GO-JEK is proof that even mighty things have small beginnings. The Indonesian start-up launched in 2010 as a concierge phone service with a single call centre in Jakarta that aimed to help residents beat the city’s notorious traffic jams.
Today, GO-JEK operates in 50 cities across Indonesia. Expanding substantially from its transport, courier and shopping service roots, it is now the number-one online service booking app in Indonesia.
GO-JEK is credited as Indonesia’s first billion-dollar startup, and has experienced particular success in the country’s food delivery sector via its popular GO-FOOD app.
“Before GO-FOOD, Indonesians could really only get food delivered from the big Western chains such as KFC and McDonalds,” says Nova Kurniawan, VP of ERP and Platforms Implementation at GO-JEK. “Now, GO-FOOD allows customers to order from approximately 150,000 merchants.”
This has created a vibrant local economy. GO-FOOD’s top five merchants are all independent local vendors, and the company now has more than 1 million registered drivers.
“GO-FOOD has expanded the market for local merchants,” confirms Kurniawan. “Through GO-FOOD, local merchants can reach a much broader audience, customers have more choice, and local drivers get more business.”
“Food delivery existed before GO-FOOD, but never at this scale,” adds Piotr Jakubowski, Chief Marketing Officer at GO-JEK. “We have seen local mom-and-pop vendors grow into successful businesses and launch full-scale restaurant kitchens. Some businesses are receiving 60 to 80 per cent of their orders from GO-FOOD, and some are setting up kitchens without physical resturant premises and they rely solely on GO-FOOD for their business.”