Area of business: Intra-city logistics
Founder: Abhishek Bansal and Vaibhav Khandelwal
Funding: $10 million from Eight Road Ventures
Orders: 30,000 orders per day
Target: 100,000 orders per day by the end of 2017
The company anticipates the number of delivery boys to grow at 15 per cent a month, with an attrition rate of 4 per cent, as compared to 20 per cent with similar players. In terms of deliveries per day the company is going 20 per cent month on month.
Business model “We had to battle to make this model unit economics-viable. It took us six to eight months to figure that out. In 2016 after Series-A, to get our next funds we had to get good fundamentals in our company,” said Bansal.
Shadowfax has developed a model by which it has identified the peak timings of each sector it works in. According to the company, this has helped them to thrive in the sector at a time when most people have shut up shop.
“We work with food grocery and e-commerce and have aggregated the demand in such a way that any point of time anyone who comes to the platform will get orders. Grocery has a peak early morning between 8 and 11, and in the evening between 5 and 11. Food has the peak at noon to 3 in the afternoon and 8 to 11 in the night,” said Bansal.
Explaining how the model works, Bansal says Shadowfax tells an outlet like Mcdonald’s, which has an internal cost of delivery of Rs 70, that it would do the delivery at Rs 55. Of this Shadowfax gives Rs 45 per order to the delivery boy. If the delivery boy works for four hours and does 10 orders, he can earn up to Rs 450. The company has an exclusive partnership with Amazon for all the latter’s deliveries, and it also promises one-day deliveries. It counts Bigbasket, Swiggy and McDonald’s as its clients. The company has three models to on-board delivery boys. The delivery boys can on-board as full-time, part-time as well freelancer (no fixed working time or days). They need to give their Aadhaar number and through that a complete background verification takes place. Of the 2,500 delivery boys, around 20 per cent are college students.
Challenge The biggest challenge, according to Bansal, is driving efficiencies in the number of orders per hour through the day. “Logistics is a very execution-heavy game and one should be able to execute the whole process well,” says Systla.
A lot of logistics companies either pivoted their model or shut up shop in 2016. Systla says one has to figure out how densely a company can spread so as to keep a good flow of orders running throughout the day. Other than this an important challenge seen in the industry is high attrition levels among the delivery boys. In the unorganised sector, the attrition level is as high as 20 per cent a month and in the organised space it is close to 15 per cent a month.
Road ahead The company plans to cover 10 more cities in the next 12 months. The company processes close to 30,000 orders each day and plans to increase this to 100,000 orders per day by the end of this year. It also plans to be completely profitable in the next one year. “Any products or goods moving intra-city should be through our platform. We also plan to on board at least 10,000 more delivery boys on the portal,” said Bansal.
On the immediate basis the ompany wants to expand to as many cities as possible. The company will also be looking at tie-ups with more restaurants and retailers to keep the order rate going throughout the day.
Expert Take: The massive opportunity is obvious, but innovation is key |