Featured Article

Can quick commerce leapfrog e-commerce in India?

India’s 2023 e-commerce sales of $60B to $65B were less than half of China’s Singles Day sales

Kommentar

A man is riding a bike past a bus stop with an advertisement of Zomato, an Indian food-delivery company, in Mumbai, India, on June 9th, 2023.
Image Credits: Niharika Kulkarni / NurPhoto / Getty Images

Even as quick commerce startups are retreating, consolidating or shutting down in many parts of the world, the model is showing encouraging signs in India. Consumers in urban cities are embracing the convenience of having groceries delivered to their doorstep in just 10 minutes. The companies making those deliveries — Blinkit, Zepto and Swiggy’s Instamart — are already charting a path to profitability.

Analysts are intrigued by the potential of 10-minute deliveries to disrupt e-commerce. Goldman Sachs recently estimated that Blinkit, which Zomato acquired in 2022 for less than $600 million, is already more valuable than its decacorn food delivery parent firm.

As of earlier this year, Blinkit held a 40% share of the quick commerce market, with Swiggy’s Instamart and Zepto close behind, according to HSBC. Flipkart, owned by Walmart, plans to enter the quick commerce space as soon as next month, further validating the industry’s potential.

Investors are also showing strong interest in the sector. Zomato boasts a valuation of $19.7 billion despite minimal profitability, processing around 3 million orders a day. In comparison, Chinese giant Meituan, which processes more than 25 times as many orders daily, has a market cap of $93 billion. Zepto, which achieved unicorn status less than a year ago, is finalizing new funding at a valuation exceeding $3 billion, according to people familiar with the matter.

Consumers are buying the quick commerce convenience, too. According to a recent Bernstein survey, the adoption was highest among millennials aged 18 to 35, with 60% of those in the 18 to 25 age bracket preferring quick commerce platforms over other channels. Even the 36+ age group is adopting digital channels, with over 30% preferring quick commerce.

UBS’ estimate for the Indian market. (Image: UBS)
Image Credits: UBS (screenshot)

While India’s rapid urbanization makes it a prime target for quick commerce, the industry’s unique operational model and infrastructure needs could limit its long-term growth and profitability. As competition intensifies, the impact of quick commerce is likely to be felt more acutely by India’s e-commerce giants. But what makes India’s retail market so attractive for quick commerce players, and what challenges lie ahead?

The opportunity for quick commerce in India

India’s e-commerce sales stood at $60 billion to $65 billion last year, according to industry estimates. That’s less than half of the sales generated by e-commerce firms on China’s last Singles Day and represents less than 7% of India’s overall retail market of more than $1 trillion.

Reliance Retail, India’s largest retail chain, clocked a revenue of about $36.7 billion in the financial year ending in March, with a valuation standing at $100 billion. The unorganized retail sector — the neighborhood stores (popularly known as kirana) that dot thousands of Indian cities, towns and villages — continues to dominate the market.

“The market is huge and, on paper, ripe for disruption. Nothing done so far has made a material dent in the industry. This is why any time a new model shows signs of functioning, all stakeholders shower them with love,” said a seasoned entrepreneur who helped build the supply chain for one of the leading retail ventures.

In other words, there’s no shortage of room for growth. 

Modern retail share of total grocery spend in India remains much lower than most other large countries and HSBC believes it will likely remain so as customers migrate directly from unorganized to quick commerce. Image credits: HSBC.
Image Credits: HSBC (screenshot)

One of the factors behind the quick commerce’s fast adoption is the similarity it has with the kirana model that has worked in India for decades. Quick commerce firms have devised a new supply chain system, setting up hundreds of unassuming warehouses, or “dark stores,” strategically situated within kilometers of residential and business areas from where large numbers of orders are placed. This allows the firms to make deliveries within minutes of order purchase.

This approach differs from that of e-commerce players like Amazon and Flipkart, which have fewer but much larger warehouses in a city, generally situated in localities where rent is cheaper and farther from residential areas.

The unique characteristics of Indian households further contribute to the appeal of quick commerce. Indian kitchens typically stock a higher number of SKUs compared to their Western counterparts, necessitating frequent top-up purchases that are better serviced by local stores and quick commerce rather than modern retail. Additionally, limited storage space in most Indian homes makes monthly bulk grocery shopping less practical, and customers tend to favor fresh food purchases, which quick commerce can easily accommodate.

According to Bernstein, quick commerce platforms can price products 10% to 15% cheaper than mom-and-pop stores while maintaining about 15% gross margins due to the removal of intermediaries. Quick commerce dark stores have rapidly expanded their SKU count from 2,000 to 6,000, with plans to further increase it to 10,000 to 12,000. These stores are replenishing their stocks two to three times a day, according to store managers.

