Are online grocery retailers delivering the goods?
The UK online grocery market is estimated at £4.4 billion (including sales tax and delivery charges) in 2009, having more than doubled (134% growth) in value over 2005-09. Rapidly rising food inflation, particularly in 2008, has contributed to high value growth in the sector, while dampening demand in volume terms.
However, even the underlying growth has been explosive. On the consumer side, rising broadband penetration and higher connection speeds, together with the steady expansion of the online grocers’ geographical coverage, has made the service accessible to more people. Meanwhile, the improvements to the online grocers’ services and rising web fluency have encouraged usage.
The UK online grocery market is estimated at £4.4 billion (including sales tax and delivery charges) in 2009, having more than doubled (134% growth) in value over 2005-09. Rapidly rising food inflation, particularly in 2008, has contributed to high value growth in the sector, while dampening demand in volume terms.
However, even the underlying growth has been explosive. On the consumer side, rising broadband penetration and higher connection speeds, together with the steady expansion of the online grocers’ geographical coverage, has made the service accessible to more people. Meanwhile, the improvements to the online grocers’ services and rising web fluency have encouraged usage.
Despite its impressive growth, online retailing still accounts for only 3% of sales of the total grocery sector, making it a niche channel in the broader context. The sector is dominated by store-based grocers, Tesco alone generating more than two fifths of total sector sales. Ocado is the odd one out as the only pure-play internet grocer, capturing 12% of the sector to rub shoulders with the second- and third-largest UK food retailers, Asda and Sainsbury’s.
People want their grocery shopping to be convenient. But, in contradiction of popular myth, most people (85%) don't mind grocery shopping, although 35% admit that they find it a chore.
Most people (83%) like to be able to select their own fresh foods.
Taking those two findings together suggests that the growth in demand for online shopping may begin to tail off. Some 15% (6 million) people regularly shop for their groceries online, a proportion which has remained
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