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    Home»Business»Amazon’s India-Tested Quick Commerce Model Goes Global, Eyes 25 Percent Order Growth
    Business

    Amazon’s India-Tested Quick Commerce Model Goes Global, Eyes 25 Percent Order Growth

    Shruti JoshiBy Shruti JoshiApril 13, 2026No Comments4 Mins Read
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    New Delhi [India], April 13: Amazon is scaling its India-born quick commerce strategy to global markets, with Jefferies projecting up to 25% growth in order volumes. The move signals a broader shift in e-commerce from convenience to immediacy as rapid delivery models reshape consumer expectations worldwide.

    So here’s the thing about Amazon: it rarely just copies a trend. It usually absorbs it, reshapes it, and then quietly pushes it somewhere bigger. And now, that whole quick commerce playbook that kinda exploded in India? Yeah, it’s not staying local anymore.

    The report (from Jefferies, if you’re wondering) basically says Amazon’s taken what worked in India, fast deliveries, hyperlocal inventory, that whole “I want it now, not tomorrow” mindset, and is starting to replicate it globally. Which… makes sense. But also feels like one of those moments you don’t notice until it’s already everywhere.

    India, weirdly enough, became the testing ground. Not Silicon Valley. Not Europe. India.

    And honestly, that says a lot.

    Because quick commerce here didn’t grow slowly. It kinda just… happened. One day, you were okay waiting 2–3 days for a package, and the next, you’re mildly annoyed if your groceries take more than 15 minutes. I mean, how did we even get here?

    Anyway, Amazon saw that shift early. Or at least earlier than most global players. The model small warehouses, tight delivery radii, heavy use of data to predict what people might order before they even search for it, it’s almost obsessive in design. Like someone sat down and said, “What if impatience was the default setting?”

    And now Jefferies is saying this could drive around 25% order growth. That’s not small. That’s… actually pretty aggressive.

    But here’s where it gets interesting. This isn’t just about speed. Speed is the headline, sure. But underneath, it’s really about behavior change. Once people get used to instant delivery, they don’t go back. They just don’t. It’s like switching from 4G to Wi-Fi; technically, you could survive without it, but why would you?

    And Amazon knows that.

    So instead of treating quick commerce as a side feature, it’s weaving it into its larger ecosystem. Which is kinda scary if you think about it. Because once they scale this globally, smaller players—who built their entire identity around “fast delivery” suddenly don’t look that special anymore.

    I mean, imagine competing on speed… against Amazon.

    Yeah.

    Amazon’s India Model Goes Global

    Also, there’s this subtle shift happening in what people order. Earlier, quick commerce was mostly groceries, essentials, and last-minute stuff. Now? It’s expanding. Electronics, small appliances, and even random impulse buys. Things you didn’t even know you wanted until they showed up in a “deliver in 10 minutes” banner.

    And don’t ask me why, but that changes how people spend their money. It just does. When the waiting time disappears, the friction disappears. And when friction disappears… spending goes up. Simple, but kinda dangerous.

    Jefferies seems pretty bullish on all this, obviously. They’re framing it as a structural growth lever, not just a temporary spike. Which, okay, fair. But it also raises a question about how sustainable this model is outside India.

    Because India has this unique mix: dense cities, a cost-effective delivery workforce, high mobile penetration, and a population that’s extremely price-sensitive but also convenience-hungry. It’s a weird combo, but it works.

    Try replicating that in, say, parts of Europe or the US, and things get messy. Costs go up. Labor dynamics change. Infrastructure isn’t always optimized for this kind of hyperlocal fulfillment. So yeah, the model travels, but it doesn’t travel cleanly.

    Still, Amazon’s not the kind of company that backs off easily. If anything, it’ll tweak the model until it fits. Or force it to fit.

    What’s also kinda fascinating is how this flips the narrative. For years, global companies brought ideas to India. Now, it’s the other way around. India’s consumer behavior is shaping global strategy. That’s… new. Or at least it feels new.

    And maybe that’s the bigger story here. Not just that, Amazon is expanding quick commerce. But that India quietly became the blueprint.

    Anyway, whether this turns into a massive win or just another expensive experiment, we’ll see. But one thing’s pretty clear: the “wait for delivery” era? It’s fading. Fast.

    And yeah, we’re all a little complicit in that.

    PNN BUSINESS

    Business
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