RINSE AND REPEAT. Products that never go out of style

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When investors evaluate consumer businesses, they usually focus on three variables: market size, market share and profitability. Yet, the most enduring competitive advantage often lies elsewhere — in consumer behaviour.The world’s most valuable consumer companies have not merely sold better products — they have also changed habits permanently. They have become the consumer’s default choice. Once that happens, competition shifts from battles over price or features to one against human psychology.History suggests that once consumers adopt a more convenient behaviour, they rarely return to the old one. Behavioural economists describe this as the status quo bias. Once a new behaviour saves time, reduces effort or removes uncertainty, the brain quickly adopts it as the new normal. Reverting to previous behaviour feels like a loss. This explains why some consumer businesses enjoy extraordinary longevity, pricing power and premium valuations. Their moat is not simply technology or distribution — it is also behavioural lock-in.India’s consumption journey over the past 25 years illustrates this remarkably well.New behavioursEntertainment was once synonymous with single-screen cinemas. Multiplexes transformed the experience through better seating, cleaner facilities, superior technology and a family-friendly environment. Consumers upgraded their expectations. Years later, OTT platforms again rewrote viewing habits by offering on-demand, personalised entertainment. Cinema-going frequency may have declined, but consumers did not return to single-screen theatres. Each innovation established a new behavioural baseline. India’s pay TV subscriber base has steadily fallen down the years, while streaming continues to gain adoption.Retail tells an even more compelling story. Consumers first migrated from neighbourhood stores to organised retail. They then embraced e-commerce for wider assortment and doorstep delivery. Today, quick commerce is redefining convenience altogether.What is fascinating is that every successive innovation has solved a small friction but created a disproportionately larger behavioural change. E-commerce eliminated the need to travel. Quick commerce is eliminating waiting itself. Saving a shopping trip changed retail. Saving one day transformed e-commerce. Saving 10 minutes is now reshaping grocery consumption.Industry estimates suggest India’s quick commerce market could continue growing at over 40 per cent annually over the next few years. That growth is not merely about faster logistics — it also reflects a permanent change in consumer expectations. Once households experience groceries arriving in minutes, convenience becomes the benchmark. They are no longer buying groceries alone, they are also buying time.Payments reflect the same behavioural shift. India now processes more than 18 billion UPI transactions each month, making it the world’s largest real-time payments ecosystem. Consumers no longer think about carrying cash, searching for change or swiping cards.Mobility follows the same principle. Uber and Ola did not simply organise taxis, they also removed uncertainty. Consumers know the fare before the ride, track the driver in real time and complete payment automatically.Food delivery offers another illustration. Domino’s transformed India’s pizza market by standardising quality, pricing and delivery. Swiggy and Zomato subsequently shifted restaurant discovery itself. Increasingly, consumers decide what to eat inside an app rather than outside it. The platform has become the starting point of demand.Reducing frictionAcross these industries, a common flywheel emerges. Companies remove one layer of friction. The reduced friction increases usage frequency. Frequency creates habit. Habit generates data. Data improves personalisation. Improved personalisation further strengthens convenience, reinforcing the habit. Over time, this behavioural flywheel becomes an economic moat that competitors find extremely difficult to replicate.This also explains why some platform businesses sustain premium valuations despite appearing expensive on traditional financial metrics. Investors are not simply valuing today’s revenues or earnings — they are also valuing future consumer behaviour, which has already been conditioned. Amazon Prime subscribers consistently spend more than non-members. Netflix viewers rarely return to scheduled television. Apple users exhibit exceptional ecosystem loyalty. UPI users seldom revert to cash. Blinkit customers increasingly expect groceries within minutes rather than hours.These are not merely successful products — they are also behavioural monopolies.What’s nextThe next behavioural transition may already be underway.For nearly three decades, consumers have interacted with the internet by searching. Search engines trained us to type keywords, browse links and compare websites before arriving at an answer. Generative AI challenges that behaviour altogether.Instead of searching, consumers increasingly ask. Instead of spending time finding and organising information, they expect information to find them. AI removes the effort involved in discovering, filtering and synthesising knowledge.If that behavioural shift continues, the economics of digital advertising, customer acquisition, search and brand discovery could be fundamentally rewritten over the next decade.For investors, this offers a different way to analyse businesses. Instead of asking only whether market share will grow, perhaps the more important questions are: Has the product become the consumer’s first instinct? Does its absence create inconvenience? Would switching back feel like a step backwards? If the answers are ‘yes’ then pricing power, customer retention and long-term profitability often follow naturally.India’s next decade of consumption will, therefore, be defined not solely by rising incomes or favourable demographics but also the businesses that become embedded in everyday routines. Is your brand becoming an everyday habit?(Karan Taurani is EVP, Elara Capital)Published on July 13, 2026