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by changer1
682 days ago
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thanks for the advice. i wanna build an online food delivery marketplace and my aim is not huge profitability actually. i just wanna build something that is useful and agile. and i don't think i'll spend much money until it gets to the breakeven point. so i feel like i should give it a try. |
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Initial ideas are easy, execution is harder, and maintaining it across time and devices and changing tech is very hard. Delivering static things like books or phone cases or laptop chargers is one thing. Delivering food is a completely different ball game.
I agree with your overall sentiment though, we'd all be better off if our food originated nearer to us and we had the proper systems to make local food more profitable for smaller food producers. But Amazon, WalMart, Costco, Hello Fresh, Full Circle, Blue Apron and dozens of other very deep pockets make it very difficult to keep up. You have to be better at something besides price or convenience, because they're run circles around you with those two. For example, you have certain advantages when you're "small" that an Amazon just simply can't compete with. Things like quality, small quantities, hyper-local, hyper-fresh, customer service, high-touch items, etc. Amazon has disadvantages because of their scale, so lean into those areas that don't scale to get some traction.