Battling e-commerce

Zepto, Blinkit and Swiggy’s Instamart are increasingly expanding beyond the grocery category, selling a variety of items, including clothing, toys, jewelry, skincare products and electronics. A TechCrunch analysis finds that the majority of items listed by Amazon India in its bestsellers list are available on quick commerce platforms.

Quick commerce has also become an important distribution channel for major food brands in India. Consumer goods giant Dabur India expects quick commerce to drive 25% to 30% of the company’s sales. Hindustan Unilever, the Indian arm of the U.K.’s Unilever, has identified quick commerce as an “opportunity we will not let go.” And for Nestle India, “Blinkit is becoming as important as Amazon.”

While quick commerce doesn’t need to expand beyond the grocery category, which itself is more than a half-trillion-dollar market in India, their expansion into electronics and fashion is likely to be limited. Electronics drive 40% to 50% of all sales on Amazon and Flipkart, according to analyst estimates. If quick commerce can crack this market, it will pose a significant and direct challenge to e-commerce giants. Goldman Sachs estimates that the total addressable market in grocery and non-grocery for quick commerce companies in the top 40-50 cities is about $150 billion.

However, the sale of smartphones and other high-ticket items is more of a gimmick and not something that can be done at a large scale, according to an e-commerce entrepreneur. 

Blinkit selling high-end smartphones and the PlayStation 5, as shared by its founder and chief executive on social media.

“It doesn’t make any sense. What quick commerce is good at is forward-commerce. But smartphones and other pricey items tend to have a not-so-insignificant return rate.… They don’t have the infrastructure to accommodate the reverse-logistics,” he said, requesting anonymity as he is one of the earliest investors in a leading quick commerce firm.

Quick commerce’s current infrastructure also doesn’t permit the sale of large appliances. This means you cannot purchase a refrigerator, air conditioner, or TV from quick commerce. “But that’s what some of these firms are suggesting, and analysts are lapping it up,” the investor said.

Falguni Nayar, founder of skincare platform Nykaa, highlighted at a recent conference that quick commerce is primarily taking share from kirana stores and would not be able to keep as much inventory and assortment as specialty platforms that educate customers.

The quick commerce story in India remains an urban phenomenon concentrated in the top 25 to 30 cities. Goldman Sachs wrote in a recent analysis that the demand in smaller cities likely makes it difficult for fresh grocery economics to work.

E-commerce giant Flipkart will launch its quick commerce service in limited cities as soon as next month, seeing an opportunity to woo customers of Amazon India. The majority of Flipkart’s customers are in smaller Indian cities and towns.

Amazon — increasingly scaling down on its investments in e-commerce in India — has so far shown no interest in quick commerce in the country. The company, which offers same-day delivery for some items to Prime members, has questioned the quality of products from firms making “fast” deliveries in some of its marketing campaigns.

A recent India consumer survey by Bank of America (BofA)
Image Credits: BofA Global Research (screenshot)

As brands increasingly focus on quick commerce as their fastest-growing channel and more consumers embrace the convenience and value proposition of 10-minute deliveries, the stage is set for a fierce battle between quick commerce and e-commerce giants in India.

More TechCrunch

One-click checkout tech company Bolt is still waiting to find out if shareholders will sign off on a proposed funding round with stipulations that founder Ryan Breslow would return as CEO. In…

One of Bolt’s proposed new backers, The London Fund, has been scrubbing its web page

Whatever size the tranche ends up being it’ll be OpenAI’s biggest outside infusion of capital since January 2023.

OpenAI reportedly in talks to close a new funding round at $100B+ valuation

Reddit’s mobile and web applications went down on Wednesday afternoon, with more than 150,000 users reporting outages on Downdetector as of 1:30 p.m. in San Francisco. When trying to access…

Reddit back online after a software update took it down

For months, a tech forum ran wild asking if the Converge 2 accelerator program actually happened. We finally found out.

OpenAI’s Converge 2 program has been shrouded in mystery

Bluesky on Wednesday introduced the ability to hide replies, as well as a way to detach your original post from someone’s quote post.

Bluesky adds ‘anti-toxicity’ tools and aims to integrate ‘a Community Notes-like’ feature in the future

Featured Article

Fluid Truck’s board ousted its sibling co-founders amid allegations of mismanaging funds

Fluid Truck, a startup that was founded to disrupt the commercial vehicle rental industry, has ousted its sibling co-founders — CEO James Eberhard and chief legal counsel Jenifer Snyder — according to sources familiar with the matter. The shakeup, which employees have described as a hostile takeover, was led by…

Fluid Truck’s board ousted its sibling co-founders amid allegations of mismanaging funds

Meta announced Wednesday that users on Threads will be able to see fediverse replies on other posts besides their own.

