Compare / Instacart vs SpaceX
AT A GLANCE
FUNDING HISTORY
Instacart
SpaceX
BUSINESS MODEL
Instacart
Instacart operates as a marketplace connecting consumers with personal shoppers and grocery retailers. Revenue comes from multiple streams: delivery fees and service fees charged to consumers (typically $3.99+ per delivery), tips to shoppers (passed through, not revenue), retailer partnerships (grocers pay Instacart for access to the platform and fulfillment services), and advertising.
Advertising has become the crown jewel. Instacart Ads lets consumer packaged goods (CPG) brands like Coca-Cola, Procter & Gamble, and Nestlé pay for sponsored product placements within the Instacart shopping experience.
When someone searches for "chips," Doritos can pay to appear first. This is incredibly valuable because it's advertising at the exact moment of purchase intent.
Ad revenue exceeded $900 million in 2023.
The retailer partnership model is key. Unlike DoorDash or Uber Eats (which listed restaurants without permission early on), Instacart works with grocers as partners.
Over 1,500 retail banners including Costco, Kroger, Albertsons, and Publix have formal partnerships. Instacart provides the technology and shoppers; grocers provide inventory and stores.
SpaceX
SpaceX makes money three ways. First, launch services — companies and governments pay SpaceX to put their satellites into orbit.
A Falcon 9 launch costs about $67 million, which undercut the competition by 75% when it debuted. Second, Starlink — SpaceX's own satellite internet constellation, which is now generating over $6 billion in annual revenue from 4+ million subscribers.
Third, government contracts — NASA pays SpaceX to ferry astronauts to the International Space Station and the DoD pays for national security launches.
The secret sauce is reusability. Before SpaceX, every rocket was used once and thrown into the ocean.
SpaceX figured out how to land the first stage booster back on Earth and fly it again. A single Falcon 9 booster has flown over 20 times.
That's like the difference between throwing away an airplane after every flight versus keeping it for decades.
HOW THEY STARTED
Instacart
Apoorva Mehta was a 26-year-old Amazon engineer in Seattle who quit his job in 2012 to start a company. The only problem: he had no idea what to build.
Over the next year, he started and abandoned roughly 20 different projects. A social network for lawyers.
A way to track restaurant wait times. Nothing stuck.
Then one day he was too lazy to go grocery shopping. He looked for a service that would shop for him and deliver everything to his door.
Nothing good existed. The existing options were grocery store delivery services that only worked during specific windows, had limited selection, and required ordering days in advance.
Mehta wanted to order groceries the way he ordered everything else online — immediately, from whatever store he wanted.
He built a prototype in 2012 and applied to Y Combinator. The demo was rough — he ordered a six-pack of beer through the app and had it delivered to a YC partner's house during the application process.
It worked. He got in.
Instacart launched in the San Francisco Bay Area in 2013 with a simple promise: order from your favorite local grocery store and have someone shop for you and deliver within an hour.
SpaceX
In 2001, Elon Musk had just sold PayPal to eBay for $1.5 billion and was sitting on roughly $180 million after taxes. Most people would buy an island.
Musk decided to buy rockets. His original idea was even weirder — he wanted to send a small greenhouse to Mars called "Mars Oasis" to reignite public interest in space exploration.
He flew to Russia three times to buy refurbished ICBMs. The Russians kept raising the price and at one point literally spat on him.
On the flight home from that last failed Russia trip, Musk opened a spreadsheet and started calculating the raw material costs of building a rocket from scratch. He realized the materials were only about 3% of the typical price of a rocket.
The rest was markup, inefficiency, and monopoly pricing by companies like Boeing and Lockheed Martin. He decided to build his own.
SpaceX was founded in June 2002 in a warehouse in El Segundo, California. Musk put in $100 million of his own money.
He hired Tom Mueller, a legendary rocket propulsion engineer who had been building rocket engines in his garage as a hobby. The first rocket, Falcon 1, was supposed to be the cheapest orbital rocket ever built.
It took six years and three spectacular explosions before it finally worked.
HOW THEY GREW
Instacart
Instacart grew by solving a problem one city at a time. They launched in San Francisco, proved the model, then expanded to other major metros.
Each new market required recruiting shoppers, signing up retailers, and building enough consumer density to make the economics work.
The COVID-19 pandemic was the inflection point. Grocery delivery went from luxury to necessity overnight.
In March 2020, Instacart hired 300,000 new shoppers in a single month. Order volume increased 500%.
Years of planned growth happened in weeks. The pandemic proved that grocery delivery wasn't a niche — it was the future of how a significant chunk of the population would shop.
The enterprise play is the long-term moat. By providing white-label technology to grocers, Instacart becomes embedded in their operations.
Even if a grocery chain wanted to build its own delivery service, they'd need years and hundreds of millions to replicate what Instacart provides. The more deeply integrated Instacart becomes in grocery operations, the harder it is to rip out.
SpaceX
SpaceX's growth strategy was simple: be cheaper than everyone, then be better than everyone, then be the only option.
