
1—Zomato: company snapshot
Zomato launched in 2008 as a menu and restaurant discovery utility and evolved into a multi-vertical food-tech platform: food delivery, quick commerce (Blinkit), B2B supplies (Hyperpure), and going-out/dining. In FY24 the quick-commerce business (Blinkit) emerged as a major growth engine, materially lifting GOV and order volumes across the consolidated group. Zomato’s public filings and investor materials make this transition traceable in numbers and strategy.
2—Growth arc: from menu scans to platform scale
The arc is simple, but execution is hard: solve a real pain (menus → discovery), prove product value, add adjacent services (delivery → groceries → B2B), then scale distribution and monetization. Key inflection points:
- 2008–2014: discovery and reviews, building trust & network effects.
- 2015: delivery becomes a core product — the platform starts routing monetizable transactions.
- 2020s: acquisitions (e.g., Blinkit) and product diversification; platform moves from single-use utility to multi-service habit.
By FY24 the company had substantial GOV expansion in quick commerce and a step-change in order volumes and monthly transacting customers for that vertical — the payoff of supply density and localization.
3—How Zomato makes money—the revenue engine (concise breakdown)
Zomato’s business model is multi-headed; monetization happens across product, ad and service layers:
- Platform fees & commissions — restaurants pay for orders and for on-platform prominence.
- Quick commerce revenue — Blinkit sales generate GOV and direct revenue; as store density and AOV rise, so does revenue.
- Subscriptions & loyalty — membership offers (Gold/Pro) drive engagement and higher lifetime value.
- Ads & promoted listings — in-app real estate is monetizable and high margin.
- B2B (Hyperpure) — selling ingredients and supplies to restaurants provides a differentiated margin stream.
FY24 quick-commerce evidence (core facts): in FY24 Blinkit’s GOV scaled to ₹12,469 crore (≈93% YoY growth), order volumes grew to 203 million (≈71% YoY), and AOV expanded — direct proof that distribution + demand economics improved materially.
4—Who uses Zomato? (audience anatomy)
Primary audiences:
- Urban 18–35s (students, professionals) — habits of frequent meal ordering and mobile usage.
- Working couples and multiplexed households — high lifetime ordering frequency.
- Small restaurants and cloud kitchens — business users of Hyperpure and promotional products.
Zomato’s segmentation is behavioral: time of order, cuisine affinity, price sensitivity, and local availability. That gives marketing very granular targeting hooks.
5—Competition: Zomato vs Swiggy (and quick-commerce entrants)
Two axes define the rivalry:
- Brand & content — Zomato’s irreverent voice vs Swiggy’s utility-first tone.
- Fulfillment & speed — Swiggy and other players (Instamart, Zepto) fight supply/density and cost economics. The quick-commerce race (Blinkit vs Instamart and others) is capital and execution intensive. Industry reports show Blinkit’s strong GOV density and higher take-rates vs peers, but rising competition pressures margins and requires continuous investment.
6—The marketing playbook (deep dive — how the machine actually runs)
Zomato’s go-to-market couples creative virality with performance plumbing and distribution economics. Tactically:
1. Brand voice as a low-cost amplifier
Witty, culturally tuned social posts and push notifications create organic traction and earned media; this reduces paid CAC and amplifies product launches.
2. Product-led activation
In-app messaging, onboarding flows and first-order offers turn awareness into trial. Loyalty mechanics and periodic offers push frequency.
3. Geo & supply alignment
Quick commerce requires store density; marketing focuses neighborhood spend where delivery times and inventory availability are strongest — a practical, ROI-driven media map.
4. Measurement & optimization
Zomato tracks orders, AOV, GOV, transacting customers and adjusted EBITDA by business unit; campaign teams optimize to these end-KPIs. FY24 investor reporting emphasizes GOV and orders as the core unit economics to be shifted.

