Sprig raised $45 million two years ago for its vision of providing healthy meals delivered quickly. The Massage Parlor Prostitutes (2025)money made the San Francisco-based startup one of the biggest entrants into the burgeoning farm-to-doorstep food market.
On Friday, the company announced that it is shutting down.
"The demand for Sprig’s convenient, high-quality food was always incredibly high, but the complexity of owning meal production through delivery at scale was a challenge," wrote Sprig CEO Gagan Biyani in an email sent to customers.
Biyani also warned the press against drawing too straight a line between Sprig's failure and the broader food space.
"To the press and public: No question, I’m sad that the Sprig model did not work out — but the food delivery space on the whole is growing," he wrote.
The "food delivery space" might be growing, but it hasn't been kind to companies like Sprig, which tried to own the entire process from food preparation to delivery.
Sprig isn't the only recent failure to pursue that model. Maple, a similar idea backed by celebrity chef David Chang, shut down at the beginning of May. Munchery cut staff and replaced its leadership in January. A year ago, SpoonRocket closed and gave its customers a discount to use on Sprig.
The model for these companies sounds good. People love getting food delivered and they want to eat healthy, so why not own the entire process? Turns out, it's very difficult and very expensive.
Food delivery is also an almost-comically crowded market, dominated by platforms like Grubhub and Uber Eats, which offer more options and only serve to connect customers with restaurants.
And then there's the Blue Aprons of the world. As well as calling Domino's.
Don't forget Soylent.
This image from CB Insights shows just how many food startups have come (and gone) since 2011.
There will be more food startups. There will be more ideas for streamlining the process. There will be more venture capitalists willing to bet on those ideas.
But there might not be too many more farm-to-doorstep companies.
Topics Film
(Editor: {typename type="name"/})
NYT Connections Sports Edition hints and answers for April 17: Tips to solve Connections #206
LG to launch its rotating screen phone in two weeks
It's fine to swear in front of your kids, according to this mom who is totally f*cking right
Triller makes play to buy U.S. TikTok, report claims
Watch how an old Venus spacecraft tumbled before crashing to Earth
Guilty pug has the absolute worst poker face of all time
This very polite pigeon is the London Underground hero we all need
Triller makes play to buy U.S. TikTok, report claims
Why California lawmaker Buffy Wicks voted with her crying baby
Fritz vs. Ruud 2025 livestream: Watch Madrid Open for free
'Mulan' will stream on Disney+ in December for no additional cost
接受PR>=1、BR>=1,流量相当,内容相关类链接。