When Amazon bought Whole Foods in 2017, the outlook appeared bleak for Instacart. Not only did the grocery delivery startup suddenly have to compete with one of the most sophisticated delivery companies in the world, it also counted Whole Foods as one of its biggest partners at the time. But as the shock of the deal settled, calls started pouring in from grocers who wanted to work with Instacart to gird their businesses against the new threat Amazon posed to them.
Many tech startups model themselves on Amazon’s approach to business; few actually try to reverse engineer Amazon and compete with it. But that’s part of Instacart’s DNA. It launched in 2012 by comparing itself to Amazon and was positioned by the tech press as wanting to be “the Amazon Prime of grocery delivery.” That may have sounded like hyperbole at the time, but in recent months Instacart has looked more and more like a mini-Amazon.
Instacart has filled its ranks with at least four dozen former Amazon staffers who’ve jumped directly from the e-commerce giant to the startup since early 2019, in positions ranging from engineering to ad sales and operations, according to a CNN Business review of LinkedIn profiles. Instacart’s chief revenue officer, Seth Dallaire, was a former VP at the ecommerce giant, and Ryan Mayward joined Instacart this month as VP of ad sales after nearly a decade at Amazon. Instacart’s founder and CEO, Apoorva Mehta, is a former Amazon supply chain engineer who has cited Amazon founder and outgoing CEO Jeff Bezos as one of his role models. (Instacart, which is on a hiring blitz, said it is seeing employees join from a number of top tech companies, including Amazon, Google and Netflix.)
– CNN