In this episode, Bob Cooney talks with Parinitaa Rajgarhia, the driving force behind Zero Latency in India. From stumbling across her first VR experience while on a family trip to launching the country’s first large-scale free-roam VR arena in Mumbai, Parinitaa shares her entrepreneurial journey, market insights, and lessons learned.
They discuss:
- How she evaluated the business opportunity for VR in India and set her pricing strategy
- The role of sampling in building trust and upselling customers to longer experiences
- Why premium VR works in developing markets and how to position it
- Marketing strategies that deliver results in a market with low initial awareness of VR
- The importance of personal engagement in sales and the cultural factors that influence booking behavior
- Overcoming gender biases as a woman leading a tech entertainment business in India
Whether you’re an operator, investor, or just fascinated by how immersive attractions succeed in emerging markets, this conversation offers a candid look at what it takes to launch and grow a premium VR brand.
🎧 Listen now to hear how Parinitaa has not only sustained but expanded Zero Latency’s presence, and why she believes the Indian market is just getting started.
Timestamps
- 00:00 – Parinitaa’s first encounter with VR and decision to bring it to India
- 02:07 – Launching Zero Latency Mumbai with young kids and no gaming background
- 03:15 – Pricing strategy and competitive analysis in an untested market
- 07:44 – Surpassing projections in the first month and lessons from the pandemic
- 11:19 – Who pays for premium VR in India and how the market has evolved
- 14:26 – Pricing for the Indian market vs. the West and introducing 15-minute “sampler” sessions
- 16:24 – How short experiences build trust and upsell to 45- and 60-minute sessions
- 20:20 – Marketing spend, customer acquisition, and the importance of education
- 26:21 – Expansion to Hyderabad and budgeting for launch marketing
- 29:12 – Why Instagram and WhatsApp drive 80% of bookings
- 33:19 – The cultural and operational reasons 60% of bookings happen over the phone
- 49:01 – Breaking gender barriers as a woman leading a VR business in India
- 50:55 – The motivation to challenge stereotypes and build a lasting brand