Business Today

The Geeky Auto Company

AUTO- AGGREGATOR JUGNOO IS NOW ON A STEADY RIDE.

- By Goutam Das

Auto-aggregator Jugnoo is now on a steady ride

Chaterpal arrives in an autoricksh­aw decked with yellow and red garlands. He is lean with spiked hair and wears military fatigue trousers and a tee. His mobile phone is synced with three loud speakers at the back. Today, he isn’t playing any music.

This writer found Chaterpal through Jugnoo, an autoricksh­aw aggregatio­n app, and is taking a ride from Film City to Sector 137 in Noida, a distance of more than 10 km. Chaterpal lives in Ghaziabad and has two brothers and three uncles, who are also autoricksh­aw drivers “attached” to Jugnoo. “I get 20-25 rides a day through the app,” he says. Jugnoo keeps a 10 per cent commission per ride. “I do not make much money but I am always busy. I don’t have to wait much between rides. I have peace of mind.”

Jugnoo, the Chandigarh-based start-up that began autoricksh­aw aggregatio­n in November 2014, has figured out ways to keep auto drivers engaged. Over the past two years, it has evolved into an on-demand hyperlocal transport and logistics company – when drivers are not transporti­ng people, they are delivering meals

from restaurant­s to homes and offices. The value created in organising an unorganise­d sector has been supplement­ed by an effort to increase capacity utilisatio­n of vehicles on the street. According to the company, there are five million autoricksh­aws in India whose combined annual turnover is close to $26 billion. Their utilisatio­n, however, is a meagre 30 per cent.

Jugnoo’s investors, which include Paytm, Snow Leopard Ventures and Rocketship VC, have figured out this market’s potential. The start-up has raised $16 million so far and has been able to aggregate about 50,000 autoricksh­aws in 30 cities. About 15,000 are “weekly active”. It has five million customers and has done over 15 million rides. It is clocking an annualised revenue run rate of $10 million. A year ago, it was $4 million.

Of course, it has a giant of a rival in Ola – the taxi aggregator has over 1.5 lakh autoricksh­aws on its platform across 80 cities. According to sources, autoricksh­aws are a profitable category for Ola, unlike cabs, where there is more cash burn.

However, as Jugnoo is focussed only on autos, it has a weakness. An average consumer’s phone will not have more than two mobility apps. He may prefer an app that offers all options – cabs, e-rickshaws and autos. And while the base price of an auto, `15 for 1.5-2 km, is lower than that of a cab’s `40, discountin­g by cab aggregator­s can cannibalis­e the auto market. This writer paid `177 to Chaterpal for the ride from Film City to Sector 137 in Noida. The return journey, in Uber, cost `175.

When Uber entered the autoricksh­aw business in April 2015, Jugnoo founders, Samar Singla and Chinmay Agarwal, were petrified. “Shit man, what’s going to happen?” Singla said at one point. “We said let’s wait and watch. We just executed and nothing really happened. Growth slowed a bit,” says Singla. Uber has shut down its autoricksh­aw business. Other aggregator­s such as mGaadi have fallen by the wayside – it was acquired by Yatra in mid-2016. But Jugnoo has survived. The jury of BT’s Coolest Start-ups was impressed. “mGaadi had good traction both on the driver side and customer side. However, investors asked how are you going to compete with the money that has been raised (by Ola and Uber)? We thought the same would happen with Jugnoo, but the company survived. I like these guys for just giving Ola and Uber a fight. They grabbed the north India market before everybody else,” a jury member commented.

Singla and Agarwal were together at IIT- Delhi’s robotics club. Singla started a poultry feed company. Next, he co-founded a SaaS company, Click Labs, with Agarwal. It built on-demand applicatio­ns, such as food delivery apps, for global customers. Jugnoo began as a “toy”. Punjab Engineerin­g College held a festival in 2014 and wanted a sponsorshi­p from Click Labs. Agarwal built a “super crude app” that aggregated autoricksh­aws. The first day, there were 90 rides. More rides were requested the second day. “We started in Chandigarh and threefour months down the line reached about 1,000 transactio­ns. We realised it was not a fad and there was something there. We raised the angel round of $1 million based on the team’s credential­s,” says Singla.

A key differenti­ator was the focus on Tier- II cities. “These cities generate over two-thirds of the country’s income and have been found to deliver growth opportunit­ies. We believe our product will grow with these cities,” says Singla. That’s why you wouldn’t hear much about Jugnoo if you live in a metro city.

“Tier- II does not have the same frequency and density of transactio­ns as metros. So, we needed to be a bit more comprehens­ive. We started food delivery and B2B delivery. We now use autoricksh­aws and bikers for food delivery,” says Singla. Jugnoo clocks 6,000 meal delivery transactio­ns in a day.

The company closes down services that don’t scale up and does it fast. Grocery delivery was one of them. The market wasn’t ready. The core auto aggregatio­n business, meanwhile, is also a wait-and-watch game. “That’s the limitation of this business. We will have to wait for the market to catch up to our concept,” says Singla. His problems, going ahead, will still remain executiona­l

“It is a difficult thing to learn – how to build a company, the organisati­on structure, and how to run a company of 1,000 people,” says Singla. “It is unnatural for us. We are all geeks and nerds.” ~

“TIER- II CITIES GENERATE OVER TWO-THIRDS OF THE COUNTRY’S INCOME... WE BELIEVE OUR PRODUCT WILL GROW WITH THESE CITIES” Samar Singla/ Founder & CEO, Jugnoo

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 ??  ?? Riding high: Jugnoo co-founders Samar Singla ( left) and Chinmay Agarwal
Riding high: Jugnoo co-founders Samar Singla ( left) and Chinmay Agarwal

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