• Home 1
  • Privacy Policy
LSD News
  • Home
  • Business
  • Crypto News
  • Finance
  • Health
  • Politics
  • Sports
  • Stock
  • Tech
  • Travel
No Result
View All Result
  • Home
  • Business
  • Crypto News
  • Finance
  • Health
  • Politics
  • Sports
  • Stock
  • Tech
  • Travel
No Result
View All Result
LSD News
No Result
View All Result
Home Business

Food-delivery startup Wonder Group gets $100 million investment from Nestle

by
November 8, 2023
in Business
0
Food-delivery startup Wonder Group gets 0 million investment from Nestle
0
SHARES
0
VIEWS
Share on FacebookShare on Twitter


Wonder Group gets $100 million investment from Nestle

Food-delivery company Wonder Group has gotten a cash infusion from Nestle, as the startup looks to sell high-tech kitchen equipment and prepared ingredients to businesses such as hotels, hospitals and sports arenas.

The deal includes a $100 million investment from Nestle, along with a strategic partnership, according to sources familiar with the matter who asked not to be named because financial terms of the deal are not public.

Nestle and Wonder confirmed the deal but declined to reveal transaction details.

The funding could get Wonder a step closer to its ambitions of making it easier, faster and cheaper for busy families to have high-quality meals at home. The startup, which was valued at about $3.5 billion when it closed a $350 million funding round in June, was founded in 2018 by serial entrepreneur and former Walmart e-commerce chief Marc Lore.

Wonder recently struck a deal to acquire meal-kit company Blue Apron for $103 million. It has also developed kitchen equipment that simplifies and speeds up cooking restaurant-quality food.

Prior to Wonder, Lore founded and sold e-commerce startup Jet.com to Walmart for $3.3 billion in 2016. Walmart ultimately shut down Jet, but Lore oversaw the big-box retailer’s aggressive push into the online world and its race to close the gap with rival Amazon. He left Walmart nearly three years ago.

Lore sold Quidsi, another business he co-founded and the parent company of Diapers.com, to Amazon.

In an interview with CNBC, Lore said working with Nestle will help Wonder scale more quickly.

Marc Lore, former CEO of Walmart eCommerce

Scott Mlyn | CNBC

Nestle, a food and beverage giant, makes ingredients, snacks and frozen meals carried by grocery stores, but also has a large food-service business and sells to clients including college campuses and cruise lines. Some of those companies may also want Wonder’s kitchen equipment, Lore said.

The partnership will start with Nestle making pizza and pasta tailored for Wonder’s kitchen equipment, along with selling the kitchen equipment to clients.

Melissa Henshaw, president of out-of-home for Nestle, said many of Nestle’s clients have struggled to keep up as customers seek convenient meals and bolder flavors, but the businesses lack the employees to make them. In many cases, that’s led to changes that limit sales opportunities and disappoint customers, such as whittled-down room service menus at hotels, limited hours at cafes or food that’s flavorless, soggy or cold.

“With our partnership with Wonder, there’s this opportunity to help operators across multiple out-of-home segments be able to improve their food quality, have consistency, and actually open up some additional revenue streams that have been pretty challenged post-pandemic,” she said.

Wonder began with a very different business model: A fleet of trucks with mobile kitchens that parked and cooked meals outside customers’ homes in the suburbs of New Jersey and New York. It pulled the plug on that approach in January and laid off hundreds of employees in a push to turn a profit quicker.

Instead, the startup pivoted to opening a growing network of brick-and-mortar kitchens where it can make menu items across cuisines that customers would otherwise find at restaurants with large followings or celebrity chefs, such as José Andrés, Bobby Flay and Michael Symon. It has bought rights from a growing number of those chefs and restaurants, which allows customers to mix and match — diners could get entrees from four different restaurants for four different family members in a single order.

The company currently has about 1,100 employees.

As of the end of the year, Wonder plans to have 10 locations in the tri-state area of New York, New Jersey and Connecticut. Each of those locations has about a dozen seats where customers can dine in, but the majority of orders are delivered or picked up for at-home dining, Lore said. Next year, it plans to open at least 20 more locations, he said.

With the startup’s new push, Wonder is selling its white-labeled technology and the meal ingredients — specially made and prepared — that goes with it to other businesses. It’s already rolled out the business-to-business offering, called WonderWorks, at 50 locations, including convention centers, theaters and airports.

Ultimately, Lore said he wants Wonder to be a “super app for mealtime” with a variety of tiered options that fit customers’ budgets, dietary preferences and schedules. The choices would include kits from Blue Apron and hot meals from its kitchens.

Wonder competes with a diverse array of players in the food space. They range from delivery companies such as Uber Eats and DoorDash to quick-service restaurants including SweetGreen and Chipotle and even grocers such as Kroger and Amazon-owned Whole Foods, which have expanded prepared food offerings.

Wonder wants to differentiate itself by how it makes that food, so it can prepare a lengthy list of meals and elevate the taste of those menu items, even in a 2,800-square-foot kitchen with little equipment and labor.

