Try GOLD - Free

REBEL'S GUIDE TO SUCCESS WITH FOOD

Outlook Business

|

June 2024

Having started its journey in 2004 as a quickservice restaurant under the brand name Faasos, Rebel Foods, now a unicorn, aims to expand its footprint. Jaydeep Barman, co-founder of Rebel Foods, talks to Vinita Bhatia about the company’s growth plans, focusing on Tier-II and -III cities, licensing as a strategy and more. Edited excerpts:

- Vinita Bhatia

REBEL'S GUIDE TO SUCCESS WITH FOOD

How has your life changed after Rebel Foods entered the unicorn club in 2021?

For Rebel Foods, the focus has been primarily on the customers and how we could build delightful food brands for them. The focus was to create a company that was loved en masse, more than valuations. The focus was on solving more and more food missions, creating value along the way.

Rebel Foods boasts strong backing from a diverse group of prominent investors both in India and globally, including Peak XV Partners (ex-Sequoia Capital), Qatar Investment Authority, Coatue, Goldman Sachs, Evolvence, RPT Global and Lightbox. Their unwavering support underscores our dedication to achieving success and driving growth within the industry. So, to answer the question—has life changed after becoming a unicorn—no. The focus has continued to be laser-like, and therefore, every move, whether operational, tactical or strategic, has been towards creating value and customer delight.

When is Rebel Foods considering going public?

While I would love to delve into this at the moment, to be honest, this is a work in progress. Can I say we are looking at going public? Yes. Would I be able to put a timeline to it at this point in time? I would rather not, as we are working on the planning, and sharing a timeline would be a little premature.

How is Rebel Foods prepared to deal with slowdown in the pandemic-induced growth in the cloud kitchen industry as more customers prefer to dine in than order out?

We are in the business of building food brands and, as long as our brands are well-loved, we will have customers ordering for them. Our growth rates have continued to be healthy post-pandemic.

During the pandemic, people stayed at home and ordered in; office orders were a bare minimum. Post-pandemic, lots of people returned to offices, and our office orders have started growing significantly.

MORE STORIES FROM Outlook Business

Outlook Business

Outlook Business

Currents of Change

A marine-robotics start-up in Kochi is building underwater drones for inspection, rescue and defence missions in harsh environments

time to read

3 mins

September 2025

Outlook Business

Brains Beyond Bots

The age of Al isn’t about replacement of jobs, it’s about the disruption taking place at the core of modern work, with implications we’re only beginning to understand

time to read

3 mins

September 2025

Outlook Business

Outlook Business

Reclaiming Mines and Cutting Methane

Sustainable mining is about striking a balance and extracting the minerals we need today, without compromising future generations.

time to read

1 min

September 2025

Outlook Business

Outlook Business

Sputtering Ahead

India must re-energise its Make in India campaign to take on global trade headwinds. Otherwise, it will continue to suffer from bullying by superpowers

time to read

6 mins

September 2025

Outlook Business

Outlook Business

Atmanirbhar Bharat needs atmanirbhar capital

Sanjay Nayar, president of Assocham and founder of venture-capital (VC) firm Sorin Investments, tells Deepsekhar Choudhury and Tarunya Sanjay that while India has seen an explosion of early-stage VC firms, the country continues to lack a deep pool of domestic capital. Edited excerpts

time to read

3 mins

September 2025

Outlook Business

Outlook Business

'There's a lot of momentum compared to five years ago'

Hemant Mohapatra, partner at Lightspeed India, tells Deepsekhar Choudhury and Tarunya Sanjay why India's start-ups are seeing a surge in scientific ambition. Edited excerpts

time to read

3 mins

September 2025

Outlook Business

Outlook Business

De-Risking Investments in the Mining Sector

There is an ever increasing demand for minerals in India with the increase in renewable energy deployment, battery storage and electric vehicles. But the mining and minerals sector faces a number of challenges.

time to read

1 mins

September 2025

Outlook Business

Outlook Business

In the Line of Fire

AI’s rapid rise is wiping out start-ups that once seemed promising. Investors now demand business moats and metrics that can withstand Al disruption

time to read

6 mins

September 2025

Outlook Business

Outlook Business

Uttar Pradesh's Beacon of Light

Tarai, Kashi Kshetra, and Purvanchal have emerged as prime pillars of development

time to read

3 mins

September 2025

Outlook Business

Outlook Business

Brands Beyond Borders

We live in an 'attention' economy. Brands are the lighthouses in an attention economy. I have written many times about India building global brands, but our progress is slow.

time to read

3 mins

September 2025

Listen

Translate

Share

-
+

Change font size