The Problem With One-Way Quick Commerce
Everyday commerce has become faster than ever, but speed alone has not solved deeper challenges. Products often move through fragmented supply chains, consumers have little influence over what is stocked, and the relationship between a purchase and its long-term value usually ends at delivery. At the same time, producers such as FPOs and manufacturers often struggle to build stronger connections with modern commerce networks. This leaves gaps across the ecosystem, creating unnecessary waste and missed opportunities for everyone involved. Accesco Living was created to address these challenges through an intelligent and circular commerce model. Behind this idea was Argha Sengupta, whose own entrepreneurial journey had already taught him how difficult it is to build meaningful systems from the ground up.
Argha Sengupta grew up in Siliguri before later moving to Bengaluru. His entrepreneurial mindset developed while building SBSO, where he worked through limited resources, organisational challenges, and the everyday realities of creating something from scratch. Those early experiences were less about quick success and more about learning resilience, leadership, and institution-building. Instead of seeing obstacles as setbacks, he gradually viewed them as opportunities to understand how lasting organisations are created. As his perspective evolved, he began thinking beyond his first venture and started exploring a much larger question about the future of everyday commerce in India.
Building a Different Kind of Commerce Network
With those lessons behind him, Argha Sengupta joined hands with co-founder Ayushman Saha to build Accesco Living. Rather than creating another quick-commerce platform focused only on faster deliveries, they envisioned an ecosystem where consumer demand could shape sourcing, FPOs and manufacturers could connect more directly with customers, and recoverable product value could continue moving through commerce. Through Accesco Loop, Cycle and Trade, they aimed to build a model where commerce did not simply end after every purchase. Turning that vision into reality, however, demanded careful validation before any larger expansion could begin.
The early months tested every assumption behind the business. Hiring the right employees, laying a strong foundation, and validating the idea became the team's biggest priorities. Instead of relying on assumptions, they focused on research and customer feedback. More than 1,000 form responses helped validate that the problem they wanted to solve genuinely existed. During this period, Argha also found unwavering support from his father, Mr. Mithun Sengupta, who became the first person to believe in the startup. That confidence gave the team strength to keep building despite uncertainty.
Like many founders, Argha experienced moments when quitting seemed easier than continuing. What kept him moving forward was the bond he shared with his employees, the determination created by criticism from doubters, and the desire to change his own destiny. Over time, those efforts translated into meaningful progress. Accesco Living received the SISFS grant, built collaborations with IITs and NITs, published news articles, expanded to a team of more than 100 members, established a network of over 100 campus ambassadors, and collected more than 10,000 beta users. Each milestone strengthened the belief that the vision could scale further.
A Vision Beyond Fast Deliveries
For Argha Sengupta and Ayushman Saha, success is measured by more than delivery speed. Their long-term vision is to build Accesco Living into India's next-generation intelligent and circular commerce network, where household demand influences sourcing, products reach consumers quickly, and recoverable value flows back into the ecosystem instead of being lost after purchase. They also want FPOs and manufacturers to gain stronger access to modern commerce while making shopping more connected, efficient, and sustainable. That vision continues to guide every decision as the company prepares for broader expansion.
Looking back, Argha believes one of the greatest rewards of entrepreneurship has been the relationships formed with his core team, whom he now considers family. Their support became just as valuable as every business milestone along the way. Reflecting on his own journey, he shares a simple message with future founders:
Great people can build brilliance from a bad idea. The wrong people can destroy even the greatest one.
It is a reminder that while ideas matter, people ultimately determine how far those ideas can go, and that belief continues to shape the future of Accesco Living.