“There’s no gas,” Lore said. “There’s no stove. There’s no fire. There’s no hoods. There’s no grease traps. This can go into a shoe store, a yoga studio or LensCrafters. It can go in anywhere. So it allows you to be very, very adaptable with the kitchen.”

Tags: Amazon.com IncBlue Apron Holdings IncBreaking News: BusinessBusinessbusiness newsChipotle Mexican Grill IncDoorDash IncFood and drinkFooddeliveryGroupinvestmentKroger CoMillionNestleNestle SARestaurantsRetail industrystartupSweetgreen IncUber Technologies IncWalmart Inc
Previous Post

WeWork has a massive footprint in London. Its bankruptcy could shake up the city’s office market

Next Post

Where Trump Counties in Ohio Voted to Support Abortion Rights

Next Post
Where Trump Counties in Ohio Voted to Support Abortion Rights

Where Trump Counties in Ohio Voted to Support Abortion Rights

Leave a Reply Cancel reply

Your email address will not be published. Required fields are marked *

Stay Connected test

  • 139 Followers
  • 205k Subscribers
  • 23.9k Followers
  • 99 Subscribers
ADVERTISEMENT
  • Trending
  • Comments
  • Latest
Hawaii officials work to address mental health challenges facing wildfire survivors

Hawaii officials work to address mental health challenges facing wildfire survivors

August 17, 2023
Wegovy heart health data is promising — but insurers face long road, high cost to cover obesity drugs

Wegovy heart health data is promising — but insurers face long road, high cost to cover obesity drugs

August 10, 2023
Contact lens maker faces lawsuit after woman said the product resulted in her losing an eye

Contact lens maker faces lawsuit after woman said the product resulted in her losing an eye

July 16, 2023
Gen Z is the worst at connecting with their grandparents, but building a better relationship could help fight loneliness. How to start

Gen Z is the worst at connecting with their grandparents, but building a better relationship could help fight loneliness. How to start

October 7, 2023
Tech layoffs in Southeast Asia mount as unprofitable startups seek to extend their runways

Tech layoffs in Southeast Asia mount as unprofitable startups seek to extend their runways

5
Contact lens maker faces lawsuit after woman said the product resulted in her losing an eye

Contact lens maker faces lawsuit after woman said the product resulted in her losing an eye

5
Why Cristiano Ronaldo’s move to Saudi Arabia means so much for the Gulf monarchy’s sporting ambitions | CNN

Why Cristiano Ronaldo’s move to Saudi Arabia means so much for the Gulf monarchy’s sporting ambitions | CNN

3
Georgia realtor receives invitation to play the Masters by mistake | CNN

Georgia realtor receives invitation to play the Masters by mistake | CNN

1
SK Hynix shares soar to over 2-decade highs as chipmaker’s parent reportedly plans AI data center

SK Hynix shares soar to over 2-decade highs as chipmaker’s parent reportedly plans AI data center

June 17, 2025
War Worries, Bitcoin Gains: Strategy Adds  Billion To Treasury

War Worries, Bitcoin Gains: Strategy Adds $1 Billion To Treasury

June 17, 2025
F&O Radar| Deploy Bull Call Spread in Apollo Hospitals for benefits from bullish view

F&O Radar| Deploy Bull Call Spread in Apollo Hospitals for benefits from bullish view

June 17, 2025
Battle over Jimmy Buffett’s 5 million estate highlights risks of family trusts

Battle over Jimmy Buffett’s $275 million estate highlights risks of family trusts

June 17, 2025

Recent News

SK Hynix shares soar to over 2-decade highs as chipmaker’s parent reportedly plans AI data center

SK Hynix shares soar to over 2-decade highs as chipmaker’s parent reportedly plans AI data center

June 17, 2025
War Worries, Bitcoin Gains: Strategy Adds  Billion To Treasury

War Worries, Bitcoin Gains: Strategy Adds $1 Billion To Treasury

June 17, 2025
F&O Radar| Deploy Bull Call Spread in Apollo Hospitals for benefits from bullish view

F&O Radar| Deploy Bull Call Spread in Apollo Hospitals for benefits from bullish view

June 17, 2025
Battle over Jimmy Buffett’s 5 million estate highlights risks of family trusts

Battle over Jimmy Buffett’s $275 million estate highlights risks of family trusts

June 17, 2025

We bring the latest news from all over the world and get all time updated you

Follow Us

Browse by Category

  • Business
  • Crypto News
  • Finance
  • Health
  • Politics
  • Sports
  • Stock
  • Tech
  • Travel
  • Uncategorized

Recent News

SK Hynix shares soar to over 2-decade highs as chipmaker’s parent reportedly plans AI data center

SK Hynix shares soar to over 2-decade highs as chipmaker’s parent reportedly plans AI data center

June 17, 2025
War Worries, Bitcoin Gains: Strategy Adds  Billion To Treasury

War Worries, Bitcoin Gains: Strategy Adds $1 Billion To Treasury

June 17, 2025
No Result
View All Result
  • Home 1
  • Privacy Policy

© 2024 LSD News title="Jegtheme">Jegtheme.