Shailesh, Shobhit
New Delhi, 6th April 2026 – Dam Good Fish (DGF) has secured a strategic funding round at a valuation of ~₹30 Cr (~$3.6 Mn), positioning itself as a technology-first seafood infrastructure company, not another D2C brand in the category.
While most players in India’s seafood market continue to operate on fragmented sourcing and distribution models, DGF is building a demand-driven, AI-led supply chain designed to eliminate inefficiencies at scale.
Fixing What the Category Has Ignored
India’s seafood industry continues to face:
- 30–40% wastage
- Multi-layered intermediaries
- Inconsistent quality and pricing
Despite strong consumer demand, the supply chain remains structurally broken.
DGF’s thesis is clear:
This is not a demand problem. It is a system failure.
From Brand to Operating System
DGF is building a “Demand-to-Harvest” operating system, where:
- Demand is predicted at a pincode level
- Procurement and harvesting align to real consumption
- Inventory flows through a controlled cold-chain network
This shifts the model from:
Catch → Store → Sell
to
Predict → Source → Deliver
Early internal benchmarks indicate a material reduction in post-harvest waste and improved inventory turns, directly impacting unit economics.
AI as Core Infrastructure
Unlike traditional seafood companies, where technology is peripheral, DGF is embedding AI into core operations:
- Demand Forecasting Engine → SKU × pincode level prediction
- Procurement Intelligence → Align sourcing cycles with real demand
- Inventory Optimisation → Reduce dead stock, improve yield
- Cold-Chain Monitoring → Ensure temperature and delivery integrity
The outcome:
A closed-loop system where supply is continuously calibrated to demand.
A Different Approach to Scale
DGF is currently deepening its presence in Delhi NCR and will expand into Mumbai and Bangalore.
The focus is not rapid expansion, but controlled scale with repeat-led economics:
- Pincode-level density
- High-frequency consumption behaviour
- Predictable demand cycles
Proof of Model in Delhi NCR
Delhi NCR is already operating as a live testbed for DGF’s demand-led supply system.
- 55%+ repeat purchase rate, indicating strong consumption behaviour in a low-frequency category
- A growing base of 5,000+ active households
- Partnerships with B2B platforms such as Hyperpure, reinforcing supply-side trust
These are not just growth metrics—they indicate early validation of a model in which demand predictability, supply alignment, and product consistency work together.
Founder POV
Shobhit Gaur, CEO & Co-Founder, Dam Good Fish, said:
The market doesn’t need another seafood brand. It needs a system that actually works.
Most players are still optimising the front-end—marketing, assortment, pricing.
But if the supply chain is broken, no amount of branding can fix the experience.
We are not trying to sell fish better.
We are fixing how fish move.
What we are building is a demand-led, technology-first supply system—where supply follows consumption, not the other way around.
That’s the shift this category needs. And that’s what we are building.”
Shailesh Patel, Co-Founder, added:
“Freshness is not a sourcing problem—it’s a system problem.
When supply is aligned with demand, waste drops, margins improve, and quality becomes more predictable.
That’s the shift we are driving.”
What This Round Enables
The company will use this round to:
- Strengthen its AI-led demand and supply systems
- Expand supply and processing infrastructure
- Launch in new metro markets
- Build teams across supply chain, data, and operations (15–20 roles)
What Investors Are Backing
The round includes operator investors and supply-chain leaders aligned with DGF’s infrastructure-first approach.
The bet is not on a D2C brand.
It is on a company attempting to redefine how seafood supply chains operate in India.
Category Shift Underway
India’s seafood market is large, but structurally underbuilt for fresh consumption.
Most organised players today are built around:
- Frozen supply chains
- Import-heavy models
DGF is taking a different route:
- Fresh seafood
- Demand-driven operations
- Technology as the core layer

