During the height of the pandemic, grocers managed an unprecedented influx of online orders for delivery and pickup, or click and collect. At the time, this influx presented grocers with challenges like too few time slots for orders, not enough products and the inability to recruit enough pickers and drivers to handle the demand.
Today, the challenges faced by online grocers have evolved. Many people are shopping in-store again, so there is less strain on delivery and click and collect services. However, competition is steep, making meeting and exceeding customer expectations essential.
Publicis Sapient reviewed the performance of U.K. and French e-commerce grocers. The research reveals that shoppers have three main expectations for online grocery shopping. These standards are universal:
The verdict? Many consumers aren’t satisfied with the current level of service (see Figure 1). And the truth is, these sub-par experiences are the main drivers of churn (see Figure 2). While customers’ tolerance of these issues was high due to a lack of options during the pandemic, it is no longer the case today.
Figure 1: Top reasons for customer churn in online grocery shopping
Figure 2: Top three delivery challenges for online grocers
Meeting shopper expectations is one of the most pressing imperatives for online grocers today and a critical path forward to reduce churn, delight customers and improve online profitability. Here’s how grocery retailers can address delivery and pickup issues.
Consumers want perfect orders without missing items or substitutions. We have seen retailers with staggeringly low perfect order rates hovering at 20 percent during set periods. Best-in-class is around 95 percent when picking up orders at customer fulfillment centers (CFC) and about 66 percent for in-store pickup.
One issue that leads to customer frustration regarding missing items is the visibility of in-stock products several days or hours before the actual picking and delivery date. This is also known as available-to-promise (ATP), a system that’s often not present on grocer websites. In the absence of a robust ATP, online grocers essentially offer products they cannot deliver. These products often include top sellers, items on promotion with limited quantities or those impacted by unusual demand patterns. This problem is particularly acute for retailers where products are picked by in-store shoppers and by online pickers combined with a lack of live inventory or no regular inventory refresh.
When one or more items are missing, the average order value (AOV) and profitability of the overall order are negatively impacted. Substitution algorithms are often not accurate enough or sufficiently personalized to individual customer tastes and preferences. They also often recommend more expensive items (e.g., a national brand equivalent when a private label is out of stock) to make up for missing items, causing grocers to disappoint customers and potentially affect margins.
Here are five ways grocers can improve order accuracy:
Customer research tells us that shelf life at home, or lack of freshness, is the second most important predictor of customer churn. In-store shoppers are accustomed to selecting items with the most extended expiration date (often stretching their arms to the back of the shelf). However, online shoppers often end up with products with a shorter fridge life, leading to lower satisfaction, food waste and a lower perception of value for the money. In the worst cases, some items arrive damaged, spoiled or otherwise unusable, generating complaints to customer service and refunds.
What can retailers do about it? The combination of the following activities enabled Publicis Sapient to help a grocer reduce wastage to less than one percent for previously problematic SKUs:
The third imperative grocers need to address is the fulfillment experience. This moment of order delivery (or pickup) requires shoppers to interact with another person. It can be a significant factor for converting otherwise neutral customers into promoters of a retailer. How friendly was the driver or store employee? Was the driver on time? Was there any conversation? Did the driver or store associate present any substitutions or help bring bags into the home or vehicle?
It became standard practice to leave bags at the front door during the pandemic, limiting human interaction and making it possible to move quickly to the next delivery. Today, in post-COVID times, retailers can take advantage of delivery as another touchpoint where they can provide a great experience. In the case of delivery, the driver becomes the face of the brand. Many online grocers have not sufficiently invested in training their drivers in customer interactions. Instead, speed is prioritized to increase drops per route. A friendly delivery person equipped with a “script” can leave a far better impression that can strengthen customer relationships and loyalty. Taking a few minutes longer for an improved customer experience is often a worthwhile trade-off.
This approach also applies to click and collect, or curbside pickup. Customers are now less willing to accept a clunky experience, which can involve queuing for a long time. Publicis Sapient has helped design solutions flagging customers’ ETA or their geolocation on the premises of the grocer to help the staff prepare the order in advance, making the experience as smooth and quick as possible for the customers.
For example, Publicis Sapient created a custom app for drivers that enhanced the algorithm used for allocating orders to routes, thus allowing the grocer to either increase dwell time or drops per route depending on the capacity utilization for that day.
The online grocery market is changing at an unprecedented speed. Providing shoppers with the exact items they ordered with the best shelf life in a timely and friendly fashion is becoming table stakes—and a prerequisite for retention and profitability.
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