From Selling Phones to Serving Fresh Food: How Nayan Shah Built PetChef for Real Pet Parents

When life pushed him into entrepreneurship, Nayan Shah answered with grit—and a kitchen. Today his brand PetChef is on a mission to make fresh, transparent nutrition the easy choice for Indian dog parents. In a candid conversation with Indian Startup Times, Nayan walks us through the early hustle, product-first thinking, and lessons from extreme adventures that shaped his leadership.

A childhood of responsibility that built an entrepreneur 

After his father passed away, Nayan started selling used cell phones to pay college fees. That early responsibility taught him two things he still leans on: find a market that needs you, and build trust every day. “Keep at it every day,” he says—simple advice that masks the long nights of product testing, deliveries from a friend’s flat-turned-kitchen, and learning ops on the fly. 

Spotting a gap: fresh food for dogs that’s actually convenient 

During the pandemic, pet adoption rose—but quality fresh food options didn’t keep pace. Pet parents faced a choice: ultra-processed kibble or homemade meals that were time-consuming and inconsistent. Nayan saw an opening. As a pet parent himself, he focused on making fresh nutrition accessible, reliable, and easy to use. 

Branding as trust: why PetChef mattered 

The name PetChef—suggested by a cousin—hit the right tone: fresh, cared-for, premium without being snobby. From day one, Nayan treated branding as essential to building trust. Packaging, founder-on-camera content, and transparent ingredient lists reinforced the message: this is real food made the right way. 

Bootstrapping, people, and the first Rs 17 lakh 

PetChef began with an initial investment of Rs 17 lakh. Nayan prioritized product development, ops, and building the right team. Early supporters—friends, family, and people the team met along the way—later became angels. “The quality of people you meet early becomes the backbone of your company,” he reflects. 

Marketing that builds community, not just sales 

PetChef leaned into grassroots tactics that resonated: on-ground pet events, partnerships with pet organizations, apartment activations, and founder-led videos that showed the product’s care and quality in action. These moves built a community of pet parents who trusted the brand to feed their dogs. 

Product points that set PetChef apart 

  • Fresh, minimally processed recipes crafted with expert guidance.
  • Transparency on ingredients and portioning guidance for pet parents.
  • National distribution that makes fresh options accessible across India.
  • Nayan emphasizes that expert guidance—helping pet parents choose the right nutrition—is as important as the food itself.

Leadership shaped by adventure 

Nayan’s extreme adventures pushing limits with limited data—translated into leadership strengths: disciplined planning, team cohesion under stress, persistence through discomfort, and knowing when to stop. These are the same instincts he applies when scaling a fresh-food supply chain. 

What’s next: scale, specialty nutrition, and focus 

Over the next five years, PetChef aims to be the go-to brand for fresh dog nutrition across India. While specialty lines (including cat food) are on the horizon, Nayan stresses a disciplined focus: get the core product and reach right before branching out. 

Advice for founders 

Nayan’s counsel is practical and grounded:

  • Do your research before you start.
  • Launch with conviction and iterate fast.
  • Surround yourself with the right people and investors.
  • Learn when to push and when to pause.

 

Interview By : Sejal Thakur

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Indian Startup Times

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