HomeNewsBusinessIndians get hooked on 10-minute grocery apps, squeezing small retailers

Indians get hooked on 10-minute grocery apps, squeezing small retailers

Indians long relied on visits to small neighbourhood outlets for groceries or got free deliveries from them via phone orders, before the rise of e-commerce triggered by Amazon and Walmart's Flipkart over the past decade.

June 11, 2024 / 07:53 IST
Story continues below Advertisement
Swiggy warehouses are mushrooming across India to deliver everything from milk and bananas to condoms and roses within minutes
Swiggy warehouses are mushrooming across India to deliver everything from milk and bananas to condoms and roses within minutes.

In a middle-class suburb of Mumbai, workers at SoftBank-backed Swiggy's grocery warehouse race against time to deliver orders within 10 minutes. Their speed is tracked by the seconds on a screen that flashes red warnings for slowness.

Outside in sweltering heat, Swiggy's bikers, sporting the firm's trademark bright orange T-shirt, frantically collect packed grocery orders to deliver them nearby, while others return to tackle another shipment assigned on their app and waiting.

Story continues below Advertisement

"Ideally, one needs to get done with the entire (pickup) process in 1 minute 30 seconds," warehouse manager Prateek Salunke said.

– a business model that is reshaping how Indians shop.