Search for Stocks /

L.T. Elevator Limited Q3FY26 Concall Decoded: – ₹46 Cr order book from Instagram ads, elevators now sold like D2C cosmetics

Spotted a factual error — a wrong number, date, or fact? Tell us and we will check the source.

1. Opening Hook

L.T. Elevator listed, skipped the usual boring “steady growth” call, and instead dropped a surprise—
they’re buying an Instagram-powered elevator brand.

While legacy elevator giants were busy pitching architects over filter coffee, L.T. quietly figured out that people are buying ₹10–11 lakh home elevators after clicking Meta ads.

No plant inauguration.
No government tender chest-thumping.
Just straight-up D2C ambition in an industry that still thinks brochures are cutting-edge tech.

The Ricardo acquisition isn’t about one small brand—it’s about cracking a distribution hack that most industrial companies didn’t even know existed.

Read on. It gets more disruptive (and slightly uncomfortable for incumbents) from here.


2. At a Glance

  • Ricardo FY25 revenue ~₹5.5 Cr – Two years old, already acting like a startup on steroids.
  • Net profit ~₹30–35 lakh – Thin margins today, optionality tomorrow.
  • 50–60 elevators/month orders – Instagram reels doing what sales teams couldn’t.
  • ₹46 Cr current order book – From ₹10–12 lakh monthly ad spend. Insane ROAS.
  • ASP ₹10–11 lakh per lift – Premium pricing without MNC branding.
  • Execution lag 6–8 months – Growth visible, revenue patiently waiting.

3. Management’s Key Commentary

“We realized there is a D2C business in elevators.”
(Translation: Turns out elevators can be sold like Boat headphones 😏)

“Almost 100% of Ricardo’s leads come from Meta Ads.”
(Architects found unemployed by Instagram algorithms)

“They generate 2,000–2,500 enquiries per month.”
(More leads than some real estate brokers)

“The home elevator market is

Read Full 16 Point breakdown. Continue reading →
EduInvesting runs entirely on reader support — ₹360 a year keeps the lights on.
Become a member
Already a member? Log in
Read Full 16 Point breakdown. Continue reading →