<aside> 👤 Sujoy Datta Product @Hike Messenger Linkedin, Email

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Idea

The plan is to scale up Swiggy’s marketplace by introducing tier-3 cities to its network. As a part of the operational testbed, the pilot project will be introduced to Jhansi*(Uttar Pradesh)*- a tier 3 city with a population of 36000 approximately(example). Once the extent of digitisation is a success, this model will be introduced in other tier 3 cities of India.


Exploring the problem

<aside> đź’ˇ To explore the pilot initiative it is indeed essential to understand why food delivery apps do not position their traditional marketplace set up in tier 3 cities.

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  1. The inherent mandate of food delivery using technology. As we know, the food delivery marketplace in India is largely centred around technology and applications. Considering the supply aspect, not only does being a Swiggy participant restaurant call for additional accountability in terms of registering their business on the app and exposing channels for expecting real-time orders.
    1. For a restaurant with daily revenue of INR 40k(assuming a quick food restaurant, to begin with) and with an initial positioning of 10 online orders per day(INR 300 average online order size) for the first quarter of pilot launch(assuming the audience is not used to online delivery at the time of launch), Swiggy will charge a 15% order commission on the total order bill.
    2. This narrows the data down to losing 15% on an average order size of INR 300 in the first quarter and equates to a monthly revenue gap of 13.5K. Tier 3 city restaurants are not very comfortable ideally acknowledging this revenue gap.
  2. Predominant idea of family dinners and home cooking. The volumes of food orders and the average order value would be considered low for tier 3 cities considering the fact that-
    1. Most individuals tend to “snack out” as per Consumer Affordability in Tier-1, Tier-2 and Tier-3 Cities of India - An Empirical Study and only individuals(bachelors/college students) who are distant from their home. Hence the volumes are insufficient, both in # of orders or Rupees, to generate any interest in the minds of decision-makers of food delivery start-ups.

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    2. Much more likely than proven, the audience of tier 3 cities finds the whole act of calling up their favourite dining restaurant/food store a bit more compatible as compared to deriving value out of omnichannel approaches to the marketplace. They would place orders ranging in methodologies where the price positioning of retail stores matches their affordability, and extent of the network.


Is it worth kickstarting a food-tech marketplace in a tier 3 city?

<aside> đź’ˇ Even if the road is bumpy as per the data-driven, there are a few factors that can easily tackle the user behaviour linked to the reluctant attitude in terms of accepting a food tech service.

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<aside> ✅ Considering the above factors, it looks favourable to expand Swiggy’s service to Tier 3 cities in India.

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Project Launch JTBD