City
Epaper

Indian online food delivery market to hit $8bn by 2022

By IANS | Published: January 28, 2020 4:07 PM

Rapid digitisation and growth in both online buyer base and spending will help India's online food industry to become a $8 billion market by 2022 growing at a CAGR of 25-30 per cent, a new report said on Tuesday.

Open in App

The report by Google and Boston Consulting Group (BCG) revealed that variety in cuisines (35 per cent) was one of the top reasons for recurrent use of online food ordering apps, followed by good discounts and convenience.

"Food tech has now made its presence in greater than 500 cities in India and with consumer confidence growing, there are new opportunities for the players to 'win with the consumer' in an evolving market,'" said Roma Datta Chobey, Director-Travel, BFSI, Classifieds, Gaming, Telco & Payments, Google.

Peer or network advocacy (52 per cent) played a critical role in drawing people to try online food ordering for the first time.

This was followed by advertisements (19 per cent) that emerged to be a strong driver in metros and among the higher income groups across the country.

"Overall online spending in India is rising rapidly and expected to grow at 25 per cent over the next five years to reach over $130 billion," said Rachit Mathur, Managing Director and Partner, India Lead of BCG's Consumer & Retail Practice.

"Riding on the wave of rapid digitization and steadily growing consumption, the reach of Food Tech companies has grown six times over the last couple of years and will continue to increase further," Mathur added.

Zomato and Swiggy currently dominate the online food delivery market in India. Zomato last week announced it has acquired Uber's Food Delivery Business in India in an all-stock deal of nearly $350 million and Uber will have 9.99 per cent stake in the Deepinder Goyal-led food delivery platform.

The Google-BCG report also suggested that consumers have common impediments that hinder adoption.

A fifth of the respondents stated a lack of trust in the app as the main barrier to usage.

Delivery charges (18 per cent), food quality concerns (13 per cent) and lack of customization (10 per cent) are other reasons why customers have, so far, not experimented with online food ordering.

"Interestingly, these observations vary based on the maturity of the market. While delivery charges is the top reason for not ordering food online in metro cities; in Tier I cities, lack of trust in apps (29 per cent) is the primary roadblock," the findings showed.

"Food tech startups have revolutionized the way Ind eat. Ordering food online is now a habit. There is large headroom to increase reach, engagement and usage frequency for food tech apps," said Abheek Singhi, Senior Partner and Managing Director at Boston Consulting Group.

( With inputs from IANS )

Tags: indiagoogleBCGBoston Consulting Group
Open in App

Related Stories

BusinessGoogle Layoffs: Tech Giant Lays Off About 200 Employees From Its 'Core' Organisation

TechnologyGoogle Down: Users Encounter 502 Error, Issues Reported with Maps, Classroom, Earth and More

TechnologyGoogle Bans Over 2 Million Policy-Violating Apps from Play Store in 2023

NationalSexually Transmitted Diseases: Rising Number of STDs Cases Concern for Increasing Infertility in India, Warn Doctors

InternationalIndia Aiming To Be “Superpower”, While We’re “Begging” To Avoid Bankruptcy: Pakistani Leader of Opposition (Watch Video)

कारोबार Realted Stories

BusinessAdani Green secures USD 400 mn from international banks for 750 MW power projects

BusinessCAG of India, Auditor General of Nepal sign MoU to enhance collaboration in auditing

BusinessAdani Green secures $400 million from international banks for 750 MW solar projects

BusinessGold production from Indian mines surges by 86 pc in Feb, copper output up 29 pc

BusinessValue of Rs 2000 banknotes in circulation plummets to Rs 7961 cr, 97.76 pc returned: RBI