Tighter credit markets, slower consumer spending, and a global tech stock rout are forcing entrepreneurs to abandon the growth-at-all-costs mentality in favour of profitability
“For five years not one investor asked me when or how we would be profitable. That’s how easily money was flowing. It was crazy. Now every VC only asks when we will be profitable,” says a startup founder.
Meanwhile, just last week Zomato, whose stock price has plunged 26 percent since listing, reported a surprise profit after tax (PAT) of Rs 2 crore in the three months ending June 2023—a first in the online food delivery giant’s 15-year history. In fact, a deferred tax of Rs 17 crore led to the single digit PAT figure; profit before tax stood at a neat Rs 15 crore.
A few days later social commerce platform Meesho, backed by Prosus, Softbank and Sequoia, said that it had turned PAT positive in July 2023, helped by a 70 percent drop in customer acquisition costs from roughly Rs 250 two years ago to Rs 50-60 today. Although Meesho, which recorded a loss of Rs 3,251 crore on revenues of Rs 3,232 crore in FY22, still has a long way to go, the signs are upbeat.
“The Indian startup ecosystem is making a hard pivot from growth to profitability. Startups and their investors are adapting, redefining priorities, and embracing new business models and cost efficiency,” says Mohit Rana, partner at RedSeer, a Gurugram-based consultancy.
The reasons for this “hard pivot” are many—higher cost of capital, higher interest rates, a decline in the value of technology stocks globally and in India, the recession in developed markets and an overall slowdown in consumer spending. But the most significant is that VCs are less willing to dish out cash. Consider how startup funding peaked to $50 billion in FY22 and dropped to $15 billion in FY23, as per RedSeer. That's a 70 percent nose-dive.