As living expenses in Tier 1 cities soar, companies will eventually shift to Tier 2 cities, enabling them to hire talent with lower investment. #Business #Talent #CostEfficiency #startups #india
4 replies10 likes
kamal p
Stealth • 5m
Problem- 60% of the carts on e-commerce websites are abandoned in tier 2 cities due to longer delivery times.
Solution- Become Amazon prime/meesho for tier 2 cities by opening a warehouse in major tier 2 cities and give faster deliveries.
Products
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10 replies2 likes
Mahendra Lochhab
Stealth • 3m
The rural FMCG market is expected to grow at a CAGR of 14.6% by 2025, and will account for 45% of the industry's revenue.
I don’t think the bigger cities in India will survive for long without a major change in infra or without building newer cities for growth. The condition of most top tier cities is getting worse day by day. People need to start moving to other cities
A bold decision by the board.Aster needs to focus on it's presence throughout the country. Targeting tier-2 and tier-3 cities and opening small centres there at affordable prices will help the common man.
2 replies7 likes
Chahit Sanghvi
Stealth • 21d
Does the government have any plans about making the internet free in tier 1/2/3 cities ?
Or subsidies to the ones providing it
3 replies5 likes
Bivas Ghosh
Stealth • 1m
I want to create a movie booking platform where filmmakers or producers can sell their movies directly to movie theaters. This process would allow single-screen theater owners to operate their theaters more easily while also enabling a wide range of
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4 replies3 likes
Prashant Singh
Stealth • 7m
Do you think that Indian job seekers (specially from tier 2 and tier 3 cities) need help with their resumes? I wonder if they will pay 100 rupees or so if I transform their resume to a great one in just 3 clicks.
2 replies7 likes
Shashank
Stealth • 1m
Nowadays, quick commerce is booming, and many people in tier 1 cities use the services of quick commerce giants. However, recently, many people from tier 2 cities, and tier 1 cities where quick commerce giants haven't yet established a strong presenc
Zomato CEO Deepinder Goyal once stated that the lack of infrastructure in tier 2 cities has paved the way for Zomato's success, as people tend to spend more on food when they have limited options in other areas..
Anyone here(from tier2 cities)feels s