Amazon to introduce 15-minute deliveries in Bengaluru this month for top-selling items

Amazon has been in India for over a decade and has committed to investing $26 billion in the country by 2030. (File Photo: AFP) (AFP)
Amazon has been in India for over a decade and has committed to investing $26 billion in the country by 2030. (File Photo: AFP) (AFP)

Summary

  • The move comes in response to increasing competition from quick commerce. 

NEW DELHI : Amazon is taking the fight to India’s quick commerce startups. Starting this December, the e-commerce giant will roll out 15-minute delivery in Bengaluru, targeting top-selling items like groceries and daily essentials. 

The move marks Amazon’s response to growing competition from ultra-fast delivery players, a segment reshaping consumer expectations in India.

Read this | CCI enlists attorney general R Venkataramani to clear path for Amazon, Flipkart antitrust probes

“On the speed side, our goal has been to make the largest selection of products available the next day, same day," said Amit Agarwal, senior vice president, Emerging Markets, Amazon, in an interview with Mint at the company’s Smbhav Summit in the national capital. 

“Prime Members can enjoy 4 million products the next day; 1 million products, same day, several hundred thousand in a few hours. Starting this December we will take the top-selling products and make them available in 15 minutes. Starting this December, we will take the top-selling products and make them available in 15 minutes."

Doubling down on speed

Amazon’s expansion into ultra-fast deliveries builds on its existing services like Amazon Fresh, which already offers 30-minute to one-hour deliveries for groceries and essentials. 

Read this | Capital is not going to decide winners in quick commerce: Swiggy’s Sriharsha Majety

Agarwal explained that the company is formalizing this model by creating a dedicated storefront to make it easier for customers to discover these products.

Orders will be fulfilled via a “combination of stores" including dark stores or partnering offline stores to service such deliveries, he said.

“It's a combination of things because you need to be closer to customers. You need smaller dark stores that can hold items closer to customers; in some cases where there is a supply chain already existing, we will obviously leverage that," he said.

Read this | Amazon-backed More Retail plans expansion of supermarkets in India

The selection will initially focus on fast-moving consumer goods, fresh produce, and everyday essentials, tapping into Amazon’s existing infrastructure, which processes 4 million next-day deliveries and 1 million same-day shipments.

“We were among the first ones that tried quick deliveries—it was called Prime Now…Given that we have the supply chain we believe now is the right time for us to open it up for 15-minutes," Agarwal added.

India’s e-commerce market is projected to grow from $70 billion in 2022 to $325 billion by the end of the decade, according to Deloitte. Post-pandemic, the market has surged as millions of consumers shifted to online shopping. Kantar estimates that India added 125 million online shoppers over the past three years, with another 80 million expected to join by 2025.

Yet, the rise of quick commerce players—promising deliveries in as little as 10 minutes—has eaten into the market share of both large marketplaces and local stores. Rivals like Flipkart and Myntra have also entered the fray, launching services such as "Flipkart Minutes" and 30-minute delivery in Bengaluru.

Amazon’s India play

Amazon has been in India for over a decade and has committed to investing $26 billion in the country by 2030, with $11 billion already poured into infrastructure such as data centres, fulfilment centres, logistics networks, and digital payment systems. The company’s efforts have created 1.4 million jobs and boosted exports from India.

“Our investments have been in the same areas. How do we digitize more sellers to add more selection, how do we build  logistics. A lot of investment goes in hard physical investments, building fulfilment centres, delivery centres, sort centres etc. All of this has also created 1.4 million jobs," Agarwal said. 

Amazon is also channelling investments into technology, particularly AWS (Amazon Web Services) and Prime Video, to diversify its offerings and strengthen its foothold across verticals. “Our job here is to also make a large business that's profitable. We have made substantial progress towards building a profitable business," he added.

Also read | Amazon India moving headquarters in Bengaluru to save costs

In fiscal year 2024, Amazon Seller Services, the marketplace arm of the company, reported a 14% increase in operating revenue to 25,406 crore, while losses narrowed by 29% to 3,470 crore, according to business intelligence platform Tofler.

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