Why Is It So Difficult for Multi-Location Businesses to Keep Every Branch Visible Online?
Local and multi-location businesses often manage fragmented customer data spread across Google Maps, Search, websites, Instagram, and Meta. This disconnected information makes it difficult to improve visibility and engagement consistently, leaving business owners to navigate increasingly complex digital systems while also managing their day-to-day operations.
Running a restaurant, salon, clinic, retail outlet, or service business is already operationally demanding. Yet owners are now expected to understand digital marketing, customer experience, websites, social platforms, and constantly evolving online systems. The challenge is not a lack of capability but the burden of interpreting disconnected information and making sense of fragmented guidance. Observing this gap raised a larger question for Akhil Singh: why had technology become so difficult for everyday businesses to use? Finding that answer required looking back at the experiences that shaped his perspective on people and problems.
Akhil Singh grew up across Mumbai, Delhi, Chennai, Bengaluru, and Pune. Exposure to different languages, cultures, and ways of life helped him become adaptable, open-minded, and comfortable connecting with people from diverse backgrounds.
Living in several of India's major cities exposed Akhil to constant change. Every place offered different communities, traditions, and perspectives. Adapting to new environments became second nature, and over time he developed an instinct for understanding people in varied situations. That ability to appreciate different contexts would later become important while working with businesses facing unique challenges. Before entrepreneurship, however, there was another chapter that gave him the confidence to act on those observations.
Leaving a Comfortable Career to Build Something Meaningful
Before starting Gloo Local, Akhil had spent nearly ten years working in product and technology startups. The experience exposed him to both the strengths and limitations of India's technology ecosystem and encouraged him to solve practical business problems.
Years in technology gave Akhil a close view of sophisticated digital products and the gap between innovation and everyday use. He repeatedly saw businesses struggling to translate advanced tools into practical decisions. Despite having a comfortable career, he felt increasingly drawn toward solving a real and visible problem. That conviction eventually led him to build Gloo Local, though the early days demanded difficult choices and constant refinement.
Building a Product Simple Enough Yet Powerful Enough
During its first six months, Gloo Local focused on identifying the most urgent customer need while building a product that remained simple for businesses yet capable of managing marketing data across multiple channels and locations.
The team faced a difficult balancing act. Local businesses needed simplicity, but their operations generated complex streams of data and marketing requirements. Building technology that could manage both became the startup's biggest early challenge. Every customer conversation changed assumptions and clarified priorities. Gradually, those iterations began producing encouraging signals that suggested the idea might genuinely work.
Gloo Local achieved its first sale within two weeks. Early encouragement also came from Sandeep from Jean Claude Olivier, a high-end salon in Bandra, Mumbai, who became one of the first believers in the startup.
For every founder, early validation matters because it transforms an idea into something tangible. The first sale within two weeks showed that businesses recognised the problem and were willing to trust a new approach. Support from early customers reinforced the team's belief that they were solving something meaningful. Yet early momentum did not eliminate uncertainty or make the entrepreneurial journey easier.
Continuing Even When the Numbers Were Uncomfortable
Akhil considered quitting many times. Customer churn, slow progress, and earning nearly twenty times more in his previous career than the startup generated made entrepreneurship emotionally and financially demanding.
The financial difference between his previous career and startup life was significant. Customers left, plans changed, and progress often felt painfully slow. What sustained him was careful financial planning, family support, and a continued belief that the problem deserved a solution. Each setback became information that improved both the product and his understanding of customers. Those lessons eventually shaped a much larger ambition.
The Vision Behind Gloo Local's Next Chapter
Gloo Local aims to become an AI growth operating system for local and multi-location businesses. Every location will have an intelligent agent that learns continuously and recommends coordinated actions that improve visibility, engagement, and revenue.
Today, more than 600 local businesses use Gloo Local AI every day. The company's long-term vision is to replace fragmented tools and broad recommendations with empirical, location-aware intelligence that helps businesses make better decisions and grow sustainably. Looking back at the journey, Akhil's advice remains rooted in experience: do not wait for complete certainty, stay close to customers, and remember that every difficult phase carries lessons because, in his words,
Persistence matters most when progress is not yet visible.