Restaurants
and Convenience stores operators have to be worried if grocery stores deli’s
start doing a good job with online ordering and delivery that their sales and
customer frequency numbers just might drop.
According to Steven Johnson Grocerant Guru® at Tacoma, WA based Foodservice Solutions® grocery
store deli’s have the advantage of incremental order size due to the number of
meal and meal components each grocery store has to offer customers.
Competing
with online delivery services like DoorDash and Uber Eats for single-meal
deliveries could be the next move for grocers aiming to capture market share
from restaurants, according to Matt Van Gilder,
director of e-commerce and digital experience for retailer-distributor SpartanNash.
During
a webinar on last week hosted by digital technology provider Upshop,
Van Gilder said that’s one of the many approaches the company is focusing on to
grow its presence in the digital commerce marketplace.
The
online forum “Digital Next: Evolving eCommerce Strategies to Meet Growing
Shopper Demands,” also featured Chad Petersen, senior vice president of
e-commerce for grocery chain Lowes Foods, was the first in a series planned by Upshop.
So,
moderator Jeff Baskin, chief revenue officer for Upshop,
noted that delivery and curbside pickup are the two points of fulfillment for
digital orders, but pickup has grown about 2.5% year over year, while delivery
has dropped by nearly 10%.
Matt Van Gilder, director of e-commerce and
digital experience for retailer-distributor SpartanNash, stated, “Our mix has
always been quite a bit skewed toward curbside pickup with a smaller portion
going to delivery,”
Van
Gilder whose company operates 144 brick-and-mortar grocery stores,
primarily under the banners of Family Fare, Martin’s Super Markets and D&W
Fresh Market, in addition to its distribution business. “That delivery
slice of the pie certainly grew over the last few years because of COVID, but
has come back down and normalized again.”
At
SpartanNash’s the approach is through partnering with a variety of last-mile
providers to deliver the order on the grocer’s behalf, “so our teams in-store
can really focus on the key differentiators, we think, of the service provided
to the customer while we’re picking the order.
That
allows the supermarket to “be more efficient with the people we have” and focus
on other factors, such as tracking how long it takes to fulfill orders and
message customers on out-of-stock items.
Petersen
stated, Lowes Foods is similarly more weighted toward pickup versus delivery
through an integrated tech stack. “It eliminates the need to go and find
another tech partner to do this and more developers to integrate that,” he
said, adding that, “... even larger regionals, we don’t have endless developers
to build this stuff.”
Van
Gilder went on to say, having in-store pickers who hand off orders to delivery
drivers gives his team opportunities to upsell grab-and-go items like pizza and
sandwiches along with the grocery order.
“I
think the next phase for us is taking that same menu solution and finding ways
to not just make it available for something that can happen alongside the
weekly order you may have set for three or four hours from now, but to also
make available for that customer to get it on demand 30 minutes from now,” he
said.
That
allows shoppers to order dinner from the deli section without even purchasing
groceries, he said.
“Having
multiple delivery fulfillment types within that channel itself or pickup for
the customer, I think, is sort of our next step to compete with marketplaces
like DoorDash, UberEats, etc. that a lot of us rely on currently for that
on-demand customer meal,” Van Gilder added.
Baskin
said third-party delivery providers were a necessity during the pandemic, but
many retailers are starting to question the profitability and long-term
strategy of relying on them. “I’m not saying there’s not a place for them;
there certainly is, but it will look a lot different between now and what will
come in the future,” he said.
Petersen
added that e-commerce is leveling out across the board, because of the
incremental fees involved in placing orders online. “You don’t have a fee when
you come into the store,” he said.
He
said grocers are going to continue their relationships with the various
delivery operations. “You want to be on the dashboard when that particular
guest or family is beholden to Shipt or Instacart or DoorDash or whatever,” he
said. “You don’t want too not be there.”
Are you looking for a new partnership
to drive sales? Are you ready for some fresh ideations? Do your food marketing
tactics look more like yesterday than tomorrow? Visit GrocerantGuru.com for more information or contact: Steve@FoodserviceSolutions.us Remember success does leave clues and we just may have the
clue you need to propel your continued success.
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