Bhavish Aggarwal Is Choking Ola
Bhavish Aggarwal Is Choking Ola
Bhavish Aggarwal Is Choking Ola
Aggarwal’s cab-hailing giant is in the doldrums, while his EV venture is off to a shaky
start. Insiders blame a toxic culture and a distrustful CEO who can’t let go.
Ola has a massive problem. It is called Bhavish Aggarwal. On the one hand, the 36-
year-old co-founder and CEO of Ola and Ola Electric is one of India’s sharpest and
most ambitious young tech entrepreneurs, who has more energy than the Duracell
bunny and the uncanny ability to dream and execute mega projects. By all accounts, the
way he absorbs knowledge and learns things, his attention to detail is a sight to behold.
On the other hand, insiders also say he is distrustful, insists on signing off on the
smallest of details, can’t focus on one thing for too long and keeps moving from one
project to another.
Aggarwal pushes unrealistic deadlines on social media, creating hype and stalling,
giving the world the impression that things are much closer to completion than in reality.
At Ola’s office in Bengaluru, he breathes fire, breaks laptops, bashes his head in anger
and fires people if the same unrealistic deadlines are missed.
The launch of Ola Electric’s scooters is a case in point. An apology, several missed
deadlines—from the launch of the booking website to the rollout plan—and many tech
glitches later, the company finally got the scooters to different cities for test drives earlier
this month. And while both Aggarwal and the company celebrate every single test drive
and remain upbeat about the product and its delivery schedule, the two-wheeler
remains very much an unfinished product.
When the first bookings were made in September, the delivery timeline for the scooters
was October, which got pushed to November. Last week, Ola Electric pushed back the
delivery for its scooters to the second half of December, citing global chip and
electronics shortages. But this is a thin cover. The chip shortage is not new and has
affected a lot of industries for over a year now.
“The reality is that the scooters are not ready. They are probably 60% ready, which is a
huge feat, given the company started working on them sometime in March this year,”
says a former executive, asking not to be named. “But I don’t see the deliveries anytime
soon. The problem is that Bhavish wanted the deliveries yesterday. He is the kind of
man who thinks it is possible to have a child in one month by getting nine women
pregnant.”
‘A treadmill’
So the apprehension of the former executive—the first one quoted above—at the choice
of our meeting place on a rainy November evening is natural. After all, people recognize
each other over masks here. Worse, such is the terror of the company and its CEO that
not many people talk about Ola, fewer yet speak about it in public. So he insists I don’t
record our conversation and take notes instead, as we look for a quiet corner to settle
down. We find one, and for the next hour, he talks about Ola.
“Bhavish is the biggest bottleneck,” says this executive, in a volume that is a few
notches lower than his normal. “Working with him is like running on a treadmill, 24×7.
You get exhausted, but you reach nowhere. Eventually, you leave.”
“There are no teams left to do the business. There have been so many issues with the
app for years, but there is no tech or product team to sort them,” he says. “As long as
Bhati was here, people were looking at the problems. At this point, anything goes.”
Ankit Bhati, Aggarwal’s batchmate from IIT Bombay, co-founded Ola and was chief
technology officer. According to media reports, he distanced himself from the company’s
day-to-day functioning in 2019, apparently unhappy with being sidelined from Ola
Electric. We wrote about this here.
After Bhati’s departure, Riddlr co-founder Brijraj Vaghani was supposed to be taking
over the engineering and product verticals as CTO for the mobility business, but then he
too left.
“The company has been without a CTO for nearly 18 months. How do you run a tech
company without a CTO?” asks the executive quoted above. “There is hardly anyone
left in the company who understands the product. If something goes kaput, there is
hardly anyone to fix it.”
If you have used the Ola app for booking a ride, you would have come across these
glitches yourself. Users have complained about general lagginess and crashes, location
The electric scooter launch debacle was the latest in a long list of such issues.
“Bhavish hired people, doubled their salaries and gave them an unrealistic timeline,”
says this executive. “People told him it wasn’t possible, but he wouldn’t listen. He fired
them instead. So the rest of them lied. That’s what has led to the launch debacle.”
As the 8 September deadline loomed and it became clearer that an announcement was
almost impossible because the website wasn’t ready, Ola Electric brought an engineer
from Ola Financial Services to fix the website overnight, which didn’t happen. “So the
next day, he was fired because Bhavish had to publish an apology,” recalls this
executive.
Still, the bigger problem isn’t the past but the future. A scooter will be delivered, just like
it was launched, despite multiple issues. “But most likely, it will be a shitty product which
can break down anytime,” he says.
So why the hurry, you may ask. First, because it is the nature of the CEO, and second,
because the cab business is no longer hot, and nothing else he has tried has worked so
far. It is evident in Ola’s valuation, which has been stuck in the $6 billion range for the
past two years. Ola Electric, an entity not owned by Ola, is now valued at $5 billion,
making it Aggarwal’s ride out.
One-trick pony?
