India has 1.4 billion people, a retail market projected to grow from $1.05 trillion to $1.9 trillion, and barely 1,000 organised convenience stores. The United States has 300,000. Korea has two lakh. Thailand has 7-Eleven on every corner. The gap is staggering, and it represents one of the biggest untapped opportunities in Indian retail.
In this episode of DilSe Omni Talks, Aastha Almast, co-founder of NewShop, walks us through exactly how she identified that gap, what it took to build a tech-first convenience retail brand from scratch, and why the franchise model might be the only way to scale retail across India’s beautifully chaotic diversity.
What Is New Shop, And Why Did India Need It?
If you’ve ever landed at a railway station in India at midnight looking for a bottle of water, a packet of chips, and a phone charger, and found nothing but a closed kirana and a suspicious vending machine, you already understand the problem NewShop set out to solve.
Convenience retail, the 7-Eleven model, the kind of store that is always open, always stocked, and always easy to interact with has never really existed in India at scale.
And so the category just stayed empty.
Aastha and her co-founders, coming from tech, not retail, saw this not as a warning sign but as a massive opportunity. NewShop launched in 2019, became profitable within the first month of opening at Anand Vihar Railway Station, and has been growing at nearly 200% year on year for the last three years, without raising external capital for the last four.
The Tech-First Approach
The Anand Vihar Railway Station story is one of the most compelling moments in the episode, and worth telling properly.
It was December 2019. Aastha and her two co-founders walked into a government tender presentation alongside large, established international retail companies. They were at least 20 years younger than everyone else in the room. Not wearing suits. The smallest team there.
But when the head of IRSDC heard their pitch, he said something that stuck: every other brand had given him spreadsheets. NewShop was the only team that had built their own technology infrastructure first, and had a solution for what happens when five or six hundred people arrive at a platform simultaneously when a train departs.
They got the station. No tender required. They were profitable in month one.
That first win set the template for everything that followed.
Why Franchise, And Why It's the Only Model That Works in India
One of the most insightful parts of the conversation is Aastha’s explanation of why NewShop chose a franchise model, and why she believes it’s the only model that can truly scale retail across India.
India, she points out, is not one market. The language changes every 50 kilometres. The food changes. A headquarters team sitting in Delhi cannot predict with accuracy what a store in Pondicherry or Visakhapatnam needs.
The kirana store survived because the owner, not a store manager, was sitting there. They knew who to give credit to. They knew what their neighbourhood wanted at 11pm on a Tuesday. They had skin in the game.
NewShop took that insight and married it with technology. Their franchise owners are entrepreneurs, not employees. And the results are visible: company-operated stores carry 25% higher cost structures. Franchise-owned stores have near-zero shrinkage because the owner’s own money is on the line.
The vision is clear and ambitious — 10,000 entrepreneurs empowered through convenience retailing in India by 2030.
The Omnichannel Play Underneath It All
What makes NewShop genuinely interesting from a marketing and technology perspective is the infrastructure they have built beneath the surface.
With 300+ stores, 60,000 orders per day, and 10 million active users, NewShop has built a single franchise dashboard that does something remarkable, it tells each store owner what they are about to run out of, predicts demand for the next week, and allows them to place restocking orders directly through an integrated e-commerce portal.
The supply chain is direct. The brand goes straight to a consolidated purchase order and is delivered to the store. No distributor in the middle. This gives NewShop complete visibility into what is selling, when, by which age group, and which products are most likely to be bought together.
They are now piloting an AI interface, where franchise owners can simply ask “how do I increase my sales by 20% next week?” and get category-specific recommendations based on data from nearby NewShop stores.
Retail media is another major pillar — contributing 35% of the company’s profit — and they share 50% of retail media earnings with franchise partners. In practice, this means a franchise owner’s retail media income can cover their rent from month one.
Quick Commerce — Friend or Foe?
The question Saurabh poses directly: is quick commerce a competitor?
Aastha’s answer is refreshingly clear. It depends entirely on location.
In dense urban clusters like Gurgaon, Bangalore, Mumbai, yes, quick commerce works. But at a highway, a railway station, a college campus, a tier-2 city where the population is mostly self-employed business owners who go out in the evening with their families and want somewhere to spend, quick commerce cannot serve that need. A delivery rider cannot come to you on the highway. A school cannot have a Blinkit drop.
India’s convenience retail opportunity is not threatened by quick commerce. It lives in all the places quick commerce cannot reach which, in India, is most of the country.


