MarketScale
‹ Back to Industries

Retail

From Cart to Click: Retailers Must Enhance Operational Efficiency and Data Management in the Age of Grocery Ecommerce

Grocery retailers face mounting pressure to streamline operations and harness customer data as online shopping accelerates across the sector

By Bruce Winder · May 7, 2024, 12:55 AM UTCBruce WinderBruce Winder RetailEcommerceUs Grocery Market
Share

Key takeaways

01

Retailers must enhance operational efficiency in the face of growing ecommerce.

02

Effective data management is crucial for succeeding in online grocery markets.

03

Traditional grocery sales are expected to slow as ecommerce continues to rise.

A new study by Brick Meets Click indicates a significant shift in the U.S. grocery market: Over the next five years, traditional grocery sales are expected to slow, while grocery ecommerce claims an increasing share. This change is driven by a rise in online sales and a strategic shift towards first-party services to optimise operational costs and enhance customer interactions. As digital marketplaces mature and economic pressures continue to shape consumer behavior, the grocery sector stands at a critical juncture.

Over the next five years, traditional grocery sales are expected to slow, while grocery ecommerce claims an increasing share.

What strategies can grocery retailers employ to thrive in a growing grocery ecommerce landscape while managing the challenges of thin margins and high operational costs? Bruce Winder, President of Bruce Winder Retail, dives into this issue, offering a detailed exploration based on current trends and future projections.

Bruce Winder highlights the following key points:

  • Adaptation to Ecommerce Growth: Emphasizing the necessity for grocers to adapt to the increasing demand for online grocery shopping, particularly as younger generations like Gen Z and Gen Alpha become significant market participants.
  • Profitability Challenges: Highlighting the difficulty of maintaining profitability through ecommerce due to traditionally low grocery margins and the added costs of last-mile delivery.
  • First-party vs. Third-party Fulfillment: Analyzing the benefits and drawbacks of using in-house resources versus third-party services for order fulfillment, and how the decision may vary based on sales volume.
  • Data Management: Highlighting the importance of managing customer data internally to maintain control over proprietary information, which can be critical for tailoring marketing strategies and enhancing customer relationships.
  • Long-Term Trends: Asserting that ecommerce is not a passing trend but a fundamental shift that will continue to expand, necessitating long-term strategic planning by retailers.
Ecommerce is not a passing trend but a fundamental shift that will continue to expand, necessitating long-term strategic planning by retailers.

Through his comprehensive analysis, Bruce Winder not only contextualizes the findings of the recent study but also outlines actionable strategies that grocery retailers can implement to navigate the evolving market dynamics effectively. This discussion offers valuable insights for businesses aiming to capitalize on the ecommerce boom while mitigating its inherent challenges.

About the author

BW
Bruce Winder

Free workspace

You just read one expert. Imagine publishing yours.

This article was produced through MarketScale. Create a free workspace and turn your own team's expertise into articles, video, and social, at scale. No credit card, no demo required.

Request invite →Book a demoNPS +73 · 1,000+ creators · 38+ countries

Explore More Retail Insights

Discover expert perspectives across the full Retail vertical.

Browse Retail Hub

About the Expert

BW
Bruce Winder