Discount grocers look to jump on home delivery bandwagon
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[June 19, 2020] By
Emma Thomasson and James Davey
BERLIN/LONDON (Reuters) - Discount
supermarket chains Aldi and Lidl look poised to accelerate their push
into home delivery to satisfy burgeoning demand for online grocery
shopping in a shift expected to endure beyond the coronavirus crisis.
Before the COVID-19 pandemic the German duo had grown at breakneck
speed, most notably in the United States and Britain. However, the rise
in their market share has since stalled in Britain and slipped in
Germany and France.
From the start of coronavirus lockdowns, they have been losing out to
larger supermarkets as consumers make fewer shopping trips and opt for
stores offering a wider choice and more branded goods, data from
research companies Kantar and Nielsen shows. Home delivery and curbside
pick-up services, meanwhile, are attracting many older customers for the
first time.
That shift is prompting the discounters to focus their attention on
previously tentative online efforts despite a long-held conviction that
the high cost of delivering fresh food makes it incompatible with a
business model reliant on low prices and minimal service.
"The coronavirus outbreak is likely to accelerate the digital
transformation," said Maxime Delacour, analyst at retail research group
IGD.
"We’re expecting to see many more e-commerce developments from both
retailers in the immediate future."
The two family owned companies owe their success to the low prices they
can offer because they keep running costs down by stocking a limited
range of goods, boosting margins with a high proportion of own-label
products and non-food special offers.
Aldi and Lidl have started to sell those higher-margin non-food ranges
online in recent years, including the likes of garden furniture,
clothing and even washing machines. But they have stopped short of
delivering groceries themselves in most of their biggest markets.
SHOPPERS EXPECT
However, customers are starting to demand home delivery in countries
such as Britain, where online penetration of the grocery market has
almost doubled to 13% since the arrival of COVID-19, according to market
researcher Nielsen.
"It would make my life much better if Aldi just started doing online
shopping," said Shannon Read, who launched a petition to urge Aldi UK to
start home delivery when she was struggling to get hold of baby formula
during Britain's coronavirus lockdown.
Aldi last week said that it has extended a trial of home delivery in
partnership with Deliveroo. If that goes well, industry insiders say the
service could be rolled out more quickly than an in-house solution
because Deliveroo is already well established.
[to top of second column] |
Abdelaziz Abdou, a Deliveroo delivery rider, poses with a bag of
Aldi groceries, as discount supermarket chains Aldi and Lidl look
poised to accelerate their push into home delivery to satisfy
burgeoning demand for online grocery shopping in a shift expected to
endure beyond the coronavirus crisis, in London, Britain, June 17,
2020. REUTERS/Toby Melville
The company has also said it will extend curbside pick-up to 600 of its 2,000
U.S. stores by the end of July. It already offers U.S. home delivery nationwide
through Instacart.
"Our curbside grocery pick-up pilot was quickly embraced by our customers and
demand for this service has continued to increase," Jason Hart, chief executive
of Aldi in the United States, said in a statement.
Lidl, which opened its first U.S. stores in 2017, works with Shipt for home
delivery there. It also signed up delivery partners in Spain and Ireland last
year.
In Poland, Lidl has started testing a click-and-collect service at one of its
stores, which should help customers to avoid social contact during the pandemic
and limit waiting times, a spokeswoman said.
The cost of offering click-and-collect is lower than home delivery, while
working with partners such as Deliveroo and Instacart helps the discounters to
minimise investment in extra technology, logistics and transport.
The pandemic has also helped the economics of online grocery shopping. A broader
customer base has reduced logistics costs because delivery vans can drop more
orders in one area, while average orders have also jumped, almost doubling at
Britain's Ocado <OCDO.L>.
That sales boom looks likely to persist even after the crisis, given that
e-commerce demand remains at elevated levels as lockdowns ease in the United
States, Italy, France and Spain, according to data from analytics company IRI.
"It is a dilemma for discounters because the logistic costs are so high," said
Robert Kecskes, retail expert at market research company GfK. "But they will
have to follow."
For now, Aldi and Lidl representatives in Germany said only that the companies
will continue to develop their online services. Lidl and Aldi Sued, which runs
stores in the south of the country, declined to elaborate on any food delivery
plans, while Aldi Nord, responsible for the north of the country, said it had no
current plans to move into food.
(Reporting by Emma Thomasson in Berlin and James Davey in London; Editing by
David Goodman)
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