// STARTUP COMPARISON
Deliberry vs Quibi
Deliberry failed in 2017 due to Competition. Quibi failed in 2020 due to Bad Timing. Different causes, different sectors, different eras — but the same simulation outcome.
| METRIC | 🔥 Deliberry | 🔥 Quibi |
|---|---|---|
| Sector | Marketplace | Media |
| Country | Spain | USA |
| Founded | 2014 | 2018 |
| Died | 2017 | 2020 |
| Raised | €15M | $1.75B |
| Peak | €15M raised | $1.75B raised |
| Primary Cause | Competition | Bad Timing |
// WHY EACH FAILED
🔥 Deliberry
Competition
Deliberry built on-demand grocery delivery in Barcelona and Madrid in 2014-2017, years before quick commerce became mainstream. The company achieved strong customer satisfaction but faced two existential threats simultaneously: Amazon launched Amazon Fresh in Spain, and Deliveroo and Glovo entered the market with deep pockets. Unable to compete with Amazon's logistics infrastructure or Glovo's VC funding, Deliberry shut down in 2017.
// LESSON
Grocery delivery is a logistics war, not a product war. When Amazon enters your category, the competitive advantage you built on product quality becomes irrelevant — they simply out-execute and out-spend you.
Grocery delivery is a logistics war, not a product war. When Amazon enters your category, the competitive advantage you built on product quality becomes irrelevant — they simply out-execute and out-spend you.
🔥 Quibi
Bad Timing
Quibi launched April 6, 2020 — two weeks after global COVID lockdowns began. The product was designed for commuters watching short videos on phones. With everyone at home on TVs, the core use case vanished. Quibi shut down in October 2020 after 6 months, returning $350M to investors.
// LESSON
No capital fixes a product designed for a world that no longer exists at launch. Market timing is not a growth problem — it is an existence problem.
No capital fixes a product designed for a world that no longer exists at launch. Market timing is not a growth problem — it is an existence problem.
// EXPLORE FURTHER