While they have taken different approaches, both companies are trying to become the region's leading one-stop mobile platform, or "super app," by offering a variety of consumer services.
On Thursday, Singapore-based Grab announced the launch early next year of online health care services, such as medical consultations and deliveries of medicine.
Grab has pledged to provide "affordable" service in Southeast Asia's underserved health care market. "This has the potential to make a huge impact in the lives of our families and communities we serve across Southeast Asia," CEO Anthony Tan said.
Ping An Insurance took part in Grab's $1 billion fundraising earlier in August, through its Ping An Capital unit. That helped Grab fill a gap in its offerings, namely health care services. The company hopes health care fits nicely with its current offerings, such as GrabPay, its mobile payment service. Grab drivers will deliver medicine to customers, for example.
Such services will not be new to Indonesians. Go-Jek, the Indonesian company that is Grab's biggest rival, already has a similar service called Go-Med. The two companies are fighting across a broad front. In July, Grab announced a partnership with Jakarta-based startup HappyFresh to offer grocery deliveries. Go-Jek has Go-Mart, a similar service.
Capitalizing on their networks of riders and drivers, both Grab and Go-Jek are branching out. Many of their businesses, including mobile payments and food delivery, are mirror images of one another.
This reflects differences in how the rivals developed. At the beginning, Grab was a ride-hailing specialist. It was already operating in six countries in 2014, before launching its first new service the following year. On the other hand, Go-Jek has operated solely in Indonesia until recently, before expanding into Vietnam, so its largely domestic operation is more diverse.
U.S.-based Uber Technologies' pullout from Southeast Asia earlier this year left Grab and Go-Jek by far the two biggest players in the region. Go-Jek has its sights set on Thailand, Singapore and the Philippines in the coming months, promising a region wide battle between the two companies.
Grab's counts Toyota Motor, along with a number of investment funds, including a unit of Ping An, among its backers in its latest round of fundraising. The Singaporean company said earlier this month it would spend most of its $2 billion haul on its Indonesian business. The country will be the key arena in the struggle to between the two companies to become Southeast Asia's super app.
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