Ep 45 Antonio Nunes: Delivering Latin America’s Groceries with Mercadoni

According to Antonio Nunes, Latin American families spend up to four hours per week in the supermarket. When combined with crippling traffic and safety concerns in many Latin American cities, it becomes clear why delivering groceries in Latin America could be a highly lucrative business. Antonio Nunes noticed that opportunity while living in Bogota and sold everything to go on a mission to deliver Latin America’s groceries in under an hour.

In this episode, I sat down with Portuguese entrepreneur, Antonio Nunes, to talk about why Latin America is growing so quickly, why last-mile delivery is a better business in LatAm than in the US or Europe, and what he has learned in his journey doing business across borders.

People who want to start companies want to change the world

Antonio’s first entrepreneurial experience involved founding an NGO in Mozambique when he was 19 years old. He was focused on making it possible for budding entrepreneurs from anywhere in the world to develop and test their ideas because he believes entrepreneurs are people who want to change the world they live in. This project marked the first step in Antonio’s career in international entrepreneurship that would take him from Asia to Latin America. Find out how Antonio started supporting global entrepreneurship in Lusophone Africa in this episode of Crossing Borders.

Scaling e-commerce businesses in Asia and Latin America

Antonio scaled a fashion e-commerce business in Singapore from a Starbucks office to a 500-person business in just nine months, knowing little about e-commerce and nothing about fashion. When Rocket Internet brought him to Bogota to build Linio, Antonio was prepared to build Latin America’s Amazon. Linio now operates in Chile, Colombia, Argentina, Mexico, Ecuador, Peru, and Venezuela. Check out to episode to learn how building Linio inspired Antonio to found Mercadoni.

Why last-mile delivery is a big opportunity in Latin America

Latin America is growing and changing much faster than the United States as it leapfrogs over legacy technologies, like landline phones, that hold the US and Europe back. Last-mile delivery has grown particularly fast, with Mercadoni’s competitors like Rappi and Cornershop receiving investment from the US this year. Antonio considers that the tight competition for Latin America’s last-mile delivery market validates this US$300B market opportunity. Antonio explains the unit economics of Latin American delivery services, and why these numbers are better than in the US, in this episode.

Delivering fresh fruit means Mercadoni is living its mission

Mercadoni seeks to replace grocery store runs for busy Latin Americans so they can focus on their families, jobs, and friends. Of the top ten items ordered through the app, eight are fresh products, including bananas, tomatoes, and meat. According to Antonio, this pattern means Mercadoni is serving its purpose; people are trusting others to choose even their products, one of the hardest items to buy.

Antonio is a serial entrepreneur who has spent his whole career building businesses across borders, first in Mozambique, then Singapore, then in Colombia. His most recent venture, Mercadoni, is fighting for market share in one of Latin America’s most competitive industries, with support from the Brazilian tech giant, Movile. Find out more about the opportunities in last-mile delivery and tech in Latin America in this episode of Crossing Borders.

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