By Laurie Burkitt 

BEIJING--China's rapidly diversifying Internet giants are now taking on Western food chains at their own game--door-to-door delivery--and finding a huge appetite among urban consumers.

Wooing customers with discounted dishes and the choice of thousands of restaurants, startups backed by the likes of Alibaba Group Holding Ltd. and Tencent Holdings Ltd. are enjoying brisk business as more diners opt to order in.

The growing fleet of motorbike couriers on Chinese roads is the latest challenge to long-established but struggling Western companies such as McDonald's Corp. and Yum Brands Inc., which owns KFC and Pizza Hut outlets. For years, the fast-food chains got a leg up over rivals by speeding hamburgers and fried chicken to buyers' homes and offices, building their own armies of bike-driving couriers who dash out orders that were phoned in or place online.

The Western chains became popular in China for two main reasons: "Because they were foreign and they delivered," said Nathan Snyder, a research analyst at brokerage CLSA. "That's no longer an advantage," he said, referring to the delivery.

Startup companies Ele.me and Meituan Waimai, which operatives via mobile applications and are backed respectively by Tencent and Alibaba, are getting economy of scale by teaming up with tens of thousands of food outlets across China. Their apps display menus of smaller local shops as well as big chains, and online customers are more likely to download a delivery app that gives them access to multiple menus than one for a single restaurant.

The services are attracting investment and following similar moves by Internet companies to dominate the market for everything from cinema tickets to taxi rides. Food sales running through the startups reached 97.5 billion yuan ($15.7 billion) last year, up 54% from 2013, according to research firm iResearch.

The surge in delivery firms is evident from the proliferation of uniformed couriers zipping around major cities on motorbikes with insulated bags. Yan Shihui, who works for Ele.me, says he can deliver to five customers per hour on his motorbike in Beijing.

Mr. Yan, 19, who has been on the job for only a few months, hits the streets as early as 9:30 a.m. until as late as 11:30 p.m., hopping from mostly Chinese restaurant chains to homes and offices, earning money for each delivery.

The trend for food delivery is boosting sales for smaller regional chains too. Beijing Weizhiwei Catering Ltd., which sells noodles and meat sticks from China's southwestern Yunnan region, has 50 outlets in Beijing and the nearby city of Tianjin.

Employees in a Beijing branch of the chain say the shop pulls in an extra 1,000 yuan, or $161, a day from three different delivery firms. A spokesman for Weizhiwei didn't respond to requests for comment, according to a manager at a branch in northeastern Beijing.

The noodle shop also offers up to 20% off on some dishes ordered through apps, a key attraction for consumers. The noodle shop covers the discount, but in some cases the startups have absorbed discounts to build up their user-bases.

The startups themselves are using investment money to try to become the dominant player in a so-far fragmented market. Tencent-backed Ele.me--which is one the two biggest players alongside Alibaba-supported Meituan--said it secured $350 million investment in January. A spokesman declined to disclose details of its revenue and profit. Alibaba announced in June that it would plow nearly $1 billion into building up another food-delivery service called Koubei. Alibaba and Tencent didn't respond to requests for comment.

Yan Cong is one consumer who has stopped ordering from McDonald's and KFC, which charge 8 yuan ($1.30) and 9 yuan respectively, for delivery on top of a 30 yuan ($4.83) meal.

"They don't save me money," said Mr. Yan, a 23-year-old athletic-club promoter. He uses food-ordering company Ele.me five or six times a week to buy noodles dishes that cost 15 yuan to 25 yuan. That is about half the amount he used to spend ordering from KFC, he said.

Couriers see incoming orders on a mobile app and will bundle them together when customers in nearby locations order from the same or neighboring restaurants. But orders have to be made within the same window of time to ensure that delivery time is under an hour .

At an investor conference in Shanghai in May, Yum executives flagged the services as creating growing competition for their KFC and Pizza Hut stores. "We are facing additional challenges," a company presentation said.

"The delivery market is getting competitive," a McDonald's spokeswoman said, adding it was looking to seek opportunities on the online platforms.

It is unclear how much the new delivery companies may be eating into sales for Yum and McDonald's, but they are getting in on the act. Yum and McDonald's are now partnering with the delivery startups.In the past year or so, KFC, Pizza Hut and McDonald's have joined with Baidu and Alibaba-backed Meituan. KFC and Pizza Hut also partner with Ele.me.

Delivery charges and food prices are clearly marked on the apps. McDonald's and KFC both incur a nine-yuan delivery charges, which a spokesman for Ele.Me says is kept by the delivery company.

Ele.me said 6% of total orders are from Western outlets like Pizza Hut and McDonald's.

Yum says deliveries accounted for 7% of its $6.82 billion sales in China last year, or about $477 million.

Industry experts say increased competition is hurting fast-food chains already fighting to regain business that they have lost to rivals as the cachet of their brand has waned and rival fast-food chains have spread.

Yum's sales in China, which accounts for roughly half of the company's revenue, dropped 4% to $1.6 billion in the second quarter from the same period a year earlier. McDonald's doesn't break out its China sales. Executives said in an earnings call last week that same-store sales remained negative, down about 3% from a year ago.

Write to Laurie Burkitt at laurie.burkitt@wsj.com

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