e-commerce
Samsung rings up a quick call as Instamart delivers galaxy in minutes
MUMBAI: If you thought 10-minute deliveries were only for groceries, Samsung and Instamart are here to dial up the surprise. In a move that blends speed with sleek tech, Samsung, India’s largest consumer electronics brand has partnered with Instamart to make the Galaxy universe just a few taps and minutes away for consumers across key cities.
The collaboration means customers can now order select Galaxy smartphones, tablets, wearables, and accessories on Instamart and have them delivered to their door almost as quickly as a snack run. In a country where convenience shapes behaviour and quick commerce already dominates everyday essentials, instant tech may well be the next habit forming category.
“At Samsung, we are driven by meaningful innovations that are accessible to everyone. Our partnership with Instamart is another step towards strengthening our omnichannel strategy and making Galaxy experience available to users in a matter of minutes. We are bringing our most loved devices closer to the users,” said Samsung India director of MX business Rahul Pahwa.
For Instamart, the tie-up signals the growing shift toward impulse-led tech buying where the leap from desire to device could now be as short as a cricket over. “Our goal has always been to anticipate and adapt to the changing lifestyles of our consumers. By partnering directly with Samsung, we’re ensuring that high-quality devices are now just a few taps and 10 minutes away, redefining what convenience in tech truly means,” said Instamart AVP Manender Kaushik.
The partnership also strengthens Samsung’s omnichannel ambitions, ensuring users across price segments can access Galaxy products through the retail method that suits them best online, offline, or now, almost instantly. With quick commerce becoming a mainstream behaviour and consumers expecting everything at once, Samsung’s move positions it squarely in the centre of modern, speed-driven tech retail.
As the lines blur between craving and checkout, Samsung and Instamart are betting that the future of buying a new phone may be as simple and as fast as ordering a carton of milk.
e-commerce
Tulasi Mohan Padavala elevated to Associate Director at Blinkit
Gurugram: Blinkit has elevated Tulasi Mohan Padavala to associate director, capping a three-year climb inside the quick-commerce firm and signalling confidence in an executive steeped in ecommerce, category management and on-ground sales execution.
Padavala shared the update publicly, saying he was “happy to share” the promotion, a succinct announcement that nevertheless marks a notable step up within one of India’s fastest-moving delivery platforms. The new role follows nearly three years at Blinkit, where he most recently served as senior category manager from February 2023 to January 2026, focusing on strategic sourcing and assortment planning.
The promotion places Padavala in Blinkit’s mid-to-senior leadership tier at a time when the company continues to expand its rapid-delivery footprint and sharpen category economics. His brief tenure as associate director began in January 2026, with responsibilities expected to span category growth, supplier strategy and cross-functional execution.
Before Blinkit, Padavala spent a short but intensive stint as global ecommerce manager at Wholsum Foods, the parent of Slurrp Farm and Millé, between November 2022 and February 2023. There he worked on digital marketplace expansion and online retail operations, adding a direct-to-consumer and international ecommerce layer to his résumé.
A longer stretch at Amazon shaped much of his cross-border commerce experience. As business development manager for Amazon’s India Global Selling programme from February 2021 to October 2022, Padavala helped Indian D2C brands enter the North American market. His remit ranged from seller recruitment and category revenue management to coordination with industry bodies, regulators and logistics partners. Key outcomes included launching more than 50 D2C consumable brands in the United States, driving a cumulative gross merchandise sales figure of $1m in FY21-22, tripling sales for participating brands during Prime Day through marketing and visibility levers, growing the monthly recurring revenue of more than 10 newly launched sellers from zero to an average $20,000 each, and negotiating ecommerce partnerships that reduced initial launch costs by 20 per cent.
Padavala’s earlier career was forged in the field rather than the dashboard. At Coffee Day Group, he spent close to five years across multiple sales leadership roles. As sales manager in the Greater Delhi Area from July 2019 to January 2021, he led vending-machine and consumables sales for small and medium enterprises with a team of more than 15 assistant and territory sales managers, managed over 2,000 clients, drove upselling and cross-selling, maintained channel partnerships and ensured timely collections. Prior to that, he served as area sales manager in Delhi between May 2018 and June 2019, handling south and east Delhi markets, and earlier in Hyderabad from April 2016 to May 2018, where he led Andhra Pradesh sales for the vending division, supervised service and logistics functions and managed a base of more than 600 machines with a four-member team.
