2. Limited assortment grocers see rising market share
Benefiting from the push towards value, limited assortment grocers were able to grow their market share over the last 12 months. The share of shoppers that have a limited assortment retailer as their main grocery retailer grew by 30% to now 12%, third overall behind traditional (53%) and supercenters (21%). Apart from the post-pandemic flexibility, key drivers for this include low-price points (54% mentioned this as the main reason), good-quality products (18%), and convenient store locations (7%). While the business model includes a smaller assortment, only 12% of shoppers see that as a reason to not shop at limited assortment retailers. Similarly, in-store service and quality are aspects customers value given the retailers’ price points, leading to overall outcomes above the fair-trade line for multiple retailers in this category. These headwinds are reflected in recent industry announcements related to additional store openings for grocers in this segment for 2024 and beyond.
3. E-Commerce post-pandemic challenges continue
Another category that saw market share movements was e-commerce. While the share of pure-play e-commerce grocers rose rapidly during the pandemic (3% in 2019, 8% by 2021), it has been in steady decline since (5% in 2022 and 3% based on the most recent survey results). Operational issues like managing perishability, dealing with ad-hoc substitution needs, or serving non-urban areas, along with financial challenges such as overcoming small basket affordability or affording fees for third-party picking and delivery providers make online grocery a hard business. This is evidenced by recent announcements related to store and/or e-commerce fulfillment center shutdowns. The shopper perspective sheds additional light on these trends. They prefer delivery over pickup (32% versus 24%), which is the more expensive model to serve from a retailer perspective. At the same time, having an attractive online shopping journey is the factor that correlates with overall retailer satisfaction the least and ranks last among reasons why shoppers picked their main retailer (2%, while low prices and convenient location lead with 26% and 19%, respectively). Without pandemic tailwinds, running a grocery business without a brick-and-mortar presence seems as challenging as it ever has.
4. Consumer interest in AI-driven shopping experiences is still low
While there are many use cases for generative artificial intelligence (AI) in today’s retail environment, consumers do not yet have a clear interest in many of those that impact their immediate shopping experience. When asked for their interest in a series of grocery AI applications, only custom promotional offers received net positive feedback. Other ideas that could simplify shopping trips like just-walk-out transactions, minimized exposure to less relevant items online, ideas that provide a more personal experience like custom marketing or smart item recommendations, or ideas that make the retailer interaction more effective such as chatbots are not yet AI applications that customers are overwhelmingly interested in.
Exhibit 2: Interest levels in AI applications
Source: Oliver Wyman analysis
One reason for the limited excitement is privacy concerns linked to the data that would be required to feed such new technology offerings. While only 31% of shoppers are not comfortable with retailers using past transaction data to generate insights and enhance the shopping experience, this number is higher for data-capturing browsing behavior (41%), in-store movement (55%), or social media activity (71%). Another reason could be that respondents assessed these applications isolated from any potential shopping experience that retailers could embed them in in which case the focus might be less on AI and data, but more on the overall in-store/online journey.
How retailers can defend leads and claw back share
With all these industry dynamics and insights on customer perception, how should retailers adjust course, if at all? How can limited assortment grocers build on the new influx of shoppers, how can more diversified retailers continue to operate financially successfully in today’s economy and with customers prioritizing value more than ever?
1. Harness implicit AI for increased productivity
Even though customer-facing generative AI applications may not yet be a draw for shoppers, retailers should invest resources in setting up the relevant insights and data architecture. It will be crucial to build capabilities now, hire talent, and grow teams to be ready for customer-facing applications in the future. At the same time, there are various ways to use the same technology in a non-customer-facing way to achieve significant cost/productivity improvements, such as preparing for vendor negotiations, analyzing competitors’ ads, and facilitating store operations. Retailers that have not invested much time or resources into generative AI should start by evaluating organizational readiness and risks, standing up governance and policy structures, and formulating broader strategies and roadmaps before starting to work on specific initiatives. First internal projects could be related to planogram compliance or operational forecasting to ensure new trade-down demand can be met with an appropriate service level.
2. Focus on destination retail to attract customers
If capturing trade-down dynamics with price moves proves challenging due to a retailer’s current value proposition, it is also possible to differentiate by becoming a destination for customers. This corresponds to moving up in the value/offer matrix, providing a better offer for a given value. Offering additional services beyond groceries, such as pharmaceutical/veterinary services, unique product selections, or an innovative in-store experience can draw customers from afar.