7—Viral campaigns, creative branding & loyalty programs
Zomato converts creative assets into measurable outcomes:
- Viral social: posts that are culturally tuned, creating high organic spread.
- Influencer seeding: local creators for launch & local market buzz.
- Zomato Gold/Pro: membership mechanics that reduce churn and lift average ordering frequency (and perceived value). These are retention levers, not vanity metrics.
8—Data, personalization & UX as conversion fuel
Zomato’s personalized recommendations, search ranking and push cadence are grounded in rich behavioral signals — order history, time of day, local supply, and promotional responsiveness. The product layer reduces friction (one-tap reorder, local favorites), turning acquisition into reproducible revenue. The FY24 investor commentary highlights investments in product and data to scale retention and monetize new verticals.
9—Headwinds & pragmatic risks
- Unit economics under pressure: aggressive store rollouts for Blinkit increase near-term adjusted losses even as GOV rises. FY25 quarter letters show investment-led dips in adjusted EBITDA for quick commerce.
- Competition: players such as Swiggy (Instamart), Zepto and large retail platforms are competing on speed and price.
- Macro demand swings: consumer spend cycles affect average order frequency and AOV.
These risks are manageable but require disciplined measurement and channel ROI sprints.
10—Actionable lessons for marketers & startups
- Align marketing with operations: for on-demand businesses the media plan must match supply capability. Market neighborhoods where delivery timelines are demonstrably strong.
- Use brand voice to lower CAC: cultural, sharable creative pulls paid costs down by increasing organic reach.
- Measure the right KPIs: orders, GOV, AOV and monthly transacting customers — not vanity metrics. Tie creative tests to these measures.
- Invest in retention: incremental LTV from membership/loyalty often outperforms marginal acquisition spend.
11 — ACME Advertising Co. — how we’d scale a Zomato-style business (OOH, Retail, Transit, Electronic & POSM)
Zomato’s growth blueprint shows the value of aligning media with product density. ACME slices channel spend to tactical KPIs.
OOH (Hyperlocal hoardings & shelter kits)
- Target: micro-clusters around newly opened quick commerce stores and high commuter corridors.
- Objective: boost local app installs and first orders within a 1–3 km radius.
- KPI: geo-tagged installs and first-order rate uplift.
Retail media (co-branded islands & QR activations)
- Target: grocery stores and partner outlets.
- Objective: convert walk-in shoppers into app users with instant coupons.
- KPI: coupon redemptions and AOV of app first orders.
Transit (bus flanks, metro card panels)
- Target: office corridors and college routes — peak commute impressions.
- Objective: drive lunchtime and dinner conversions with time-boxed creative.
- KPI: uplift in midday and evening order volumes in campaign zones.
Electronic / DOOH (dynamic creative)
- Target: high-footfall retail and mall precincts.
- Objective: rotate creative by hour (breakfast/lunch/dinner) and surface time-relevant promos.
- KPI: QR scans, promo redemptions, campaign CTR to landing page.
POSM (in-store branding & table tents)
- Target: partner restaurants and cloud kitchen pickups.
- Objective: reduce friction — “order again via app” with single-tap QR/UTM.
- KPI: repeat order uplift within 30 days.
Pilot (30 days)
- Micro-OOH + DOOH + retail islands + POSM + geo-targeted social.
- Measure installs, first orders, AOV, redemption rate and CPFO (cost per first order). ACME provides weekly sprint reports and creative iteration.
Conclusion
Zomato’s evolution proves this: when product distribution, a sharp brand voice, and data-driven lifecycle marketing align, attention converts into durable revenue. Quick-commerce growth is capital-intensive, but when matched with hyperlocal marketing (online + offline) the economics can scale. FY24–FY25 disclosures show GOV and order growth as proof points—now the job is to optimize channel ROI while protecting unit economics.
Contact ACME Advertising Co.
Phone: +91 8013-8013-59
Email: sales@acmeadvertiser.com
Website: www.acmeadvertiser.com
