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<Back to Gourmet Food Mall In The News>

The Return
of the Online Grocer
By Denise Purcell
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Remember
WebVan and ShopLink? The rise and fall of once-promising and now-defunct
e-retailing upstarts left the impression that the online grocery shopping
concept was too ambitious or experimental to succeed. A combination of
miscalculations shuttered early online grocers: aggressive expansion;
related expenses of establishing warehouses and truck fleets; overly
optimistic anticipated order volume; and complex websites.
Now, nearly four years after the highly
publicized dotcom downturn, a new generation of grocery e-retailers has hit
the Internet. But, unlike dotcom’s bandwagon-jumping heyday, today’s
merchants are coming onboard with tested or retooled business models. For
many, this means an affiliation with brick-and-mortar stores for buying
power, distribution and fulfillment ease—criteria that often eluded their
predecessors. Others are still around from the first e-retailing wave but
with more user- |
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GourmetFoodMall's CEO Andrew Restivo (right)
and National Sales Director
Gerald Williams (left) offer a shopping mall platform for 150 specialty food
purveyors.
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friendly websites. Together with the influx of
high-speed Internet connections common in most homes, these improvements are
raising consumers’ comfort levels with online shopping. Finally, rather than low
prices—the hallmark of the first generation—today’s online grocers highlight
product quality as much as user convenience—a trend that has spawned a surge in
sites that showcase fresh, natural, organic and specialty foods.
Realistic Expectations
Online grocery is a fast-growing niche. Although consumer usage remains in
single digits (around 3 percent, mainly due to shopper hesitation or services
being unavailable in certain areas), a market exists, says Christine Overby,
principal analyst at Cambridge, Mass.-based Forrester Research. “It is a small
e-commerce category but one with high growth curves,” she adds. According to
Forrester data, online food and beverage sales could grow from $3.7 billion in
2003 to $17.4 billion in 2008—accounting for 4 percent of total retail food
sales.
The failure of some early grocery websites did not
mean that consumers disliked the service, just that operations needed
evaluation. “After the dotcom bubble burst, people
who were shopping online continued to do so at remaining sites. The re-education
that is happening is not necessarily from the online consumer,” Overby
continues. “It is a resetting of expectations on the business side.”
The focus is now on getting the business model and
execution right, explains Scott DeGraeve, senior vice
president and general manager of Peapod LLC,
Skokie, Ill. Its online grocery shopping site
www.peapod.com operates in 15 markets around the East Coast and Midwest,
offering about 11,000 items, including produce, meat, seafood, deli, prepared
foods, natural and organic, kosher, wine and beer.
Though it launched in 1989, prior to the dotcom
boom, Peapod faced some consumer skepticism following e-commerce’s downslide.
“We heard for awhile ‘we thought you were out of business,’ but that’s
lessening,” DeGraeve notes. “Re-awareness building was required, letting people
know we were still here and offering better service than ever.”
With repeat shopping the driving force to success,
a main service improvement for peapod.com and others was to the functionality of
the sites themselves. Compared to original online shopping lists that needed to
be retyped or re-clicked for each visit, now Peapod keeps a master of customers’
previous purchases for convenience. In addition, consumers may sort shopping
lists by sales items or lowest unit price or based on nutritional criteria. “One
of our greatest advantages is the ability for customers to navigate items to see
labeling or ingredients. They can sort by carb or fat content or search for
organic foods. It allows customers to be health-conscious while shopping online,
which is a big concern now,” notes DeGraeve.
Bricks and Clicks
Most thriving online grocers have benefited by affiliating with traditional
retailers, where they can leverage the stores’ infrastructure to provide cost
efficiencies and better fulfillment models. In fact, conventional retailers
themselves have launched some of the most successful online services.
Established chains such as Safeway and Albertsons have grown online businesses
in areas where they already had a strong retail presence. Using their own stores
as warehouses, they save the cost of setting up distribution centers.
The 2001 acquisition by Royal Ahold
nv, an international retail and foodservice company
based in the Netherlands, has allowed
Peapod to expand its online business by co-branding with Ahold U.S.A. chains
Stop and Shop and Giant. In addition to exercising the buying power of Royal
Ahold to make higher-volume, lower-priced purchases, the
affiliation allows Peapod to manage distribution and transportation
costs. Orders are filled from eight warerooms, dedicated areas adjacent to
partner stores in Massachusetts, Connecticut, Rhode Island, New York and New
Jersey as well as through two 75,000-square-foot warehouses in Chicago and
Washington, D.C. Since the acquisition, Peapod has expanded to more than 155,000
customers, boasting annual sales increases of nearly 30 percent, says DeGraeve.
Plans call for the online service to expand to new markets in Ahold’s footprint.
Netgrocer.com, an online grocery service since
1995, was acquired and privatized by ShopRite of Oakland, N.J., a member of
retailer-owned cooperative Wakefern Food Corporation. Since the affiliation in
November 2003, the site has grown to about 30,000 products with nearly 450,000
repeat customers. The e-retailer has increased efficiencies as part of Wakefern,
which operates 2.5 million square feet of warehousing and one of the East
Coast’s largest private transportation fleets.
“Having Wakefern’s buying power behind us, as well
as its fulfillment and quality guarantee is a distinct advantage,” says Owner
Bob Clare. When an order comes in, the product is shipped from Wakefern’s
distribution center to Shop-Rite of
Oakland’s dedicated on-site fulfillment center for shipping within 20 hours to
Netgrocer.com customers. Orders are shipped nationwide via Fedex, UPS or
standard mail.
