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Jubilant FoodWorks: The Lone Wolf Leading India’s QSR Pack Amid Slowing Demand

India’s quick-service restaurant (QSR) industry may be in the middle of a soft patch, but one player seems to be rewriting the rules of the game. While most restaurant chains spent the September quarter navigating muted demand, higher costs and the weight of festive fasting periods, Jubilant FoodWorks — the master franchisee of Domino’s Pizza in India — delivered a performance that stood starkly apart from the rest.

At a time when eating-out frequency dipped and delivery costs pinched margins across the sector, Jubilant managed to post robust growth, signalling a fundamental shift in what is driving success in India’s $27.8 billion QSR market. And if trends continue, the company may be steering the industry toward a future defined by delivery, speed, and unrelenting focus on consumer convenience.


A Quarter Where Jubilant Defied Gravity

Jubilant FoodWorks reported ₹2,340.15 crore in revenue, a strong 19.7% year-on-year jump, even as competitors struggled to maintain single-digit growth. Even more striking: net profit doubled to ₹194.6 crore.

This performance didn’t just outpace the competition—it exposed how deeply consumer behaviour has evolved.

While much of the sector grappled with sluggish dine-in and the Navratri-Shraavana fasting overlap, Jubilant leaned into its core strengths: a delivery-first mindset, aggressive value pricing, and constant product innovation.

Same-store sales growth hit 9.1%, a standout figure in an otherwise muted demand environment. CEO Sameer Khetarpal attributed this to Domino’s delivery-led model and “continuous product innovation,” which helped the brand stay top-of-mind even during fasting periods.

During the quarter, the company added 93 new stores, including 81 Domino’s outlets, expanding its footprint to nearly 3,500 stores in India and overseas — reaffirming Domino’s position as India’s largest QSR chain.


Competitors Feel the Chill of a Slowdown

While Jubilant soared, others in the sector faced a far tougher operating landscape.

Westlife Foodworld (McDonald’s West & South India)

Managing director Saurabh Kalra called Q2 “a period of continued softness in discretionary spend,” reflecting a cautious consumer mood.

Devyani International (KFC, Pizza Hut)

Chairman Ravi Jaipuria noted that overlapping fasting seasons led to a sharp dip in out-of-home consumption.

Sapphire Foods (KFC, Pizza Hut)

CEO Sanjay Purohit summed up sentiment succinctly: “Nothing has improved materially.”

A Bernstein report echoed the industry’s concerns, highlighting deeper structural issues, including rising delivery costs and overdependence on discounts to retain market share.


What Set Jubilant Apart?

While rivals battled margin pressure and weak dine-in trends, Jubilant’s strategy offered strong insulation against industry headwinds.

1. A Fully Owned Delivery Network

Unlike most QSR players who depend on Swiggy and Zomato, Domino’s controls its end-to-end delivery.
This allows:

With a 20-minute delivery promise and frequent free delivery offers, Domino’s has built a delivery recall unmatched in the industry.

“Domino’s has the biggest mind share in delivery—people associate it with reliability and speed,” said Satish Meena, founder of Datum Intelligence.

2. Smart, Layered Pricing Strategy

Domino’s cracked the affordability-premium balance:

This “value-plus-variety” approach helped sustain demand even in a slow market.

3. A Strong, Sticky Loyalty Base

With a 40-million-member loyalty programme, Domino’s enjoys repeat orders that reduce customer acquisition costs and maintain demand consistency.

4. A Category That Naturally Wins

Pizza remains one of India’s most frequently ordered delivery foods — a product that travels well, offers meal-for-many convenience, and thrives in family settings.


An Industry Under Pressure

Across the broader QSR landscape, several structural challenges continue to weigh on profitability:

The sector’s challenges are not merely quarterly fluctuations but signs of a deeper, evolving consumer landscape.


A Promising December Quarter Ahead

Despite September’s softness, QSR operators are optimistic about the December quarter — historically the strongest period for food services in India.

Domino’s is already seeing tailwinds:

Analysts agree that food spending usually stays strong from Diwali through New Year, buoyed by higher mall visits, holiday travel and social gatherings.

Other major players share the optimism:


Takeaways: The New Rules of India’s QSR Game

Jubilant FoodWorks’ stellar quarter illustrates how India’s QSR industry is undergoing a structural reset.

The winning formula is clear:

As India’s QSR market heads toward $43.5 billion by 2030, the players who master convenience, affordability and operational efficiency will lead the next decade.

For now, Jubilant FoodWorks stands tall — the lone wolf running ahead while the pack regroups.


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