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Online could boom in 2017 as baskets, frequency grow

Online grocery is poised for a major boom in 2017 as an increase in "click-and-collect" options from U.S. retailers like Kroger and Walmart facilitate a consumer shift from buying specific items online infrequently to buying large baskets more frequently.

Jon Springer, Executive Editor

October 31, 2016

2 Min Read

Online grocery is poised for a major boom in 2017 as an increase in "click-and-collect" options from U.S. retailers like Kroger and Walmart facilitate a consumer shift from buying specific items online infrequently to buying large baskets more frequently.

Deborah Weinswig, an analyst with Fung Global Retail & Technology in a report published Monday said the expansion of click and collect at retail will help close a gap between the large percentage of shoppers already making grocery purchases online and the relatively low percentage of fast-moving consumer goods purchased online overall.

This shift will help the share of fast-moving consumer goods sold online to grow to more than 2% in 2017, up from about 1.4% this year. According to Fung, that would represent more than $24 billion in FMCG sales online in 2017, up from around $17 billion this year. According to Mintel figures cited in the report, nearly one-third of U.S. consumers are already shopping online for groceries — an increase of 63% from 2014. But sales are not proportionate because those shoppers tend to buy specific items, instead of baskets of goods on the Internet, and they don't use the Internet to shop as frequently as they do physical stores.

Amazon currently dominates online grocery in the U.S., but that's due in part to the relative slowness with which brick-and-mortar retailers have moved online, Weinswig noted. That is changing this year as the two largest physical sellers of groceries in the U.S. — Wal-Mart Stores and Kroger, respectively — aggressively add "click-and-collect" capabilities allowing their customers to shop online and retrieve orders at local stores. Walmart through the second quarter was offering pickup in 60 markets and 400 locations; Kroger's ClickList offering had about the same number of locations through its second quarter.

"Given the already substantial consumer participation rates, there look to be opportunities to convert the large body of occasional, small-basket online shoppers into shoppers who conduct their main grocery shops online," Weinswig said.

About the Author

Jon Springer

Executive Editor

Jon Springer is executive editor of Winsight Grocery Business with responsibility for leading its digital news team. Jon has more than 20 years of experience covering consumer business and retail in New York, including more than 14 years at the Retail/Financial desk at Supermarket News. His previous experience includes covering consumer markets for KPMG’s Insiders; the U.S. beverage industry for Beverage Spectrum; and he was a Senior Editor covering commercial real estate and retail for the International Council of Shopping Centers. Jon began his career as a sports reporter and features editor for the Cecil Whig, a daily newspaper in Elkton, Md. Jon is also the author of two books on baseball. He has a Bachelor of Arts degree in English-Journalism from the University of Delaware. He lives in Brooklyn, N.Y. with his family.

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