The
cost of shopping for grocery items online is fast becoming a major obstacle for
most consumers today. Customer migration
to online grocery shopping was all the rage during the pandemic the ability for
consumers to see, feel, touch items in the store while picking up ‘something on
sale’ are the key drivers to consumers return to the grocery store.
According
to Steven Johnson Grocerant Guru®
at Tacoma, WA based Foodservice Solutions® in store shopping drives customer satisfaction
specifically within ‘fresh food’ departments.
Consumers like to see if seasonal fruit is fresh, meat is lean, seafood
looks good before they buy.
Here
we are once again with a new study by SymphonyAI Retail CPG that revealed,
“More than half of the grocery e-commerce customer base in the United States
and Europe has exited the channel over roughly the past year.”
So,
lets take a look from the 2022 first quarter through the 2023 first quarter,
the U.S. and European online grocery customer base shrank 52%, according
to “The 2023 State of Grocery
E-Commerce” report, released last week by the retail and
CPG marketing and research specialist, a unit of Palo Alto, California-based SymphonyAI. Of those e-grocery
users, 60% returned to shopping only at their brick-and-mortar store, and 40%
left their retailer entirely—not shopping its physical or online store.
Now
those going back to store-only were tighter with their dollars, cutting their
overall spending by 16% and looking elsewhere for their other grocery needs,
SymphonyAI Retail CPG reported.
Get
this the Q1 2023 study examined 58 million households and 607 million
transactions across Europe and the U.S., covering 7.5 billion units of volume
(818 million online) and traditional grocery retailers. Results were compared
against the same period a year ago.
Too
the facts: “Grocery e-commerce household penetration dropped to 6.5 customers
out of 100 in Q1 2023 from a peak of about 8.5 of 100 in Q2 2020, the report
said. The research showed a 14% net decline in the total number of online
shoppers, i.e. departing shoppers offset by new shoppers.
Online
grocery revenue growth—the single-largest driver of e-commerce performance—fell
1% from Q1 to Q1 2022-2023. Declines among other key drivers included online
customers (-14%) and basket size (-5%), while increased metrics included
frequency and item value, both up 11%.
SymphonyAI
Retail CPG noted in the study that e-grocery customers acquired “post
lockdown,” i.e. after COVID-19 restrictions, have a 71% churn rate compared
with a 50% rate among those becoming digital grocery customers during the
pandemic.
“The
overall decline in online customers and their impact on e-commerce growth is
significant,” explained Laetitia Berthier, head of client engagement at
SymphonyAI Retail CPG. “Contrary to expectations, the losses are coming not
from shoppers who were forced online during the height of the pandemic, but
rather those shoppers who had moved online after the pandemic. It’s critical
for retailers to understand those customer dynamics and their fast-changing
needs to succeed in the critical online channel.”
As
of the 2023 first quarter, 71.4% of grocery customers shopping online also did
so in-store, roughly double the percentage in Q2 2020 at the start of
lockdowns, according to the study data. Similarly, online grocery sales growth
among omnichannel shoppers—buying both in-store and online—stood at 6.2% at the
close of Q1 2023, approximately twice as high as online-only customers.
SymphonyAI
Retail CPG said omnichannel shoppers also typically deliver an incremental 15%
to 18% sales lift versus in-store-only customers, or about a 9% increase apiece
in basket size and shopping frequency. The research showed that omnichannel
customers, too, are more likely to remain primary shoppers with a certain
retailer, with a retention rate of 5% in Q1 2023.
The
SymphonyAI study also pointed to “massive opportunities” for retailers to spur
digital engagement, incremental growth and customer loyalty in grocery
shopping. For instance, the number of households seeking private-label products
online deliver revenue growth of more than 10%, with 35% of households buying
private brands online. Ensuring that the most-purchased store-brand items are
available online could add 0.9% in incremental digital sales, the research
said. Likewise, 37% of online grocery households are promotion-sensitive versus
31% for in-store-only customers.
And
there are still grocery e-commerce novices. SymphonyAI Retail CPG estimated
that 83% of current in-store customers haven’t used online grocery services at
any time over the past five years, and 5.5% of these shoppers are top
e-commerce prospects. The report said that converting these consumers to
omnichannel grocery shoppers could mean another 0.8% in total retailer revenue.”
Foodservice Solutions® team is here to
help you drive top line sales and bottom-line profits. Are you looking
a customer ahead? Visit GrocerantGuru.com for more information or contact: Steve@FoodserviceSolutions.us Remember success does leave clues and we just may the clue
you need to propel your continued success.
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