HomeNewsBusinessZomato IPO: When data brings confusion, not clarity

Zomato IPO: When data brings confusion, not clarity

Something doesn't add up with regard to the food delivery market projections in India.

May 12, 2021 / 15:27 IST
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Note to readers: Hello world is a program developers run to check if a newly installed programming language is working alright. Startups and tech companies are continuously launching new software to run the real world. This column will attempt to be the "Hello World" for the real world.

A few days ago, food delivery startup Zomato said that it intends to go public. The company, which started as a restaurant review, listing and reservation platform back in 2008 has come a long way. As internet and venture capital supercharged India’s startup ecosystem, Foodiebay grew into Zomato. These days, it makes most of its money from food delivery. It charges a commission from the restaurant as well as a delivery fee from customers.

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We don’t know how or when it will go public yet, but when it does, it will be a great day for India’s exit-starved startup ecosystem. It will have created history in startup land.

As an observer of the ecosystem, I set out to make this column an informative take on Zomato’s potential initial public offering (IPO). What it means for the ecosystem, what does it do for the company, its perseverant founders, employees and ultimately investors. Sure Zomato has been losing money but that’s pretty much how most internet companies are built.