges. Address Validation is explicitly marked coming soon and the navigation promises seven-day go-live.
company · accessed 2026-07-13The current 3PL page says WareIQ owns and operates fulfillment centers, receives/stores stock and performs scan-based pick, pack and dispatch. It lists 20+ centers, 13+ cities, 27,000+ pincodes and courier partners including Delhivery, Blue Dart, DTDC, Ekart and XpressBees. Returns and RTO units are received, quality checked and either automatically relisted as sellable inventory or quarantined and flagged. Fit starts at a few hundred monthly orders and is strongest above 300. The page explicitly contrasts WareIQ with Shiprocket and other courier aggregators that provide rates but do not hold inventory.
company · accessed 2026-07-13WareIQ describes a single inventory pool and order queue across D2C, marketplaces and quick commerce. It says marketplace and D2C inventory syncs in real time; orders are routed to the nearest eligible fulfillment center; the operating layer considers serviceability, cost, SLA and exceptions; and WareIQ teams own fulfillment-center execution and SLA work. It markets 50+ integrations, branded tracking, returns QC and NDR management.
company · accessed 2026-07-13The central platform combines OMS, WMS, inventory, shipping, billing and analytics. It unifies orders across channels, supports status and attribute views, sends daily email reports, tracks multiple warehouses and channels, supports bundling and inventory-transfer requests, and exposes labels, invoices, manifests and pick/pack documents. InventoryLogIQ provides inventory-health, replenishment and network-planning recommendations; auto-replenishment is described as triggers/reminders, not autonomous stock movement. Billing views show inbound, fulfillment and shipping charges, payment/remittance status and COD-linked charge rules.
company · accessed 2026-07-13D2C fulfillment includes storefront integration, inventory placement, OMS/WMS, picking, packing, dispatch, delivery promise and shipping. Returns are recorded with timestamped photo/video evidence and graded at the fulfillment center; WareIQ says units can be processed and restocked within 48 hours, but the merchant uses the evidence to decide refunds, replacements or warranty claims. Pricing depends on SKU count, order volume, storage, channel mix and shipping lanes; customers pay storage, fulfillment processing and shipping at courier rates.
company · accessed 2026-07-13WareIQ markets managed marketplace operations for Amazon, Flipkart, Myntra, Nykaa, Meesho, AJIO, JioMart, Tata Cliq, FirstCry and CRED Store. Its OMS/WMS syncs orders and inventory, warehouse teams meet channel cutoffs and execute compliant packaging, labels and documents, and returns QC produces media for claims support. The page says WareIQ is one operating layer for warehousing, processing, inventory sync, courier allocation, tracking, reverse logistics and QC; it does not establish formal certification by every named marketplace.
company · accessed 2026-07-13The current services hub covers D2C, marketplace, quick-commerce and B2B fulfillment from one inventory pool. It documents Shopify and WooCommerce connections, REST API and webhook support for Magento, custom storefronts and proprietary OMS/ERP, B2B invoicing and POD, quick-commerce replenishment, kitting, temperature-controlled storage, returns/RTO QC and automatic sellable-stock relisting. It describes Shopify orders routing to the nearest fulfillment center when a customer confirms and WooCommerce COD confirmation workflows.
company · accessed 2026-07-13WareIQ offers feeder fulfillment for Blinkit, Zepto and Swiggy Instamart, including compliant packing/labels, delivery partners, POD, inventory tracking and forecasting. The page states brands take marketplace appointments, WareIQ works backward to fulfill them, and purchase orders currently require manual upload because quick-commerce platforms lack ready APIs. Inventory counts then update across connected channels in real time. The page states 12+ cities, while current broader company pages state 13+ cities.
company · accessed 2026-07-13WareIQ Shipping is a standalone multi-carrier service starting at INR 21 per 500g with zero signup fee and no minimum order value. It provides rule-based dynamic courier allocation, branded tracking, analytics, weight reconciliation and NDR workflows that combine automation across channels with human-assisted resolution. This page states 24,000+ pincodes, conflicting with the 27,000+ figure used across the current homepage and 3PL pages. RTO/NDR reduction of 20-40% and early-COD claims lack named measurement context.
