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Grocers have significantly expanded e-commerce operations over the pandemic, but only 45% are profitable online, according to FMI’s annual “The Food Retailing Industry Speaks” report.
E-commerce represented 5.6% of grocers’ sales in 2022, more the double the 2.5% penetration reached in 2019, according to the study.
Grocers were found to still be experimenting with e-grocery execution. More than three-quarters (77%) are fulfilling online as of 2020, mainly through their own platforms, although 68% are partnering with third parties. Nearly half (47%) of grocers surveyed plan to change their online sales platform in the next two years.
Fresh or perimeter departments, a challenging category for grocery delivery due to its perishable nature, continue to account for 40% of all online sales.
Wage and fuel inflation as well as consumers seeking bargains in the inflationary climate have lately been putting more pressure on online grocery’s profitability.
“For many supermarkets, online delivery services are perceived as a ‘necessary evil’ — with some losing money on each delivery, due in large part to increased costs, inventory management, and price sensitivity of customers,” Chair of CIM Food Drink and Agriculture Group, Mark Dodds recently told the U.K.’s Grocery Gazette. “One way that retailers have been looking to bridge this gap is by increasing charges for home delivery — though this is a difficult line to tow.”
In March, Amazon began tacking on new service fees for Prime members who order less than $150 worth of groceries through its Amazon Fresh delivery service. Tesco’s move earlier this year to charge suppliers a “fulfillment fee” to cover the cost of scaling online operations received major backlash.
Recent analysis from Statista exploring the various models of online grocery — including having grocers pick up from the warehouse or dark stores, using a third-party delivery partner to pick up from stores, using automated centralized or micro-fulfillment centers, as well as offering in-store pickup — found most models aren’t profitable without charging additional fees. Statista wrote, “The least profitable is when the grocer picks items from the store for home delivery. Only automated micro-fulfillment center click-and-collect online grocery was profitable, with a margin of 2%.”
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