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§ Private Profile · Vancouver, BC, Canada
Tiggy is a technology company.
Tiggy designed and operated an ultrafast grocery delivery service, offering a wide array of everyday essentials and fresh produce directly to consumers within 15 minutes of ordering. The company built its operational model around strategically located dark stores and employed its own dedicated delivery fleet, ensuring rapid fulfillment and last-mile efficiency. This integrated approach allowed for tight control over inventory and delivery logistics, a critical factor for achieving its ambitious delivery timelines.
The venture was co-founded by Eugene Bisovka and Razmik Sukyasov in July 2021, launching initially in Vancouver, Canada. Their core insight stemmed from a recognition of evolving consumer expectations for immediate gratification and convenience, particularly in the grocery sector. They aimed to translate this demand into a scalable quick-commerce solution, leveraging their understanding of logistical challenges and consumer behavior in urban environments.
Tiggy catered to individuals seeking immediate access to groceries and household items, effectively positioning itself as a modern, hyper-convenient alternative to traditional shopping trips. The company’s long-term vision centered on fundamentally transforming the way consumers purchase daily necessities, aspiring to redefine the future of urban convenience and reshape retail landscapes through its rapid delivery infrastructure.
Tiggy has raised $6.0M across 1 funding round.
Tiggy has raised $6.0M in total across 1 funding round.
Tiggy has raised $6.0M across 1 funding round. Most recently, it raised $6.0M Seed in September 2021.
| Date | Round | Lead Investors | Other Investors | Status |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Sep 1, 2021 | $6M Seed | Heartland | Banana Capital, LAUNCH, LOI Venture, Northside Ventures, Nyca Partners, Panache Ventures, Plug & Play Ventures, Thomas Pentz, TQ Ventures, Demi Lovato, LEV Ekster, Philippe Teixeira DA Mota, Scott Belsky, FJ Labs, Global Founders Capital, Redbox Ventures | Announced |
Tiggy has raised $6.0M in total across 1 funding round.
Tiggy's investors include Heartland, Banana Capital, LAUNCH, LOI Venture, Northside Ventures, Nyca Partners, Panache Ventures, Plug & Play Ventures, Thomas Pentz, TQ Ventures, Demi Lovato, Lev Ekster.
Tiggy is a Vancouver-based grocery delivery startup specializing in ultrafast 15-minute deliveries of everyday essentials like fresh produce, pantry staples, fruits, vegetables, and healthcare items via a mobile app. Founded in July 2021 by Eugene Bisovka and Razmik Sukyasov, it targets Canadian consumers seeking on-demand shopping for quick needs, such as running out of ingredients while cooking, in a market where e-commerce sales hit $29 billion but food delivery remains nascent.[1][2][3][5] Tiggy serves urban households in Vancouver and Toronto through dark stores—compact, inventory-optimized fulfillment centers—offering over 1,400 SKUs at launch and solving the problem of slow grocery delivery by promising free 15-minute service, disrupting incumbents like Instacart.[1][3] It raised $6.35 million in seed funding in December 2021, led by Heartland with participation from Global Founders Capital, FJ Labs, and Redbox Ventures, fueling plans to expand SKUs, add dark stores in Vancouver (from four), and launch five in Toronto by year-end, with ambitions for 350 centers nationwide by 2024; early growth impressed investors, employing 150 people in five months and challenging rivals with 1 million customers.[1][2]
Tiggy emerged in July 2021 amid rising demand for quick commerce in Canada, just as Instacart expanded into food delivery across all 10 provinces.[1] Co-founders Eugene Bisovka and Razmik Sukyasov launched from Vancouver, capitalizing on the post-pandemic shift to e-commerce and on-demand grocery needs.[1][2][5] The app went live in September 2021 with over 1,400 SKUs, including fresh items, and quickly gained traction—investor Turner Novak of Banana Capital noted its "impressive pace" in disrupting incumbents via capital-efficient dark stores.[1] Seed funding announced in December 2021 provided runway for rapid scaling, marking a pivotal moment that enabled Toronto entry and nationwide ambitions.[1][3]
Tiggy rides the global quick commerce wave, bringing 15-minute grocery delivery to Canada's $29 billion e-commerce market where food delivery lags behind players like Instacart.[1][5] Timing aligns with post-2021 consumer shifts to on-demand habits, amplified by urban density in Vancouver and Toronto, enabling dark store scalability over traditional retail.[1][3] Market forces like rising e-commerce penetration and rival expansions favor Tiggy's lean model, which avoids heavy reliance on third-party logistics for better margins and speed.[1] It influences the ecosystem by pressuring incumbents, spurring competition, and normalizing ultrafast essentials delivery, potentially accelerating Canada's adoption of dark store networks nationwide.[1]
Tiggy's early momentum—seed funding, store expansions, and investor hype—positions it to capture quick commerce share in Canada, with dark stores scaling to 350 by 2024 plans signaling aggressive growth.[1] Upcoming trends like AI-optimized inventory and expanded urban footprints will shape its path, while competition from global giants tests its efficiency edge. Its influence may evolve from regional disruptor to national leader, redefining on-demand groceries and tying back to its mission of forever changing everyday essentials shopping.[1][5]