company · accessed 2026-07-13Warehouse staff capture HD return media in WareIQ's mobile app; the platform auto-indexes it by order ID/AWB, stores it centrally, updates the WMS through scans and supports grading and bulk media download for marketplace claims. The headline promises 100% claim approval but supplies no named customer, cohort or denominator; the product directly prepares evidence, while filing/approval authority remains with marketplaces and operators.
company · accessed 2026-07-13Seller of Record is a managed operating model. WareIQ owns seller accounts, marketplace operations, GST/invoicing/finance close, fulfillment, returns, support, monthly settlements and reporting; the brand retains product, positioning, pricing guardrails, growth strategy and inventory-allocation decisions. The service is offered to international entrants and Indian companies expanding across states, with a custom-plan lead form and no public price.
company · accessed 2026-07-13For international brands, WareIQ discloses a single-percentage reseller agreement and a virtual-inventory model. WareIQ receives Indian collections into its bank account, deducts commissions, handles GST/accounting, fulfillment, returns and support, reconciles monthly and remits net proceeds to the parent brand's international bank. The page says launch can occur in weeks rather than quarters but gives no fixed implementation duration or rate.
company · accessed 2026-07-13Multi Vendor Central is middleware for marketplace operators. It provides admin/vendor access, integrations with WMS/OMS/POS, order and inventory sync, vendor dashboards, catalog updates, live rates, labels, tracking, bulk invoicing, configurable privileges, tiered commissions and automated vendor payments. The page says it has an open API architecture and names Shopify, Magento, WooCommerce, Unicommerce, Vinculum, EasyEcom, Navision, Wondersoft and 20+ carriers. POP CLUB supplies a named qualitative testimonial about vendor onboarding.
company · accessed 2026-07-13The branded tracking page provides a custom URL, real-time shipment journey, shipping notifications, website links, feedback collection and placements for cross-sell/upsell content. It names example tracking pages for Flatheads, Just Herbs, Kama Ayurveda, Wingreens, Raw Pressery and BSB. The page does not show WareIQ completing a subsequent purchase or operating paid-media spend.
company · accessed 2026-07-13Shipping badges check product inventory in real time, identify the nearest warehouse, test pincode serviceability and calculate the fastest available delivery timeline for product/collection pages. WareIQ also markets the badge in ad placements, but does not show creation, launch or spend optimization of the underlying campaigns. The page's 50% CPA reduction and 40% sales-lift claims are anonymous and lack measurement lineage.
company · accessed 2026-07-13WareIQ says the platform supports 100+ integrations across marketplaces, website builders, WMS, couriers, accounting, returns, ERP and POS. Named systems include Amazon, Flipkart, Shopify, Magento, Meesho, WooCommerce, Myntra, Nykaa, Unicommerce, Vinculum and EasyEcom. It says the connections eliminate manual data imports and offers custom-integration requests.
company · accessed 2026-07-13The Shopify WMS page documents real-time order/inventory sync, SKU upload and listing management, synchronized labels/invoices/POs/order status and automated returns processing that updates inventory. It describes plug-and-play go-live but provides no stable implementation duration on the page.
company · accessed 2026-07-13WareIQ offers managed licensed/pharma fulfillment with dedicated temperature zones, monitoring, pharmacist recruitment and supervision, compliance documents, pick/pack/dispatch and batch/expiry tracking. The customer holds the facility license and pharmacist employment contract. Pricing is a fixed monthly component for the dedicated zone, infrastructure amortization and minimum commitment plus a variable per-order rate; WareIQ promises a scoped proposal within 48 hours, not a public rate card.
company · accessed 2026-07-13The estimator models monthly inbound handling per unit, outbound fulfillment per order/extra unit, returns, kitting/labeling and weight-based daily storage. It assumes 45 inventory days, 8% returns and 5% of inbound units requiring labeling/kitting and excludes last mile. Results are indicative; final commercials vary by dimensions, handling complexity, storage and network design. The lead form segments monthly orders into under 1,000, 1,000-5,000, 5,000-10,000, 10,000-25,000 and 25,000+.
company · accessed 2026-07-13The shipping calculator accepts origin/destination pincode, weight, dimensions, prepaid versus COD and shipment value, and returns courier options/rates. Its onboarding form bands monthly orders from uncertain/startup through 10,000+. The public calculator proves quote mechanics, not a disclosed typical monthly ticket.
