logo
Made tough choice to close fast-fashion delivery startup Blip: Co-founder Ansh Agarwal

Made tough choice to close fast-fashion delivery startup Blip: Co-founder Ansh Agarwal

Minta day ago
New Delhi, Jul 13 (PTI) Bengaluru-based startup Blip, which was into fast fashion delivery, has been shut down, co-founder Ansh Agarwal said in a LinkedIn post, citing limited capital and go-to-market challenges.
Blip offered 30-minute doorstep delivery of the latest fashion apparel and accessories in Bengaluru, and its closure highlights the broader strain on early-stage innovation for startups, as they face harsh funding realities, despite promising growth narratives of the quick commerce space.
In the backdrop of cautious investor sentiments and fierce competition, new ventures, overall, struggle to scale up and face operational challenges within the country's evolving startup ecosystem.
Among the prominent startups that have shut down over the last one year are Koo, touted as an Indian replica of Twitter, now X (that blamed failed attempts at partnerships and harsh funding winter for its closure), and Nithin Kamath-backed edtech Stoa School.
"Update: We are shutting down Blip after building for over a year. We have finally called it a day. While we continue to believe in this space, bootstrapping the business with limited capital made it extremely difficult for us to participate in the market," Agarwal wrote in a post.
The Blip model, being different from the rest, did a lot of first-in-market implementations that took its own time to convince stakeholders. It affected a go-to-market strategy and "slowed things considerably down for us", he said.
"The result of limited working capital and failure to implement our go-to-market in an efficient manner, it didn't make sense for us to continue, and hence, we had to make a difficult choice to shut blip down," he said.
Agarwal conceded that he personally continues to believe in the space and understands the need for verticalisation of quick-commerce in general.
"Sadly, it won't be us. I am extremely proud of what we did at blip. Being first in the market and changing the narratives with the resources we had kept me awake at night, but it was all worth it," he further said.
Thanking co-founder Sarvesh Kedia, Agarwal said he couldn't have asked for a better partner, one who could take anything thrown at him, with rigour.
Orange background

Try Our AI Features

Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:

Comments

No comments yet...

Related Articles

IFFCO MD Dr. US Awasthi On India's Cooperative Push And How It's Empowering Farmers
IFFCO MD Dr. US Awasthi On India's Cooperative Push And How It's Empowering Farmers

Time of India

time27 minutes ago

  • Time of India

IFFCO MD Dr. US Awasthi On India's Cooperative Push And How It's Empowering Farmers

Dr. Uday Shankar Awasthi, Managing Director of IFFCO and renowned as the "Fertiliser Man of India," shares his experiences working with nine Indian Prime Ministers. He highlights contributions from leaders like Rajiv Gandhi, who initiated computerisation, and H.D. Deve Gowda's focus on farmers. Dr. Awasthi also shares his experience with current Prime Minister Narendra Modi. Under Dr. Awasthi's leadership, IFFCO has risen to global prominence. Watch Read More

India, US talks for proposed trade pact going on at a very fast pace: Piyush Goyal
India, US talks for proposed trade pact going on at a very fast pace: Piyush Goyal

Time of India

time29 minutes ago

  • Time of India

India, US talks for proposed trade pact going on at a very fast pace: Piyush Goyal

Live Events (You can now subscribe to our (You can now subscribe to our Economic Times WhatsApp channel The negotiations between India and the US for a proposed trade agreement are going at a fast pace, Commerce and Industry Minister Piyush Goyal said on Indian team has reached Washington for the next round of talks on the first tranche of the bilateral trade agreement."Negotiations are going on at a very fast pace and in the spirit of mutual cooperation so that we can come out with a win-win trade complementing agreement with the United States," Goyal told reporters Commerce Secretary Sunil Barthwal at a separate event said that negotiations for proposed trade agreements with the European Union (EU) and the US are going said that the free trade agreements (FTAs) that India is doing are one of the key enablers to promote global capability centres (GCCs) in the country."So if you look at the free trade agreements today, which we are doing with the UK, which we have just announced, with European Union (EU), which is going on, with the US again discussions are on with several other countries in the world," Barthwal said here at CII GCC Business Summit and the US are negotiating a bilateral trade agreement (BTA). They are targeting to conclude the first phase of the pact by fall (September-October) of this India and the EU are also negotiating an June 2022, India and the 27-nation EU bloc resumed negotiations for a comprehensive free trade agreement, an investment protection agreement and a pact on geographical indications (GIs) after a gap of over eight talks stalled in 2013 due to differences over the level of opening up of the markets. India and the EU are targeting to conclude the free trade deal by the end of this the secretary said that today's agreements are different from the traditional FTAs, which were confined to traditional trade, tariffs and manufacturing. The new pacts are a more complex set of agreements which include services, a regulatory system in services, including the FDI (foreign direct investment)."Those are being looked at (in the new pacts)," he said, adding that now there is also an institutional mechanism in these pacts to look at issues like harmonising regulations and these are important facets of GCCs, he said, adding that modern FTAs will lead to the innovation corridor, which will facilitate GCCs in India "We are looking at the IPR (intellectual property rights) chapters. We are looking at what the coordination mechanism will be in case disputes arise. That is another area which we look at in FTAs," the secretary the new age pacts focus on principles of digital trade, which the partner countries have to adopt."If there is a data localisation or data privacy laws, then how will they be looked at. That is another angle, which we define in these FTAs," he new trade agreements, Barthwal said, are addressing a whole gamut of issues. "And therefore, it is taking a lot of time when we do these FTAs. There are detailed discussions, detailed deliberations, and detailed stakeholder consultation," he added that in the FTA with the UK, there is a chapter on innovation, which was not the case earlier. There is also a mechanism to set up innovation working groups under that deal, which was announced on May 6, but has not yet been signed."The ultimate point of these FTAs is that once these are (businesses) will get certainty about those regulations, because those regulations are not going to change unless and until you have agreed differently. And it gives certainty," Barthwal said.

