Bengaluru: Betting on the 10-minute instant delivery of grocery, e-commerce company Grofers’ Founder and Chief Executive Officer Albinder Dhindsa announced rebranding of the platform as Blinkit on Monday. 


Charting the course of the company's journey, Dhindsa in a blogpost wrote, “Once upon a time, a few months ago, we started on a journey to build the future of commerce with 10 minute delivery of most of the stuff our customers need in their daily lives. Today, we already process over a million orders a week, across 12 cities in India. And this is just a start."


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Sharing the development Dhindsa tweeted, "The 1 retweet and 1 like and we’ll change the name of Grofers in the blink of an eye. Eyes."



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The rebranding comes months after the company rolled out the 10-minute delivery in August this year, and initially launched the service across the top 12 Indian cities.


"We learnt a lot as Grofers, and all our learnings, our team, and our infrastructure is being repurposed to pivot to something with staggering product-market fit – quick commerce. Today, we are surging ahead as a new company, and we have a new mission statement – “instant commerce indistinguishable from magic". And we will no longer be doing this as Grofers – we will be doing it as Blinkit," wrote Dhindsa in the blog.


Dhindsa told the publication Moneycontrol that the company was doing 1.25 lakh orders on a daily basis. Grofers had recently acquired the unicorn status or $1 billion in valuation after it raised more than $120 million from food aggregator Zomato and existing investor Tiger Global Management earlier this year.


In a move to push its quick commerce offering across Indian cities, the company has partnered with local store owners and following a ‘dark store strategy’ dedicated towards online e-commerce deliveries.


The competion in the quick e-commerce delivery space has heated up. Blinkit faces stiff competition from foodtech giant Swiggy, which is focussing on 15-minute delivery through its Instamart offering, and quick grocery delivery start-up, Zepto, which also offers 10 minutes delivery. Other companies in the space include BigBasket, Dunzo, and others.


Swiggy announced $700-million investment in the express grocery delivery service Instamart in its quest to double down on non-food delivery categories. According to Moneycontrol report, the company was registering more than one million orders per week and aims to roll out 15-minute deliveries to top cities by January next  year.