India’s commercial interiors industry is entering a phase of structural maturity. Over the past decade, the sector has expanded alongside the country’s corporate, industrial and infrastructure growth. But the nature of demand is changing. As companies scale faster, operate across multiple locations and compress project timelines, expectations from interior partners have shifted decisively. Design quality remains important, but it is no longer sufficient on its own. Reliability of delivery, cost predictability and end-to-end accountability now matter just as much. This shift is visible in the data. According to Mordor Intelligence, “the India interior design market is expected to grow from USD 35.48 billion in 2026 to USD 65.01 billion by 2031, at a CAGR of 12.87 percent.” Commercial interiors account for a substantial share of this expansion, driven by office space absorption, industrial development and institutional projects. Growth at this pace places pressure on traditional operating models that separate design from execution.
FocusOn Interiors’ recent strategic repositioning must be understood in this context. Shanu Khan, Founder, FocusOn Interiors, discusses how his firm is moving from a design-centric practice toward a delivery-led, integrated interior solutions company. He explains that this is not a branding exercise but a response to changing client economics.
When Design Alone Stops Being Enough
FocusOn Interiors built its early reputation on careful, human-centred design. Like many design-led firms, it succeeded by translating client requirements into functional, well-resolved spaces. As project scale increased, however, a familiar industry constraint became evident. Design intent, however strong, does not automatically translate into predictable outcomes on site.
Large organisations increasingly expect a single point of responsibility from concept through completion. Fragmented vendor ecosystems, uneven site supervision and slow decision-making frequently undermine otherwise strong design strategies. For clients, the cost of this fragmentation is not aesthetic disappointment but operational disruption.
Rising fit-out costs have heightened this concern. Market analysis cited by Altre notes that “average office fit-out costs in India increased by around 4.5 percent year on year in 2024, reaching approximately ₹5,788 per square foot.” In such an environment, delays, rework and coordination failures translate directly into financial risk. It is this execution gap between what is designed and what is delivered that has prompted many design-led firms to reassess their operating models.
Integration as a Strategic Response
FocusOn’s response has been to bring delivery closer to the core of its organisation. The acquisition of Riya Enterprises reflects a deliberate attempt to internalise execution capabilities that are often outsourced and weakly governed in the interiors industry.
Riya Enterprises contributes experienced site teams, established vendor networks and a track record of on-ground delivery. Integrating these capabilities allows FocusOn greater control over timelines, quality benchmarks and cost management. Decision-making moves closer to the site, coordination improves and accountability becomes clearer.
This approach aligns with broader market trends. According to Coherent Market Insights, the India institutional interior fit-out market “is estimated to be valued at USD 13.73 billion in 2025 and is expected to reach USD 28.36 billion by 2032, exhibiting a CAGR of 10.9 percent.” Much of this growth is concentrated in complex environments such as corporate campuses, manufacturing facilities and regulated workplaces, where execution discipline matters as much as design intelligence.
A Market Moving Toward Delivery Certainty
The interiors and fit-out sector is increasingly converging on integrated delivery models. Clients prefer fewer interfaces, clearer accountability and faster resolution of on-site issues. As organisations expand across cities and regions, they seek partners capable of delivering consistently at scale. Global clients bring stricter expectations around safety, compliance and documentation. Cost transparency, once negotiable, is now assumed.
In this environment, the distinction between designer and contractor is beginning to blur. Firms that can combine spatial intelligence with execution control are better positioned to manage risk and deliver predictability.
FocusOn’s strategy reflects this convergence. Rather than simply adding execution capacity, the firm is aligning design thinking and delivery discipline within a single operating framework. The objective is not only to build spaces, but to manage outcomes.
Where Differentiation Lies
What distinguishes FocusOn’s approach is how integration is applied. The firm continues to approach projects with a consulting mindset, investing time in understanding how spaces are used, how people move and how operations function. Design decisions are informed by these operational insights. Execution is governed by the same logic, rather than treated as a downstream activity.
With the addition of Riya Enterprises, this approach is reinforced by stronger site governance and tighter delivery control. The challenge, as with all integrated models, lies in maintaining design integrity while scaling execution. FocusOn’s position is that the two can reinforce rather than dilute each other.
The Road Ahead
FocusOn plans to extend this delivery-led model across India’s major commercial and industrial hubs, with a focus on large corporate offices, specialised manufacturing facilities and complex interior environments. Technology adoption, process standardisation and talent development are expected to support this expansion. The acquisition of Riya Enterprises marks more than an increase in capacity. It signals a shift in identity, from a design partner to an execution-accountable solutions firm aligned with the realities of modern project delivery.
As India’s interior fit-out market continues to expand, firms will increasingly be judged not by how compelling their designs appear in presentations, but by how reliably those designs translate into finished spaces. In repositioning itself around delivery certainty, FocusOn Interiors is aligning with a market that values outcomes over intent. In a sector where execution failures remain common and accountability often diffuse, that alignment appears timely.