US shoppers prefer shopping groceries from local stores instead of online retail stores

US shoppers prefer shopping groceries from local stores instead of online retail stores

Reuters October 18, 2017, 22:45:32 IST

“The fact that few people want online grocery shopping now doesn’t mean they won’t want it tomorrow,” Wolf said.

Advertisement
US shoppers prefer shopping groceries from local stores instead of online retail stores

Most US shoppers are fiercely loyal to local food stores, calling them better than online options, according to a new Reuters/Ipsos poll that raises questions about how much Amazon.com’s $13.7 billion purchase of Whole Foods will shake up the supermarket business.

Representational image. Reuters

Shares in Kroger Co, the largest US supermarket operator, have tumbled 40 percent from this year’s highs on worries that the newly merged company will be quick to siphon business from traditional food sellers.

Advertisement

Seventy-five percent of online shoppers said they rarely or never buy groceries online, according to the survey of nearly 8,600 adults from 12 August to 1 September. Even among frequent online shoppers who make internet purchases at least weekly, almost 60 percent said they never buy groceries online or do so just a few times a year, according to the poll.

The poll also found that around 60 percent of all adults said their local food markets win on price, selection, quality and convenience. Online sellers led in those categories with only around 3 percent of respondents.

“I like to touch everything,” said Beth Hatter, 31, who spends roughly $750 a month on groceries to feed an extended family in Newark, Delaware, and buys a lot of produce.

Advertisement

She shops at BJ’s Wholesale Club, ShopRite and Food Lion, even though online shopping is an option.

Kristian Guy, 25, passes a Met Foodmarket and an organic grocer that stays open until midnight on the walk to his subway stop in Brooklyn.

“I don’t really need to think about buying food online,” said Guy, who does not want food deliveries spoiling on his doorstep.

Advertisement

Amazon has tried for years to grow its online grocery business, without making much of a dent. Its purchase of Whole Foods took its US grocery marketshare from 0.19 percent to 1.4 percent, versus 14.46 percent for Walmart and 7.17 percent for Kroger, according to GlobalData Retail.

The poll shows “brick and mortar is not dead yet,” said Roger Davidson, a grocery consultant, who predicts that the future of food buying will be mix of online and offline shopping.

Advertisement

The Food Marketing Institute and Nielsen expect US online grocery sales to grow from $20.5 billion, or 4 percent overall, in 2016 to $100 billion, or 20 percent overall, by 2025.

Still, some respondents are changing or are open to changing the way they use technology to shop.

Fort Lauderdale resident Ashley Vettese, 24, who said she was wary of online retailers’ food quality, uses grocery store apps for coupons. Kirsten Fox, 28, of Albany, Oregon, likes to pick out her own food. But she said she would consider new online ordering/curbside pickup services being rolled out by Kroger and Wal-Mart Stores Inc to avoid taking her young son into crowded stores during flu season.

Advertisement

Loop Capital analyst Andrew Wolf said attitudes toward online grocery shopping could change.

“The fact that few people want online grocery shopping now doesn’t mean they won’t want it tomorrow,” Wolf said.

Latest News

Find us on YouTube

Subscribe

Top Shows

Vantage First Sports Fast and Factual Between The Lines