Quick commerce is no longer just a distribution channel. It is becoming a performance marketing channel.
Platforms like Blinkit, Zepto, Instamart, and BigBasket sit very close to the moment of purchase. The user is not casually browsing a social feed. They are often buying something now: snacks, beverages, beauty, personal care, home essentials, gifting items, accessories, small electronics, or impulse products.
For D2C brands, quick commerce marketing is about winning visibility at the exact moment of demand.
Quick commerce does not behave like Amazon or Flipkart.
On marketplaces, users may research, compare, and delay purchase. On quick commerce, users often want speed, availability, and convenience. That changes the ad strategy.
The biggest levers are:
Blinkit’s Brand Central page describes it as a self-serve advertising platform that lets brands run sponsored placements across search, category pages, recommendations, and brand stores. It also says brands can reach 2.5 crore+ engaged shoppers with purchase intent.
That makes Blinkit especially useful for brands in categories such as snacks, beverages, personal care, beauty, home care, pet care, gifting, and fast-moving lifestyle products.
Zepto’s brand platform positions custom ads as a way to increase brand visibility and help brands stand out and stay top of mind.
For Zepto, brands should focus on mobile-first product discovery. The thumbnail must sell the product. The title must match search behaviour. The price must feel instantly acceptable.
Swiggy said Instamart expanded to 100 cities and offers groceries and essentials across 20+ categories with 10-minute delivery.
That matters because quick commerce growth is no longer only a metro story. Brands should think city-wise and category-wise instead of running one national plan.
BigBasket has a partner ecosystem and product ads login infrastructure, making it relevant for grocery, FMCG, household, beauty, and daily essentials brands.
For BigBasket, purchase behaviour may be more basket-led compared with pure impulse quick commerce, so multipacks, repeat-use products, and value packs can work well.
To win on quick commerce, use this loop:
Do not advertise products that are unavailable in key cities or dark stores.
Buy search and category visibility for priority SKUs.
Improve product title, image, price, pack size, and reviews.
Identify products that generate repeat purchases and increase visibility there.
Scale city by city, not blindly nationwide.
Quick commerce product titles should be short but clear.
Weak title: “Protein Bar Chocolate”
Better title: “Chocolate Protein Bar, 20g Protein, 60g”
Weak title: “Face Wash”
Better title: “Vitamin C Face Wash for Glowing Skin, 100ml”
Weak title: “Socks”
Better title: “Men’s Cotton Ankle Socks, Pack of 3”
The user is making a quick decision. Do not make them guess.
Quick commerce is strongest for:
Fashion brands should be selective. Quick commerce may work for socks, innerwear, accessories, beauty-led fashion add-ons, emergency footwear, rainwear, and gifting products more than full fashion catalogs.
Run campaigns around:
Not for all apparel. It works better for fast-moving fashion-adjacent products such as socks, innerwear, accessories, beauty add-ons, gifting, and emergency-use products.
Availability. If the product is not available in the right city or dark store, ads cannot scale efficiently.
No. Focus on high-velocity SKUs, repeat-purchase products, strong thumbnails, and city-wise availability.