company · accessed 2026-07-13WareIQ publishes a general privacy policy covering its websites and services, personal-data collection, contracts/consent, cookies, business partners, auditing, analytics and troubleshooting. The page does not state product-security certifications, encryption standards, SSO, RBAC, retention schedules or a DPA/subprocessor inventory.
company · accessed 2026-07-13The current website terms say WareIQ.com is owned by WareIQ Private Limited. The current site footer gives CIN U63000KA2019PTC128142 and a Bengaluru registered office. The page is a website-use policy rather than a customer service agreement and does not disclose product SLAs, contract term or liability terms for fulfillment customers.
company · accessed 2026-07-13WareIQ's official LinkedIn profile describes a privately held Bengaluru company founded in 2019 with a 51-200 employee band. It markets full-stack ecommerce fulfillment and shipping across 13+ Indian cities. LinkedIn's size band is self-reported company metadata and is not a verified headcount.
official_social · accessed 2026-07-13Y Combinator lists WareIQ as a Summer 2020 Bengaluru company founded in 2019 with 50 team members and active founders Harsh Vaidya and Aayush Mattoo. It describes a decision engine that allocates orders to the nearest warehouse holding inventory and the appropriate courier. The profile's InventoryLogIQ launch says AI segments SKUs, identifies liquidation/replenishment needs and recommends location/quantity, and says its model was trained on data from 500+ brands. That training-data figure is not necessarily the current customer count and differs from WareIQ's current 400+ brand claim.
investor · accessed 2026-07-13WareIQ's official newsroom records a $1.65M seed round from Y Combinator, FundersClub, Pioneer Fund, Soma Capital, Emles Venture Advisors and founders of Flexport. It names Harsh Vaidya as cofounder/CEO. At the time WareIQ described connected warehouse partners and an order-volume take rate/free signup; this is historical commercial and network evidence, not assumed current.
company · accessed 2026-07-13A company-hosted historical interview says that after about 14 months of operations WareIQ served 200+ brands, was profitable from day one and had a $2M annualized run rate. It describes standardized charges for storage, order processing, last mile and the technology platform and repeats the $1.65M seed round. These figures are historical, not current revenue or profitability evidence.
company · accessed 2026-07-13The official case-study sitemap enumerated exactly 11 canonical case-study URLs at access: Lotus Herbals, Blissclub, Kama Ayurveda, Leemboodi Fashion, Nasher Miles, The Sleep Company, Cuddles for Cubs, Setu Nutrition, TCNS Clothing, Lil'Goodness and Organic Riot. The legacy /customer-stories/ lead returned 404 and was not treated as a separate universe.
company · accessed 2026-07-13The two-page official hub surfaces the same 11 case stories and their publication dates. All cases are vendor-hosted; no customer-owned metric source is linked. The case copy is largely 2020-2023-era and includes legacy footprint, module and customer-count language that is not promoted to current product fact.
company · accessed 2026-07-13A 2023 product release documents a wallet hold reserved when an order becomes ready to ship, settlement of shipping charges on delivery, release of the hold for canceled orders, RTO return-charge updates and later weight-dispute adjustments in the main wallet/passbook. It is retained as legacy product evidence because current navigation does not clearly expose the wallet as a current module.
company · accessed 2026-07-13This legacy release described COD/NDR verification, IVR calling, order-level call recordings and RTO Shield, which could disable COD for blacklisted/high-risk customers and reimburse shipping cost for an RTO predicted safe. Current navigation no longer presents these as core modules, so they are not treated as current shippable proof without corroboration.
company · accessed 2026-07-13WareIQ's updated company comparison positions its own core as end-to-end inventory storage, WMS/OMS, fulfillment, marketplace operations and shipping, versus Shiprocket's shipping-aggregation core. It describes WareIQ as pay-per-use/no-upfront-deposit with seven-day onboarding but also uses 500+ brands and 30+ shipping partners, which conflict with current homepage figures and are not promoted over the current product pages. No direct Shiprocket integration, joint customer, bundle or partnership is disclosed.
