Ganesh Prasad, the founder of the popular Indian educational YouTube channel Think School, has announced the launch of the Quick Commerce Accelerator, a one-day intensive program designed to help Direct-to-Consumer (D2C) founders scale their businesses on rapid-delivery platforms.
The event is scheduled for June 7, 2026, at the DLF Cyber Park in Gurgaon, where 120 selected founders will receive mentorship from a panel of industry experts, investors, and successful entrepreneurs.
The initiative aims to address the high failure rate of brands attempting to navigate the complexities of quick commerce, which refers to the business model where goods are delivered to customers within 10 to 30 minutes.
The program features a prominent lineup of mentors, including Kiran Shah, the founder of the guilt-free ice cream brand Go Zero, which successfully scaled to a revenue of 100 crore rupees primarily through quick commerce channels.
Joining him is Arjun Vaidya, the founder of the acquired brand Dr. Vaidya’s and current partner at V3 Ventures, along with Pooja Shirali, a director at DSG Consumer Partners.
Kiran Mitkari, the head of D2C partnerships at Swiggy Instamart, will also provide insights into how major platforms select and prioritize brands for their digital storefronts.
Quick commerce has become a dominant force in Indian retail, but many brands struggle with the operational demands of the sector.
The accelerator will focus on critical metrics such as fill rates, which is the percentage of customer orders that are fulfilled without items being out of stock, and Dark Store inventory management.
Prasad noted that while many founders believe getting listed is the hardest part, the real challenge lies in maintaining a sustainable supply chain and achieving a healthy Return on Ad Spend (ROAS).
Prasad, whose channel Think School has amassed over 6 million subscribers by providing deep-dive business case studies, emphasized that the program is designed to move education beyond theory into practical application.
He stated that the goal is to help a two-year-old startup learn how to outsell established 30-year-old Fast-Moving Consumer Goods (FMCG) giants by leveraging the speed and data-driven nature of modern delivery apps.
The program also aims to demystify why certain brands receive high valuations and acquisitions while others with similar revenues fail to raise early-stage capital.
Founders who are not selected for the 120 seats in the live room will still have access to the curriculum.
Think School has announced that all applicants will receive a full recording of the sessions along with specialized frameworks and playbooks to help them scale their operations independently.
This move aligns with the channel’s broader mission of making high-level business education accessible to a wider audience across India’s growing startup ecosystem.
Website link: https://thethinkschool.com/sp/quickcommerce/