Amazon stops accepting new online grocery customers amid
surging demand
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[April 13, 2020] By
Krystal Hu
(Reuters) - Amazon will begin to put new
grocery delivery customers on a wait list and curtail shopping hours at
some Whole Foods stores to prioritize orders from existing customers
buying food online during the coronavirus outbreak, the company said on
Sunday.
Many shoppers recently seeking to purchase groceries from the
Seattle-based e-commerce company found they could not place orders due
to a lack of available delivery slots. Amazon said it would have to
relegate all new online grocery customers to a wait list starting Monday
while working on adding capacity each week.
In recent weeks, it increased the number of Whole Foods stores offering
grocery pickup to more than 150 locations, up from 80 previously.
Amazon also plans to shorten some Whole Foods stores' hours for the
public so its employees can more quickly fulfill online grocery orders,
the company said.
The moves illustrates how the world's largest online retailer, which
showed its ambition to enter the grocery industry by acquiring Whole
Foods for $13.7 billion in August 2017, is now leveraging its presence
both online and in physical stores to handle high demand from consumers
who are stuck eating at home, with many restaurant dining rooms closed
to the public.
Amazon offers grocery delivery services Amazon Fresh and Amazon Prime
Now from its own warehouses and Whole Foods stores. It typically touts
ultra-fast delivery within hours, with shoppers able to choose a
delivery window. Last month, Amazon temporarily suspended the Prime
Pantry delivery service, which sells non-perishable groceries.
Amazon said its online grocery order capacity has increased by more than
60% during the outbreak. Some netizens who said they used Amazon Prime,
its $119-a-year subscription service for U.S. shoppers, have
nevertheless complained on social media about the scarcity of delivery
windows.
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A worker in a face mask walks by trucks parked at an Amazon facility
as the global coronavirus outbreak continued in Bethpage on Long
Island in New York, U.S., March 17, 2020. REUTERS/Andrew Kelly/File
Photo
The company said it is hiring more workers to expand capacity and that it plans
to launch a new feature that will help customers secure a virtual "place in
line" to distribute the delivery windows on a first come, first served basis. It
also offered higher pay to encourage its warehouse workers to work for its
grocery delivery service.
Currently, Amazon runs 487 Whole Foods stores in the United States. These stores
have been limiting the number of customers allowed at once, and Amazon has said
it conducts daily employee temperature checks and sends masks and gloves to
protect workers.
The first store of Amazon's much-anticipated new grocery chain, which is
scheduled to open this year in Woodland Hills, Los Angeles, has been temporarily
transitioned into a warehouse for online orders, the company said.
Still, some employees at Whole Foods and Amazon warehouses have protested the
company is not doing enough to protect them, in demonstrations that gained
attention from lawmakers and unions. Over 50 Amazon fulfillment centers and
several Whole Foods stores had confirmed COVID-19 cases, according to multiple
reports.
"We still expect the combination of restricted capacity due to social distancing
and customer demand will continue to make finding available delivery windows
challenging for customers," Stephenie Landry, vice president of Grocery at
Amazon, wrote in a blogpost. "If you are able to do so safely, we kindly
encourage our customers who can to shop in-person."
(Reporting by Krystal Hu in New York and Jeffrey Dastin in San Francisco;
Editing by Christopher Cushing)
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