India鈥檚 Zomato faces heat for plans to deliver food in 10 minutes

MUMBAI 鈥 Indian food-delivery giant Zomato Ltd. is facing a backlash on social media for its plans to roll out a 10-minute food service that critics say raises road-safety risks for delivery riders.
CEO Deepinder Goyal said in a post late on Monday the service 鈥淶omato Instant鈥 would rely on a densely located network of so-called food 鈥渇inishing stations,鈥 which will house bestseller items from restaurants and use a sophisticated demand prediction algorithm.
鈥淣obody in the world has so far delivered hot and fresh food in under 10 minutes at scale,鈥 Mr. Goyal wrote on LinkedIn and Twitter. 鈥淲e were eager to be the first.鈥
Within hours, Zomato鈥檚 announcement sparked a flurry of responses. A lawmaker questioned the business model while executives raised concerns about rider safety on Indian roads.
Zomato, which counts China鈥檚 Ant Group as an investor, did not respond to requests for comment.
Many on social media urged a rethink, saying food can wait as even ambulances in India take longer to reach patients. Some on LinkedIn questioned the need for such a model.
鈥淚 don鈥檛 want to eat food that someone has brought to me while keeping his life at risk,鈥 wrote Gunjan Rastogi, a researcher at India鈥檚 RSB Insights & Analytics.
Karti P. Chidambaram, an Indian lawmaker, tweeted: 鈥淭his is absurd! It鈥檚 going to put undue pressure on the delivery personnel.鈥
The Zomato CEO鈥檚 Monday announcement started by saying: 鈥淲e will start with a clarification… we do not put any pressure on delivery partners.鈥
After it failed to convince many, Mr. Goyal issued another tweet on Tuesday stressing that delivery will be 鈥渟afe鈥 for riders who will face no penalties, urging people to understand the model 鈥渂efore the outrage.鈥
鈥淨uick commerce鈥 grocery startups in India have been a rage with SoftBank-backed Blinkit and rival Zepto expanding rapidly. Reuters reported in January delivery bikers said they faced pressure to meet deadlines, which often led to speeding, for fear of being rebuked by store managers.
Critics say risks are too high on Indian roads. Even in cities, most roads are riddled with potholes and motorists violate basic rules. The World Bank says India has a death every four minutes on its roads and crashes kill around 150,000 people each year.
Nevertheless, many customers have been hooked to quick commerce grocery services to meet their instant shopping needs.
鈥淚 would be happy to get my food in 10 minutes,鈥 said one LinkedIn user, Sonu Sekharan. 鈥 Reuters