“The cab-hailing business is finite. If you put together Ola and Uber, they are at, say,
100, and the market opportunity is about 120. So the headroom to grow in the core
business is not very high,” says the second executive quoted above. “You also have to
understand that Ola overtook Uber in India not because it was a better service, but
because of the problems Uber was facing in India.”
Since starting India operations in 2013, Uber grew at a breakneck speed, growing from
about 5% of the ride-sharing market in 2015 to nearly half of it sometime last year.
When it sold its food delivery vertical to Zomato in January 2020, everyone thought
Uber would double down on its core business in India. But then something changed.
India is still the sixth-largest market for Uber but the San Francisco-based company
seems to have dropped the ball on India, because a) the pandemic has hurt the
The pandemic has been unforgiving for the business. Ola’s operating revenue for the 12
months ended March 2021 fell more than 60% from a year ago to Rs980 crore. Ride-
hailing, which saw a drop of over 50%, still accounted for 90% of revenue. The food and
financial services businesses together accounted for just over Rs 65 crore. Losses
came down significantly too, mostly on the back of layoffs and reduced marketing
spend.
The numbers may have improved, but the most unfortunate part of cab-hailing apps is
that nobody in the world has turned a profit at scale purely on this one business. In
regulatory filings before its 2019 IPO, Uber had famously said that the company might
never be able to make money from its core taxi-hailing business.
So it is a matter of survival that Ola finds other businesses. It has tried multiple things
over the years: cabs, autos, two-wheelers, aggregation, manufacturing, food, finance,
the list goes on. But outside cab-hailing, nothing has scaled up well.
“So many of us told Bhavish not to get into the food business because it is a very high
burn business, but Bhavish said he was convinced and wanted to show the middle
finger to UberEats,” says a third former executive, also requesting anonymity. “The
hundreds of crores of rupees that went down the drain due to his whim was not
“Bhavish thinks brands are not going to stand out or make him money, so now they are
getting into deliveries,” says the second former executive. “Nobody knows what is
happening. If you don’t create visibility with the brands, how are people going to know
about it? Did you know Ola has a pizza brand?”
“I don’t even know who is heading the vertical now. I don’t think Bhavish has any
interest left in the business,” says the second former executive. In November, the
company said it is looking to expand its insurance business internationally to support
In between, there was the failed Nagpur experiment with commercial electric vehicles
and Ola Fleets. The latest bet is Ola Cars, a platform for buying and selling used cars.
“They are trying to build it heavily, but I don’t think it is doing well,” says the second
former executive. “Bhavish tweeted recently that the company has sold more than 1,000
cars through Ola Cars. But again, it is full of glitches."
There have been multiple complaints. People are not just complaining about the tech
issues but also the overall experience on the website. Some have even said that the
prices on Ola Cars are higher than other such platforms selling used cars.
Long story short, till the electric scooter business proves otherwise, Ola can safely be
called a one-hit pony. It has cracked exactly one business, and that too only in India.
Also, at a time when its only rival was retreating. But don’t let that reality ruin good
storytelling.
The problem with Ola—and, by extension, Bhavish Aggarwal—is that for all the efforts
and the genius of a maverick founder, they haven’t been able to create a second viable
business, a second pillar of growth, so far. It is worth reiterating here that none of these
businesses was easy. But given the kind of money the company raised and the talent it
attracted, this is the worst possible outcome. And there is one person ultimately
responsible.
“They were a bunch of hustlers from IIT Bombay. They did whatever it took to fight Uber
and get a bigger market share in 2016-17,” says the first former executive. “They did
that. Then the company became bigger and growth slowed. So Bhavish brought in
professionals to run the company. But it created a culture issue.”
The professional managers came with years of experience in well-structured
organizations. They came from companies where opinions mattered, dissent was
common and employees were encouraged to question leaders. Ola is the opposite.
Aggarwal is extremely ambitious and supremely paranoid. He wants to win at any cost.
Failure is like death. Dissent is frowned upon. At Ola, there is a perpetual sense of
urgency. Aggarwal wants everything done yesterday, which puts people under immense
pressure. People either leave or lie, bringing the entire system down.
He gets out of meetings, shuts people down, asks people to get out or keeps them
waiting for hours on end. In-person meetings are called past midnight, people are kept
waiting and then Aggarwal cancels the meeting, asking them to come back early the
following day, the executive adds.
“He will call for a meeting at 7 am on a Sunday and arrive midday and cancel the
meeting,” says the third former executive. “He misses no opportunity to put this servant-
master relationship on record.”
For Aggarwal, his company is his to control. Famously, in 2016, he turned down a
billion-dollar investment from SoftBank because he didn’t want to be put in the same
position as Snapdeal, where SoftBank as an investor tried to push the struggling e-
commerce startup to sell to larger rival Flipkart. Not only did he decline the $1 billion
investment, he also changed the board’s composition to give himself unassailable
power over anyone else.
“And since he has the power over the board, he will either understand this and change
accordingly, or Aggarwal will run Ola to the ground.”