Health measures introduced over the last twelve weeks have had a huge impact on consumer buying habits. Will these changes last? It’s still too early to say. Rather than drawing any hasty conclusions, we thought it might be useful to take a step back and look at what has been going on during lockdown, and how home delivery has played a central - even vital - role for both consumers and those working in retail.
Barely allowed to leave home and with no idea of how long the lockdown would last, nor any real understanding of how the crisis was going to affect their purchasing power in the medium to long term, the French have limited their shopping to the basic essentials: food, hygiene and household care products. Many have favoured shopping locally, and many others have resorted to buying online, especially via the websites of the major supermarket chains.
Legend:
E-commerce - more than 10% of market share.
Market share value of e-commerce (Click-and-collect and home delivery) of fast moving consumer goods
Tuesday, 17 March START OF LOCKDOWN
In the light of the health risks and restrictions on movement, the home delivery or click-and-collect options that allow consumers to shop at their habitual supermarkets have clearly been pivotal for both new online shoppers and seasoned customers alike. As a result,
Whatever the details of the case, the fact that shoppers have turned to the supermarket chains’ online sales has meant the latter have been able to offset the drop in customers visiting their shops. Even more so as the closure of cafes and restaurants and the need for families to produce 2 meals a day has led to an 89% increase in the average shopping basket value (IRI via Le Point).
Whilst click-and-collect has been the overall winner of the lockdown, having captured up to 80% of the growth in general online retail (Nielsen), home delivery of groceries has also boomed. For example:.
The sudden increase in demand has meant that all food retailers have struggled to adapt and this has had a negative impact on delivery times and customer satisfaction.
Legend:
On the left side: For click-and-collect, delivery times increase slightly in the 7th week of lockdown.
Chart: average delivery time for the click-and-collect market, in number of days (aggregated by week)
In our opinion, using postcodes is not the most effective way to
The key to optimisation in a time of crisis is to be able to quickly change the parameters used under normal circumstances for calculating delivery rounds - quite simply because the priorities, the resources available and the operational conditions change. This is precisely what
Delivery delays have not only affected food retail. All online merchants (pure players or not) as well as their logistics providers have seen an increase in delivery times since the the start of lockdown and despite a very slight decline in sales. This can be explained by the closure of ‘non-essential’ shops which usually serve as a collection point (Mondial Relay and Relais Colis) and click-and-collect, for those brands built on a physical network.
Creating a
Research undertaken by Fevad between the 23 and 25 March 2020 on 136 online sales sites in France reveals disruption in the logistics chain from warehouses to service provider. The consequences of this are:
A second study by Fevad carried out at the end of April revealed that 41% of the sites surveyed had seen an improvement in the situation in warehouses, but 36.5% highlighted that conditions and delivery times were worsening whilst their activity started to increase.
The lockdown is coming to an end but the return to normal will take a long time - and all the more because at the end of the health crisis looms an economic one which all observers have already labelled as ‘major’. Will the French return to the high street and spend the 55 to 60 billion that they’ve been forced to save during the lockdown? Have they got used to consuming less? Will those who’ve discovered the comfort of shopping online and ease of
If you can answer that one, you must be a genius!
In an interview with Le Figaro, Philippe Moatti, economist and co-president of l'Observatoire société et consommation (Obsoco), the French observatory of society and consumption, predicts that “the trends which are most likely to last are those which have been reinforced by the context of the health crisis, notably ecological ideology which had already gained momentum well before the lockdown. For a fraction of the population, the lockdown has provided the stimulus to take the journey further: put consumption back in its place, consume less but better and more intelligently.”
Even if this only involves a “fraction of the population”, this last phrase bodes well. For retail and logistics, it presents challenges that we at Geoconcept are perfectly positioned and well-equipped to help our customers overcome.