They started by undercutting the launch market. The United Launch Alliance (Boeing + Lockheed Martin joint venture) was charging $300-400 million per launch.
SpaceX offered $67 million. Government agencies and commercial satellite companies started lining up.
Reusability was the real game-changer. Landing a rocket booster looked like science fiction when SpaceX first attempted it in 2013.
They failed over and over — spectacular ocean landings, explosions on drone ships, near-misses. But in December 2015, a Falcon 9 first stage landed back at Cape Canaveral.
It was the first time an orbital-class rocket had ever landed after a mission. Now they do it routinely — it's almost boring.
Starlink created a completely new revenue stream. Instead of just launching other people's satellites, SpaceX launched thousands of its own.
By 2024, Starlink had over 4 million subscribers and was generating billions in revenue. It turned SpaceX from a launch company into a telecom company.
THE HARD PART
Instacart
The post-COVID hangover was brutal. After pandemic demand normalized, growth slowed dramatically.
The company's valuation dropped from a peak of $39 billion in early 2021 to about $10 billion at IPO in September 2023. Investors who bought at the peak saw a 75% paper loss.
The narrative shifted from "essential infrastructure" to "nice-to-have luxury."
Unit economics are perpetually tight. Paying a person to walk through a grocery store, pick items, bag them, and drive them to someone's house is expensive.
Unlike meal delivery (one restaurant, one bag), grocery delivery involves dozens of items per order, refrigeration requirements, and substitution decisions. Every order that requires a shopper to call the customer about an out-of-stock item eats into efficiency.
Amazon is the existential threat. Amazon Fresh, Whole Foods delivery, and Amazon's own logistics network represent a competitor with nearly unlimited resources and a Prime membership base of 200+ million.
Amazon has been willing to lose billions on grocery delivery to build market share. Instacart's advantage is retailer partnerships — Kroger and Publix use Instacart specifically because they don't want to help Amazon dominate grocery.
SpaceX
The early days nearly killed the company. SpaceX's first three Falcon 1 launches all failed.
The first one in 2006 crashed 25 seconds after liftoff due to a corroded fuel line nut. The second in 2007 reached space but the second stage shut down early.
The third in 2008 failed because the first and second stages collided during separation. Musk had enough money for one more attempt.
If flight four failed, SpaceX was dead.
Flight four worked. On September 28, 2008, Falcon 1 became the first privately developed liquid-fuel rocket to reach orbit.
Musk has said he was so stressed during that period he was throwing up regularly.
The financial pressure was existential. Musk was simultaneously funding Tesla, which was also on the brink of bankruptcy in 2008.
He had to split his last $40 million between the two companies. He borrowed money for rent.
But right at the end of 2008, NASA awarded SpaceX a $1.6 billion contract to resupply the International Space Station. That contract saved the company.
Starship development has been its own saga. The rocket has exploded multiple times during testing.
Each failure costs hundreds of millions. But SpaceX treats failures as data — they move faster by blowing things up and iterating than competitors do by being cautious.
THE PRODUCTS
Instacart
Instacart Marketplace — the core platform where consumers order groceries from 80,000+ stores for delivery or pickup, with personal shoppers fulfilling orders. Instacart+ — subscription service ($9.99/month) offering free delivery on orders over $35, reduced service fees, and credit back on pickup orders.
Instacart Ads — a retail media platform letting CPG brands run sponsored product listings, display ads, and coupons within the shopping experience. Instacart Platform (Enterprise) — white-label e-commerce technology that lets grocers build their own online ordering and fulfillment powered by Instacart's infrastructure.
Caper Cart — AI-powered smart shopping carts (from the 2021 Caper AI acquisition) with built-in screens, barcode scanners, and payment that let shoppers skip the checkout line.
SpaceX
Falcon 9 is the workhorse — the most-launched rocket in the world. It carries satellites to orbit and astronauts to the ISS, and the first stage lands itself for reuse.
Falcon Heavy is three Falcon 9 boosters strapped together — the most powerful operational rocket in the world until Starship came along. Dragon is the spacecraft that carries astronauts and cargo to the ISS.
It's the only American vehicle currently flying humans to space. Starlink is the satellite internet service — over 6,000 satellites in orbit delivering broadband to 100+ countries.
Starship is the big one — the tallest and most powerful rocket ever built, designed to carry 100+ people to Mars. It's still in testing but has already completed a full flight.
WHO BACKED THEM
Instacart
Sequoia Capital was an early and consistent backer. Andreessen Horowitz invested in growth rounds.
D1 Capital Partners led the 2021 round that valued Instacart at $39 billion. Existing investors including Valiant Capital, T.
Rowe Price, Fidelity, and Tiger Global participated across rounds. Y Combinator was the starting point (Summer 2012 batch).
The September 2023 IPO on NASDAQ priced at $30 per share, valuing the company at approximately $10 billion.
SpaceX
Founders Fund, Draper Fisher Jurvetson, Google, Fidelity Investments, Valor Equity Partners, Baillie Gifford, a]6z (Andreessen Horowitz), NASA (as customer/partner)