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The Gig Economy Project
The Gig Economy Project
39 episodes
2 days ago
The Gig Economy Project is a media network for gig workers in Europe, seeking to promote efforts to transform work in the digital age. We publish on the the Brave New Europe website, see here: https://braveneweurope.com/the-gig-economy-project Bike couriers, ‘micro-taskers’, home care workers, & many more who work on-demand in the digital platform economy & have few job protections are at the sharpest edge of capitalist exploitation, but are also providing some of the most creative and powerful forms of resistance in the working class today. This podcast provides insight into that resistance.
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All content for The Gig Economy Project is the property of The Gig Economy Project and is served directly from their servers with no modification, redirects, or rehosting. The podcast is not affiliated with or endorsed by Podjoint in any way.
The Gig Economy Project is a media network for gig workers in Europe, seeking to promote efforts to transform work in the digital age. We publish on the the Brave New Europe website, see here: https://braveneweurope.com/the-gig-economy-project Bike couriers, ‘micro-taskers’, home care workers, & many more who work on-demand in the digital platform economy & have few job protections are at the sharpest edge of capitalist exploitation, but are also providing some of the most creative and powerful forms of resistance in the working class today. This podcast provides insight into that resistance.
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Technology
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The rise and fall of grocery delivery in Europe
The Gig Economy Project
52 minutes 31 seconds
1 year ago
The rise and fall of grocery delivery in Europe

"If you can go to the moon, why are you still going to the supermarket?”


That was the pitch of Kağan Sümer, former CEO and co-founder of the Gorillas grocery delivery platform, founded in Berlin in 2020. 


Sümer promised Gorillas could deliver groceries to your home in 10 minutes. “Faster than you” was the company’s first slogan. 


Gorillas took off during the pandemic, attracting billions in venture capital investment. It became Europe’s fastest ever ‘Unicorn’ - a start-up with a valuation of over €1 billion - taking just nine months to reach that 10 figure sum. 


But the success didn’t last. By the end of 2022 the company was on the verge of liquidation as its costs spiralled, demand slowed and venture capital looked elsewhere. It was sold to Getir, a Turkish grocery delivery platform which means ‘Bring’ in English.


Getir became the undisputed king of Q-Commerce in Europe, but it’s domination of the market was still not enough to save it. Getir’s empire began to crumble in 2023 as the same factors which brought down Gorillas were quickly undermining the whole industry.


In early May of this year, Getir - once valued at over €10 billion - decided to retreat from all of its foreign markets, now solely operating in Turkey. Getir’s decline signals the demise of the Q-Commerce specialist operator, a rise and fall that brought tens of thousands of workers into its orbit before just as quickly dispensing with almost all of them. 


What explains this rapid journey from boom to bust? To discuss this, I’m joined by three guests who have intricate knowledge of the app-based grocery delivery sector. 


Rachel Verdin is Research Fellow at the Digital Futures at Work Research Centre and author of ‘Back to the Dark Ages’, a report by the Foundation for European Progressive Studies on the grocery delivery sector. 


Harry Parfitt is a former Flink grocery delivery courier in Freiburg, Germany. Flink shut down their operations in Freiburg when Harry and his colleagues were on the brink of setting-up a Works’ Council there. Written your Masters’ thesis about it at the University of Frieburg 


Aju John hosted and produced the Delivery Charge podcast series, which looked at how platform workers are organising in India and Germany. A large part of the Delivery Charge series looked at grocery delivery organising in Berlin at Gorillas, Getir and Flink. 



03:28: Why has Europe’s grocery delivery sector collapsed?


18:02: Worker organising and resistance in the grocery delivery sector


34:10: What future for Q-Commerce and what lessons can be learned from the sector’s rise and fall?


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The Gig Economy Project
The Gig Economy Project is a media network for gig workers in Europe, seeking to promote efforts to transform work in the digital age. We publish on the the Brave New Europe website, see here: https://braveneweurope.com/the-gig-economy-project Bike couriers, ‘micro-taskers’, home care workers, & many more who work on-demand in the digital platform economy & have few job protections are at the sharpest edge of capitalist exploitation, but are also providing some of the most creative and powerful forms of resistance in the working class today. This podcast provides insight into that resistance.