Aussie startup Voly has raised $18 million in a seed funding round led by Sequoia Capital India for its platform offering grocery deliveries within 15 minutes, with the business looking to further disrupt an antiquated industry.
The round also includes backing from existing investors Global Founders Capital and Aussie VC Artesian Capital.
Founded in April this year and launched in July, Voly is a service allowing consumers to order their groceries online, with delivery in 15 minutes or less.
Co-founders Mark Heath and Thibault Henry started out โwith just us two on a couple of bikesโ, Heath tells SmartCompany.
Now the startup has a team of 35 working in its offices, plus around 100 people in stores, picking out, packing and delivering orders.
While the founders donโt share any specific revenue figures, they do say the business is doubling month-on-month.
Voly is opening a new store every couple of weeks, ever expanding the reach of the service.
Deliveries are available in 42 Sydney suburbs. Next year, thatโs set to increase, with the service rolling out nationally.
โWeโve proven the model,โ Heath says.
โNow we want to bring it to more people.โ
How does Voly work?
The startup operates several so-called โdark storesโ or micro-fulfillment centres in Sydney. Voly owns all the products it sells, so doesnโt rely on any third-party providers.
Delivery riders are also employees, rather than gig-economy workers.
While the founders recognise the benefits of gig-economy riders in some situations, they opted to hire outright in order to focus on customer experience.
Theyโre trying to fundamentally change the way the grocery retail category operates. In order to get people on board, they needed stellar customer service.
โThere’s some amazing, amazing outcomes you get having a fully employed and fully engaged team of people that are looking after the customer,โ Heath notes.
That could be as simple as the customer getting the same rider every time, or riders getting to know the layout of apartment complexes โ not getting lost every time.
โThat brings with it a lot of trust.โ
Volyโs new grocery economy
Heath and Henry set out to disrupt what is one of the most traditional retail sectors, dominated by a few big players in the Australian market.
However, with the pandemic irreversibly changing the way people shop for other goods, Henry says itโs the right time for a business like Voly.
Over the past two years, people have been doing their Coles or Woolies shop online more often โ even for the first time.
โWe are offering a real alternative to this,โ Henry says.
Instead of doing a big weekly shop, customers can buy what they need three or four times a week, he adds. People are changing the very way they interact with their grocery suppliers, and the way they manage their food consumption.
โThereโs no need to plan ahead anymore.โ
In the future Heath sees the whole grocery sector switching to more โneeds basedโ services.
People will think about what they want for dinner, find a recipe and order everything there and then. Those ingredients will arrive within minutes, taking away any pressure or unwarranted planning time.
Of course, the founders see Voly being front and centre of this new grocery economy.
โWe want to create a brand that is pretty much the most-loved brand in Australia,โ Henry says.
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