Campus Ideaz

Share your Ideas here. Be as descriptive as possible. Ask for feedback. If you find any interesting Idea, you can comment and encourage the person in taking it forward.

SAVERLY

Problem :-

The middle class is constantly squeezed by

  • Rising cost of groceries, essentials, and utilities.
  • Retailers and e-commerce platforms adding multiple middlemen margins.
  • Lack of bargaining over the MRP

Today, even discount apps and e-commerce platforms ( Flipkart, Blinkit, Zepto, BigBasket) still sell at marked-up retail rates. The middle class pays more than they should.

Solution“Samuh” (Community-Powered Savings) 

A community-based bulk buying platform that creates demand from middle-class families and connects them directly to wholesalers, manufacturers, and local vendors to provide 30–40% cheaper prices on everyday essentials.

How Does It Work 

B2C model

  1. Families join the Samuh app in their locality.

  2. They add their grocery/essential needs.

  3. The app aggregates orders from hundreds of families.

  4. Goods are purchased in bulk directly from wholesalers / local distributors.

  5. Orders are split and delivered to families at wholesale rates.

B2B model

  • Wholesalers, distributors, and local kirana stores get assured bulk orders without extra marketing.

  • Faster inventory movement.

  • Reduced delivery costs (single bulk drop instead of small scattered orders).

  • They pay a small commission to Samuh for bringing them demand.

 

Why This Is Different from Existing Apps :

 

  • Not Just Discounts → True Wholesale Rates

    • Swiggy Instamart, BigBasket, Blinkit still sell at retail with discounts.

    • Samuh cuts out middlemen → delivers at factory/wholesale price.

  • Community Model

    • Families pool demand = more bargaining power.

    • Prices drop as more people in the group join (gamified savings).

  • Local Vendor Integration

    • Instead of only big warehouses, we partner with nearby kirana + wholesalers, keeping supply chain short and costs low.

  • Middle-Class First Approach

    • Focused on essentials only (rice, dal, oil, milk, vegetables, cleaning supplies).

    • No unnecessary luxury products that inflate bills.

 

Benefits :

  • For Families (Consumers)

    • Save ₹2,000–₹4,000/month on essentials.

    • Access to quality goods at affordable prices.

    • Transparent pricing (see wholesale vs retail difference).

  • For Vendors

    • Bulk guaranteed sales.

    • Low delivery cost.

    • Loyal customer base.

 

 

 

Revenue Streams :

1. Commission from Vendors (Primary Model)

  • Every time a bulk order goes through, vendors/wholesalers pay a 2–5% commission.

  • Example: If a 100-family bulk order = ₹5,00,000 → you take ₹15,000–₹25,000.

  • Vendors accept this because:

    • You’re giving them guaranteed bulk orders.

    • Lower marketing + delivery costs for them.

2. Consumer Subscription Model

  • Offer premium membership: ₹99–₹199/month.

  • Benefits: early access to bulk deals, extra discounts, free delivery.

  • Even if 1 lakh families subscribe at ₹99 → ₹99 lakh/month steady revenue.

3. Delivery / Service Fee (Optional)

  • A small ₹5–₹15 per order delivery charge.

  • Still cheaper than retail because of bulk pricing.

  • Covers logistics cost.

4. Advertising & Promotions

  • Local brands, kirana shops, or FMCG companies pay to feature their products on the app.

  • Example: “Fortune Oil Family Pack – Featured Bulk Deal of the Week.”

5. Data Insights (Future Scaling)

  • Once large user base builds, you can monetize anonymized data (e.g., consumption trends, locality-based demand) → FMCG brands value this.

 

 

Votes: 13
E-mail me when people leave their comments –

You need to be a member of campusideaz to add comments!

Join campusideaz

Comments

  • This is a very practical solution to the rising cost of essentials. The community model gives real bargaining power to families while supporting local vendors. You could also consider adding shared delivery slots to make logistics even more efficient. A much-needed idea for today's middle-class households.
  • This is a well-structured concept that clearly explains value for both consumers and suppliers—aggregating family demand to secure wholesale prices while ensuring assured bulk orders and lower costs for distributors. Strengthening points on trust, technology, and scalability would make the model even more compelling.
  • This really addresses a pain point so many families face. Bulk community buying could be a real game-changer for middle-class savings.
  • This is a solid idea, Mahesh! The community-powered bulk model really stands out because it tackles the middle-class pain point directly, unlike discount-based apps that still operate at retail. Cutting out middlemen, pooling demand, and keeping supply chains local makes both economic and logistical sense. The revenue streams are also well thought out and scalable.
This reply was deleted.