Threads deepens its ties to the open social web, aka the ‘fediverse’

Just weeks ago, during an interview with TechCrunch, Thomas Ingenlath laid out his plan to turn Polestar into a self-sustaining company. Now, he’s out.  Polestar said Tuesday Ingenlath has resigned as…

Polestar is getting a new CEO amid EV sales slump

Midjourney, the AI image-generating platform that’s reportedly raking in more than $200 million in revenue without any VC investment, is getting into hardware. The company made the announcement in a…

Midjourney says it’s ‘getting into hardware’

Hiya, folks, welcome to TechCrunch’s regular AI newsletter. If you want this in your inbox every Wednesday, sign up here. Say what you will about generative AI. But it’s commoditizing…

This Week in AI: AI is rapidly being commoditized

OpenSea, which calls itself the “world’s largest” nonfungible token (NFT) marketplace, received a Wells notice from the SEC, the company said in a blog post Wednesday, indicating the regulator may…

SEC takes aim at NFT marketplace OpenSea

Kissner previously served as Twitter’s chief information security officer, and held senior security and privacy positions at Apple, Google, and Lacework.

Ex-Twitter CISO Lea Kissner appointed as LinkedIn security chief

Featured Article

A comprehensive list of 2024 tech layoffs

A complete list of all the known layoffs in tech, from Big Tech to startups, broken down by month throughout 2024.

A comprehensive list of 2024 tech layoffs

It’s been more than a year since Tesla agreed to open its Supercharger network to electric vehicles from other automakers, like General Motors and Ford. But Tesla’s network of nearly…

Tesla’s Supercharger network is still unavailable to non-Tesla EVs

Tumblr is making the move to WordPress. After its 2019 acquisition by WordPress.com parent company Automattic in a $3 million fire sale, the new owner has focused on improving Tumblr’s…

Tumblr to move its half a billion blogs to WordPress

Back in February, Google paused its AI-powered chatbot Gemini’s ability to generate images of people after users complained of historical inaccuracies. Told to depict “a Roman legion,” for example, Gemini would show an anachronistic…

Google says it’s fixed Gemini’s people-generating feature

Exclusive: Millennium Space Systems will soon have a new CEO as Jason Kim has departed the company, TechCrunch has learned. 

The CEO of Boeing’s satellite maker, Millennium Space, has quietly left the company

As of the company’s most recent financial quarter, Apple’s Services bsuiness represented about one-quarter of the tech giant’s revenue.

Apple reportedly cuts 100 jobs working on Books and other services

After a long week of coding, you might assume San Francisco’s builders would retreat into the Bay Area’s mountains, beaches or vibrant clubbing scene. But in reality, when the week…

Born from San Francisco’s AI hackathons, Agency lets you see what your AI agents do

You’ve got the product — now how do you find customers? And once you find those customers, how do you keep them coming back for more? At TechCrunch Disrupt 2024,…

VCs and founders talk finding (and keeping) product-market fit at TechCrunch Disrupt 2024

Snapchat announced on Wednesday that it’s releasing new resources for educators to help them create safe environments in their schools by better understanding how their students use the app. The…

Snapchat releases new teen safety resources for educators

Marty Kausas, Pylon’s CEO and co-founder, says they quickly learned that the omnichannel approach the company originally took was just a first step, and customers were clamoring for more.

Pylon lands $17M investment to build a full service B2B customer service platform

Update 8/27: The Polaris Dawn launch has been pushed back a day and is now planned for Wednesday, August 28 after a helium leak was detected ahead of its takeoff.…

Polaris Dawn will push the limits of SpaceX’s human spaceflight program — here’s how to watch it launch live

Pryzm announced its $2 million pre-seed round, led by XYZ Venture Capital and Amplify.LA.

Pryzm is a new kind of defense tech startup: One that helps others win lucrative contracts

Comun, a digital bank focused on serving immigrants in the United States, has raised $21.5 million in a Series A funding round less than nine months after announcing a $4.5…

Fast-growing immigrant-focused neobank Comun has secured $21.5M in new funding just months after its last raise

Calm is rolling out a suite of new features to make it easier for people to fit mindfulness into their lives. Most notably, the app is launching “Taptivities,” which are…

Calm’s new Story-like mindfulness exercises offer an alternative to social media

The NotePin, which hits preorder Wednesday, is $169 and comes with a free starter plan or a Pro Plan, which costs $79 per year.

Plaud takes a crack at a simpler AI pin

CoinSwitch, a prominent Indian cryptocurrency exchange, is suing rival platform WazirX to recover trapped funds.

CoinSwitch sues WazirX to recover trapped funds

Web browser and search startup Brave has laid off 27 employees across the different departments, TechCrunch has learned. The company confirmed the layoffs but didn’t give more details about the…

Brave lays off 27 employees

Zepto co-founder Aadit Palicha told a group of analysts and investors on Tuesday that the three-year-old Indian delivery startup anticipates growth of 150% in the next 12 months, a remarkable…

Zepto, snagging $1B in 90 days, projects 150% annual growth