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WhyQ spent a decade pivoting. It might have finally found the model that works.

ID
2166
Status
summarized
Published
30 Jun 2026, 5:38 PM
Fetched
30 Jun 2026, 5:49 PM
Provider
Vulcan Post
Category
malaysia-startup
Original URL
https://vulcanpost.com/912034/whyq-corporate-dining/
Source URL
https://vulcanpost.com/feed/

Summary

Score
8.5
Created
30 Jun 2026, 5:50 PM
Tags
Audience
startup-founders

What happened

WhyQ, a Malaysian food delivery startup, spent a decade pivoting from hawker-to-office delivery to residential delivery during COVID, and finally found a sustainable model in corporate dining. The article outlines how the company learned that scaling too fast burned cash, and a focused B2B approach now delivers better unit economics.

Why it matters

Startup founders can learn from WhyQ's pivot: rapid B2C scaling without solid unit economics is a trap, and a lean B2B model (corporate meal plans) can unlock profitability in a competitive food delivery market. The lesson is directly applicable to SaaS and marketplace founders in Southeast Asia.

Discussion angle

What red flags signal that a consumer delivery model is unsustainable, and how can founders test a pivot to B2B without losing their core team?

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