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Re: Groceries
At least canned tomatos are still cheap, the fresh ones are 3x what they were in season.
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Re: Groceries
Originally Posted by R I C H
(Post 11836469)
Urban and rural areas here are on a completely different scale of distribution here though. I'm 50 minutes drive from a grocery store. The depot the distributes produce for my business is Vancouver, 4 hours away. The rural population here (c250 permanent, which swells to 5,000+ during holiday seasons) isn't big enough to support a reasonably priced distribution model. It's not untypical of Canada generally outside of urban centres. I can buy 4l of milk at $4.50ish retail in a grocery store. Delivered it costs me a fraction under $10. I buy as much as 240l per week - what I spend in time and gas driving to Kamloops, I more than save on delivery costs. That's one example of 50+ items I regularly order.
How far is it in drive time from one end of population to the other (just in terms of a diameter line How far to the next small rural town? The business model would make sense if people could pre order 24 hours in advance. Would people travel the radius of town (per above drive time on diameter) to collect at a given time their weekly or daily shop if it was same instore price as city and no delivery charge? |
Re: Groceries
Originally Posted by Parnell
(Post 11836498)
Thanks RICH you have got me thinking
How far is it in drive time from one end of population to the other (just in terms of a diameter line How far to the next small rural town? The business model would make sense if people could pre order 24 hours in advance. Would people travel the radius of town (per above drive time on diameter) to collect at a given time their weekly or daily shop if it was same instore price as city and no delivery charge? I'm not sure I understand your proposition. How will you buy at a price point that provides enough profit to offer free delivery? The volume you'd have to purchase would mean you'd need storage and a huge refrigerated truck. I purchase >$5,000 per week and you can see how expensive delivery charges are even at that volume. |
Re: Groceries
Originally Posted by R I C H
(Post 11836559)
Kamloops east to west takes 30 minutes drive time. North to south maybe a little more as it isn't served by a highway for a large proportion. There are small populations of a thousand or so in each direction 20 minutes from town. None have grocery stores. The next large urban areas are an hour and a quarter south or 50 minutes east. People commute to Kamloops and pick up groceries while there. What additional convenience are you offering? I'm not sure I understand your proposition. How will you buy at a price point that provides enough profit to offer free delivery? The volume you'd have to purchase would mean you'd need storage and a huge refrigerated truck. I purchase >$5,000 per week and you can see how expensive delivery charges are even at that volume.
Vancouver to Calgary for example one way, then Calgary to Vancouver the next day? about 1000km? |
Re: Groceries
Originally Posted by Parnell
(Post 11836578)
If a large truck could travel on a straight line through and park up at a central spot in each rural township being serviced. Full automated container could retrieve relevant customers order (tote boxes) and then move on to next location.
The business cost offset is retail space versus truck running costs. For example it would require the people in town to be prepared to order today for items to be delivered tomorrow and to be at a certain point in town I think a truck can service around 2,000 customers so say 100 customers (households) per small town would mean 20 stops? I need to get myself familiar with Canada Map but I don't see why it would be too much trouble to organize ???? The 2 national restaurant suppliers don't have retail space, but they need warehouse space to fulfil orders. How do you avoid that? It's 35-40 degrees here in the summer and -15 in the winter. You can't distribute in a container that isn't climate controlled. People in rural areas commute to town for work and shop while there. I'm not sure you'd get anywhere near 2,000 customers worth of weekly grocertries in a truck, but to cover just 3 rural populations north of Kamloops you'd drive well over 300kms on a round trip. The fuel and running cost overhead in a large truck is substantial. Your business model suggests you can deliver more cheaply (and therefore purchase more cheaply) than national distributors that in my small town alone deliver over $80k per week of groceries to businesses. |
Re: Groceries
Originally Posted by Parnell
(Post 11836578)
Vancouver to Calgary for example one way, then Calgary to Vancouver the next day? about 1000km?
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Re: Groceries
Originally Posted by Parnell
(Post 11836324)
Its all those buy one get one free offers that causes a lot of unnecessary glutton and waste.
For many others, the bogofs, twofers and other deals, help them put food on the table.
Originally Posted by Almost Canadian
(Post 11836418)
OK. Buy what the offer promotes and give the excess to a food bank or a homeless person.
We all know that this is exactly what I do :p |
Re: Groceries
Originally Posted by Shard
(Post 11836336)
I find many of the offers are for items I do want, but simply do not need the quantity offered. Even produce is being oversold, for example packs of peppers containing 2-3 when you only need one. And some supermarkets are even doing 'buy three for the price of two'.
They are getting pricey though these days, and less North American... The last ones had stickers that said product of Spain. One item that never seems to increase is Banana's, despite the pain in the rear they are to ship, the price is the most stable food price wise. |
Re: Groceries
Originally Posted by Jsmth321
(Post 11836680)
by the pound
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Re: Groceries
Originally Posted by orly
(Post 11836738)
Demand metric. It is your duty!
Relevant article about groceries. Canada Grocery Prices Are Giving Shoppers Serious Sticker Shock Spoiler:
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Re: Groceries
Originally Posted by Jsmth321
(Post 11836782)
At check out they do it in metric and on the sign on the bottom is metric, the big sign is just in pounds...... Relevant article about groceries. Canada Grocery Prices Are Giving Shoppers Serious Sticker Shock
Spoiler:
For example exporting from NZ, importing into Canada? |
Re: Groceries
Originally Posted by Parnell
(Post 11836578)
If a large truck could travel on a straight line through and park up at a central spot in each rural township being serviced. Full automated container could retrieve relevant customers order (tote boxes) and then move on to next location.The business cost offset is retail space versus truck running costs. For example it would require the people in town to be prepared to order today for items to be delivered tomorrow and to be at a certain point in town I think a truck can service around 2,000 customers so say 100 customers (households) per small town would mean 20 stops?I need to get myself familiar with Canada Map but I don't see why it would be too much trouble to organize ????
Vancouver to Calgary for example one way, then Calgary to Vancouver the next day? about 1000km? Vancouver to Calgary is 1000km each way, 12 hours in a semi. A few mountain passes in between. What do you do if the truck is stuck for 4 days in a snow slide? Reefer essential for produce. Would need two drivers to comply with hours of service rules in that time frame. To comply with driver rules, make necessary stops (stopping time is duty time), driving time, this would be minimum of 3 day round trip. Servicing 2000 customers, probably a week. Our trucks do, Vancouver, Calgary, Edmonton, 15 drops, 5 day trip there and back when no hold ups, such as the TCH being closed. |
Re: Groceries
Originally Posted by BristolUK
(Post 11836662)
Ah, without meaning to sound rude, there speaks someone with a luxury boat to be kept in the Bahamas. :nod:
For many others, the bogofs, twofers and other deals, help them put food on the table. :thumbup: Good one. |
Re: Groceries
Originally Posted by Parnell
(Post 11835832)
Have been looking at the online operators and the likely hood of Instacart starting later this year.
They all appear to push the grocery pricing up around 28% because of delivery charges and additional product markups. Would free delivery, faster or more convenient delivery and better pricing be well received in Canada? |
Re: Groceries
Originally Posted by bc2015
(Post 11836812)
I don't see a market for online grocery shopping in Canada at all. Online shopping in general is not very big even for electronics etc...
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