The Swiggy Genie team approached us with a simple ask to launch a discount campaign that could drive growth for the category and encourage users to explore other use cases. But before jumping into promotions, we wanted to pause and understand why users weren’t already doing that.
Digging into user behavior revealed an interesting pattern most people saw Genie as a service for sending only selective items. For instance, users who once used it to send clothes often repeated that same use case, while many others who tried the service once never came back.
When we looked at the data with the business team, it became clear that entire categories were going untouched. This led us to form a few hypotheses: perhaps users weren’t comfortable sending certain types of items, or maybe they were turning to alternatives like Dunzo for those needs.
Ultimately, this pointed to a deeper challenge not just about discounts, but about perception and engagement.
Key Challenges
Low Activation: Many first-time users never returned, showing a need for more engaging onboarding and clearer value.
Limited Perception: Genie was seen as a one-time, transactional service.
Weak Recall: Competing platforms like Dunzo dominated the space for quick delivery needs.
Now, the goal was not to run yet another discount coupon, but to actually make people remember Swiggy Genie when they needed it most. Because let’s face it when you’ve forgotten your charger at home or left your keys at a friend’s place, you’re not thinking about saving ₹20, you’re thinking “Who can fix this right now?”
We wanted to move beyond transactional nudges and instead build meaningful, memorable experiences rooted in human behavior — the kind that spark intrinsic motivation and a little emotional connection.
Pick-up and drop is a pure need-based service, and in those rushed moments, users don’t go hunting for discounts they go with the first name that pops into their head. That’s exactly where we wanted Genie to live: in that split-second of recall, right when the need hits.
So, instead of shouting “offer!”, we decided to whisper “remember me?” — through design, gamification, and small moments of delight that made Genie stick in people’s minds (and hopefully their muscle memory too)
Genie was already part of Swiggy, but most people weren’t using it to its full potential. The Birthday Fest game and New Year stories sparked fresh curiosity, users started noticing Genie, trying it out, and coming back for more.
I shaped the user journey to make discovery seamless, interactions playful, and notifications genuinely engaging, turning Genie into something users actually wanted to explore.
Gamified onboarding and storytelling boosted Genie’s visibility, resulting in a 70% increase in first-time user sign-ups during the campaign.
Scenario-driven challenges and emotional content re-engaged lapsed users, leading to a 30% rise in dormant user activation.
Grateful to Aathira for bringing every idea to life through her stunning graphics, and to Madhusudhan for his guidance and mentorship throughout the journey. This project was a true team effort.
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