company · accessed 2026-07-13WareIQ says Lotus Herbals added two fulfillment locations, integrated website/marketplace orders, used automated courier choice and AI inventory-placement recommendations, and relied on WareIQ teams for fulfillment, returns/exchanges and marketplace operations. It reports 3x sales in one year, 11 percentage points more regional shipments, one day shorter/1.3x faster delivery and 20 percentage points fewer returns. Cost-per-shipment copy conflicts: the snapshot says 11% lower while the body says 7.5% lower.
company · accessed 2026-07-13WareIQ says Blissclub used multi-channel integration, AI inventory optimization over 400+ SKUs, two new warehouses, B2B support, marketplace onboarding, returns/claims and personalized packing. It reports regional shipment share up 30%+, delivery time down 20%+, cost per shipment down about 10%, online sales up 3x through 4+ new channels, order volume up 11x+ in the first ten months and presence on 4+ new marketplaces in the first year. The headline frames 3x sales in one year while the snapshot says the second year of operations.
company · accessed 2026-07-13WareIQ says it analyzed demand, placed inventory in Kama Ayurveda retail stores, added four WareIQ fulfillment centers in blind spots and implemented branded tracking. The vendor reports 75%+ order growth in nine months, RTO below 1.5% from double digits and nearly 90% of orders delivered in two days, with same-day delivery in metros.
company · accessed 2026-07-13WareIQ says its fulfillment network, connected platform, warehouse operations team and account management handled Leemboodi Fashion's Dussehra/Diwali peak. It reports a 10x+ order surge, 100% of orders ready for dispatch on time/zero dispatch delays and zero seller cancellations across major marketplaces.
company · accessed 2026-07-13WareIQ says Nasher Miles connected four warehouses, added delivery-promise badges and received managed marketplace-expansion support. It reports monthly order volume up 13x in two years and shipping cost per order down 75%; it says website conversion/churn improved but provides no numeric conversion outcome.
company · accessed 2026-07-13WareIQ says The Sleep Company used on-demand warehouses, parent/child AWBs for multi-parcel shipments, heavy-parcel pickup and inventory placement nearer customers. It reports 6x+ monthly-order growth in under a year, two new warehouses in North/East India and four new marketplaces; damage/delay reduction is qualitative.
company · accessed 2026-07-13WareIQ says Cuddles for Cubs used its fulfillment network, merchant analytics, configurable courier rules, marketplace support and warehouse teams. It reports 500%+ monthly-order growth/6x business growth in one year, storage cost down 50% during sales season and shipping cost down 20%+ in one year. Channel copy conflicts: the snapshot says three new sales channels while the body says four new marketplaces.
company · accessed 2026-07-13WareIQ says Setu Nutrition used its merchant platform, nationwide fulfillment network and personalized-kit operations. The snapshot reports 3x+ monthly-order growth and 20% lower shipping cost in one year; the headline says growth occurred in less than a year, and the impact section repeats workflows but omits both quantified outcomes.
company · accessed 2026-07-13WareIQ says TCNS connected D2C/marketplace data, used WareIQ-operated fulfillment in two zones and relied on warehouse staff for returns/exchanges. It reports 6x+ monthly-order growth in six months, 50% lower average return volume between the beginning and end of Q4 2021 and 5+ newly added marketplaces.
company · accessed 2026-07-13WareIQ says Lil'Goodness used temperature-controlled fulfillment, Shopify/Magento/marketplace integrations, ML inventory-placement recommendations and elastic staffed operations. Metric copy is internally inconsistent: the headline/body say 260%+ order growth in four months, a customer quote says 172%, and displayed volume moves from 11,000 to more than 30,000 per month. Revenue is reported as 5.2x to INR 28 lakh, but the baseline is INR 5.4 lakh in the snapshot and INR 5.7 lakh in the body. WareIQ also reports 99% fulfillment during 200x surges, about 20,000 orders/day during an April 2022 campaign and 60% of orders delivered in one-to-two days versus below 5% before.
company · accessed 2026-07-13WareIQ says Organic Riot distributed inventory across Mumbai, NCR, Bengaluru and Pune. The headline rounds two-day coverage to 80%, the introduction says 78% of demand centers, and the impact says 85% of orders fell in Zone A/B; baseline copy similarly says 23% of demand centers and 22% of orders. The page reports return rate reduced to 3% but does not state the prior rate or measurement window.
company · accessed 2026-07-13