By Guru Hariharan, CEO of CommerceIQ
The state of ultra-fast, 15-minute food and meal delivery is a lot like musical chairs, and right now, the game is in its early stages as growth surges within major cities, namely NYC. The music is playing, and competitors like DoorDash, Gopuff, Getir, Gorillas, and Fridge No More are circling the prize, reaping massive year-on-year growth as their employees criss-cross the city delivering food to expectant shoppers. The prize looks enticing; the opportunity vast. What shopper doesn’t want their food now? Potential markets include most residents of all densely populated metropolitan areas around the country. But just like the popular game, competition will prevent some players from finding a seat as the industry matures and the music stops.
Since the onset of COVID, the instant food delivery market has soared. Instacart, for all its growth and headlines, isn’t really a competitor here. If Instacart replaces a pre-planned fill-in or stock-up trip to the grocery store, these other services are focused on replacing more urgent shopping occasions such as the trip to the corner store or restaurant. They fulfill a need for immediacy and help reclaim precious time for the busy lives of many urbanites. The catch? The cost of doing business is astronomical.
Nascent ultra-fast food delivery companies may be booming, but they are also in fierce competition with each other. Each must offer a suite of enticing features to attract new shoppers and retain current ones. The three following offers, in particular, stand as both effective and expensive strategies: Offering promotional freebies, having no basket minimums, and developing ever-faster delivery times.
Generous sign-up promotions translate to high customer acquisition costs, and these companies are hemorrhaging vast sums in their growth stages as many customers are new. No basket minimums mean even paying customers are frequently unprofitable as the margins on one or two items plus associated fees cannot cover the cost of delivery for the provider. The implicit demand for immediacy and ever-faster delivery leads to further inefficiencies in routes and drivers. Finally, even if a potential customer trials one service, there is no guarantee of future engagement. Loyalty is cheap in a hyper-competitive market. All of these services are growing, but profitability remains elusive.
There may not be an obvious solution to this problem. The market has yielded a prisoner’s dilemma. In search of a lucrative prize, delivery services must outshine each other with shopper-friendly features. Yet when all players offer these perks, the differential advantage for any one of them is lost. Take these benefits away, and you sink beneath the advances of the competition. In the end, the players are back where they started, but with fewer resources and less breathing room to grow and sustain their business.
So why is this a problem? This is, after all, how the free market works. Healthy competition means the consumer emerges as the winner and an efficient and productive economy hums along. But in this instance, profits aren’t just reduced, they threaten to never emerge and starve these businesses providing tangible shopper benefit.
That the market can bear this structure points to backing investor’s faith that the future opportunity is too great to ignore, and that winning this race can overcome profitability challenges in the long run. Scale high enough, and costs come down enough to create a sustainable business model. But none of these organizations are competing in a vacuum.They are competing for the same use cases and the same shopper. Eventually these growth figures will hit a wall imposed by the growth of other players. For most players, that wall may arrive before they become profitable. The industry is headed for an inevitable shakeout where for some players to find their seat, others will be standing in the rain.
What could the future hold?
A wave of consolidation. If the race to be profitable cannot be won, then the race to be a desirable acquisition target is a strong consolation prize–especially if a competing service within striking distance of profitability is the one making the acquisition.
While there have been several notable acquisitions in the food delivery space, like DoorDash’s recent purchase of Wolt, the Helsinki-based delivery startup, and Just Eat Takeaway’s purchase of Grubhub in 2020, these transactions were largely viewed as market expansion, rather than drivers of operational efficiencies or consolidation efforts to gain pricing power.
Another possibility is that established retailers like Walmart or Target could make an acquisition and use their vast shopper base and resources to scale the business. Either way, expect the market to shrink as players make the best of their situation.
Applied automation. For those focused on improving internal profitability, there is at least one option available. Use of emerging technologies promise to bring down costs in the near future. Better route optimization, driverless or drone delivery, and even SaaS platforms for internal systems management can all improve results. Once again, however, this requires upfront capital investment to plan for an expected payoff. Any technology that adds a differential advantage in terms of lower costs or better shopper experiences gives some space for a delivery service to become a more financially stable company.
More geographic bets. Fast grocery delivery is inherently driven by geography, and if a service can’t scale nationally, then it may be able to scale locally. These services can take a strategic view by tiering cities by size-of-prize and shopper fit to determine the best prospects for expansion. We can envision a future where the nation gets carved up with certain delivery services only becoming dominant in some cities. Establishing a presence first in certain cities could yield first mover benefits and allow a service to scale and become more profitable without worrying about short-term competition.
All of these players ultimately need a competitive strategy to avoid ending up as the odd one out, because there may not be enough seats to go around.
© 2024 Benzinga.com. Benzinga does not provide investment advice. All rights reserved.
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