HCLTech starts the year strong, but margins raise worry
HCLTech starts the year strong, but margins raise worry

Mint

time31 minutes ago

  • Mint

HCLTech starts the year strong, but margins raise worry

HCL Technologies Ltd reported better-than-expected revenue in the June quarter and now sees full-year growth at 3-5% against 2-5% earlier, but the management lowering its full-year profitability by 100 basis points was a sore spot. On Monday, the country's third-largest information technology (IT) services company reported $3.55 billion revenue for the June quarter, up 1.34% sequentially. The performance exceeded expectations of 37 analysts polled by Bloomberg, who expected HCLTech to report $3.53 billion in revenue. This was its best first quarter in six years. HCLTech performed better than larger peer Tata Consultancy Services (TCS) in a lumpy first quarter because of its Europe business, and expects a stable FY26 despite lingering macroeconomic uncertainty. TCS ended the first quarter with $7.42 billion in revenue, down 0.59% sequentially. The Noida-headquartered company's management sounded confident. 'We observed that the environment remains stable from an overall perspective, with some variations across specific verticals. It also did not deteriorate as feared at the start of the quarter,' said C Vijayakumar, chief executive of HCLTech, as part of his prepared remarks during the company's post-earnings press conference on Monday. Vijayakumar's commentary is in contrast to TCS chief executive K. Krithivasan, who called out delays in decision-making and project starts with respect to discretionary investments. The HCLTech management narrowed its revenue guidance for the full year. The company now expects revenue growth between 3% and 5% in constant currency terms, higher than its 2% guidance on the lower end it had called out in April. Constant currency does not take currency fluctuations into account. While TCS's Krithivasan said that non-essential tech spending, which is crucial in boosting revenue of homegrown IT outsourcers, must be back once uncertainty lifts, Vijayakumar was optimistic of growth along expected lines. 'We are optimistic about meeting a revised guidance supported by our superior revenue growth and positive booking expectations for the upcoming quarters,' said Vijayakumar. For now, most of the company's incremental business of $47 million came from businesses based in Europe, which contributed 87% of it. HCL gets almost a third of its business from Europe. In terms of verticals, much of the incremental revenue came from banks and financial institutions, which makes up a little more than a fifth of the company's business and is its largest cash cow. HCLTech got $766 million from financial institutions last quarter. However, there were bigger causes of concern. The Noida-based IT outsourcer reported $450 million in net profit, down 9.3% sequentially. This was the company's second successive quarter of net profit decline. HCLTech's operating margins also raised concerns. Its profitability declined 160 basis points to 16.9% during the quarter. One basis point is a hundredth of a percentage point. The company even reduced its operating margin band to 17-18% for the full year as against its 18-19% target in April. Chief financial officer Shiv Walia called it one-time impact, attributing the drop to a bunch of factors, adding 'specialized hiring as well as skill and location mismatch and a one-off impact of customer bankruptcy' caused the margins to drop, among other smaller factors. While the software products business is historically its primary margin booster, operating margins for this vertical declined 190 basis points sequentially to end at 22.4% for the June quarter. Notably, HCLTech is one of the few large IT outsourcers that has a sizeable reliance on selling and licensing revenue of software products. Its revenue from its software business fell 4.6% on a quarterly basis to $330 million; still, the bigger impact of this arm is on the company's operating margins. Unlike TCS, HCLTech reduced headcount in the quarter. The company cut staff by 269 in the April-June 2025 period to end with 223,151, whereas TCS added 5,090 people in the first three months of the fiscal to end with 613,069 employees. Two of the country's three largest IT outsourcers adding headcount implies better signs ahead. More headcount in an IT services company means more demand for IT services and vice-versa. This increase in headcount comes on the backdrop of a tariff war started by US president Donald Trump coupled with geopolitical uncertainties. Both have put IT spends of large companies, many of whom count HCLTech as their IT vendor, in limbo. The company also highlighted a restructuring plan that was put in place. 'The restructuring consists of two components. One is a lot of facilities that we are not utilizing, mostly in locations outside India, is something which we believe we should optimize, because we have not been using some of these facilities, especially some of it related to our acquisitions,' said Vijayakumar. He also mentioned that the headcount would be cut because of the programme, in order to get to the company's 18-19% operating margin aspiration. 'The second is also that there will be some talent ramp-down that has happened, especially in some of the geographies outside India,' said Vijayakumar, adding that the upper end of its guidance factored a cost component to its restructuring programme. Like TCS, HCLTech did not call out orders or revenue from Gen AI, but announced a dividend of ₹ 12 per share. The company's shares fell 1.41% to close at ₹ 1,614 on Monday. The 30-share benchmark BSE Sensex index closed 0.3% lower at 82,253.46 points. The earnings were announced after market hours.

DOWNLOAD THE APP

Get Started Now: Download the App

Ready to dive into a world of global content with local flavor? Download Daily8 app today from your preferred app store and start exploring.
app-storeplay-store