Manufacturers
Hair product manufacturers
High Rate of Cuticle Misalignment in Bulk Raw Hair Processing
Indian hair exporters struggle with 'Remi' integrity. Unprocessed temple hair often gets mixed with fallen 'non-Remi' hair during collection. If cuticles aren't aligned, export batches tangle after two washes, leading to massive international chargebacks and damaged reputations for West Bengal and Andhra-based manufacturers.
Lack of B2B Supply Chain Traceability and Standardized SKU Management
Indian hair manufacturers operate in a highly fragmented, 'offline' manner. International B2B buyers find it difficult to track orders, verify inventory in real-time, or ensure that the 'Type 3' wave they ordered yesterday is the same as the one they get next month. There is no traceability from temple auction to finished product.
Structural Damage During High-Lift Bleaching for Export Extensions
Small and medium hair processing units in India rely on rudimentary boiling and bleaching methods that weaken the hair shaft. This leads to high breakage rates during the manufacturing of blonde extensions (613 shade), which is the most profitable export item but the hardest to produce without damage.
Precision Gaps in Thin-Skin and Medical-Grade Hair System Production
Precision in thin-skin and HD lace manufacturing is lacking in the Indian SME sector. Chinese manufacturers dominate the 'invisible' hairpiece market because Indian units lack the micro-injection molding and consistent ventilation (knotting) density required for modern medical-grade hair systems.
Inconsistent Curl Retainment in Steam-Processed Texture Hair
Indian hair manufacturing often ignores the 'texture-match' requirement for the African and African-American markets—the largest consumers of hair. Indian hair is naturally straight or wavy; manufacturers use harsh perming rods to create 'Kinky Curly' textures, but these curls often drop after one wash because the 'steam-set' tech is outdated.