His professional arc began with internships that combined analytics and process improvement. At Boehringer Ingelheim in 2015, Padavala analysed the impact of brand extension on the drug Pradaxa, identified key performance indicators through market research and assessed sales forecasts, recommendations that drew positive responses in pilot studies. Earlier, at Genpact in 2014, he automated manual sales-order backlog reporting using VBA and Excel, increasing efficiency by 800 per cent, and worked on benchmarking metrics within supply-chain planning processes.
From automating spreadsheets to scaling cross-border ecommerce and now steering quick-commerce categories, Padavala’s trajectory tracks the evolution of India’s retail economy itself. Blinkit’s bet is clear: blend data, discipline and delivery speed. The promotion formalises what his career already suggests. In the race for instant commerce, experience that moves from warehouse floors to global dashboards is no longer optional. It is the engine.
e-commerce
Bharatpe plays a super over as Rohit Sharma fronts T20 push
MUMBAI: When the stakes rise and seconds matter, even payments need a match-winning finish. That’s the cue for Bharatpe, which has rolled out Super Over, a nationwide campaign led by Indian cricket captain Rohit Sharma, timed neatly ahead of the ICC Men’s T20 World Cup.
The campaign draws a straight line between the pulse of cricket and the pace of everyday digital payments. A new brand film taps into India’s emotional bond with the game, while positioning UPI as the quiet hero that keeps daily transactions ticking along at match speed.
As part of Super Over, users making payments via Bharatpe UPI can bag daily rewards ranging from match tickets and signed merchandise to a chance to watch a T20 World Cup fixture alongside Rohit Sharma himself. Both consumers and merchants are also assured Zillion Coins on every eligible transaction, adding a little extra sparkle to routine payments.
Behind the scenes, Bharatpe is also batting for safety. The platform is backed by Bharatpe Shield, a fraud-protection layer designed to offer enhanced security, comprehensive coverage and dedicated support aimed at helping users transact with greater confidence as digital payments scale up.
Announcing the campaign, Bharatpe head of marketing Shilpi Kapoor said Super Over mirrors the aspirations of everyday Indians, combining speed, security and instant rewards to make UPI transactions feel both reliable and rewarding.
The campaign will play out across digital platforms, social media and on-ground activations nationwide, staying live through the T20 World Cup season proof that in cricket, as in payments, timing is everything.
e-commerce
Ahead of budget 2026, KoinX highlights crypto tax disconnect
MUMBAI: As the Union Budget 2026 looms, India’s crypto tax regime is back in the spotlight, and not in a flattering way. A new report by KoinX suggests that for many investors, the taxman walked away with more cheer than their portfolios did.
According to India’s Crypto Tax Story 2025, nearly half of Indian crypto investors ended FY25 in the red. Yet many still paid taxes. The report draws on anonymised data from close to seven lakh Indian users and paints a picture of a system that taxes activity rather than outcomes.
At the heart of the debate is the 1 per cent tax deducted at source. While the levy has improved transaction reporting, KoinX argues it has also frozen capital by skimming every trade, profit or loss notwithstanding. The result is a growing dependence on refunds and a steady squeeze on liquidity.
In FY25 alone, total TDS collected across the crypto ecosystem stood at Rs 511.83 crore. KoinX users contributed Rs 130.16 crore of this amount, but their actual tax liability was only Rs 91.64 crore. That leaves an estimated Rs 38.52 crore locked up as excess deductions.
The burden is unevenly shared. Less than 5 per cent of traders accounted for 87 percent of total TDS collections. Thin margins mean even high volume traders often overpay upfront, while smaller investors feel the pinch in proportion.
KoinX founder and CEO Punit Agarwal said the solution is not scrapping TDS but resizing it. He advocates a uniform cut to 0.1 percent, arguing it would free trapped capital, reduce the drift to offshore platforms and keep compliance intact.
The bigger fault line, however, lies in capital gains taxation. The report shows a near perfect split in outcomes. Around 51 per cent of users posted net gains, while 49 percent booked net losses. Yet taxable gains ballooned to Rs 3,722 crore because losses cannot be set off.
As a result, investors who collectively lost Rs 1,178 crore still paid tax on Rs 180 crore of gains. In plain terms, many paid capital gains tax without any capital gains to show for it.
Agarwal calls this a break from first principles. Across asset classes, no net gain means no capital gains tax. Treating crypto differently, he warns, distorts behaviour and risks driving both traders and liquidity offshore.
As policymakers fine tune the Budget 2026 numbers, KoinX hopes its data offers a timely nudge. The message is simple. A tax system that moves with outcomes, not just volumes, could make crypto less taxing for everyone.
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