Grocers interested in exploring an online business
component, but who find the technology or logistics daunting, may opt to partner
with companies such as MyWebGrocer.com. Headquartered in
Manhattan, MyWebGrocer.com creates and powers
retailers’ online ordering systems. Shoppers connect to a grocer’s web store
though its own URL, but the page is operated through MyWebGrocer. Customers’
orders are routed directly to the store and can either be delivered or picked
up, depending on individual retailer’s fulfillment policies. MyWebGrocer targets
independent and chain grocers and serves more than 160 supermarkets in 20
states, including Dorothy Lane Market in Dayton, Ohio, and Harris Teeter in
Charlotte, N.C.
A 300,000-Square-Foot Anomaly
An anomaly to the brick-and-click model is three-year-old FreshDirect, which has
become a leading online fresh food manufacturing and delivery service.
(See sidebar, p. 25). The site, which services more
than 100,000 customers in Manhattan, Brooklyn and Queens, recently delivered its
two millionth order. “They’re an interesting
exception to the traditional-with-online rule because they deliver a valuable
service without real offline connections,” notes Overby from Forrester.
Instead, by sourcing directly and preparing food on
the premises, the operation has reinvented grocery’s traditional supply
structure, resulting in quality control and competitive pricing.
Responding to FreshDirect’s popularity, more sites
have cropped up to service New York’s
receptive do-it-for-me clientele. Most, such as thefoodempor ium.com or
xpressgrocer.com, an arm of Gristedes markets, are affiliated with traditional
retailers. “In general, the industry treads lightly with online; sites come in
with established stores. We’ve made an impact in pushing stores to develop a web
business for the convenience factor,” notes Ken Blanchette, vice president,
specialty foods. “But the marketplace is not infinite. Sites that offer the
least service and worst products won’t fare well.”
Better Than the Supermarket
Quality is
the key to repeat online sales, particularly in perishables, which consumers
habitually like to pick out for themselves. While some brick-and-click services
rely on a pick-in-store model, other e-retailers opt for centralized
distribution or dedicated fulfillment centers to limit handling.
Peapod’s personal shoppers fill orders from its
warerooms or warehouses to maintain quality. To ensure temperature control, the
merchant relies on its Stay Fresh delivery system, which controls climate from
the warehouse, on the trucks and in the delivery bins.
The website also allows consumers to offer personal
shoppers directives on perishables, such as to pick unripe bananas. “Produce is
the most important category for quality,” notes DeGraeve. “We need to show
customers that we can do it better than they do it themselves.”
Multi-Channel Mindset
Rather than fearing them as sales cannibals, online grocers have come to be
viewed as another avenue of service that can augment brick-and-mortar sales.
“Early versions thought people would only shop online, but over time the concept
has changed to a multi-channel idea, with the online business bringing new
customers to the offline,” explains Peapod’s DeGraeve. “We find it’s a loyalty
builder with our affiliated retailers. If customers in a Stop and Shop trade
area order online, they'll likely go to the store, bringing more overall
spending to the chain,” he adds.
Online grocers estimate the market’s potential to
reach 8-10 percent of brick-and-mortar sales. “If you look at how Internet savvy
kids are today, that translates into future online shopping,” believes
Netgrocer’s Clare. “It won’t take sales away from grocery stores; it’s just
another way to shop.”
Many see the Internet as a complement, influencing
sales across other channels. According to Jupiter Media data presented at “The
Secrets of Successful E-Retailers,” a 2005 Winter Fancy Food Show Educational
Program, for every $1 spent by consumers online, they spend an additional $6
offline as a result of the online search. “Consumers want to determine how
they’ll do business with you—in your store, through a catalog or online,” says
Andrew Restivo, owner of New
Orleans’-based GourmetFoodMall.com. “An Internet purchase increases the overall
sales a person will do with you.”
Flourishing of Specialty Foods
Driven by an appreciation of artisan products and a “public food revolution,”
online specialty food e-retailers are flourishing, notes Forrester's Overby. In
addition to FreshDirect's high-quality perishables and prepared items, consumers
can shop Amazon.com's Gourmet Store, cheese and accouterment merchant
igourmet.com and myriad others.
“The sites that went belly-up
before competed against local grocery markets,” explains Restivo of
GourmetFoodMall.com, an online shopping mall that provides a platform for about
150 specialty food purveyors in 40 categories to host websites. “Specialty food
has been a slower adopter to the Internet, but the movement is gaining momentum.
It’s an area that could see double-digit growth.”
Specialty products are viewed by consumers as an
added benefit because of their quality, says Peapod’s DeGraeve. In the
Chicago market, where it is not linked to an
Ahold retailer, the grocer has experimented with specialty offerings through a
Chicago’s Best area, offering lines such as Charlie Trotter products. The
e-retailer has also formed a partnership with Wild Oats Markets, to sell its
private-label products through peapod.com.
“If I were a specialty food retailer I wouldn’t
look at sites as competition. I’d take advantage of their growing popularity and
think how I could offer online service to local customers,” says Overby. “There
is a powerful urge, especially for foodies, who want to go to wine and cheese
shops and sample and talk to purveyors. They won’t stop doing that, even if they
shop online.”
Merchants can be at a
disadvantage without an online component to enhance growth. It’s another
location for educating consumers. Says Restivo, “Specialty
foods have a great story. Retailers need to get it out through a number
of venues.
“Your customers use the Internet.
Let them learn more about products from your site. This is a customer-focused
industry and that needs to be replicated online. It will promote more sales per
square foot overall.”
Denise Purcell is managing
editor of Specialty Food
Magazine.
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